Official Name: | Laysters |
Coordinates: | 52.2668°N -2.6337°W |
Os Grid Reference: | SO568633 |
Country: | England |
Static Image: | File:St Andrew, Leysters (geograph 3402278).jpg |
Static Image Caption: | St Andrew's church |
Constituency Westminster: | North Herefordshire |
Post Town: | Tenbury Wells |
Postcode Area: | WR |
Postcode District: | WR15 |
Dial Code: | 01568 |
Unitary England: | Herefordshire |
Lieutenancy England: | Herefordshire |
Region: | West Midlands |
London Distance Mi: | 120 |
London Direction: | SE |
Laysters is a civil parish in north-east Herefordshire, England, and approximately 15miles north-northeast from the city and county town of Hereford. The nearest towns are the market towns of Leominster 4.5miles to the south-west, and Tenbury Wells in Worcestershire, 3.5miles miles to the north-east. Within Letton is the Grade 1 listed Church of St Andrew. The parish was alternatively spelt 'Leysters', the ecclesiastic spelling.
Laysters in the Domesday Book is written as "Last", in 1228 as "Lastes", and in 1242 and 1257 as "Lastres".[1] The parish hamlet of Woonton, in Domesday is written as "Wenetone". Domesday shows that Laysters was in the Hundred of Wolfhay, under three owners, and described as 'waste'. The first manor had in 1066 belonged to Arngrim of Womerton and Arnketil, lordship transferred in 1086 to Roger of Mussegros, who was also tenant-in-chief to king William I. The second, in 1066, belonged to Godric, transferred to Bernard in 1086 under the tenants-in-chief Durand of Gloucester, and Walter son of Roger. The third, in 1066, belonged to Eadric the Wild under the overlordship of King Edward, in 1086 remaining with Edric who was also tenant-in-chief in chief to William I.[2] [3] [4]
In the reign of king John (1199 to 1216), Laysters belonged to the lords of Kilpeck Castle. Part of the manor was passed to Ralph Botyler, through his wife, Kilpeck co-heiress Lady Maud Pantulf, during the reign of Edward IV (1442 – 1483), with a further part to the Devereux family. Then both parts of the manor came into the hands of the Delamere family, who sold it to a Thomas Whitgreave, Receiver to Richard, Duke of York. Whitgreave's daughter married Thomas Barneby of Ludlow, Shropshire, the Treasurer to Edward IV. Part of Laysters was sold in 1653 to a John Clark, who was the receiver to Charterhouse; his granddaughter in 1675 bringing it to John Powel of Whyle. The other part of the manor remained with the Barneby family until 1795.[5] [6] [7]
The church at Laysters was historically a chapel to Tenbury Priory, but was appropriated by Sheen Priory under Henry V. Laysters was part of the rectory of Tenbury, but at the dissolution of monasteries the parish was leased to a Thomas Acton and his descendants.[5]
In the 1850s and 1860s Laysters is described as a parish near the Leominster to Tenbury road and in the Wolphy hundred and the Leominster Union—poor relief and joint parish workhouse provision set up under the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834— that included the township, later in the 1890s the hamlet, of Woonton, at the south-west of the parish. The ecclesiastical parish (as Leysters), was in the Shropshire archdeaconry, and Hereford bishopric. The church of St Andrew is described as an "old stone building of massive character, but not possessing sufficient architectural features to mark the style". The church, repaired in the early 1830s, comprises a tower, nave, and chancel, and contains "several" plain mural tablets. The living is a perpetual curracy—office supported by stipend rather than tithes or glebe—worth £250 yearly, with about 90acres of glebe, the area of land used to support the parish church and priest. There were parish charities of a £16 10s. yearly value. At 30yd south from the church is a tumulus, which might have been an ancient burial mound. The population in 1851 was 210 in 43 inhabited houses. Post was processed through Leominster, which was also the nearest money order office. Commercial traders and residents included between ten and twelve farmers, the parish clerk (who was also a farm steward, parish constable, and agent to the National Live Stock Insurance Co.), a boot & shoe maker, a carpenter, and the mistress of the parochial school. An 1814-built school at Bockleton, 1.5miles to the south-east, also accepted labourers’ children of Laysters for no fee. Parish area in the 1850s was about 1980acres, the soil being "clayey" over a subsoil of clay and marl, with some cornstone [mottled red and green limestone], rock outcrops. Crops grown were grain, cabbage, mangold wurtzel and swedes. Swedes averaged thirty tons an acre, with all crops of "splendid growth", indicating the "application of at least some of the improvements in modern agricultural science". Rosedale, a property at the south of the parish is described in the 1850s as a "genteel residence, sheltered by plantations, and pleasantly situated on a sloping eminence which is terminated by a small stream and fish pond". Woonton House, today Woonton Court, was the home of a doctor who practiced at Leominster. Within the house was reported an inscribed poem:In 1795 the estates comprising the lordships of Heath, a further Laysters' settlement of the time, and Woonton, had been purchased by "… Hulton the celebrated antiquarian and historian". His descendants in the 1850s resided on the property.[8] [9] [10] [11] [12]
By the 1870s Laysters, with the union, was also in the petty sessional division, and county court district of Leominster, and in Docklow polling district. The population in 1861 was 283, and in 1871 was 279 people in 54 houses, as families or as 60 separate occupiers. Parish area was refined to 1989acres, at a yearly ratable value of £2,261. There were five chief landowners, three of whom lived outside the parish: Bockleton, Cheltenham, and Yockleton near Shrewsbury. The parish was now in the Ludlow archdeaconry and the Burford West rural deanery. The living was now a vicarage, with a value, £256 13s., with a residence (at Little Laysters,, 400yd south-west from the church), and 93acres, of glebe. Reported was a £600 cost for the 1830s partial restoration of the church, and a further approximately £350 restoration in 1871 described as the "roof being laid open, the timber varnished, and the church repewed". The ecclesiastical of parish of St Michael and all Angels, described as being at Old Wood, Laysters, and formed in 1856, combined parts of the parishes of Laysters, Middleton on the Hill, and part of the mother parish of Tenbury in Worcestershire. Endowed charities in the 1870s then amounted to £41 12s. yearly. The parish school at Little Laysters, was a public Elementary School for boys and girls with an average attendance of about 46. Resident at Laysters was the schoolmaster and the teacher at the day school. Commercial traders included the proprietors of Laysters' brick and tile works, a carpenter, a wheelwright, a thrashing machine proprietor who was also a carpenter, a shopkeeper, and the parish clerk. Listed were also ten farmers, three also a hop grower, and another a steward for the Norfolk Farmers' live stock insurance company, and for the Lancashire fire and life insurance office, and a farm bailiff.[13] [14] [15] [16] By the 1880s Laysters is described as being in the Northern division of the county, and 5miles south-east from Easton Court station on the Tenbury branch of the Shrewsbury and Hereford Railway. The church of St Andrew is now described as being of Norman style, of chancel, nave, south porch, and a western tower containing three bells, with east and south windows of stained glass. The parish register dates to 1703. The ecclesiastical parish living was still a vicarage, with a tithe rent charge—typically one-tenth of the produce or profits of the land given to the rector for his services—of £254, but still with 90 acres of glebe, in the gift of Bockleton Court, outside the civil parish. In 1885 a Wesleyan chapel was being erected. The parish charities were then valued at £37 l0s. yearly. The two principal landowners lived at Bockelton and Pendleton, Lancashire. Chief crops were now listed as wheat, beans, oats, hops and apples. Population in 1881 was 238 in 53 inhabited houses, with 58 families or separate occupiers. By now, letters were collected from a letter box, with post processed through Tenbury which was then the nearest money order & telegraph office. The parochial school, for boys and girls, which was built in 1869, included a master's house, and accommodated and had an average attendance of 47 pupils. The school was then run by a schoolmistress, as was a further day school. In 1885 parish residents included the church vicar, at the vicarage, and the church curate. Commercial residents included a carpenter, two related female shopkeepers, seven farmers, and a farm bailiff. By 1890 the parish was in the now Docklow and Kimbolton polling district and electoral division of the county council. Listings now state that St Andrew's church, described as a "massive stone edifice", was restored in 1842, and again in 1870. The school was now a National School, accommodating 48, with an average attendance of 44. Tenbury, Brimfield and Leominster were the nearest money order offices, with letters collected from a letter box and processed through Tenbury, the nearest money order telegraph office and post town, and delivered by messenger. Residents in 1890s included the parish vicar at the vicarage, the parish clerk, two churchwardens, Wesleyan chapel ministers, and the schoolmaster who was also the Poor Law assistant overseer and parish clerk, and the schoolmistress. The school, with an attendance of 36, was at this time stated as being built in 1869. Commercial traders included the two shopkeepers, twelve farmers, two of whom were also a hop grower, and a farm bailiff. Population in 1891 was 200.[17] [18] [19]
In 1913 the parish is described as being 4.5miles miles from Fencote station on the Leominster and Bromyard section of the Great Western Railway, and about 5 miles south-east from Easton Court station on the Tenbury and Bewdley branch of the Great Western Railway. Population in 1911 was 177 in the civil and 167 in the ecclesiastical parish. There was by then a post office just to the north from the parish at Laysters Pole in Middleton on the Hill. At Laysters Pole a carrier—transporter of trade goods, with sometimes people, between different settlements—connected the parish to Leominster. The schoolmaster's house had been rebuilt in 1898. The school now housed 60 pupils with an average attendance of 39. Commercial listings included a grocer at Laysters Pole post office, and twelve farmers, two of whom were also hop growers.[20]
In 1876, the poet George Evans produced Echoes From Nature, a compilation of poems largely highlighting Laysters, such as The Great Heath Farm, Laysters, pp. 138,139, and Reflections in Laysters Churchyard, p. 24.[21]
Laysters is in north-northeast Herefordshire, on the border with Worcestershire, and approximately 15miles north-northeast from the city of Hereford. The nearest towns are Leominster 4.5miles to the south-west, and Tenbury Wells 3.5miles miles to the north-east. The parish, orientated north-east to south-west, is approximately 4miles in length, its width at the north-east 0.7miles, at the south-west 1miles, and at the centre 935yd, with an area of 1995.5acres, and an approximate height of between 300feet and 650feet above sea level. Adjacent parishes are, in Herefordshire, Pudleston at the south, Kimbolton at the south and west, and Middleton on the Hill at the north and north-west, and in Worcestershire, Tenbury at the north and north-east, and Bockleton at the east and south-east.[14] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] The parish is rural, of farm complexes, fields, managed woodland and coppices, streams, ponds, isolated and dispersed businesses and residential properties. The depopulated village and farm hamlet of Laysters (Leysters), is at the central north, with the farming hamlet of Woonton, at 1.5miles, south-west of the village and at the border with Kimbolton. Three streams form parish boundaries. The first, Whyle Brook, rises at Starch Field Covert, flows south-eastwards to the border with Bockelton, at which point it is joined by a further stream from the north, then flows south-west as the parish boundary with Bockleton and then as the boundary with Pudleston, until it turns south to meet Stretford Brook at the north of Leominster parish, eventually meeting the River Lugg as tributary in Leominster town. The second, a branch of Whyle Brook, rises at the north, near Leysters Pole and at the border with Middleton on the Hill, flows parallel to the A4114, then south to form a short border with Kimbolton. The third rises 380yd east from Leysters Pole as the stream Church House Dingle, becoming Sunny Bank Dingle, as the parish boundary with Middleton on the Hill, to the confluence with Cadmere Brook, a tributary of the River Teme to the north. Cadmere Brook crosses Laysters upstream to Bockleton. The only major road in the parish is the A4112, which runs as a 300yd stretch through a northern tip of the parish west from Leysters Pole in Middleton on the Hill and continues south-west as a boundary with Middleton and Kimbolton. A minor road running south from Leysters Pole branches, into three: one road south to Whyle in Pudleston; one south-east to Bockleton; one, as Cinders Lane, arcing north-east, through Oldwood, Worcesterchire, in Tenbury parish, to Tenbury Wells. A minor through-road arcs through the west of the parish, from the A4122, running through Woonton, then to Brockmanton in Puddleston. All other routes are country lanes, bridleways, farm tracks, property entrances, and footpaths.[14] [23] [24] [25]
The parish is represented in the lowest tier of UK governance by the nine member Middleton on the Hill & Leysters Group Parish Council.As Herefordshire is a unitary authority—no district council between parish and county councils—the parish sends one councillor, representing the Leominster North & Rural ward, to Herefordshire County Council.[27] [28] [29] [30] Laysters is represent in the UK parliament as part of the North Herefordshire constituency, held by the Conservative Party since 2010 by Bill Wiggin.
In 1974 Laysters became part of the now defunct Leominster District of the county of Hereford and Worcester, instituted under the 1972 Local Government Act.[31] In 2002 the parish, with the parishes of Brimfield, Eye, Moreton and Ashton, Eyton, Kimbolton, Little Hereford, Luston, and Middleton on the Hill, was reassessed as part of Upton Ward which elected one councillor to Herefordshire district council.[32] Until Brexit, on 31 January 2020, the parish was represented in the European Parliament as part of the West Midlands constituency.
Parish population in 2021 was 141. Laysters shares a village hall with Middleton.[22] [33] There are no shops or amenities in the parish, except the Church of St Andrew's, which is part of the Leominster Team Ministry.[34] Businesses operating in Layster include a civil engineering company, a livestock transport company and, at Woonton, a holiday let property with attached caravanning and camping site.[14] [23] [25]
Laysters falls under the Wye Valley NHS Trust; the closest hospital is Leominster Community Hospital at Leominster, with the closest major hospital Hereford County Hospital at Hereford.[35] [36] The nearest primary education is at St James' C.E. Primary School at Kimbolton, 3.5miles to the west. For secondary education the parish falls within the catchment area of Earl Mortimer College at Leominster, 5miles to the south-west.[14] [23] [37] [38]
The closest bus stops are under 1miles to the north at Middleton, on the Wigmore to Leominster route.[39] The closest rail connections are at Leominster railway station, 5 miles to the south-west, on the Crewe to Newport Welsh Marches Line, which also serves Hereford railway station, with further connections to Oxford on the Cotswold Line, and to Birmingham provided by West Midlands Trains.[14] [23]
The parish is covered by Free Radio Herefordshire & Worcestershire on 96.7 FM and Free Radio Birmingham, and Sunshine 855, as well as BBC Hereford and Worcester.
Laysters contains one Grade I and four Grade II listed buildings.[40] The Grade I parish Church of St Andrew, is church of local sandstone, of chancel, nave, west tower, and south porch. It dates to the 12th century, with the chancel and tower from the 13th. The church was restored in the late 19th century when a south porch and organ chamber were added, and the chancel south wall rebuilt. A stone slate roof was added in the 20th century. The tower is of three stages and llancet windows are topped with a pyramidal roof; the bell stage contains three bells. The nave at the south contains a 19th-century two-light traceried window either side of the porch, and the same on the north. Between the nave and chancel is timber chancel arch. The chancel south side shows a blind doorway beside a 19th-century trefoil headed window. The east window, also 19th century, is of three lights and traceried. The nave roof, under the 20th-century tiles, is of 14th-century trussing. The trussed chancel roof dates to the 17th century and, on its north side is an arched recessed organ room. The interior contains a 12th-century bowl font which might have originally come from Pudleston. Wall monuments date to the early 18th century, with a floor ledger slab dated 1644.[4] [34] [41] [42]
At 36yd south from the church is centred an earthwork, the remains of a scheduled probable motte castle. Circular in form, it is about 25yd in diameter, varies in height from 4feet to 9feet, and is surrounded by a 30feet wide and 3.5feet deep ditch. The centre of the motte was excavated in the 20th century, evidence of which remains; the earthwork, previously thought a burial barrow, revealed "ashes, charcoal, and an accumulation of rough stones, but nothing in the shape of pottery or coin was found, nor could any definite form of stone structure be determined".[42] [43] [44] [45]
Cinders, is a rectangular plan sandstone farmhouse 1.5miles north-east from the church. Its main block dates to the 14th century, vertically extended and added chimney stacks in the 16th, a north wing added in the 17th, and with further development in the 19th. The 17th century north wing is timber-framed with brick infilling. The house is of two storeys, with an attic with two gabled dormer windows at the south, and a tiled roof. The interior is 17th century with major alterations in 1851. The interior contains a late 16th or early 17th-century wooden staircase, and two 17th-century panelled doors. A pre-Second World War survey by the Worcester Archaeology Service, before the property was converted to residential use, reported brick flooring as part of the oldest parts of the farm, which probably included a pre-19th-century cow house and threshing barn, with the larger elements of the farmstead chiefly 18th century which could indicate that there was an expansion of the property at that time. At 300yd north from Cinders, and east from Cinders Lane, is the site of a fish pond, and at the south of the farm complex, is the site of a possible dovecot, both post medieval and scheduled.[42] [46] [47] [48] [49]
Great Heath Farmhouse, with an attached cider house, is 1500yd south-west from the church. The house dates to the 17th century with major remodelling in 1851, is timber-framed, partly with later added brick, with a hipped Welsh slate roof. It is of rectangular footprint with a south-east cross wing, and of two storeys with a central door with two bays of casement windows. Attached on the north side is a cider house which contains a "cider mill and press with the initials 'W W' and a date of 1771". An outbuilding dates to the late 17th or early 18th century. In a field at 100yd north-west from the farm complex, is the scheduled site of a post-medieval quarry.[42] [50] [51]
Wilden, off Cinders Lane and 1400yd north-east from the church, is a 17th-century farmhouse, with a northern cross wing added in the 18th century, and further alterations in the 19th and 20th centuries. Of sandstone, it is part timber-framed with brick infill in its rear wing. Of T-shaped plan, and of two storeys with attic and cellar, it is roofed with Welsh slate. The interior contains an original 17th-century staircase. Unlisted outbuildings are at the south-east of the house contain a 17th-century tallat (loft), the walls of stone below, and open framing above. At 150yd south-west from Wilden, is the site of a fishpond, and in the field at 250yd south-east the site of a lime kiln, both post medieval and scheduled.[42] [52] [53]
Woonton Court, 1.4miles south-west of the church, is an L-plan 16th-century farmhouse, extended in the 17th, 18th and 19th century, and of two storeys with roof gable dormers, a tiled roof, and chimney stacks of decorative stone. Originally a timber-framed house it was refaced with sandstone on the ground floor, the first floor (attic floor), with exposed timber-framing infilled with brick. Windows are French casement and of uPVC. On the north-east gable end are "seven rows of nesting boxes with alighting ledges". The interior contains exposed ceiling beams. At 70yd on the roadside south from Wooton Court is the extant and scheduled site of a post-medieval fish pool and meadow.[42] [54] [55] [56] The Poet's stone, south-east from Sunny Bank Dingle, is a roadside memorial on Cinders Lane to William Wordsworth, and his wife Mary. Wordsworth was visiting his brother-in-law Tom Hutchinson on 22 October 1845, as part of his exploration of Herefordshire, and rested on the stone. Following this the parish vicar had inscribed the still visible initials 'WW' and 'MW' as memorial to the event.[57] [58] [59]