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Rufford
is another of the descendants of the prolific parish of Croston
from which it was separated contemporaneously with the parish of
Chorley in the year 1793. The parish of Rufford is bounded by the
parish of Tarleton on the north, by North Meols on the west, by
Ormskirk on the south, and by Croston parish on the east. From north
to south the breadth of the parish is two miles and a quarter, and
from the west to east three miles, constituting an area of 2961
statute acres, which may be divided :-
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Customary
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Statute
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A.
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R.
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P.
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|
A.
|
R.
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P.
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| Ploughed
Land |
364
|
2
|
5
|
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1194
|
1
|
20
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| Meadow
and Pasture |
701
|
2
|
17
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1463
|
2
|
36
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| Gardens |
46
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1
|
6
|
|
97
|
3
|
27
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| Woods
and Wastes |
97
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0
|
12
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205
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1
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20
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| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Total
in the Parish
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1409
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1
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35
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2961
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12
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23
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The
eastern boundary of this parish is washed by the river Douglas,
augmented by the water of the Ellerbeck, which, after rising in
Lathom, forms its confluence with the Douglas at the S. E. extremity
of the parish of Rufford. A meer-sluice, four yards broad, conveys
into the Douglas the surplus water of all the subsidiary drains
in the low lands of this parish and the adjoining parish of Croston.
With
the exception of one estate belonging to the church, the whole parish
is an unbroken manor, of which Sir Thomas Hesketh, of Rufford Hall,
is the lord. A court baron is held at the Hesketh Arms in Rufford
annually, about the 28th of October, at which the tenants, who chiefly
hold their land upon life-tenures, render suit and service. A moiety
of this manor appears to have been originally granted in the reign
of Henry I. by Richard Bussel, the second baron of Penwortham, to
Richard Fitun, along with the lordship of Clayton, the moiety of
Heapey and other property in the hundred. John Fitton, his great
grandson, was lord of half Rufford, and his grandson, Richard Fitton,
by a charter without date, gave to his daughter Matilda, or Mawde,
and her heirs, for their homage and service the entire moiety of
the town of Rufford with all its appurtenances. Mr. Roger Dodsworth,
the anti-quarry, of Hutton Grange, who was the second husband of
Holcroft, daughter of Thomas Hesketh, esq. notices this charter
as in his father-in-law's possession, May 24, 1629, and adds, "This
Matilda was coheir of Richard Fitton, and married sir William Hesketh,
4 Edw. I. which proveth them to live H. 3. time." By the marriage
of sir William's grandson, sir John Heskayte, knight, with Alice,
daughter and only heir of Edmund Fytton, lord of half Ruffourd,
he became sole lord of the manor of Rufford, and assumed the arms
of Fytton;- on a bend sable, three garbs or. His son, sir William
de Heskayte, lord of Ruffourd, Heskaithe, Beconsawe, &c. obtained
in 13 Edward III. a charter to hold a market every Friday at his
manor of Rugford, and a fair for one day on the feast of St. Philip
and St. James the Apostles, together with the libertyof free warren
in all his demesne lands of Rugford in the county of Lancaster.
While in Normandy, the same king, in the 20th year of his reign,
granted sir William a licence to found a chantry in the chapel of
St. Mary of Rufford.

The
fidelity of history claims some observations upon the annexed pedigree,
drawn up, as it has evidently been, with great care, and for the
use of which the author is indebted to the worthy lord and representatives
of this ancient house.
Thomas
Hesketh, the husband of Margaret Banaster, is styled lord of Rufford
in 1387, while the epitaph states that he died October 8, 1363.
Sir John Dellamere, in his pedigree, is in all probability the "Johannes
de la Warren, miles, dominus de Croston," of the Register of
St. Mary of Lancaster, and is so styled in the charter by which
he surrendered the advowson of Croston to that priory. Thomas Hesketh,
esq., who died in 1523, is represented in the pedigree as having
been only once married, but this Thomas was divorced from Elizabeth
Flemming, on a petition from that lady, in which she accuses herself
of incontinency.
Geneaology
- Hesketh of
Rufford (2.2mb)
On
this representation, the sentence of divorce was confirmed by the
pope Alexander VI. in the fifth year of his pontificate, on the
nones of June, 1497. In the monumental inscription we find Thomas
Hesketh, esq., and Grace, his wife, which Thomas died 14th August,
1523, and the said Grace 29th June 1510. From the Suffield MS. pedigree,
Grace is said to be the daughter of sir Richard Towneley, of Towneley;
and this, in some measure, agrees with the papal decree, in which
the principals are forgiven their incontinence, Elizabeth Fleming
with Thurstan Hall, her second husband, and Thomas Hesketh with
Grace Towneley, his second wife. This Thomas Hesketh was seized
of the manor of Hoghwie and Rufford, and on the chantry of Rufford,
and was succeeded by his natural son, sir Robert Hesketh, whose
mother was Alla Howard. Sir Robert was knighted for his bravery
in France, and married Grace, the daughter of sir John Towneley
of Towneley. Sir Robert died in 1539, seized of the manor and advowson
of Rufford.
The
chapel of Rufford, now the parish church, was in existence five
centuries ago, when sir Robert Heskaith was licensed to form a chantry.
Whether the licence was then burdened with the conditions of a yearly
payment of x1s, which was anciently claimed as a fine out of the
manor of Rufford by the monastery of St. Werburgh, is not certain;
but "Richard Bussel gave to the abbey of Chester one carucate
of land in Ruchford in alms, which the abbot of Chester holds;"
and the dean and chapter of Chester at present enjoy a pension of
£40 per annum, issuing out of this manor in virtue of that
grant. In 1734 the family of Hesketh procured a brief for rebuilding
the chapel, which was finished at a charge of £1165.
stolen from hubmaker
This
church is a plain brick edifice, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, with
a stone cupola surmounting the west gate. The interior is neat,
clean, and even elegant, and a small gallery and organ, erected
in 1829, much improves the effect. On the north side of the family
pew of the Heskeths is a venerable marble slab, on which are represented
a knight and his lady, the former attired in armour, with his hands
clasped in prayer, a sword by his side, and his head resting on
a cushion; the latter in the costume of her times, her hands joined
in prayer, and her head resting on a cushion. The figures are at
full length, but they are partly obscured by the pew; the family
coat with twelve quarterings surmounts the tablet, and round its
edges this inscription:-
"Domine
Miserere Animabus Thome Hesketh Armigeri et Margerie uxoris ejus
qui quidem Thomas obj. VIII die Octobris ad mccclxiii; A Litera
Dominicali. Robertus Willielmus Margaria Thomas Johannis Hugo Willielmus
Galfridus Richardus Henricus hic."
"
Hic subtus jacent Thomas Hesketh ar. et Gracia uxor ejus, qui quidem
Thomas obijt xiiii die Augusti, AD MDXXIII et predicta Gracia xxix
die Junij AD MDX quorum Animab. propitietur deus."
The
family pedigree of the Hesketh's preserves mention of several other
monumental inscriptions in this church, which are now no longer
visible; amongst others, to the memory of Alicia Hesketh, the wife
of Robert Hesketh, who died on the 17th of September, A.D. 1480.
Another to the memory of Thomas Hesketh, Ar. who died August 14,
1523, and Grace, his wife, died 29th June, . . . . Another to Robert
Hesketh Armiger, died 1st January, 1430. And a fourth to Robert
Heskaith, knt., died 8th February, 1532, and dame Grace, his wife,
died 28th of May, 1543, and underneath the figure of a knight at
full length, his shield and sword resting on a cushion. On the north
wall is affixed a neat mural tablet surmounted by two shields of
arms, (crest, a lion rampant,) bearing this inscription:-
"Near
this place are deposited the remains of Sir Thomas Hesketh Bart
who departed this life March the 4th 1778 aged 51, deeply regretted
by his numerous friends, and sincerely mourned by his afflicted
widow who erected this marble, a small but grateful token of her
Concern for his Loss, and her affectionate regard for his memory.
"His
frailer part his sinful Flesh
To dust lies here resign'd
Thy mercy, Lord ! his soul implores,
Oh ! may it mercy find."
For
successive centuries, the patrons of this living, which was a perpetual
curacy till the year 1793, were the rectors of Croston, but on Rufford
being rendered an independent parish, in that year, it became a
rectory, and the rev. Edward Masters, one of the three sons of Dr.
Robert Masters, the rector of Croston, became patron and incumbent.
The living is still retained by the original incumbent of the rectory,
but the patronage having been purchased from him about fifteen years
ago, by the trustees of Pierce Markie, esq., the presentation, on
the next vacancy, will be in those gentlemen.
The
earliest entry in the parish register here is of the date 1670,
and the following records of mortality, taken at three different
periods, indicate the progress of the population:-
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1670
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1671
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1700
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1701
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1831
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1832
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Baptisms
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10
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13
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31
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14
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104
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82
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Marriages
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1
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0
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1
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1
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2
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5
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Burials
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19
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16
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12
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11
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50
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56
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Around
the base of the cover of the baptismal font in Rufford church are
the following words in gilt letters, raised upon a blue ground:-

There
is only one dissenting place of worship in the parish, and that
is a preaching room used by the Wesleyan Methodists since 1813.
During
the decennial period, between the population returns of 1821 and
1831, the population of Rufford has decreased one-fifth in amount,
owing probably to the entire absence of trade and manufactures,
the industry of the inhabitants being wholly confined to agriculture.
The ague formally prevailed in this parish and district to a considerable
amount, but the drainage of land, to which much attention has been
paid, by removing the predisposing cause, has almost banished that
complaint; and the ancient recorder of mortality, the parish clerk,
now living, at the age of ninety-one years, is a striking evidence
in favour of the ameliorated climate.
The
habits of the people are simple and unsophisticated, and their manners
much more bland and agreeable than in the manufacturing villages.
The superintending eye of a paternal landlord is visible here. There
is no market, but a fair is held annually on the 13th of May, (formerly
on the 12th,) for horned cattle, pedalry, &c. A stone pillar
rising from a tier of steps, formerly stood in the village, but
was removed about the year 1818.
The
charities of Rufford, as exhibited in the XVth report of the parliamentary
commissioners, are few in number and small in amount. They consist
of
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Lathoms
Charity, for which see Croston Charities.
Layfield's Charity. See Croston Charities.
Charities of Baldwin and others, amounting to £34.
10s. in several small sums, for which an interest of £1.
14s. 6d. was paid, towards the support of a schoolmaster until
the year 1818, when it was discontinued in consequence of
a school having been built by sir T. D. Hesketh in 1816, which
is supported solely at the worthy baronet's expense, for all
the poor children of the parish, on the national system, and
books are also furnished for the use of the school. A small
payment is made by the children of the farmers. The old school-house,
which stood opposite the Hesketh Arms, supported a still more
ancient one of Rufford Old Hall.
Charities of Baldwin and Berry. Two sums, of £20
each, vested in the parochial funds, for the interest of which
40s. was formerly paid by the parish officers, and distributed
amongst the poor on St. Thomas's day, but it appears that
the payment has been discontinued for a length of time, "though
the parishioners express no disinclination to resume the payment.".
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The
principle mansions in this parish consist of Rufford Old Hall, Holmes
Wood House, and Rufford New Hall. The Old Hall, situated in park-like
grounds, is of the age of Elizabeth, and was amongst the early erections
in this country which cemented brick and the wood-and-plaster materials.
Many of the rooms are paneled and ornamented with carved figures
and foliage. The house is occupied by Thomas Henry Hesketh, esq.,
son of sir Thomas. Holmes Wood House is of ancient date, but now
used as the homestead of a farmer. The New Hall, or, as it is called,
par excellence, Rufford Hall, is the seat of sir Thomas Dalrymple
Hesketh, bart., by whom it was erected in 1798. With the exception
of the east front, which has a portico of four Ionic columns, the
exterior of this mansion is devoid of ornament. The entrance hall,
or vestibule, forms a billiard room, and on the balustrades of the
light and elegant staircase is the family emblem of the eagle displayed.
The library is fitted up with classical taste, the bookcases being
divided by short scagliola columns, supporting delicately formed
alabaster vases; and a small but delicate collection of paintings
adorn the drawing-room. The park which adjoins the great Liverpool
and Preston road, is extensive and well wooded, and there are here
all the indications of ancient family dignity sustained and heightened
by modern improvements.

The
country in and around Rufford is flat, but by the aid of good cultivation
it is rendered tolerably interesting. The land to the west partakes
of the marshy character of Marton Meer, which is partly in Rufford
parish. Most of the fields are divided by ditches, and drained by
commissioners under the provisions of the Croston Drainage Act.
The soil is a good vegetable loam, producing abundant crops of excellent
potatoes. This parish is on the line of the subterranean forest,
and trees, chiefly oak and fir, are found in great numbers, both
under the Holms Wood and Tarleton mosses, and the more solid land
on the margin of the rivers. In some places these trees have the
appearance of having been burnt down, and of having fallen across
each other in indiscriminate heaps, and in others a wide sweeping
hurricane seems to have torn them up by the roots. The parish is
alike destitute of stone quarries and coal mines.
Transcript
Index | Local History
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