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The Parracombe Survey - Terry Green (Newsletter Summer
2001) See also Holworthy.
THE PARRACOMBE SURVEY: More than any of our plans, the
field-boundary survey at Parracombe has been brought to a halt by the
Foot & Mouth crisis. When things are back to normal it will go ahead.
Meanwhile, examining and recording field-boundaries is only part of a
developing Parracombe project, an important element of which will be a
survey of the vernacular buildings (an accurate measured survey can enable
us to sort out the phases of development of a building and to determine
its earliest form). At the same time we plan to conduct test-pitting in
the vicinity of the houses. This will involve digging out a number of
small (lmetre x lmetre) pits and extracting any artifacts which may provide
dating. This all requires the permission of the owners, of course, especially
when we want to dig holes in their gardens!
There are 30+ buildings to be surveyed, so assistance is required. We
plan to begin the survey this September.
We hope to get a small number of students from Exeter University to assist,
but we also want volunteers from NDAS. This project has the potential
to become very important for the archaeology of North Devon, so clearly
we want members to get involved. If you would like to join in building
survey and test-pitting this September, please ring Colin Humphreys on
(01271) 882152 or me (Terry Green) on (01271) 866662.
Terry Green, Chairman.
Parracombe Project: First Report - Terry Green (Newsletter
Summer 2002)
THE PARRACOMBE PROJECT: First Report:-
I. Building Survey and Test-Pitting:
As promised in the Summer 2001 Newsletter, the Parracombe Project got
under way in September. It began with the limited aim of surveying buildings
and testpitting at Bodley, a settlement focus to the north-west of the
village centre (Fig.l). Here there appear to be three original farms,
East, Middle and West Bodley plus Higher Bodley which is a later addition.
In the first two weeks of September, the buildings at East Bodley were
surveyed and recorded. At the same time four test-pits were opened within
the curtilage.

The house at East Bodley turned out to be complicated. The building bears
two datestones, one (1754/5) on a cross-wing extension at the east end
and the other (1638) on a porch attached to the main wing. It is
necessary to be cautious about date-stones, since it is not clear that
they actually record the date of uilding. In this case the 1754/5 stone
claims to mark the building of the house, but evidently refers only to
the cross-wing. The porch joins the main wing with a straight joint and
presumably post-dates it, but whether it was actually built in 1638 is
open to debate. The roof structure of the main wing is all 17th century,
which is consistent with the porch date, but the building is not of one
phase. One internal wall is exceptionally hick and the suspicion is that
it belongs to an earlier, possibly pre-l6th century phase.
The first test-pit (TPl ~ see fig.2 below) was dug within a walled area
to the west of the building. In the wall on the north side of the area
are signs that a building or perhaps just a wall has been removed, and
when we opened up this first lm x 2m test-pit, we found the lower courses
of a wall running east-west and corresponding to the scar visible in the
standing masonry. To the east of this was a cobbled surface, while to
the west a large quantity of rubble, pottery sherds, glass and animal
bone filled the void against the (inner) face of the wall and sat straight
on the natural. The date-range of this material was (probably) 17th to
19th century. All of it was apparently redeposited and none was earlier
than the apparent date of the house. Interestingly it included, just below
the turf, two Chinese coins! These probably owe their presence to the
Blackmores who had occupied the house until the early 20th century and
had included missionaries to China amongst their numbers.
The second test-pit (TP2) was dug in the garden to the west of the house
and produced a dozen early
modern sherds including a piece of 18th century thick, black bottle glass.

The third pit (TP3), dug in the area to the south which, on the 1840 tithe
map, is shown as a stock yard, produced exclusively 20th century material.
These pits were a disappointment after TPl. At a slightly later
date, a fourth pit (TP4) was dug in another part of the former yard and
this time produced a large quantity of pottery fragments with a date range
similar to that found in TPl. This was also redeposited material dumped
as make-up over the surface of the former stock-yard. The worn cobbles
of the yard were revealed at the bottom lying immediately above natural.
All pits were dug down to natural and all produced unstratified post-medieval
material. There was no
recognisably medieval pottery. Events took over and so far we have not
progressed to Middle and West Bodley. We have, however, surveyed two further
buildings, one at Holworthy Farm and the other at
Walner Farm. The latter is a complex of buildings lying in an out-of-the-way
location between West Middleton and Heale. The peculiarly elongated house
was surveyed over two days in October with plans of ground and first floors
and an elevation drawing of the south face of the building.
The house has smoke-blackened thatch in part of its roof and initial analysis
makes it clear that there have been numerous phases of building and suggests
that there may be a genuine longhouse at the core of it all. Test-pitting
has yet to be done here. Holworthy Farm was also surveyed in October,
but see below for further details.
II. Field Boundary Survey:
With the FMD crisis (hopefully) out of the way, the field boundary survey
was able to proceed. East Middleton Farm, taken on as a test-bed for the
recording procedures, had been held up since February and was finally
completed just before Christmas. The data have now all been fed into a
data-base, and it is hoped that in future the information will contribute
towards a digital phased landscape map. One preliminary finding is encouraging.
In the Autumn/Winter Newsletter 2001, page 20, Figure 4, a long curving
boundary was singled out as early and significant. Interrogation of the
data-base, highlights the remaining portion of this boundary to the west
of Pound Lane as of considerable bulk and unique in supporting both ancient
oak and holly. (The previous reference to it as slight and overgrown was
a mistake - mea culpal) Now that methods have been tested, the survey
should proceed to cover, ultimately, all of the parish. It's a long process
and needs more help!
III. Holworthy Farm:
During last year, Dr Ralph Fyffe from Exeter University had been in search
of suitable sites on Exmoor for taking core samples of peat for palaeoenvironmental
analysis.
Among others he found a suitable location below Chapman Barrows on the
land of Holworthy Farm.
Anyone who has read through The Field Archaeology of Exmoor (Riley and
Wilson-North, 2001), will have found on pages 71 and 72 a landscape study
of Higher Holworthy and South Common, Parracombe. Figure 3.22 is an aerial
photograph of the ploughed out remains of a hillslope enclosure, which
lies within the land of Holworthy Farm and close to the site where Ralph
Fyffe has taken his core samples. With the permission of Phil and Julie
Rawle and with the agreement of Rob Wilson-North, the plan for this year
(2002) is to commission a geophysical survey of the hillslope enclosure
and to follow this up with a focused excavation. Just to the south of
the site is a field which, we are assured, will be available for field-walking
during this year - probably in early June. The opportunity exists, therefore,
to relate together the findings from at least four different investigative
approaches. In addition, it should then be possible to place any results
in a wider landscape context, because Holworthy Farm, reaching west from
the moorland edge just below Chapman Barrows, includes on its land, the
fossilised remains of a medieval field-system, a deserted farmstead (Higher
Holworthy) and further earthworks beside the main farmhouse. Furthermore,
to the west the land buts up against the boundary of what appears to be
an early (infield) enclosure related to the medieval core settlement of
Church Town.
Holworthy Farm presents the opportunity to carry out every type of survey,
and to make a substantial
contribution to the ultimate goal of the Parracombe Project, a complete
parish survey. We hope that many
members will want to become involved (phone Colin: 01271 882152 or fill
in the volunteer form on page 19-20).
The excavation at Higher Holworthy is a highly desirable goal, but at
present we still need an experienced excavator to take it on as a commitment.
Terry Green.
Getting back to the NDAS Parracombe Project - Terry Green
(Newsletter No 11 2005)

The Holworthy excavation
came out of the NDAS Parracombe Project which we set up in 2001. The aim
was to conduct an archaeological/historical survey of this interesting
parish as a contribution to the understanding of the evolution of the
North Devon Landscape. The project was to include documentary history,
a survey of the buildings of the parish, a field-boundary survey, field-walking
where and whenever possible, test-pitting and excavation when required.
The ultimate model for the project was the Shapwick Project conducted
in Somerset by Mick Aston and Chris Gerrard. While that project was backed
by University departments, and could set far more ambitious goals than
a local society ever could, it seemed possible that with enough voluntary
assistance we might ultimately arrive at an understanding of the evolution
of Parracombe, an upland parish. Inevitably what can be accomplished is
determined by the number of people who are willing to become involved,
and we are at present only a small part of the way towards achieving the
goal which we set ourselves. The most successful part of the project –
apart from the Holworthy excavation – has been the field boundary
survey which has so far taken in East and West Middleton (though this
farm has yet to be completed) and Holworthy Farm. At Holworthy Farm we
have also done field-walking and have completed a measured survey of the
house. In fact it was when we came to Holworthy that we became distracted!
We were encouraged to take a look at the slight earthwork on the hillside
above the farm and the rest, as they say, is history!
The Holworthy Farm excavation, conducted between 2002
and 2005, has been a signal achievement, but now that we are wrapping
it up, we can get back to plan A. The first thing to do in the field is
to complete the field-boundary survey of West Middleton and move on. In
fact we have set dates to continue the survey (see Dates for your Diary)
and if you are able to volunteer your assistance, please get in touch
with June Aiken on 01598 763316.
The purpose of such a survey is to provide data with
which to begin to peel away the layers of the historic landscape. Through
previous survey work we have begun to establish that certain physical
characteristics of the existing hedge-banks can help to pinpoint some
of the oldest boundaries. Comparing these with the historic maps, we can
isolate tell-tale characteristics and recognise succeeding episodes of
enclosure. At Holworthy Farm, for example, there is a boundary on the
hillside below the Bronze Age enclosure, which is recognisably a late,
probably 18th century construction. In the 1840 tithe award the steep
ground below this boundary is called Holy Pound, but it seems very probable
that before the boundary was made this name, with its clear reference
to a pound or enclosure, was attached to the whole outfield area in which
the Bronze Age settlement is situated. This suggests that the
enclosure was visible in historic times.
Currently a number of NDAS members are offering their
voluntary assistance with the Victoria County History
project recently initiated on Exmoor. The purpose of the project is
to combine documentary and field evidence to produce parish histories
of a number of South Exmoor parishes. Parracombe is not included, but
what we are trying to do there parallels the VCH project. With this in
mind, Rob Wilson-North (ENPA archaeologist) has recently suggested the
following “Parracombe Agenda”: It is suggested that we should:-
• Consider the Bronze Age evidence in the light of Holworthy, looking
at other enclosures, Martinhoe Common, South Common, the flint scatters,
etc;
• Draw together existing information on field monuments such as
Chapman Barrows, Voley Castle, Holwell Castle, etc.;
• Examine the field-systems, their chronology and development;
• Consider the origin of the settlements, both the principal nuclei
and the farmsteads (Parracombe Churchtown with the church of St Petrock,
Bodley, Middleton, Rowley, Holworthy, Holwell, etc.);
• Develop models to trace settlement evolution;
• Within this framework, consider recent influences such as the
railway, road patterns, changes in farming, the World Wars, modern communications,
etc.
The questions raised should be considered in the light
of Dr Martin Gillard’s PhD thesis on the Exmoor landscape, Dr Judith
Cannell’s thesis on the archaeology of Exmoor woodland, the Holworthy
dig, building records, the work going on under the VCH umbrella.
This all amounts to a thorough investigation of the
landscape with opportunities for all the main techniques such as fieldwalking,
geophysical survey, earthwork survey, standing building recording, documentary
research, oral history. A number of elements here tie in with the parish
history being developed by the Parracombe Historical and Archaeological
Society.
A very important contribution to the Parracombe Project
was recently made by Mary Houldsworth and Jim Knights, when they completed
a geophysical survey of Holwell Castle.
And currently Margaret Reed is doing a documentary sweep
in the record offices, a necessary and important step towards providing
a framework of recorded history for the archaeological evidence.
From evidence gathered in these ways, we can piece together
a parish history which goes beyond the written records. Ultimately and
ideally one would like to be able to trace a continuous development from
the first arrival of Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in the area, through
the prehistoric period to the arrival of Christianity, to medieval settlement,
to the arrival and departure of the railway and beyond up to the present
day. In there somewhere there will be a place for the Holworthy Farm settlement,
and hopefully its antecedents and successors.
Documenting Parracombe -Margaret Reed
(Newsletter No 12 2006)

As part of the NDAS Parracombe Project, I was invited
to ‘do a documentary sweep in local record offices…towards
providing a framework of recorded history for Parracombe’. On re-joining
the society after an absence of some years I had thought that humble pot
washing was likely to be my main contribution, in preference to kneeling
in muddy holes. Instead I was offered the exciting task of discovering
any records that might assist in tracing the evolution of the parish of
Parracombe, and in particular of the landscape history. The important
archaeological fieldwork carried out by the Society in the last five years,
combined with the enthusiasm and dedication of the members of the Parracombe
Archaeology & History Society in researching and publishing Parracombe
and the Heddon Valley – an
Unfinished History, makes my task much easier than starting with a blank
canvas. I hope that I can provide some answers to the queries, fill in
some of the gaps and maybe add a few extra pieces of the puzzle along
the way.
May I at this point make a plea for any documents or
records relevant to Parracombe’s past that may be in private hands?
I have already been given access to some such papers, and would welcome
more if available. So, what information have I located so far in this
quest for relevant documents? Domesday is of course the most likely start,
failing a Saxon charter or two that have, so far, not materialised.
From the time of the Norman Conquest onwards life in
this upland Devon parish can be traced through official records running
like a thread through a thousand years, from a time when the parish as
such did not exist and much of it was uncultivated heath and moor. The
survey of 1086 records three manors or estates, each previously owned
by Saxons: Parracombe, Middleton and Rowley. These later grouped together
to form the parish as we know it today.
Fourteenth century tax returns based on goods or land
indicate how the population gradually increased in numbers and wealth,
thus creating the need to bring more land under cultivation. Through Norman,
Plantagenet, Tudor and Stuart reigns a number of surveys record names
and other details of the inhabitants and the development of the farms.
Sheep, which provided the bulk of the population with a living, figured
largely in the economy of the parish for centuries.
There has been a church in Parracombe for at least eight
hundred years, maybe more. The patrons of the living and the rectors they
appointed during that time exerted significant influence upon the lives
of the inhabitants, especially in the matter of tithes.
In the sixteenth century the records show how Parracombe
prepared for the possible arrival of the Spanish. Each male was named
and trained with longbow, musket or pike if fit to do so, or if unfit,
but with means, was charged with providing the equipment. In the event,
no invasion occurred. Other surveys tell us how many fire hearths there
were in 1674, how the land was used and what taxes were raised. Wills
provide us with an insight into the wealth of some of the local gentry
and which properties they owned.
In the nineteenth century we have the tithe maps and
awards and the census returns. In the twentieth century, perhaps the biggest
changes of all in lifestyles occurred. Communications have evolved over
the years, from track-ways to turnpikes, railways and new roads suited
to modern traffic. Living memory is invaluable in this respect, much of
it found in the works of Arthur Smyth, J. F. Chanter, local newspapers
and An Unfinished History. The list of sources is endless and varied;
all are important in adding to the history of Parracombe and its evolution
into the twenty-first century and there is so much still to be discovered.
I hope to be equal to the challenge.
Field Boundary Survey at West
Middleton, Parracombe - Terry Green
As part of the Parracombe Project, NDAS members have
during the last eighteen months or so - with permission of the owners
John and Norma Smyth - surveyed the field boundaries of West Middleton
Farm. As reported previously, this involves going out into the field armed
with a map, several ranging-poles, tape-measures, record sheets, clipboards
and pencils (plus a picnic lunch and preferably in fine weather) to record
the dimensions and details of the existing field boundaries. In Parracombe
these are mostly Devon hedge-banks, solid earth banks, often stone faced
and with or without a hedgerow on top. The aim of the exercise is to ascertain
whether a chronology of boundary formation can be achieved by comparing
the dimensions and morphology of these features which are the most widespread
archaeological monuments in the landscape.

Boundaries represent the definition, protection and control of land. The
process of enclosure continued over many centuries culminating in the
Parliamentary Inclosures of the 18th and 19th centuries. Boundaries of
this period are usually recognised by their straight lines and right-angles
and in this area usually represent the enclosure of hitherto open commons
or moorland (often called 'Downs' in this area). When we measure these
boundaries we find them to be modest in size, normally neatly faced with
regularly pitched stone with a hedge - if there is one - of a single species
on top. Proceeding from these late boundaries towards the settlement core,
we find more irregular boundaries of more massive proportions with mixed
hedges. These represent earlier periods of enclosure. On a map it is often
possible to work out a development sequence where, for example, boundaries
clearly radiate from a long curving boundary close to the settlement core.
When we come close to the settlement we may find
ourselves in an area of small irregular fields with massive boundaries
which seem out of proportion to the size of the enclosed area. Here we
are among the oldest enclosures with the oldest boundaries.

The above is a simplification - it's never that clear or simple - but
it makes the point that the earliest boundaries tend to be very big. The
reasons for this are probably various, but it should be clear that a big
boundary represents the digging and piling up of a large volume of soil
and stone, which represents a lot of man-hours and therefore expense,
either in money terms or in terms of time lost to the important matter
of food production. Big boundaries therefore, probably date from a time
when expense was no object or expense was not an issue, which suggests
a period when the lord of the manor could demand the service of his peasantry
without cost to himself. If, at this period, cost was not an issue, then
prestige quite probably was. The bigger the barrier behind which you could
reside, the more you impressed the neighbours, either with what you could
afford or with what you could afford to waste. This would be the situation
prior to the population decline and consequent scarcity of labour of the
mid-14th century.
At West Middleton, which in the medieval period, was the core of the manor
of Middleton, we have found a number of very massive boundaries close
to the core of the settlement. Seen on the First Edition OS map (Fig.1),
the boundaries around the farm buildings form a quadrilateral looking
very much like a manorial enclosure such as is found elsewhere in the
county and the country. A number of these inner boundaries are very massive
indeed, in the most impressive cases over 2.5 metres high (Plate 1) and
over 4.0 metres wide at the base representing up to 7 cubic metres of
soil and stone per metre of length: clearly a very serious piece of work.
We are aware that hedgebanks become eroded and are periodically maintained,
so that over time their dimensions can change. Since the effort required
to move soil (in an unmechanised age) would always be the same, and as
labour becomes more expensive and motives change over time, it seems fair
to assume that a rebuilt boundary will be less rather than more massive
than the original. Therefore when we come across a length of very massive
boundary, we assume it represents something like the original. BoundaryWM111A
(shown in Fig.2 with a heavy line and the number 7) represents this well.
This south-eastern end of boundary WM111 is the most massive boundary
we have found anywhere (group 7), but to the north-west of the kink (arrowed)
it thins down to a group 3. The thinner section is clearly a rebuild.
The boundary running along the north-western edge

of the settlement core is the most consistently massive
we have seen. It has a ditch on its northwest side and through it runs
a track leading to Mill Wood, where probably was the mill which features
in the documents which Margaret Reed has studied. Whoever was arriving
or leaving by this route would have been impressed. Massive boundaries
are not confined to the settlement core, though elsewhere they are scattered.
Fig.3 shows them with heavy lines. As can be seen they are few, but may
represent
divisions within a medieval field-system. Our field boundary analysis
is not an exact science, but it does help to characterise these important
and ubiquitous monuments and to make sense of them within a settlement
pattern.
Middleton Manor, Parracombe A
Preliminary Survey -1086 to 1838 - Margaret Read
Margaret Read has been applying her research skills
to the documentary record of Parracombe. She was asked to look particularly
at the manor of Middleton* and has demonstrated how the extent of the
manor and the pattern of ownership and occupation have developed over
nine centuries.
(* Divided probably since the 15th century into West and East Middleton.)
The Saxon manor of Middleton, owned by Edmer before 1066, became one of
the many estates across a dozen English counties awarded by William I
to Geoffrey, Bishop of Coutances following the Norman invasion.
The Domesday entry reads:
Middleton -(In the hundred of Shirwell- held of the honour of Bamstaple)
- Edmer held it before 1086. It paid tax for half a virgate of land. Land
for 4 ploughs. In lordship 1 plough; 1 furlong. 2 villagers have another
plough and 1 furlong. Meadow 6 acres; pasture 30 acres; woodland 3 acres;
15 pigs. Formerly 8 shillings, now 12 shillings. [Domesday Book: Devon,
Part One (3.52), Thorn and Thorn 1985.]
This description of the manor in the Domesday Survey of 1086 is, to say
the least, confusing. While the ancient boundaries remained into recent
times, the extent of cleared, and therefore taxable, land in the eleventh
century is uncertain as land measurement took account of soil quality.
Also the terms hide, virgate and furlong were not constant and bore little
relation to modern acres or hectares. However, it has been assessed that
Middleton was taxed on 359 acres in 1086. During the next two centuries
several changes of overlordship are recorded in Feet of Fines, including
a very interesting one dated 1248/9, in which a portion of Middleton is
described in some detail. The land, passing from Walter Baghal to John
& Joan Weston, is described in the following terms: -
'... one mill, one ferling of land and ten acres of wood in Middleton,
part of the appurtenances of two parts of one ploughland which Walter
before had by gift and grant of the said John and Joan. Thus John and
his heirs and all his men henceforth shall have common of pasture everywhere
in the said two parts of one ploughland and likewise in all other the
lands, woods, meadows and pastures of the said Walter and his heirs in
the said township tor[7] all their cattle in Middleton after the corn
and hay are carried away. Thus also John and his heirs henceforth may
take and have timber in the woods of Walter and his heirs in the said
township of Middleton to repair, make and sustain the mill by view of
the foresters of the said Walter and his heirs for ever...'
(Feet of Fines, Devon and Cornwall Record Society 1912,Vol.1, No. 461,
29.10.1248-27.10.1249)
Here is evidence that a mill had been introduced since 1086 and that the
woodland had increased in size, the three acres having now grown to at
least ten, bearing in mind that this is only a portion of the entire Middleton
estate. By 1332 the Lay Subsidy Roll recorded eight people in Middleton
liable to pay the tax, which was assessed on at least ten shillings' worth
of moveable goods in rural areas, with the tax being levied at one fifteenth.
Here is evidence that Middleton was occupied by several families of sufficient
means to be taxpayers rather than labourers. The first name on the list
is probably that of the descendant of Walter Baghal mentioned above in
1248: -
Middleton
| Baldwin Baghel |
8d |
| John Greye |
8d |
| Henry de Hele |
10d |
| Thomas de Hele |
18d |
| John Puddyng |
8d |
| Adam Bryan |
8d |
| John Horsmer |
10d |
| Thomas de Brydewyk |
12d |
Tax assessments, muster rolls and other official returns from the sixteenth
century onwards unfortunately relate to the parish as a whole rather than
separate 'townships' or manors, so it is not possible to trace he growth
of Middleton by this means until the late eighteenth century, with the
Land Tax Assessments of 1780 to 1832:
Land Tax Returns 1780: Middleton Manor (North Devon Record
Office)
| Property |
Proprietor |
Occupant |
| Voley |
Henry Beavis, Esq. |
George Pugsley |
| Heal |
Henry Beavis, Esq. |
Nicholas Ridd |
| Walner & Gratton |
John Crang |
John Crang |
| Heal &Winslade Meadow |
John Crang |
John Crang |
| West Middleton |
Henry Down, Esq. |
Richard Dovell |
| Heal |
Richard Dowell |
William Frost |
| Middleton |
John Slader, snr. |
John Slader |
| East Middleton |
Henry Beavis, Esq. |
Henry Harding |
| Grattons |
John Prowel |
Humphrey Merchant |
| Heal |
Mr. Berry |
Thomas Challacombe |
| East Middleton |
Henry Harding |
Henry Harding |
| Heal |
Richard Tucker |
Charles Blackmore |
| Invention |
Timothy Harding |
Timothy Harding |
| |
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Tithe Award 1838: (North Devon Record
Office)
Following on from the tax returns, the Tithe Award of 1838, complete with
detailed map of the whole parish, is a complete record of land use and
property ownership at that time. There were fifteen separate land-holdings
in the area formerly known as the manor of Middleton which were in the
hands of six landowners who occupied almost 1300 acres. The holdings at
this date were West Middleton, Walner, Voley, Heale (part), Heale Moor,
East Middleton (in three parts), Heale Down (in two parts), South Hill,
Invention, a cottage and garden in Middleton and a plantation and wood.
Major landowners among these were Robert Newton Incledon, various members
of the Dovell Family and Amelia Warren Griffiths.
The figures in 1838 are a far cry from those of Domesday. Seven hundred
and fifty years after the survey the rural manor of Middleton had become
a thriving community within the parish of Parracombe, with every occupier
engaged in some form of agriculture, while the landowners, as before,
were not all resident. Robert Newton Incledon was Recorder for Barnstaple
and lived in Pilton, while Amelia Warren Griffiths also had strong connections
in Pilton and owned property in several parishes in Devon and elsewhere.
This preliminary survey necessarily ends with the Tithe Award of 1838.
Middleton retains a landscape of farmland and wooded cleaves, bounded
by streams and ancient trackways, as it was a thousand years ago, and
although agriculture remains, the way of life for the farming community
has changed beyond recognition.
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