Places: Great Budworth
Place Type
Parish
County
Cheshire
Deanery
Frodsham
Causes
EDC 5/1/4 – Joan Dutton alias Sompnor contra Richard Sompnor
EDC 5/1/10 – George Cotton, esquire, contra Margery Holford
GREAT BUDWORTH
This parish contained one of the greatest number of townships of any parish in England and was one of the largest, by the nineteenth century it comprised some 35 townships and covered 26,676 acres.
Chapelries with varying degrees of independence were situated in the parish at Little Legh, Lower Peover, Nether Whitley, Stretton and Witton.
The church building was considered ‘one of the finest examples of ecclesiastical architecture remaining in Cheshire’ (Richards). Parts of the building date back to the fourteenth century, but there have been a number of subsequent alterations and extensions funded in part by bequests by parishioners. The tower, for example, is said to date from the sixteenth century.
A stone communion table and fifteenth-century font were discovered buried under the floor when the nave was lowered during extensive remodelling in the nineteenth century.
Prior to the dissolution of Norton Priory in 1536 the church belonged to the priory and canons of Norton were normally appointed to serve at Great Budworth. After the dissolution the parish was given by Henry VIII to his new foundation of Christ Church, Oxford.
The lax morals of the canon who held the vicarage prior to the dissolution were reported by Adam Beconsall to Thomas Cromwell in 1535. However, he continued to hold the parish until his death in 1551 when he was succeeded by the first cleric presented by Christ Church who was almost certainly not resident in the parish.
There was a school in the churchyard, founded in about 1600.
The production of salt was important in the parish which included the town of Northwich, and the transport of this commodity was facilitated by the construction of the Bridgewater Canal which passes through the parish.
Sources:
‘Henry VIII: April 1535, 1-10’, in Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, Volume 8, January-July 1535, ed. James Gairdner (London, 1885), British History Online https://www.british-history.ac.uk/letters-papers-hen8/vol8/pp188-202 (vol. 8 no 496)
‘Bucknall – Buildwas’, in A Topographical Dictionary of England, ed. Samuel Lewis( London, 1848), British History Online https://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-dict/england/pp424-428
George Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, (second edition, revised and enlarged by T. Helsby, London, 1882), vol. i, pp. 605-611
Raymond Richards, Old Cheshire Churches (Revised and enlarged edition, Didsbury, 1973), pp. 170-175
Dorothy Sylvester, ‘Parish and Township in Cheshire and north-east Wales’, Journal of the Chester Archaeological Society, 54 (1967), pp. 23-36