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Woodland Management in Hampshire, 900 to 1815
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2011
Abstract
The coppice and underwood trades in north Hampshire lasted almost unchanged for over one thousand years, yet the conspicuously wooded landscape of today is no more than three hundred years old. The landscape is an outcome of the enclosure of the common fields and replacement of their temporary dead-hedges by permanent living hedges, together with a radical reorganisation of the methods by which both wood and timber were grown, managed and marketed. These processes abolished the old extensive, open landscape, comprised of coppices, underwood, timber and rough grazing: the land-use system now termed wood pasture. It created the closed landscape of intensively managed woodland that prospered between 1750 and 1870. Evidence is drawn from the records of Crown, church, college and lay estates, besides contemporary comment, interpreted in the light of experience in restoring and managing an area of wood pasture.
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76. Gras, Crawley, pp. 167–77.
77. Hampstead Record Office: Herriard 44M69/E1/1/15. In 1635 Henwood covered 146 acres 3 rods 15 poles. In 2008 it covered 140·2 acres (Herriard Estate Map).
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81. Great Pipe Roll, Henry III 1241–42, (Yale, 1918), p. 272, lists purprestures (land enclosed and built on) in Pamber Forest in the early thirteenth century, adding to the large 909 CE enclosure made by Winchester Cathedral. The acreage is calculated by subtracting the 1500 acres of land cited in the 1611 survey of the Forest from the 2000 acres of the thirteenth century parish. In fact, Pamber was extra-parochial, because it had no church, no manor, and no common fields. See P. Hase, ‘The Development of the Parish in Hampshire’ (unpublished doctoral thesis, University of Nottingham, 1975), p. 321.
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87. Berkshire Record Office: D/Eby T102 Map of Pamber Forest 1720; HRO: Q23/1/2 Pamber Enclosure Award in Book of enrolments at Sessions Easter 1814-Midsummer 1830.
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89. See note 5 above.
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91. Berkshire Record Office: D/Eby E53, Case – with Mr Wilbraham's Opinion 1763; E58, Account of Coppices at Pamber 1758–1815.
92. Hampshire Record Office: Sydmonton 19M61/1482; Hampshire Record Office: Herriard 44M69/E11/101.
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101. Close Rolls, 36 Henry III 1252 (London, 1927), p. 56.
102. Joseph Cullom's Wood Book, 23rd March, 1863. Unpublished. Privately held by the author.
103. Hampshire Record Office: Herriard 44M69E14/56.
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105. Camden, Brittania, description of Hampshire, 1610 translation, p. 272, www.geog.port.ac.uk; National Archives, E178/2049: Pamber Forest Survey.
106. Hampshire Record Office: Sydmonton 19M61/338; six and a half tons brought overland from Reading to Sydmonton House in 1692.
107. National Archives, E178/2049, Pamber Forest Survey; HRO: Herriard
4M69/E11/97; Hampshire Record Office: Herriard 44M69/E4/20; Messrs Bulbeck and Godwin accounts 28M64.
108. Hampshire Record Office: Herriard 44M69/G/3/426.
109. Berkshire Record Office: D/Eby E53, Case – with Mr Wilbraham's Opinion 1763; D/Eby E58, Account of Coppices at Pamber 1758–1815.
110. Herriard Estate Wood Book 1776–1903. This is held by the Estate office. Seen by kind permission of the owner, Mr J. T. L. Jervoise.
111. HRO: The Vyne 31M57/602 and -/604.
112. J. D. Young, An Economic History of Woodlands in Southern England, p. 45.
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