Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 October 2020
The Marquis of Anglesey on his Dorset estate was an absentee landlord who maintained close relationships with his estate through extensive correspondence with his land agent William Castleman. The surviving letters are a very rich source by which to examine the minutiae of rural life and a way to reconstruct social and working relationships within the nineteenth-century English landed estate. By focusing on a range of customary and unwritten rights, this article will consider issues such as how tenants navigated renegotiation of their leases, sought rent abatements or compensation for damage to their crops from hunting. Working and social relationships on such an estate were closely interlinked, as is widely shown here. The article also raises more contentious estate issues such as who had the rights to fallen and standing timber, the customs affecting courts, the repair of churches, and the responsibilities for building and maintaining schools. Throughout, the issue of ‘social control’ is assessed. Together the range of documented work and social interactions provide a fuller picture of the functioning of a southern English great estate in the early nineteenth century, and allow us to examine this rural community beyond the remit of its agricultural history.
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3 Jeffry Wyatville was a successful architect, whose work involved improvements, remodelling and extending existing properties, including some of the great houses such as Longleat (Wiltshire), Wollaton Hall (Nottinghamshire), Chatsworth (Derbyshire), Woburn Abbey (Bedfordshire), and Windsor Castle. No one has yet been able to fathom how Castleman was able to persuade an architecture of this stature to work for him on this more modest property.
4 Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 5th March 1804.
5 Ibid., 13th August 1804.
6 Jones, The Stalbridge Inheritance, p. 56.
7 Dorset History Centre (hereafter DHC), background to the Anglesey estate.
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32 DHC D/ANG/B5/37, 8th May 1826.
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49 DHC D/ANG/B5/60, 28th December 1943.
50 DHC D/ANG/B5/61, 8th January 1844.
51 DHC D/ANG/B5/61, 11th January 1844.
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73 Quoted in Beardmore, ‘Landowner, tenant and agent’, 184.
74 DHC D/ANG/B5/25, 21st October 1819.
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80 DHC D/ANG/B5/39, 16th February 1827.
81 DHC D/ANG/B5/39, 14th February 1827.
82 DHC D/ANG/B5/51, 1st January 1837.
83 DHC D/ANG/B5/37, 3rd February 1826.
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89 DHC D/ANG/B5/15, 13th August 1814.
90 DHC D/ANG/B5/15, 1st July 1814.
91 DHC D/ANG/B5/37, 3rd November 1826.
92 DHC D/ANG/B5/37, 10th November 1826.
93 DHC D/ANG/B5/48, 27th April 1835.
94 DHC D/ANG/B5/61, 12th September 1844.
95 DHC D/ANG/B5/37, 3rd February 1826.
96 DHC D/ANG/B5/46, 22nd January 1834.
97 DHC D/ANG/B5/46, 4th February 1834.
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