1086 to 1379


A HISTORY OF FEATHERSTONE

   INTRODUCTION

  At the time of writing (2016) it is just thirty years since the first issue of The Featherstone Chronicle hit the streets (actually Featherstone Library). Also I met an old acquaintance in Lidl car park and he told me someone was badgering him to sell him the first ten editions of The Featherstone Chronicle. It set me thinking. It has long been out of print so should I do a re-write? I cannot do what I did last time, produce booklets, so I have decided to put it on the internet.

THE CURRENCY
  As time goes by fewer people will remember pounds, shillings and pence. There are internet sites that deal with these. The internet will also provide the means of converting the amounts of money in these pages to present day values. There is no point in me doing it here because if someone reads this in ten years time the value would be out of date.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
  Thanks are due to John Goodchild and the staff of the Archives and Local History Section at Wakefield District Library for providing help and encouragement, for assistance from Pontefract Reference Library, the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, the West Yorkshire Archives, the fellow members of the 1980's Featherstone Local History Group, all those who bought the originals which persuaded me to carry on and anyone else whose name I have forgotten in the last 30 years.
  From 1863 to 1884 nearly all the information is from the Pontefract Advertiser. From 1885 onwards it is from the Pontefract and Castleford Express. The British Newspaper Archive was also a useful source. If from elsewhere it will be acknowledged.
Irvin Saxton  March 2016.

  1086 to 1379
 
  1086  THE DOMESDAY BOOK
  The first documentary evidence of the existence of Ackton, Featherstone and Purston is the Domesday Book. From this we know the whole area belonged to Ligulf in the time of King Edward in 1066. When Edward died and William the Conqueror beat King Harold in battle, Ligulf had his lands taken from him and they were given to Ilbert de Lacy, one of William's supporters. He in turn gave others the right to oversee large parcels of his estate called manors. Ackton, Featherstone and Purston became separate manors.
  In 1086 King William sent commissioners into every shire to inquire who held the land in King Edward's day, what it was worth then, who held it at the time of the survey and its worth at that time.
  The book was written in a form of Latin shorthand. A translation was published by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society in 1898.  It is:

            "In Aitone Ligulf had three carucates of land for geld, where two ploughs may be. Now William has it of Ilbert. He has half a plough there, and two villeins and six bordars with one plough and a half. Wood, pasturable, half a league in length and four quaranteens in breadth. In the time of King Edward it was worth ten shillings and is now the same."

            " "In Ferestane and Prestone and Harduwic (Hardwick) and Osele (Nostell) Ligulf had sixteen carucates for geld, and six ploughs may be there. Now Ralph and Ernulf have them of Ilbert. In the demesne three ploughs, and twenty villeins and fifteen bordars with seven ploughs. Two churches are there and two priests. Wood, pasturable, one league in length and one in breadth. In the time of King Edward they were worth one hundred shillings and are now worth sixty shillings."

  If it is assumed there would be about four in each family, then the approximate populations in 1086 would be between 35 and 40 in each village. One of the churches was in Featherstone and the other in Nostell, so if there was a priest to begin the name of Purston it would seem his church no longer existed by this time.
  The translation is not easy to understand because of words no longer in use. Carucate and plough are roughly the same and mean the area of land that could be ploughed in a season by one oxen team. Geld was the tax paid to the king. The demesne was the manor house together with the lands adjacent to it which were not let out to the peasants. A villein was a serf who was allowed to work some land owned by the lord of the manor in return for so many days work on the lord's land. A bordar was even lower down the social scale than a villein and he had to do the more menial tasks required by the lord. A league was about three miles and a quaranteen about a furlong (220 yards).
  Most people only had a Christian name, but surnames gradually came into use - many people taking the name of the place where they lived. The three local lords became known as William Pictavus, Ralph de Featherstone and Ernulf de Preston.
  Note: The Featherstone in this survey was the area around the church in what is now North Featherstone. There would probably be no inhabitants between that and Purston. The Featherstone we know was nearly 800 years in the future. Shown below are the original entries for the local area. Thank goodness for the translator.

THE PLACE NAMES
  That the Romans marched along the eastern flank of Featherstone and Purston is not in doubt because the line of their great road Ermine Street is well documented. It ran in almost a straight line from Doncaster passing Castlesyke Hill on the east side and Marlpit Hill on the west side. It turned north a little to avoid the hill on which North Featherstone now stands and then headed for the Aire crossing at Castleford.
  It is unlikely there were many locals about to see the Romans pass because the area was still mostly forested. The land would have been gradually cleared for agriculture. The derivation of the place names which, according to A H Smith's book The Place Names of the West Riding of Yorkshire, were most likely established in the Old English period about 600AD are:
   Purston - Preost tun  "Priest's farmstead"
   Ackton - Ac ton  "Oak tree farmstead"
   Featherstone - Feoderstan  "Four stones"
  It is easy to agree with the derivation for Purston, especially when it is remembered it was called Preston for hundreds of years. Ackton has had many spellings in its history. For probably ever since it was established the locals have pronounced it Aketon, and this is preserved in Aketon Road in Cutsyke. 
  In his book Walks Around Wakefield published in 1871 W S Banks writes of "Ackton or Aikton", and Lorenzo Padgett in his Castleford and District in the Olden Times published in 1904 consistently spells it Aketon.  It should be remembered the A in Ac ton was long in this Old English name and as far as the oak tree is concerned is still preserved in how to say acorn. 
  The version for Featherstone is the most difficult. If Smith is correct there was a cromlech (a trio of standing stones surmounted by a fourth) on the hill at North Featherstone, but the reason for such a cromlech is unknown and if it existed there is no trace of it today.
  Note: In the Domesday Book the compiler added an "e" to all three local names. It shouldn't be there because by looking at other place names it can be seen he added the "e" to most names ending in a vowel and a consonant.
  The remaining problem is when and why Jackling was added to Preston. Over the years this changed to Purston Jaglin.  Was it a priest's or monk's name? Was it the name of the most prominent family? Unless some evidence turns up from the time we may never know.       

THE FEUDAL SYSTEM
  What was life like in those far off days? King William began from the principle that because he won at Hastings he owned all the land in the kingdom. He granted estates to other men (called tenants-in-chief) to hold in return for well defined services. One of these was to provide an agreed number of knights for the king's armies. The tenant-in-chief guaranteed this by settling the knights on the land in return for their military service. The land on which a knight settled became known as a "knight's fee". The greater feudal estates were called "honours", thus the knights of Ackton, Featherstone and Purston belonged to the Honour of Pontefract. The knight lived in his manor house surrounded by the lands he had kept for himself, the remainder of which he allowed his peasants to use.
  The houses of the peasants lay on either side of a village street. They were built of wood from the large amount of forest that still existed, or uprights and beams supporting rubble and clay or wattle and daub. The floor was usually bare earth and the roof was thatched. They did their farming in large open fields divided into strips a few feet wide and about a furlong in length. The strips were shared out by the peasants, and generally each peasant had strips in various parts of the field to give each a share of the best if it was that sort of field. When this system died out most fields were ploughed over and the strips disappeared. Some were left as grazing land and can still be seen today. There is one piece of this land at the Pontefract side of Farmer Copley's farmstead. The strips are best seen when the sun is low or when snow is melting because it melts at different rates in the humps and hollows.
  There were two or three fields and one was left fallow each year. There was meadow for the hay harvest which provided winter feed for the animals, and rough grazing and woodland where the animals could feed in the summer.
  The peasants, both villeins and bordars, had no legal right to leave their holdings; they were bound to the soil. They had to grind their corn at the lord's mill, and they could not give their children in marriage without his consent. They had to work on his lands for an agreed number of days, and they had to give a tenth part (a tithe) of what they got from their own land to the church. The peasants would have to attend church on Sundays but would be unable to follow the Latin words. Confession was compulsory, either to the parish priest or a travelling friar.
  The church was used for other things apart from religion. A fugitive from justice could take refuge in a church or churchyard. After 40 days he could confess and be banished from the country without facing trial. As an alternative he could elect for trial by ordeal. If fire was chosen he had to carry heated iron for nine feet during mass. His hand was then bandaged and if there were no scars after three days he was declared innocent. For trial by water the accused was bound and lowered into cold water. If he sank he was innocent but if he floated he was guilty because the water had rejected him. 
  One means of keeping law and order was the tithing in which men had to be enrolled in a group of ten. If a member of a tithing became involved in wrong-doing his fellow members were obliged to produce him for trial or else pay a fine for dereliction of duty and pay compensation to the injured party.
  In the 12th century there was a gradual change to a money system instead of bartering or giving personal service. The peasants were allowed to pay rent instead of working on the lord of the manor's lands, and further up the social scale the lord of the manor was allowed to pay a knight's fee instead of being available for military service.  
  The personal grainy photo below shows Farmer Copley's ancient field divided into strips.
 

     THE  CHANTRY
  If there was a chapel in Purston in 1086 the compiler of the Domesday Book forgot to mention it, but the odds are it wasn't there any more. However, about this time the people of Purston would have found it a long trail to All Saints' Church at (North) Featherstone, especially when the weather was bad. Many other townships were in the same situation so it was agreed chantries (chapels) could be built for the ease of the inhabitants of outlying hamlets. The chapel of St John the Baptist in Purston was founded by Robert de Preston (who was probably the son of Ernulf de Preston) in the 12th century.
  Robert's son, William de Preston, made an agreement with the canons of Nostell whereby they granted him a chantry in the chapel at Purston. In return he granted to the chapel and chaplain two bovates and 15 acres of his demesne land. To the canons he granted half a bovate in Hardwick, six acres near the house of Thurbert de Hardwick, and pasturage in Purston for the canons' sheep. The chaplain was to be appointed by the prior on the advice of William.
  The men of Purston were to attend at Featherstone Church on certain feast days including All Saints' Day. William also confirmed the gifts of land made by his father to Nostell, and he agreed to grant a further bovate for the maintenance of a deacon to serve in the chapel of Purston for the soul of Henry his son.
  It was usual for the priors or monks to take in important people who were dying through illness or injury. William de Preston's son, Henry, had been received as a full canon by the canons at Nostell. The canons also agreed to take William if he wished to take the habit, and bury his body at the priory; and also his second wife Aldid. (His first wife's name was Basilia).

THE CHURCH
  The monks of La Charite sur Loire, based at Pontefract, had been granted control of Featherstone Church, but the founding of Nostell Priory some time after 1100 caused a readjustment of the overseeing of the local churches. The monks at Pontefract released to the canons the church of St Oswald, a cemetery and a dwelling. In return the canons agreed that Featherstone Church would in future receive the ecclesiastical customs from West Hardwick. The notification of this agreement was issued by Thomas II Archbishop of York, and it included the names of Robert de Lacy, Amfrey (Amfrid?) (possibly a descendant of Featherstone's first knight Ralph de Featherstone, Bernewin (probably the priest), and Ralph the clerk (in holy orders?).
  Robert de Lacy earned the displeasure of King Henry I and he was banished. The king gave all the local lands to Hugh de Laval. About 1120 Hugh and Archbishop Thurston of York arranged another exchange between the monks of Pontefract and the canons of Nostell. The canons agreed to give up half a share of a church in Pontefract, and in return the monks agreed to transfer Featherstone Church to the canons. Thus Featherstone All Saints came under the control of Nostell Priory.
  
FEATHERSTONE IN THE 13th CENTURY.
    It is estimated between 1086 and 1300 the number of people in the country doubled. There was a considerable strain on the farm lands to provide enough food for everybody. Consequently the price of wheat trebled during the same period. Some tenants-in-chief saw the chance to increase their wealth by exploiting more of their estates themselves and re-imposing labour services, which they had earlier allowed their villains to commute to  a rent payment.
  The villeins really didn't have much choice. As their families multiplied the number of strips in the fields that each had grew less. This gave the lord's bailiff the chance to drive harder bargains with the villeins for fieldwork on the lord's lands as the condition for releasing other lands for the villeins.
  That some of the local peasants were suffering hard times is shown by a grant by William, son of Isolda de Preston and grandson of William de Preston, of one bovate of land to the canons of Nostell towards the repair of the shoes of the poor.
  Isolda de Preston, daughter of William de Preston, gave to the chapel of St John the Baptist of Preston "all my tillage lands upon Longlands near the way of Went which land butts onto Syrecroft".  She gave five shillings a year rent due from Thomas de Knarsborough to the church of St Oswald in Nostell plus one bovate of land in Preston "with all the appurtenances viz that which Godfey Cooper formally held of me and after him Thomas Knarsborough".
  King John was becoming at odds with the barons. He was demanding knight's fees almost annually instead of only when the manor changed hands. He personally fixed the fee, sometimes as much as three times what his father had charged. In those days when a tenant-in-chief died and his heir was too young to inherit the king would sometimes sell or grant the guardianship of the child to a third party until he came of age, sometimes at a price which could not be recovered from the estate by fair means.  He would also force widows to marry against their will.
  At the levying of a particular heavy knight's fee in 1214 the barons revolted and forced King John to sign the Magna Carta. This limited the knight's fee to 100 shillings, no more than a reasonable profit without waste of stock or chattels could be taken from land under wardship, such estates would be returned to their heir in good condition, and widows were not to be compelled to marry. The tenants-in-chief were to treat their tenants in the same manner.
  There was also the provision for assizes to be held four times a year to sort out arguments over the possession of land. The usual method of determining ownership was for sufficient witnesses to be assembled to satisfy the court the claims made were true.
  After the death of Ralph de Featherstone about 1244 one such case was to determine how much land he held and who was heir to it. The witnesses were William de Bretton, John de Sothulle, John de Saville, Stephen de Southkerby, Eudo de Sutton, John de Smitheton, Adam de Preston, Alan son of Josiana, William de Assartis and Robert le Daungerous.
  They said on oath Ralph de Featherstone had in demesne in Featherstone 30 acres of land valued at ten shillings per year, one messuage 2s, five acres of meadow 2s 6d, and pasture 14s. He also had in villeinage nearly three bovates of land at a total of 11s, rent from free men 49s 3d plus one pound of pepper and two pounds of cumin (probably in lieu of rent from a spicer).
  It was decided his daughter Olive age 16 was his heir, because his son Richard was born to his wife Emma in the ten year period when they were living together, whereas Olive was born after they were married.
   It was about this time the digging of coal began locally. At the Yorkshire Eyre of 1278 (a court of itinerant justices) the wapentake jury complained Robert de Wetherly was digging coal in the King's highway at Ackton to the detriment of the road. The sheriff was ordered to repair the road at the offender's expense.
  A change in the law and order system occurred with the 1285 Statute of Winchester which established the "hue and cry". This allowed any person wishing to make an arrest to call upon the rest of the manor or parish to join him in pursuit. Fellow parishioners were obliged to assist and shout out to attract other people's attention. Anyone starting a hue and cry without good cause was punished.
  Social and economic changes began to enfeeble the feudal system. With an increasing sale of land, and marriages and inheritances between families, the original simple formula of one man as the tenant of one knight's fee disappeared, and some knight's fees were split into fractions.
  One example was Ackton, where Raynor de Ackton (son of Peter de Toulston) held just half the knight's fee. Consequently when he died his successor had to pay 50 shillings to the receiver of the Honour of Pontefract.

COAL MINING BEGINS
  There can be no doubt coal digging increased in the next fifty years. Eventually a serious dispute arose between Richard Fitz Robert of Featherstone on the one hand and the Abbot of Kirkstall and the priors of St Oswald at Nostell, backed by the tenants of Purston, Hardwick, Ackton and Featherstone on the other, who claimed common of pasture.
  The miners were evidently digging up the coal on Featherstone Common which was the land between Sewerbridge Beck and Green Lane. An agreement was reached in 1322 in which Richard was allowed to dig coal in specified places from Pyllehyll corner to the ditch between Fowehill and the moor. These names have been lost over time. Possibly the corner was the junction between Green Lane and Commonside Lane, and Fowehill was somewhere in Ackton. An alternative is the corner of Green Lane and Featherstone Lane and the hill is that at North Featherstone crossroads.
  In return for this concession Richard was to be debarred from any further exploitation of the moor except on payment of a reasonable charge. Also if any of his neighbours' cattle strayed into the parts he was digging through lack of proper fences, he was to drive them back and not impound them. 
  The Ordnance Survey map below shows the extent of Featherstone Common, and the enlargement shows "Old Coal Pit" between the N and E at the top of the map.
 
                                    

 1337 KING EDWARD'S INVITATION

  In the early 1300's there was a shortage of weavers to turn wool into cloth. In order to tempt people to emigrate across the English Channel King Edward III issued the following statute in 1337:
   "That all cloth workers of strange lands, of whatever country they may be, which will come into England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland within the King's power, shall come safely and surely and shall be in the King's protection and safe conduct to dwell in the same lands (choosing where they will) and to the intent the said cloth workers shall have the greater will to come and dwell here our Sovereign Lord the King will grant them franchises as many and as such shall suffice them."
  What has this to do with our district? This may be why there are two entries for "John of Flanders" in the Poll Tax for Ackton taken 42 years later.

1379 THE POLL TAX

  One method the kings of old used for raising money was to declare a poll tax for which most people had to pay a sum of money based on their income. Richard II had one in 1379 and the result has survived. The clergy, paupers and children under 16 were exempt, and a husband and wife counted as one. The minimum was one groat, four pence, and the local payers were:
 
ACKTON
John Clerkson
Richard Clerkson and Helen
Thomas son of John Beatrix
John de Kirkham and Alice
William Clerkson and Joan
John Hornon and Margaret
Robert de Balne and Christine
Adam Doughty and Idonia
John de Flanders and Joan
Margaret their servant
John de Flanders
Thomas Ely and Joan
John Plumto their servant
Twenty-one persons named, thirteen paid 4d, total 4s 4d
                                  
FEATHERSTONE
 Henry de Featherstone (draper) and Agnes  12d
John their son  4d
Robert Hipperon  4d
Richard his servant  4d
Elizabeth Wilcox  4d
Henry her servant  4d
Thomas Brown (tailor)  6d
William Rogerson and Agnes  4d
Cecilia their daughter 4d
Thomas Halden and Joan  4d
Alice de Featherstone  4d
Richard Hipperon  4d
Alice de Holme  4d
Alice her servant  4d
Alice del Mere  4d
John de Featherstone (merchant) and Alice  12d
Thomas Baghill (cobbler)  6d
Margaret Baghill  4d
John her servant  4d
Robert de Stanley  4d
William Elyne  4d
Henry Fox  4d
John Colet  4d
Roger Smith  4d
Margaret de Holdene  4d
Henry Bucktrout  4d
Thirty persons named, 26 paid 10s 4d.

PURSTON
William de Quarmby (sergeant) and Agnes  6s 8d 
Richard Williamson (blacksmith) and Alice  6d
Isabella their daughter  4d
Henry de Preston (merchant of beasts) and Alice  12d
John their son  4d
Margaret their daughter  4d
Thomas their servant  4d
Joan their servant  4d
Richard de Went and Isabella  4d
John de Went and Isabella  4d
Thomas Barker and Joan  4d
John Cooper  4d
Richard Thresher and Helen  4d
William Lychurch and Diana  4d
Cecilia their daughter  4d
                                                      Richard Riley  4d
                                                        John Tide  4d
                                           William del Hall and Emma  4d
                                                     Cecilia Deling  4d
                                                 Emma her daughter  4d
Thomas Spicer and Emma  4d
John Walker and Margaret  4d
Isabella their daughter  4d
John Heydson  4d
John Townend (tailor) and Agnes  6d
Elizabeth Pinder  4d
William Adamson and Joan  4d
John their son  4d
Agnes their daughter  4d
William Ralfson and Isabella  4d
Thomas their son  4d
Alice their daughter  4d
Henry de Cotes  4d
Adam Hale and Agnes  4d
Joan their daughter  4d
John Aldull  4d
Richard de Preston (blacksmith) and Alice  6d
John their servant  4d
Thomas their servant  4d
Robert Wright (blacksmith)  6d
Alice his daughter  4d
Richard his servant  4d
Joan Sharpe  4d
Isabella del Sandal  4d
Richard Hardwick  4d
Matilda Tolus  4d
Joan Wainman  4d
William Hancock  4d
Alice his daughter  4d
William his son  4d
Alice his daughter  4d
William his son  4d
Hugh de Went  4d
Robert de Santinglay (tailor)  6d
Thomas de Santinglay  4d
John Barn and Isabella  4d
Henry Lawson (weaver) and Agnes  6d
Joan their daughter  4d
Emma Milner  4d
Margaret her daughter  4d
Robert Brewster (spicer) and Isabella  12d
Eighty persons named, sixty paid tax, total 28s 10d.

   There are some odd things in this poll tax return. There were nine married couples in Ackton but apparently no child over sixteen. There were only two married couples in Featherstone which seems strange. Both places had grown little if at all since 1086.
 The population of Purston had at least doubled in that period. William de Quarmby is described as a sergeant ie giving service to a king or baron. He was taxed at 20 times the amount for a simple peasant. His odd sum is half a mark. A mark was two-thirds of a pound, but there was never a coin. It was only used in accountancy.
 The tax return was in Latin and was published by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society in 1881.      
                  

1400s to 1641

   A HISTORY OF FEATHERSTONE

 1400s to1641
 
EDWARD PERCY AND THE MANOR OF FEATHERSTONE
  The manor of Featherstone was run by the "Featherstones" until the early 1400's when Walter Frost married Isobel Fetherston, the sister of Simon de Fetherston and heiress of the estates. When Simon died the Featherstone estates passed via Isobel into the Frost family. One hundred years later the estates comprised of 530 acres in Featherstone and 340 in Ackton, together with the properties built on the land.
  A descendant of Walter Frost, also called Walter, married Anna Ranson, and their only child was a daughter called Margaret. She married Josceline Percy, the youngest son of Henry the fourth Earl of Northumberland. Walter Frost died in 1528 and left most of his property to Margaret. 
  The Percys had one son called Edward born in 1524. Margaret Percy died in 1530 and her husband died two years later leaving Edward too young to take over the manor. King Henry VIII made Edward a ward of Thomas Waterton of Walton Hall, for which Thomas received an annuity of £10 from the manor of Featherstone and four properties in Ackton.
  This was much to the disgust of Sir William Percy, elder brother of Josceline. He claimed his brother had been murdered by three of his servants who then went to Thomas Waterton with his brother's goods. He also said Thomas Waterton had been quick to marry his daughter Elizabeth to Edward Percy (this must have been when he was of marriageable age). "A sorry bargain, his blood considered", was Sir William's opinion on that.
  Edward Percy died in 1590 but his burial is not recorded in the Featherstone parish register, which suggests he did not live on the manor.

THE PARISH REGISTER
  Parish registers began in 1538 when Thomas Cromwell, Vicar General to King Henry VIII, issued an injunction that the clergy of the Church of England should keep records of baptisms, marriages and deaths. This was probably done in a book with paper pages, or maybe even on loose sheets and it was eventually realised such records would not last long. So in 1597 in the reign of Queen Elizabeth it was decreed each church should provide a parchment register and copy the previous entries into it.
  It is unfortunate the Act requiring this new book said of the copying of previous entries "but especially since the first year of Her Majesty's reign". The result of this was the Featherstone clerk, along with many of his colleagues in other parishes, only copied the entries from 9 November 1558, the first day of Elizabeth's reign. The earlier 20 years are lost for ever.
  For hundreds of years the parish of Featherstone included Featherstone, Purston, Ackton, Whitwood, Whitwood Mere and Pontefract Park (the area between what is now North Featherstone and the water tower hill in the present park), so entries for all these places are found in the register.
  It was common practice for the clerk to list the names and events on pieces of paper and write up the register when it suited him. This caused problems such as missing dates and names. There was no agreed form of spelling. The clerk put what he thought at the time and he often changed his mind. On many occasions the same surname is spelt two different ways on the same line. They all had their own idioms and it is possible to tell when a different clerk commenced writing in the register. This is especially true for the local village names and there are many different spellings. Even so it is possible to see the gradual change from Preston via Pruston to Purston.
  The register is available from the Wakefield and District Family History Society, but they have done it in name order for the benefit of people looking up ancestors, rather that a direct copy which is more interesting for local history.

1546  THE END OF PURSTON CHANTRY

  In 1545 King Henry VIII passed an Act to dispose of all chantries on the grounds many donors of land were attempting to get their lands back, and some priests were conveying away the lands or making long leases for their own benefit. The proceeds of the disposal were intended to help pay for the wars against the French and the Scots. Commissioners were appointed to survey all the chantries and those in Yorkshire were done in 1546. Henry died before the chantries were sold, and Edward VI decided the money raised should go to funding educational institutions. The chantry priest was given a pension, and where the yearly value of the chantry was less than £6 a pension to that value was given. The survey for the Purston chantry was as follows.

THE CHANTRY OF SAINT JOHN BAPTIST IN PRESTON JACKLIN
Chapel in the Parish of Featherstone
  Thomas Huntingdon, incumbent. Being of the foundation of Robert of Preston, to pray for the soul of the founder and all Christian souls, and to do service four principle days of the year at the parish church of Featherstone.
  The same is within the parish of Featherstone and distant from the same one mile. The necessity of the same is to pray for the souls departed and to do divine service in the said chapel for the ease of the inhabitants being aged and impotent. The same is used and observed accordingly. There are no lands alienated or sold since the 4th day of February in the 27th year of the reign of King Henry VIII.
Goods 11s 6d. Plate, none.
  First, one capital messuage and six acres of arable land, lying in Preston, in the tenure of John Saunders, of the yearly rent of 22s; three pastures and two acres of land and a road in the tenure of James Woodruffe, 8s 6d; four acres of land in the tenure of Fellingworth's wife, 4s; 12 acres of land in the holdings of Nicholas Shelet, the younger, 12s; one close in the tenure of the said Nicholas, 13s 4d; one close with one acre of land in the holdings of John Hamerton Esq, 14s 4d; one close in the holdings of John Chapell, 9s; one close in the holdings of William Wilson, 4s; one cottage in the holdings of John Walton, 4s; two acres of land in the tenure of John Greenwood, 2s 6d; three acres of land in the tenure of James Huntington, 3s; three acres of land in the tenure of William Simpson, 3s.
  Sum of the said chantry, £4 19s 8d. Whereof payable to the King's Majesty yearly, 8s; and to the bishop, 12d. In all 9 shillings. And so remains, £4 10s 8d.
  The above information is taken from Early Yorkshire Charters by W Farrar, published in 1916, and the publications of the Surtees Society volume 92, published in 1893.
  So after 400 years Purston lost its chapel, and Thomas Huntingdon lost his place as the incumbent and received as compensation a yearly pension of  £4 10s 8d (made up to £6). There is no trace of the chapel now and a clue to its position is on an 1849 Ordnance Survey map where what is now called Coach Road was once called Chapel Lane. (Could this have been the road in the tenure of James Woodruffe?) 



  Also, there is this sketch copied from an old map in 1942 by Alec Alexander which shows a field in Chapel Lane called Chapel Close. 

1546 NOT WORTH A MENTION
  It is obvious from the 1379 Poll Tax that Purston was much bigger than the other two villages yet it is not shown on Christopher Saxton's map of 1577. Thirty-one years earlier John Leland was commissioned by Henry VIII to check on the libraries at monasteries and colleges. He noted what he saw on his travels and on his journey from Wakefield to Pontefract he must have gone through Streethouse because he mentions the head of the River Went. Yet not a word did he write about Ackton, Purston or Featherstone.

1626  THE DAY KING CHARLES WORKED A FIDDLE

  Hundreds of years ago the Kings of England always seemed to be hard up and they were always looking for ways of raising money. In 1626 King Charles I hit upon a new idea.
  There was an old law that gave the king the power to invite all those with a yearly income of £40 or more to be knighted at the coronation of the king, the marriage of his daughter, the dubbing of the prince a knight, or some other great occasion. Anyone who did not turn up to receive that honour could be made to pay a fine.
  Charles decided to use this old law to make some money. So he had a list made of all those it was intended to knight as part of the coronation ceremonies. Of course it would not have served his purpose if those listed turned up, so the proclamation was published in Yorkshire on January 30 1626, and it called on all persons to appear in London before January 31.
  This was clearly impossible, but the local gentry did not worry too much because no fine had been levied for a non-appearance for many years. No doubt they got a shock when King Charles asked for his money. A great many who failed to turn up were fined, the fines for Yorkshire alone being £16,638. The locals who had to pay up were John Horncastle (Featherstone) £10, Thomas Beckwith (Ackton) £15 and John Lee (Ackton) £10.
  From the Record Series of the Yorkshire Archaeological Society.

1638  HIGHWAY MAINTENANCE
  In the 16th century the highways were in a shocking state. The responsibility lay with each parish, but providing the locals could get where they wanted to be they wouldn't be bothered about the through traffic. A horse could go round the potholes, or pull its feet out of the mud, but when wagons, carts and coaches became more commonplace a road which would just do for a pack horse was no good for a wheeled vehicle. So the Government passed an Act of Parliament in 1555 which required every parish to elect two surveyors to be responsible for the roads.
  The surveyors had to nominate four days in the summer (later increased to six) and every man who employed workers had to send two of them with tools to work on the roads eight hours on each appointed day. A man who did not employ someone had to do the work himself. Fines were imposed on those who failed to take part.
  The system didn't work because no employer would send his best workers, and those who had to go themselves would not be likely to give of their best. Eventually the hand of the law fell on the defaulters.
  At the West Riding Quarter Sessions of January 1638 a penalty of £100 was laid upon the inhabitants of Featherstone, Snydale, Purston, Heath and Stanley that they repair the King's highway between Wakefield and Pontefract before the next sessions after the close of Easter.
  Two years later Messrs Byrnes, Thorp, and Heather were at the Quarter Sessions saying the King's highway in a place called Penny Lane within the township of Purston and parish of Featherstone was now in great decay for lack of repair, and the inhabitants of the parish of Featherstone ought to repair the same.
  Penny Lane was probably what is now Pontefract Road. There is an old map in Pontefract Library which names the road from where the war memorial used to be towards Purston as Penny Lane so it is a reasonable assumption it went right through to Purston.
  Human nature being what it is, it is likely the roads were in a mess until the passing of the Turnpike Act which allowed the erection of toll bars, and that meant those who used the roads had to pay for the upkeep of them. 

1641  YOU WILL GO TO CHURCH
  Attending church on Sunday used to be compulsory and persons failing to turn up were likely to find themselves in court. This happened to quite a few Featherstone folk in 1641 when the following were charged at the West Riding Quarter Sessions.
  "Matthew Hamerton, Philip Hamerton gent, Dorothy his wife, Elizabeth Hippon a widow, Margaret Hipperon, Mary Hipperon, John Thorpe and his wife Jane, Elena Beckwith, Elizabeth Bilcliffe, George Pepper, Agnes Barley, Ann Fawcett and Dennis Freeman who on April 1 1641 who all over 16 did nor repair to their parish church, nor any other church, chapel or usual place of common prayer, nor were there at the time of common prayer at any time within one month the next following the aforesaid April 1, but voluntary and obstinately have foreborne, and each of them hath foreborne the same, from the said April 1 for the space of one month the next following, contrary to the Statute of 1 Elizabeth (the statute of Uniformity of Common Prayer) and against the Statute of 23 Elizabeth,"
  The penalty for missing church for a month was £20, an enormous sum in those days, And if it wasn't paid the Sovereign was entitled to seize part of the defaulters land. The purpose of such a draconian measure was to make Roman Catholics attend the Church of England, but some were evidently prepared to lose everything for their beliefs.