Vastern Manor House as built by
the Bassetts was a large and impressive structure. It
was walled, had a gatehouse, a chapel, a prison,
extensive living quarters for man and beast, and all
the domestic appurtenances that went with a status
house, such as brew house, bake house, kitchens,
barns, gardens and fish ponds. Variously called
Fetstern (a fortress), Fastern, or Vastern it was set
on rising ground, almost surrounded by woods which
were later turned into a deer park. The attractive
country house known today as Vastern Manor occupies
only a small part of the original site.
According to W. F. Parsons,
Vastern was one of five seats in Wiltshire selected by
the Norman kings as hunting villas, the others being
at Clarendon, Corsham, Marlborough and Tollard Royal.
The Bassetts and their successors were naturally
interested in extending the park which seems to have
reached a maximum area of about 2000 acres. Large
herds of deer were kept there as late as the 16th
century. Sir John Thynne of Longleat was a great
friend of Lord Protector Somerset in Edward VI's
reign, and Canon Jackson found among the family papers
a letter from the Protector's steward, John Berwycke,
saying that he had turned out "500 deer, mostly
rascals (lean deer) into Braden Forest, and pasture,
enough for my Lord Grace's provision, is in better
condition this year than it hath ever been at this
time."
Exercises in beating the bounds
were frequently necessary and one such perambulation
is described in great detail. It was made on May 18,
1602 and the following extract deals with the boundary
of Great Park adjoining Braden Forest. "Going and
viewing the boundes and meres dividing the manors of
Wootton Bassett and Brynkworthe of the west side .....
as the most eldest and auncient men hath known and
hard tyme aught of minde ..... as also what their
forefathers hath toulde them when they were children
going the perambulation. JOHN BATHE, 80; RICHARD
BATHE, 80; JOHN GAULT, 80; WILLIAM HENLYE, 75; THOMAS
HASKYNS, 66; CHRISTOPHER WITNAM, 77; THOMAS PHELPS,
76; THOMAS ROBBINS, 100; THOMAS BATHE, 70; RICHARD
ILES, 60; WILLIAM WEBB, 56; JOHN SHURMER, 60."
..... "The first daye going from Wotton to
Broadweyes geat through Whitehall woakhayes meadow
passing into a ground lately enclosed by Sir Henry
Knyvett at which plasse it is sayd by these old men as
they have hard theyre foorfathers saye the Duke of
York had his waye forthe by the Faoffe Geat
(Hookers)". From there the boundary went to sand
pits on Brinkworth Hill, a cross at Highgate (farm), a
great "woorke left for a meare (boundary)
standing between Mughall and Wotton's wood that was
called the Ragge," Braydon Lane, Shropshire Marsh
and Baynards Ash. W. F. Parsons said it continued
along the ridge to the Row de Dow, across the bottom
of Wood St., the upper part of Whitehill Lane and so
by way of Hunts Mill brook to Vastern Wilderness.
Workmen who maintained the hedge at certain points had
the right to cut fuel "as far as a man could
through a hatchet and for tryall John Mountaine dyd
through his hatchet 8 lugge (poles) and so dyd Thomas
Roadway and 3 others."
It is difficult to trace the
history of the actual manor house and demesne as it
was usually occupied by the lord's bailiff or leased
out. Also dilapidation would set in as farming grew
more important then feudal splendour. The buildings
that Lawrence Hyde acquired in 1676 were probably
based on the gatehouse and by the middle of the 19th
century Vastern was described as a crumbling
farmhouse. The Victoria County History has tracked
down a number of interesting items on the way, such as
the existence of a royal stud at Vastern in the 14th
and 15th centuries, and the names of Gilbert of
Berwick 1331-2, William of Wroughton 1369-76, Richard
Rowsewell 1573, John Rowesell 1587-1603, Thomas Jacob
1641, and Thomas Brinsden 1664-70, all of whom lived
at the Gatehouse, leased land, or farmed on the
estate. In 1648 John Aubrey visited Vastern and in his
usual uncritical way accepted from Thomas Jacob the
purely fanciful story that Richard III had been born
there.
Lawrence Hyde no doubt found
Vastern a useful retreat when he was out of favour at
court. It also brought him near his elder brother's
estate at Blunsdon. This brother, later Lord
Clarendon, had to sell Blunsdon Manor in 1695 to Sir
Antony Keek to whom he owed £8,000. How long he spent
at Vastern is not known, but, according to an entry in
his brother's diary, he was certainly there on
November 11, 1688. Sir William Temple did not think
much of Lawrence's Wiltshire purchase for in a letter
dated July 20, 1678 he says "I hear you are grown
as ill at court as to be gone down into the country to
a scurvy patch of land you had bought there."
Later members of the Clarendon family do not seem to
have favoured it for personal occupation. The Home
Farm was leased to Charles Cruse of Greenhill unitl
1750 and for 150 years after that to the Henly family.
In the early part of the 18th century the house was
occupied by a sport-loving county magistrate called
Franklyn. Goddard Smith's diary, of which there is a
copy in Devizes Museum, records how he dined there
with Mr. Walker of Lyneham, Mr. Pleydell of Midgehall,
Mr. Hardyman of Lydiard Millicent, the Rev. Paul
Forrester of Wootton Bassett, Mrs. Cruse of Greenhill,
Mr. Nevil Maskelyne, Robert Long, Mr. Bouchier and
other local worthies. Bowling was a great attraction,
and he enters all his betting wins and losses.
Partridge setting, hunting, cock-fighting,
hare-coursing and dancing were among other activities
to find their way into the diary.
In 1852 more than 100 years
later James Waylen, the Devizes historian, visited
Vastern and had this to say. "Few people passing
along the high road would suspect the irregular and
somewhat naked-looking fabric of Fastern farmhouse to
have been the abode of nobility in the giddy times of
Charles II. The commanding position, the rookery,
traces of a terraced garden, remains of stone mullions
replaced by rickety wood and leaden casements, the
Tudor doorway, and foundations at the rear of the
house of large proportions ..... will be sufficient
evidence that the place is but a shadow of its former
self." Such must have been its general state when
the Meux family bought the manor in 1866 and applied
their renovating zeal to it.
The conversion was done with
some feeling for the past. The central block built of
stone is probably mediaeval, and one of the rooms has
"heavily moulded ceiling beams with a foliage
boss of late mediaeval date at their intersection." The stone chimney-piece bears the arms of
the Englefields and may have originally been on the
upper floor where there was a single lofty room. The
small wings on the north, east and west sides are
probably 17th & 18th century additions. The door
in the south west wing is 15th century but it was
brought from Berwick Bassett Manor house by Sir Henry
Bruce Meux. Any remaining features of Norman origin
will be underground but the modernised house still
conveys a feeling of the past such as you get nowhere
else in Wootton Bassett. The recent by-passing of the
house serves only to accentuate its remoteness from
the modern world. Nostalgic poems written by the
Reverend Stephen Clark in 1873, and by John Henly of
Vastern Farm rather earlier show how much the old
building, the bluebell woods, the Wilderness, and the
Grove moved the romantic imagination of a generation
untouched as yet by the prevailing vogue for
historical research.
Reproduced
from "Wootton Bassett: A History" by PJ
Gingell
by kind permission of the Wootton Bassett Historical
Society