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81
Bremhill / The Domesday Book!
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 27, 2019, 01:55:06 pm »
Here's what The Domesday Book says about Bremhill.


The church itself holds Bremhill TRE it paid geld for 38 hides. There is land for 30 ploughs. 0f this land 17 hides are in demesne, and there are 7 ploughs, and 12 slaves There are 32 villans and 13 bordars with 20 ploughs. There are 2 mills rendering 30/- and 12 acres of meadow, and woodland 2 leagues long and 2 furlongs broad. It was worth 14 pounds when the abbot received it, now 16 pounds.

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Caswell / Re: Casswell and Cheese
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 27, 2019, 01:43:00 pm »
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Edwin Casswell's cheese and pork business in Woodstock Ontario Canada.


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The Big Cheese being transported to the Exposition in Saratoga Springs
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Caswell / Casswell and Cheese
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 27, 2019, 01:35:45 pm »

 I remember my father telling me, when I was a child, that his aunts in Avebury (the bakers) had told him that at one time, the Caswell family had been incredibly rich. But he had no further knowledge of how or why this should be. None of it rubbed off onto us, that’s for sure.
The Caswell family lived in Yatesbury since records began in the 12th century. Records even show Hugh De Careswell's marriage date of 6 Dec 1296 to Idonea.

From other records, it is seen that Hugh was a man of some wealth, as stated here.

Hugh de Careswell holds in Hyatesbury 16 acres of land for the term of his life which he had of the demise and grant of the said Matthew son of John before he enfeoffed under the feudal system) give (someone) freehold property or land in exchange for their pledged service.

(He enfeoffed trustees with the lands"under the feudal system) give (someone) freehold property or land in exchange for their pledged service.)

the said King Edward. At Yatesbury there is a capital messuage, and it is worth per annum 5s. There are there 217 acres of arable land worth 54s. 3d., and 9. acres of meadow worth 19s. There is there pastura in la Northfelde and on Coulesbo, and it is worth per annum 4s. Also of rent of assize, per annum, 61s. 2d. ; and of rent to the “succentor” of Sarum to have pasture on Northlese 3s., of rent of Robert Barvile one pair of spurs, price 6d.,of Hugh Carswell for a certain ditch 4 hens, price 8d., and of chersete 10 **** and 30 hens, price 3s. 4d.

A few sparse records of Caswell's in Yatesbury dot the history books until we come to William De Caswell in 1317. It is he who is the rector of St Marys Church in Witney, a town close to the Caswell Castle at Curbridge. This castle is mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1088 as being ‘abandoned’.

A chancel in the church was once named Caswell Chancel. It's name was changed to Wenman chancel around 1500 when a Richard Wenman owned Caswell Castle & farm according to property deeds I was shown at Caswell Castle farm. He was a very wealthy wool merchant and is celebrated by brasses in the church. So it should be no surprise to see William De Caswell listed as the rector in 1317.

It must be obvious that the immense wealth generated by the wool trade in Witney, had to be fed by people actually growing the wool, and here we have this William, on the Downs at Yatesbury, with a large parcel of land, a rector no less (nobleman worthy of living in a castle or baronial manor). See https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rector_(ecclesiastical) So the rector would have appointed a vicar to run the proceedings, and he would have also 'owned' the chancel.
 
 Living at Caswell castle just down the road in Curbridge would have given him the title 'De Caswell’.
In 1626 Robert Casswell of Yatesbury (his wife was Mary Chilcester) bequeathed his wheat field to one son, and a horse to another. He gave five pounds to the poor and five pounds to each of his five children.
Still in Yatesbury, about 1820, we have lots of evidence of this wealth. William and Ann Casswell (note the spelling change now) have an expensive tomb in the churchyard. Their son Robert gifted 6000 pounds to his nieces, as it looks like he had no heirs. (A third of a million pounds in todays money).There is a plaque on the wall in the Yatesbury church commemorating Robert’s generosity erected by his nieces, Anne LONG and Susanna BANNISTER".

The Casswell family moved from Yatesbury & Cherhill to Rowde and lived there for a couple of generations before moving to Trowbridge, where Richard Casswell became the church warden of St James Church. There are five bells in the belfry with his name cast on them.

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Whether he paid for these bells I'm not sure, but he had a fortune as he bequeathed 1200 pounds each to at least a dozen relatives in his will. He owned numerous properties in the town,
Duke St and Cottles Barton are mentioned. The rental from these was gifted as inheritances to children and grand children. So we can see from his lengthy will that at least 12000 pounds was gifted in cash, which would amount to almost a million pounds in todays money. The properties would have considerably more value. There is much discussion in the will regarding Consolidated Bank Annuities. Richard married Ann Marchant and has an elegant tomb in St James Church yard.
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Richard's grandson James married Suzanna Gunstone Slade, and had eleven children. He lived at Dilton Farm Westbury. His son named Edwin Thomas emigrated to Canada, after selling all their real estate.

Edwin became a cheese broker, He made a total of 55 trips across the ocean to further the industry of the dairy business.

He exhibited cheese at the Continental Exhibition o f 1874 held in Philadelphia. Here, Casswell ran into problems. It seems too many area farmers did not want to sell their cheese for exhibit. Caswell and another man, Thomas Ballantyne of Stratford, Ontario, went themselves to the farms collecting cheese and to guarantee the cheese makers they would not lose anything on what was to be shipped to the exhibition.The exhibition was a great success and added to the already growing reputation of Canadian and especially Ingersoll cheese.
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"He was one of the pioneer cheese men of the country. It was to men of his push, integrity , and intelligence that the country owes the immense cheese trade it enjoys today." Mr Casswell built up quite a fortune, but subsequently was unfortunate in business, and lost most of his wealth. He was president in the Dairyman's Association of Western Ontario four times. He retired to London, Ontario, and ran a small retail business until his death in 1896 at the age of 66.
The association of Edwin Casswell and the Harris brothers James and Miles, (not of Calne descent) who were already involved in the cheese business, led to them making the worlds biggest cheese to be exhibited at an exposition in Saratoga Springs, for the New York State Fair. The cheese was enormous and was drawn to the railroad by six horses. It was 6'10" wide, weighed 7300lbs, and was 3' high.
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Caswell / Re: My quest for my roots
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 25, 2019, 03:06:34 am »
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The moat

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The watercress bed.

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Wall with arrow slot

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Sketch of wall in old history book.



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Caswell / Re: My quest for my roots Photos of the Castle
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 25, 2019, 03:02:07 am »
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Arrow slot close up

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Front of manor house

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Farm yard

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The moat
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Caswell / My quest for my roots
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 25, 2019, 02:46:53 am »
The Origins of the CASWELL Surname by Mike Caswell

My quest for my roots started about 20 years ago, when I first saw the TV program ‘Roots’ by Alex Haley. It was a story about a black man who traced his roots through slavery back to Africa. I was intrigued to know ‘where I came from’ and how my name ‘Caswell’ originated.
Many times, during my genealogy adventure, I came across the explanation for the CASWELL name as being’ someone who lived by the side of a watercress bed’, and derived from a corruption of ‘Cresswell’. This seemed to conflict with another viewpoint, which said we came from the British warlord ‘Cassivellaunus’, a man who fought Julius Caesar. The latter, for many years, seemed more plausible to me, as many Wiltshire Caswells surnames were spelt Casswell, but as time wore on, I began to realize that spelling was not something ancestors or their scribes were particularly good at, and one could only rely on the fact that the name was spelt in a variety of ways.

The years rolled by, gradually I pieced together all the available data from the IGI, the Wiltshire records office and my own relatives information. Almost every single event was fitted into the Caswell tree, and it stretched back to 1594, when a Robert Casswell lived in Yatesbury. He was one of the first available entries in the village's church records. Surnames seemed to be well established then and there was no sign of a watercress bed, or anything else that pointed to the name’s origins. Then, one day I read and article about Calstone, a small village near Yatesbury, having a watercress bed. Could this be it? If it was, no other clues were forthcoming.

More years rolled by as I tried to research the village of Yatesbury a little more. It was a fairly uneventful place, nestled in an uphill fold of the Marlborough Downs. It kept whatever secrets it had to itself, until I found an entry dated 1284ad regarding a tax payment by a Hugh de Carswell and his wife Idonea. They owed the landlord a sore sparrow hawk. (Sore meaning red, and young sparrow hawks were red)
In the Edington Cartulary vol 36, p 153, -588, John Carswell is mentioned as a witness to a charter of Thomas Webbe of Bourford (Burford is near Curbridge/Witney, Oxford), dated 1 5 Sep 1394.

He is mentioned, same page, item 590, on July 1 1396, as a witness to a charter of John Lake of Langeford, Berks. (Langford is also now in Oxford and very close to Curbridge)
Also, item 596 on 21 Dec 1361, in a charter of John Laundels, granting in fee, with warranty, to the rector and brethren of the house or monastery of Edington property in Westwell.

This is one of the very first records we have of Caswells living in Yatesbury. In a tax list of 1332, William de Carsewelle paid taxes of 5s 4d and John de Carsewelle paid 6s 8d. This is recorded in the Edington Cartulary Vo l.45 page 43.

My big question remained, if Hugh, William and Thomas were all ‘de Caswell’, or ‘of Caswell’, where was this place? There was certainly no mention of it anywhere nearby or anywhere in Wiltshire. ‘de Caswell’ sprung up again several months later when I was given an enormous family tree of the Buckeridge Family. The very first entry was Henry Buceric. The Buckeridge’s came from Berkshire, but I couldn’t find any place named Caswell in Berkshire.
The entry for Henry Buceric reads: 8 Hen.III 1224 Pedes Pinium
(Lands in Carswell, Berkshire)

I also noted that Caswell of Berkshire was mentioned in the Domesday book, but it said, 'now abandoned', and that was 1088ad.
In the end, technology came to my aid, as I asked my friends on the Internet if anyone knew of a place near Wiltshire called Caswell. The reply came quickly, as the hamlet of Carswell Marsh, near Witney instantly appeared on an Internet location search map. This area was once in Berkshire, now Oxford, which explained why it couldn’t previously be found.

This warranted more research, so I engaged the services of an Oxford researcher, who came up with several very useful pieces of information, not the least being an old book which had a drawing of Caswell Farm with a brief description stating there was a moat, and the remains of a castle or baronial mansion. My researcher took photos of the entrance to the farm, but never ventured down the long lane.



 HISTORY OF WITNEY by the Rev. Dr. Giles 1852ad
From the Oxfordshire County Record Office
35. Curbridge -- CASWELL HOUSE -- THE WENMAN FAMILY.
The small hamlet of Curbridge lies about two miles out of Witney, on the Bampton road. It is a lonely looking village, with little to attract notice Some of the houses appear to be built on the foundations of older edifices, and here and there is seen a wall, evidently of considerable antiquity. Almost half the land belonging to the whole parish of Witney, lies in this hamlet, and a small chapel of ease has lately been built here
There are also the remains of what was once a fine baronial mansion or castle, now called Caswell house. A large, moat runs round it and the solid piers of the great gateway, defended by loop holes on each side for discharging missiles at an assailant, are still to be seen, as depicted in the accompanying etching-

The whole is now used as a farmhouse, shewing us that the arts of husbandry and of peaceful life will outlive the munitions of war, and the pomp of baronial castles. I have not been able to discover who were the founders and original occupiers of this once stately mansion, but the last family of distinction who resided here were the Wenmans, of whom Antony Wood says, in his MSS., that they were originally clothiers of Witney and being the first that used vains or carts with four wheels to carry their cloth to London, were called wainmen, or else the first of them was a driver of a wain. Their old house in Witney was until lately an inn (The Crown) to the east of the Town Hall. Within half a mile of Caswell House, is a well in the fields, cast in stone.

To the above brief notices, may be appended a letter from Edward Dalton Esq. of Dunkirk House near Nailsworth, dated march 23 1843, to the Rev. Thomas Symons, and inserted in that gentleman's Manuscript Collections [viii, 328] of which much use has been made in this work.
"My family were resident freeholders at Curbridge, in the parish of Witney, from before 1570 to 1644, when they followed the declining fortunes of King Charles, and suffered greviously at Newbury."
Some time later I was send a copy of a map drawn up in the 1600's. Further research exposed several more, drawn about that time, by John Speed. Just to the south of Witney, near Ducklington, Caswell Castle is clearly visible.


 On a trip to the UK in October 1999, my wife and I took a drive to Oxfordshire, to see if we could find the property known as Caswell Farm, located in Curbridge. Our Oxford researcher had previously sent me some photos of the entrance, so I easily recognized it.
After parking the car in the courtyard in front of the old house, we knocked on the door and no one answered. I hadn't come all across the planet to give up now, so I walked along the lane past some of the farm outhouses, on looking back towards the house I thought I could recognize some of the features of the house from the old sketch, but I wasn't sure I had the right place.


   A young man plowing with a tractor saw me looking out towards him, and drove over to meet me. He worked on the farm and when I explained why I was there, and then showed him the sketch, he said. "I know exactly where that wall is, the drawing is perfect!'
"What about a moat?" I asked, fearing that would simply be too much to ask.
"Yes, we have a moat, would you like to see it?"
We walked back towards my car and my wife joined us, as we walked into the main farm yard.
"Look, over there. You can see the defense slots in that wall, the buttresses and that old doorway!" the young man pointed across the yard, while I compared each detail. The drawing was incredibly accurate, and nothing had changed for over 150 years.
"But, where is the moat?" A few walls and a couple of arrow slots didn't really prove there was a castle here, but a moat would convince me that there was indeed a castle here once.

We took a few steps towards the edge of the yard and peered over a wall. And there, looking so tranquil and peaceful was, my moat!
The water was several feet deep and looked fairly fresh.
It was difficult to walk around the entire spread of the moat, because the inner circle was overgrown, and the outside was fenced off. But for all that, it was quite obvious that this waterscape was man made and designed in a horseshoe to protect the grounds where the castle once stood.
A little later Mr & Mrs Matthews, the farm owners returned, and they were delighted to find I had such an interest in their property. We were given a tour of the house, and then another tour of the grounds, this time approaching the moat from a different direction.
  The entire length of the moat must have been two or three hundred yards and was quite impressive. If a castle had been standing there today, the moat would have done it justice.

I stood there, in silence, just soaking in all the significance of my discovery.
Our quest was almost over, the job was done! I felt elated that, after 20 years of research I had eventually found out where I had come from. It was a magnificent climax to discover that we Caswells had once owned a castle.
We thanked our hosts and promised to keep in touch with email, and then, just as we were leaving, Mrs Matthews showed us the pond. Next to the farm yard. She explained it was very old and the running water from the spring fed the moat. The sound of running water could be heard as it cascaded over the small waterfall into the moat. We looked at the pond, which had a sandy bottom, and the water was crystal clear, quite unusual for a farm pond. Then it struck me, I gazed out into the pond and saw it! WATERCRESS! Lots of it!
 Here was a medieval pond, next to Caswell Castle, growing watercress! It was simply too much! I had hunted everywhere to find a watercress bed, and here it was!

My wife and I drove away from the farm, feeling elated and very satisfied with our days work. I decided to turn towards home, but Carol said, "What about Witney? Didn't you want to see the church?" I wasn't too keen, wishing to end the day on this high, but she persuaded me to take the few miles into town.

On arrival at the old church, we found a churchwarden in the grounds planting bulbs. We explained that we were looking for a chapel within the church named Caswell Chapel, as this had been mentioned in an old document from the Oxford Records Office.
He had never heard of such a thing, but stated that the Wenman family were the main show in town many years ago, and there was a chapel named after them. The Wenmans once owned Caswell Farm where we had been only moments ago.
On entering the old church we noticed a large tomb at one end of the church. It was very splendid, with lots of inlaid brass work. No doubt many people had taken rubbings of it.

 There was no mention of Caswells here, - but wait- Carol read out aloud from a typed list on the wall above the tomb. "Previous Rectors Of Witney"
"William de Caswell 1317"
I mentioned that I had found notes on a William de Caswell in Yatesbury for this time frame, and as there was nothing else forthcoming, we left the church. The churchwarden was curious if we found anything useful, so we explained our small discovery, but could not make a connection in any way.

The churchwarden then gave us a briefing on the lives of rectors during that period. They were almost noblemen, (worthy of living in baronial mansions or castles), but they rarely lived in their parish, preferring to look after their financial interests elsewhere, and placing a junior to run the day to day affairs of the church.
So, why did I have a William De Caswell living in Yatesbury, Wiltshire about this time?
The warden didn't seem to know, until I told him that they were sheep farmers on some of the best grazing on the Marlborough Downs.
His eyes lit up and he said, "There is the answer! Witney was a woolen blanket town in medieval times. Your William was
probably supplying the town with wool and getting rich off the proceeds.

So, here was the very valid reason for the Caswells of Caswell Castle to be in Yatesbury, Wiltshire. The search is over! I found out where I came from!


Mike Caswell Oct 19 1999

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Calne / Re: Old Photos and Postcards from Around Calne
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 23, 2019, 04:48:29 am »
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Calne / Old Photos and Postcards from Around Calne
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 23, 2019, 04:46:30 am »
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Devizes / The Brittox
« Last post by Michael Caswell on November 23, 2019, 04:43:32 am »
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