Feckenham Forest was a royal forest, centred around the town of Feckenham, covering large parts of west Worcestershire and Warwickshire. As such, it was not entirely wooded, nor entirely the property of the King. Rather, the King had legal rights over game, wood and grazing within the forest, and special courts imposed harsh penalties when rights were violated. Courts and the forest gaol were located at Feckenham and executions took place at Gallows Green near Hanbury.
The legal origins are not recorded, but it was a royal forest in the time of Edward the Confessor and his predecessors. Forest law itself was established under King Canute in 1016.[1] The forest boundaries were extended greatly during the reign of Henry II, expanding from 34 to 184 square miles. The forest boundaries were reduced back in 1301.
The wood was encroached to produce salt in Droitwich, and was quite reduced by the time it was disafforested during the reign of King Charles I in 1629.[2] The process of disafforestation created considerable social unrest and riots.[3] A few areas of ancient forest still remain near Dodford and Chaddesley Corbett.
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At its greatest extent, the forest covered an area including Bromsgrove, Redditch, Evesham, Pershore and Worcester. It adjoined the Forest of Arden.
Its extent prior to Henry II was around 34 square miles, encompassing an area with Tardebigge in the north, Hanbury, approaching Droitwich in the west and approaching Alcester in the south east.
It was extended along with many other forests during Henry II's reign to encompass about 184 square miles. This stretched from Evesham in the south, close to Worcester, up to Droitwich and Wychbold in the west, to Stone, Chaddesley Corbett and Alvechurch in the north, and Redditch, Studley and Alcester to in the east.[4] These boundaries are described in an official Perambulation made for Edward I in 1300-1, which also sets out the original extent and recommended the reduction of the royal forest to its original size.
The wooded areas were home to numerous species of animals including badgers, foxes, martens, otters, wild boars, wild cats and wolves. The main animals that were hunted as game were hare, red and fallow deer.[1]
Warrens sheltered stocks of pheasant, partridge and woodcock.[1] There were also fishponds near Feckenham and deer parks.
Wolves were a considerable problem in medieval period. Hunters were paid kill wolves in Worcestershire, at 3/- in the reign of Henry III, and Edward I made a specific order to his new chief forester Peter Corbet of Chaddesley to destroy wolves in 1280:[1]
to take and destroy in all forests and parks and other places within our counties of Glocester, Worcester, Hereford, Salop and Stafford, in which wolves are found, the wolves, with men, dogs and his own devices in every way he thinks proper.[5]
However, for a long time wolf populations were managed, rather than destroyed, as they were hunted for sport.[6]
Wolves were eventually eliminated in England in the reign of Henry VII.
Some of the manors within the forest area were owned by the Bishop of Worcester, and a few were owned by the King, such as Feckenham, Inkberrow, Bromsgrove and Chaddesley Corbett.[7] Inkberrow had a royal deer park.
The King had rights over hunting game, grazing, feeding pigs on acorns and beech nuts; and timber and ‘underwood’. Rights of warren were granted to Grimbald Pauncefoote in the manor of Bentley in 1281 for rabbits.
Forest law was especially harsh and a cause of considerable grievance. Governance centred on Feckenham at which the courthouse and gaol were located.[6] Executions took place at Gallows Green, between Hanbury and Droitwich on the Salt Way.[8]
Appointments could be of considerable prestige. The forests’ titular head was the keeper, whose role was essentially honorary. Prominent appointments included Geoffrey Chaucer (1389) and Gilbert Talbot of Grafton (1492). Under the keeper were verderers who were the main enforcers of forest law, investigating infractions and trespasses. Their official symbol was an axe. Woodwards guarded royal timber rights and venison.
Poaching and encroachment on royal rights was not simply a matter of the poor taking game and, when caught, being executed. Many of the documented offences involved either noblemen or churchmen and were punished by heavy fines.[9] The Bishop of Worcester was fined 500 marks in 1290 for “trespasses of vert and venison” and a further 200 li in 1291. Under Henry III, however, the Church of St Mary, that is Worcester Cathedral, was granted rights to hunt in their own forests, so that “no forester, verderer or other bailiffs of the King’s shall in future intermeddle in the woods saving in matters touching the King’s venison”.[10]
Land disputes are also recorded with the Abbotts of Evesham, who enclosed a large part of the forest, when it was at its greater extent, arguing they had he right under old charters. Their wood at Sambourne was seized in 1280 as compensation.[11]
Considerable pressure on the wooded areas as the result of the use of timber to fuel salt pans in Droitwich, a practice that had been recorded as far back as the Domesday Book. Demand for salt increased as the population grew. Much of the forest had therefore been cut was being farmed by the time the forest was abolished in 1629.[12]
The largest remaining woodland was Feckenham Park, described in early 1600s by Thomas Habingdon:
The king had a large Parke abuttinge on Feckenham thoughe in the Paryshe of Hanbury. Neither wanted theare (in Hanbury) for the recreation our Kynges a fayre Parke sortinge in name with the Kinges vast forest, reachinge in former ages far and wide.
A large walk for savage beastes, but now more commodyously chaunged into the civill habitations of many gentellmen, the freeholds of wealthy yeomen, and dwellings of industryous husbandmen. Feckenham Parke cominge by attainder to the Crown, Queen Elizabeth bestowed it on Sir Thomas Leighton, who married her neere Kynswoman Mistris Elizabeth Knolles in which family continuing towe descentes, it is devolved (by purchase) to the honourable house of the Lord Baron Coventree, Lord Keeper of the greate seale.[13]
The woodland can be seen on maps produced in this period, including by Christopher Saxton and on the Sheldon Tapestry.
Sir Miles Fleetwood was charged with surveying the lands before the disafforestation. The Lord of Hanbury and Feckenham manors, Sir Edward Leighton gained around 80 acres in Monkwood and 360 acres around Feckenham, including the Queen’s Coppice, Ranger’s Coppice, Timber Coppice, Fearful Coppice and Red Slough Coppice.[14]
Dissafforestation caused riots in the Feckenham and elsewhere, known as the Western Rising.[3]
Very little of the original woodlands are left. The most substantial areas are in the north west area extended under Henry II, rather than the woodlands around Feckenham. Remnants of the wooded parts of the forest include:
Pepper Wood and Chaddesley Woods are now designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.[20][21] Cutpursey Coppice, just south of these woods, is also documented as being an areas of “Ancient semi-natural woodland”.[22]
Placenames which record the presence of the forest may include: