In 1620
Esmé Stewart, the Earl of March (1579–1624) and Lord Lieutenant of Huntingdonshire (later, briefly, the 3rd Duke of Lennox), sold the manor of
Little Gidding to Thomas Sheppard. The Ferrars and Wodenoths were investors in the
Virginia Company and other colonial projects. Soon the small community was joined by Mary's son
John Ferrar and his family. Mary and her son Nicholas worked closely together to ensure the smooth running of their community, and during his absence in London Nicholas Ferrar wrote frequent letters to ensure that his strong-willed mother's wishes were heeded and acted upon as the owner of the property. She, for her part, valued his wisdom and vision, and through her affection for him she often deferred to his opinion. The Ferrars began repairing the site with Mary's first priority being the church, which had been desecrated through use as a barn and which was so full of hay that at first she was unable to enter to pray. By 1629 it was fully restored. During this period Mary Ferrar commenced a series of charitable works among the local community. She endowed an
almshouse in the form of a large room in her house for four elderly local widows who were regarded as part of the household and joined the daily prayers. The community was never a formal religious community, as with a monastery or convent. They did not have an official Rule (such as the
Rule of Saint Benedict), no vows were required, and no
enclosure. The Ferrar household lived a Christian life according to
High Church principles and the
Book of Common Prayer. They engaged in tending to the health and education of local children and became skilled in
bookbinding. The Ferrar household was criticised by Puritans and denounced as a "Protestant Nunnery" and as
Arminian heresy; in 1641 it was attacked in a pamphlet entitled "The Arminian Nunnery". The fame of the Ferrars and the Little Gidding community spread and they attracted visitors. King
Charles I visited Little Gidding three times, including on 2 May 1646 seeking refuge after the Royalist defeat at the
Battle of Naseby, when he was given temporary refuge by
John Ferrar. ==Death and legacy==