Early settlement Early occupation of the area around Penkridge has been confirmed by the presence of a
Bronze or
Iron Age barrow at nearby Rowley Hill. A significant settlement in this vicinity has existed since pre-Roman times, with its original location being at the intersection of the
River Penk and what became the
Roman military road known as
Watling Street (today's
A5 trunk road). This would place it between Water Eaton and
Gailey, about SSW of the village. The Roman settlement of
Pennocrucium and earlier settlements were in the Penkridge area, but not on the same site as present village of Penkridge.
Medieval Penkridge Anglo-Saxon origins The village of Penkridge dates back at least to the early
Middle Ages, when the area was part of
Mercia, although the foundation date is unknown.
King Edgar in 958, described it as a "famous place", so it was already of importance by then. In the
Tudor period, it was claimed that the founder of the collegiate church of
St. Michael at Penkridge was King
Eadred (946-55), King Edgar's uncle, which seems plausible.
The importance of the church Penkridge's church was of central importance to the village from Anglo-Saxon times and the
Norman Conquest did not change this. It was of a special status. :* It was a
collegiate church: a church served by a community of
priests, known as a
chapter. The members were known as
canons. They were not monks, but
secular clergy. In 1086 the
Domesday survey found that most of the farm land at Penkridge was held from the king by the nine priests of St. Michael's, who had six slaves and seven
villeins working for them. :* It was a
chapel royal – a place set aside by the monarchs for their own use – generally to pray and to offer
mass for their souls. This made it completely independent of the local
Bishop of Lichfield – an institution called a
Royal Peculiar. In 1280 Penkridge even shut its doors on the
Archbishop of Canterbury, when he tried to carry out a tour of inspection (known as a
canonical visitation). :* It was organised like a
cathedral chapter. This happened during the 12th century, probably during
the Anarchy of
Stephen's reign. The reorganised chapter was headed by a
Dean. The other canons each received a particular estate to live off, called a
prebend, and were known as
prebendaries. :* It was headed by the
Archbishop of Dublin from 1226. This was because in 1215
King John gave to Archbishop
Henry of London, one of his most trusted administrators, the right to appoint the dean of Penkridge. He made himself dean on the next vacancy, and subsequent archbishops of Dublin automatically became deans of Penkridge. The collegiate church was the most important local institution for most of Penkridge's history: economically powerful and architecturally dominant. All the people of the parish had to be buried there, at considerable cost, so it was where the local magnates installed their memorials. Its area of jurisdiction defined Penkridge parish, which was also the main unit of local government until late Victorian times. The dean and many of the canons were absentees, so they appointed vicars to act for them locally. The focus of worship was prayer and masses on behalf of the dead, not care for the living. Two priests were employed solely to serve in
chantries for the monarch and for the
Virgin Mary. By the 16th century, the people of Penkridge themselves subscribed to pay a morrow priest to celebrate a daily mass, so that they could worship.
Pastoral care and
preaching were not taken seriously until the 16th century or later. File:Penkridge St Michael - West window exterior.jpg|Exterior view of the western end of the church, showing large Perpendicular window. File:Penkridge St Michael - West tower 01.jpg|View of the tower, modified in late Perpendicular style in the 16th century. File:Penkridge St Michael - East window exterior.jpg|East window. Perpendicular in style, it formerly contained much more tracery. File:Penkridge St Michael - Chancel gates and organ.jpg|The
wrought iron chancel gates of Dutch origin, dated 1778. The organ, formerly in the tower arch, was moved to present position in 1881. File:Penkridge St Michael - Lavabo 01.jpg|
Lavabo in wall of south chancel aisle File:Penkridge St Michael - Pulpit 1890 01.jpg|Stone pulpit, 1890, part of a substantial restoration and refurbishment which began in 1881. File:Penkridge St Michael - Richard Littleton and Alice Wynnesbury tomb alcove.jpg|The early 16th century tomb alcove of Richard Littleton and Alice Wynnesbury in the south nave aisle, now used for
votive candles. Originally this part of the church was a Littleton family chapel.
The grip of the forest Large areas surrounding Penkridge were placed by the Norman kings under
Forest Law, a savage penal code designed to protect the ecology and wildlife for the king's enjoyment. These areas were part of the Royal Forest of Cank or
Cannock Chase and were known as Gailey Hay and Teddesley Hay. Forest law kept most of south Staffordshire in an economic straitjacket.
Conflicts between the barons and kings in the 13th century forced a relaxation, starting with the first issue of the
Forest Charter in 1217. So it was in
Henry III's reign that Penkridge began to grow economically and probably in population. Local people began to create new fields, called
assarts, by clearing the trees and scrub (still a capital crime), and Penkridge acquired an annual fair and weekly market.
Manors and magnates Medieval Penkridge was organised on the
manorial system. There were a number of manors within the parish, of varying size and importance, each with its own lord, who owed feudal service to his own overlord, but exercised authority over his tenants. A list of the different medieval manors and estates would include: Penkridge Manor, Penkridge deanery manor,
Congreve, Congreve Prebendal Manor, Drayton, Gailey, Levedale,
Longridge, Lyne Hill or Linhull,
Mitton, La More (later Moor Hall), Otherton, Pillaton, Preston, Rodbaston, Water Eaton, Whiston, Coppenhall or Copehale, Dunston, and Stretton. The largest was the manor of Penkridge itself. King John's gift of 1215 to the Archbishop of Dublin included Penkridge manor. The Archbishop decided to divide it, giving about two-thirds to his nephew, Andrew de Blund, and keeping the rest for the deanery. The manor of Penkridge was passed on through the Blund (later called Blount) family and later other families of
lay landlords. The Church had large holdings of land. St. Michael's college had not only the deanery manor but also Preston and the Prebendal Manor of Congreve. The other prebends also held lands, but not as lords of the manor. Some manors belonged to Staffordshire monasteries.
Burton Abbey held Pillaton, Bickford and Whiston, and also, for a time, Gailey, which later passed to the nuns of
Black Ladies Priory at
Brewood. Drayton belonged to the
Augustinian Priory of St. Thomas, near Stafford. Most of the manors were quite small and often their owners were fairly minor, although some small manors formed part of the wider holdings of great families. Even the most minor of lords had the right to hold manorial courts and to discipline their tenants, but a wealthy and important lord was like a monarch in his own manor. By the late 14th century the lords of Penkridge manor had obtained
charters giving them rights to pursue criminals wherever they wished; to inflict the
death penalty; to force tenants to take collective responsibility for offenders; and to confiscate stray livestock. Just before 1500, the
Littleton family make their first appearance in Penkridge. Richard Littleton brought Pillaton into the family's possession through marriage and Pillaton Hall was the Littleton family seat for about 250 years, the centre of an expanding property empire. Soon they took on the leases of most of St. Michael's church lands and established a family chapel in the church – a statement of their growing importance. They were the most important local representatives of the
landed gentry, a class that was to dominate rural life for several centuries.
Agriculture Much of the Penkridge area was cultivated under the
open field system, although the actual field names are not documented until 16th and 17th centuries, as they were about to be
enclosed. In Penkridge manor, for example, there were Clay Field, Prince Field, Manstonshill, Mill Field, Wood Field, and Lowtherne or Lantern Field, Fyland, Old Field, and Whotcroft, and also common grazing areas, Stretton Meadow and Hay Meadow. The date varied, but in the Middle Ages it fell around the end of September and lasted for seven or eight days. It began as a general fair but developed into a
horse fair by the late 16th century. Henry III granted Andrew le Blund a weekly market in 1244. This was challenged by the
burgesses of Stafford, who feared competition, but Penkridge kept its Tuesday market for centuries. After 1500 the market declined, expired and was revived several times, also changing days several times. The marketplace, still so-named but no longer used, was at the opposite end of the village from the church. The modern market is held on the livestock auction site close to Bull Bridge. Mills were another great source of profit to lords of the manor, who forced their tenants to use them. The River Penk and a number of tributary brooks were able to drive mills. The
Domesday Book of 1086 records mills at Penkridge at Water Eaton. A century later there were two mills at Penkridge and one of them was operated by the More family for centuries, as tenants of the dean. A mill is recorded at Drayton by 1194; at Congreve, Pillaton, and Rodbaston in the 13th century; at Whiston in the 14th; and at
Mitton in the 15th. These were all corn mills, but in 1345 Water Eaton had a
fulling mill, as well as the corn mill.
Reformation and revolution: Penkridge in Tudor and Stuart Times Dissolution The
Reformation brought major changes to landownership and social life at Penkridge. First came the
Dissolution of the Monasteries under
Henry VIII. This swept away Burton Abbey, and its manor of Drayton was sold in 1538 to
the Bishop of Lichfield, who wanted it for his nephews. The College of St. Michael was not threatened at first, as it was not a monastery, but
Edward VI's reign brought a more radical phase of the Reformation. In 1547 the
Abolition of Chantries Act decreed the end of the chantry churches and their colleges. St. Michael's was still a thriving institution: a major rebuilding was in progress. Its estates enriched the dean (Archbishop of Dublin), seven prebendaries, two chantry canons, an official principal, three
vicars choral, three further
vicars, a high
deacon, a
subdeacon, and a
sacrist. In 1547 its property was assessed at £82 6s. 8d. annually.
The Dudley inheritance of both Penkridge manor and the deanery manor, before his political ambitions led to his execution. and his wives, Helen Swynnerton and Isabel Wood, in St. Michael's. Littleton was quick to snap up what he could from the wreck of Dudley's empire. Penkridge now became enmeshed in the meteoric career of
John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, a key figure in
Edward VI's regency council. In 1539, Dudley got control of Penkridge manor by foreclosing on a debt its owners, the
Willoughby de Broke family, had owed to his father,
Edmund Dudley. Next he grabbed the Deanery Manor and Tedesley Hay, making him the most important landowner in the area, although day-to-day management of the deanery lands stayed with the Littletons, the lessees. Dudley went on to seize almost absolute power in England, and taking the title
Duke of Northumberland. Edward's early death in 1553 left Dudley high and dry. Edward's older sister, the Catholic
Mary, succeeded but Dudley attempted a
coup d'état in favour of
Lady Jane Grey. Mary prevailed and Dudley was arrested and beheaded as a traitor. His lands were forfeit to the Crown, the extensive estates at Penkridge among them. Dudley had the foresight to grant various estates to his relatives. So his daughter-in-law,
Anne Dudley, Countess of Warwick, was able to keep a lifetime interest in Penkridge, while his wife hung on to Teddesley Hay until her death. Teddesley was bought by
Sir Edward Littleton in 1555. A new Sir Edward succeeded in 1558 and his vigorous
enclosure policy soon stirred up controversy. Penkridge manor entered into a limbo, prolonged by Anne's insanity. The fate of the deanery manor too was unresolved: it was taken from the Dudleys, but not restored to the Church, as Mary did not re-establish the chantries. So both remained with the Crown for a generation, with no decision on their fate. Not until the 1580s were matters resolved. In 1581 the college property was sold to speculators and in 1585 it was snapped up by Sir Edward Littleton. In 1582, Queen Elizabeth promised Penkridge manor to
Sir Fulke Greville, heir to the Willoughby de Brokes, and he took over 1590.
Civil war The Grevilles were powerful regionally and nationally. The
Fulke Greville who inherited Penkridge in 1606 was a poet and statesman. He served both Elizabeth and
James I, who gave him
Warwick Castle as a seat and elevated him to the peerage as the 1st Baron Brooke. In 1628 he was murdered by a servant. As he was unmarried and childless, he had adopted his younger cousin Robert as his son and heir to both the title and the great estates in Staffordshire and Warwickshire. Robert was a leading parliamentarian and a
Puritan, who promoted emigration to America. When the
English Civil War broke out, he took command of a parliamentary army in central England and was killed during the siege of
Lichfield Cathedral in 1643. He was succeeded by
Francis Greville, 3rd Baron Brooke. The Littletons were purely local landowners and instinctively loyalist.
Sir Edward Littleton was made a
Baronet by
Charles I on 28 June 1627 and was expelled from the House of Commons in 1644 for his royalist sympathies. In May 1645, royalist troops quartered in Penkridge were expelled by small parliamentary force after a brief skirmish. Littleton's estates were
sequestrated but he was able to recover them on payment of £1347. The Littletons' holdings were thus preserved and they found themselves in favour again after the
restoration of Charles II in 1660. Despite the revolutionary turmoil, the real situation in Penkridge was little changed. An anomaly surviving from before the Reformation was the
peculiar jurisdiction of St. Michael's. Although the college was long gone, its privileges survived and were vested in the Littletons, owners of the deanery manor. They appointed vicars and kept bishops at bay, until the royal peculiar was ended in 1858. giving a total population of perhaps 1,200 to 1,500. By the first census, in 1801, it was 2,275. It rose to a peak of 3,316 in 1851. A fall thereafter is mainly the result of the parish being reduced in size by the loss of Coppenhall, Stretton and Dunston. Penkridge itself seems to have had a fairly stable population for the century from 1851 to 1951: a decline relative to the country as a whole, but not a collapse. From the 1660s the pace of enclosure quickened, with all of the manors being divided into small farms, usually with the cultivators' consent, and these aggregated gradually into larger units. The second half of the 19th century, and especially the last quarter, were hard times for agriculture, with the repeal of the
Corn Laws in 1846 and the
Long Depression from about 1873. The 1831 census found that farmers and agricultural labourers accounted about 60% of the total adult male workforce. Next came shop keepers and artisans, showing that Penkridge remained a small but important commercial centre, although the market had gone. – probably mainly with the local gentry. The hospitality industry was quite important, with 40 men working in food and lodging and 15 working with carriages and horses – reflecting the continuing importance of the inns on a major route. The diversity of trades is marked. No less than 43 – 25 women and 18 men – were involved in dress-making, and there were quarrymen, traders, and many others. However, professionals are numbered at only 14. Penkridge owed much to its transport links, which steadily improved. The main Stafford–Wolverhampton route, now the
A449 road was
turnpiked under the
Stafford, Worcester and Warwick Roads Act 1760 (
1 Geo. 3. c. 39). Bull Bridge, carrying the road over the Penk, was rebuilt in 1796 and widened in 1822. The improved road attracted more traffic: by 1818 there were stops by coaches on the London – Manchester, Birmingham – Manchester and Birmingham – Liverpool routes. The
Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal, opened in 1772, running straight through the parish and the township from north to south, with wharves at Spread Eagle (later called Gailey) and at Penkridge. In 1837, the Grand Junction Railway was opened. It cut through Penkridge on its west side, where
Penkridge station was built, and was carried over the
River Penk by the large
Penkridge Viaduct. It began with two trains daily in each direction, to Stafford and Wolverhampton. Heavy industry expanded in the 18th century, when a forge at Congreve was turning out 120 tons of iron a year, and in the 1820s the mill below Bull Bridge was used for rolling iron. However, this industry tailed off as the
Black Country ironworks outstripped it. Extraction of building materials grew in Victorian times, with the Littletons operating quarries at Wolgarston, Wood Bank, and Quarry Heath,
Zenith of the Littletons The fortunes of the village and the Littletons remained intertwined. Sir Edward Littleton, the fourth baronet, bought Penkridge manor from the Earl of Warwick in 1749, completing his family's dominance of the area. Soon after he built
Teddesley Hall, a much more impressive seat for the family. He survived until 1812, although, his wife died childless in 1781. He adopted his great-nephew,
Edward Walhouse, as his heir. Walhouse took the name Littleton and took over the Littleton estates, although not the
Littleton baronetcy. He achieved far greater eminence as a politician than any other member of the family, serving as
Chief Secretary for Ireland under the Whig Prime Minister
Grey in 1833–35. He was elevated to the peerage as
Baron Hatherton, a title which remains with the head of the Littleton family to the present, and became an active member of the House of Lords. Hatherton resided at Teddesley, where he established a free agricultural college and farmed successfully. He strongly promoted education in the area, paying for a
National School in Penkridge and another at Levedale, and for clothing for some of the school children. However, his lifetime saw a decisive shift in the family's interests. As heir to both the Walhouse family fortune and the Littleton estates, he owned great estates around Penkridge and mineral holdings and much residential property in the
Cannock and
Walsall areas. He owned coal mines at
Great Wyrley,
Bloxwich and Walsall; limestone quarries and brickyards in Walsall that were used to build much of the town; hundreds of residential and commercial properties; gravel and sand pits, stone quarries in many places. Unlike Penkridge, Cannock and Walsall were boom towns of the Victorian era, powered by the most modern and profitable industries of the age. The Littletons played a leading part in this phase of the
Industrial Revolution and made large profits from it, and this tilted their attention increasingly away from their landed estates. == The modern village ==