Diary of Rev Edward Stevens

1886, March 25, Thursday 

Annunciation of B.V.M. Divine Service at 9.15.

George Harris, my tenant, sent me a notice, appended herewith. I did not reply to it.

Note loose in diary:

Sibford Gower
Mar 25th 1886

Reverend Sir

I give you notice to leave this land and premieses at Michaelmas ecept an alteration of rent as things are so much altered I should be please to arrange with you if we can come to terms

Yours obedient
G. Harris

Visited School, Thomas Green, Mrs Shelswell, Hannah Simmons.

Returned overcoats (Soldiers’) not sold to F.W. Harmer & Co of Norwich and cheque for £4 for those sold. The men in the parish were not so desirous of purchasing them as I thought they would be.

1886, March 26, Friday

Drove Bell to Wroxton, took Webb. Preached Lenten Sermon this evening at Wroxton Church for Izatt. Very windy and rainy. Took supper at Vicarage. Intensely dark and wild night. Wind broke one of my lamps so we had to come along with only one light which was very unpleasant.

1886, March 27, Saturday  a

Attended Brass Band practice.

Received notice, brought by William Barton, signed by tenants (or rather by some and signed for other by some, without their authority. E.g. W. Hall for Sylvia Sabin. Phoebe Payne for her husband as occupying for the ??? of year, allotment held by her late father David Hone; and Sally Barnes for her son William). The note asked that the trustees should let them have the first 24 allotments hitherto let at 7/6 per piece for 5/- per piece, i.e. £1 per acre, “same as they had used to be”.

This was apparently instigated by Mr F. Mann who at the last Trustees Meeting proposed that these rents should be reduced. But the Trustees decided that as the allotments numbered 1 – 24 were much better and more conveniently situated than the rest – that no complaint had ever been made of the rent, but that on the contrary they were eagerly sought after, in preference to the 5/- pieces – they would not be doing right to reduce them. The notice was started by William Webb, Mr Mann’s carter and other man who went to William Barton and got him to do the writing.

I have seen most of the tenants who tell me they would have thought nothing about the matter but that these men came and asked them to sign. Not one of them would be willing to exchange his 7/6 allotment for a 5/- one. Mr Woolgrove says the 24 allotments in question are all worth the money, and almost any farmer would gladly give £1.10 an acre for all and pay rates which at present the Trustees have to pay.

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Read about the Rev Edward Stevens here.