extract from The Old Halls, Manors and Families of Derbyshire Vol 1 by Joseph Tilley, published 1892
Along the north bank of the Goyt, from Kinderscout to
Mellor, is the tract of land once designated Bowden Middlecale. Within this tract there once stood a
solitary mill, situated in a romantic glen, which did duty for centuries for
all the surrounding townships. There
are several mills now (it is the district of mills), and a railway station,
too, from whence it is a comfortable stroll to Beard, or Ollerset, or Thornsett,
or Scout, or the Mermaids' Pool, or Hayfield, or Long Lee. Here we are surrounded by those picturesque
spots where some of the oldest of the Peak families were located in such remote
times. Here, almost within sight of each other, were the homesteads of the Beards,
Bradburys, and Needhams. In our stroll we noticed a shopkeeper (a chemist,
druggist, and colourman), named Kinder; we remembered that Hayfield Church was
built by the munificence of a Kinder in 1385.
Is it not probable that the colourman may be a descendant of an ancestor
whose name is found on several glorious rolls?
The Manor of Beard, says White, was given to John, Earl of
Shrewsbury, by Henry VIII. This could not be, for there was no John Talbot who
wore the coronet under that monarch; though white is correct in saying it was
given to the Talbots, and this brings us face to face with a fact Lysons could
have rendered intelligible. If Henry
VIII gave it to the Talbots, how could the Beards, Leghs, and Duncalfs have
possessed it and passed it by heiress previous to the Talbots? The Royal gift would shew it to be Royal
demesne, while there is no evidence that the Beards were tenants in
Capite. We have an idea that the tenure
of the Beards, and their heirs, was under the Abbey of Basingwerke(a). These are the kind of facts the compilers
will not face. The senior line of the
Beards became extinct about 1400, when the heiress mated with the Leghs (she
was the wife of two brothers successively), and the manor was certainly in her
dowry. Beard Hall was assuredly
distinct from the manor, for the homestead remained with a junior line of the
family until the days of Queen Elizabeth anyway. The old edifice is delightfully situated about half-a-mile from
New Mills, and from its position commands a splendid view of the surrounding
country. The masonry of the remains
(for there is only a gable left of the original structure) was evidently the
work of William Beard, who was living here in 1570, and whose daughter,
Elizabeth (senior co-heiress), married Ralph Ashenhurst. We do not refer to the foundations, for they
are considerably older, nor to a small portion of the interior, which has the
appearance of having been former out of a tower with port holes. How an old
Peak family gets lost sight of can be instanced by the Beards. The most careful and accurate of Derbyshire
compilers (dear old Lysons) has these sentences: "The grandfather of the last Beard, of Beard Hall had four
sons; the two elder died without male issue, each of them having only a
daughter and heir; Alice, daughter of Nicholas, married Blackwell; Alice,
daughter of Richard, married Bowden.
William, son of John, the third son, was of Beard Hall, and had three
daughters married to Ashenhurst, Holt and Yeaveley. The Ashenhursts inherited Beard Hall. Ralph, the fourth son, had four sons, but we know nothing of
their posterity." The descendants
of this fourth son are yet among us; yes, living within a short stroll from
their ancestral homesteads, but not as lords of a manor, but as vendors of
treacle and soap, and other delectable necessities of life.
We had little hope of finding any remains of Beard Hall yet
standing, for intelligence had reached us - indeed, we were so told as we were
plodding our way from Bugsworth - that it had been entirely rebuilt. There was more than one pleasure awaiting
us, for not only was there the old gable, but a resident within who was a
descendant of the historic Staffords, who has been repeatedly asked why he
makes no attempt to recover on of the peerages once held by that family, and which
is still in abeyance. The courtesy of
Mr. Daniel Stafford and his lady we most gratefully acknowledge, while their
willingness to give information makes us their debtor, to which we would add,
that if our ideas could have been as readily grasped by some people who are
tenants of other old edifices as by this lady and gentleman, we should have
gathered more facts by the way than we have. The Legs who held the Manor of
Beard were offshoots of the great Cheshire house who had branches at Adlington,
Bothomes, Bruche, Lyme and Ridge. The
name they held was not really their own, paternally, for they were descendants
of the Venables, Baron Kinderton, one
of whom, in the reign of Henry III, married the heiress of the Leghs, and
adopted her name. Their son espoused
Ellen de Corona and acquired Adlington, thus the two quarterings of their shield
become intelligible. The pedigrees of
Cheshire families given by Earwaker tells us of many unions with Peak families,
of which we gather but little from our own compilers. The wife of the last
Beard of Beard Hall was a daughter of the Davenports of Henbury.
The Ashenhursts were a Staffordshire house of remote
antiquity. John, the grandson of the Beard heiress, who was born here, became
that famous, or infamous Parliamentary Colonel during the Civil War, whose
compound treachery is known to historical students. This fact alone would have
attracted many an individual to Beard. The father of the Colonel was a J. P.,
who donned the profession of a clergyman occasionally, for the entry is on
record that he married seventeen couples of Chapel-en-le-Frith lads and lasses
one morning. Is it not singular that
this old building, after having sheltered the Beards and the Ashenhursts,
should now be the dwelling of a gentleman whose ancestor not only fought at
Hastings, and whose name if on the Roll of Battle Abbey, but who was cousin to
the man to whom the victory gave the throne of England? Is it not singular, too, that the Halls of
Beard, Shalcross, Ollerset and Mellor (all comparatively within a stone's throw
of each other), all seeming with historic associations, all within about twenty
miles from Bakewell, should be so little known even to the curious.
(a) Basingwerke Abbey near Holywell, Flintshire was abandoned in 1536. They formerly held considerable lands in Derbyshire