A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE 



Chandler, 1673, the third being 

 Lord. a.c. 1673.' 



The communion plat 

 paten, 1662, large pate 

 almsdish, 1702. 



The registers before 1 i 

 tisms and marriages from 

 to 1 71 7 ; (ii) baptisms 



ribed ' Praise the 



consists of a cup of 1 564, 



1687, flagon, 1688, and 



s follows : (i) bap- 



, burials 1 j 



d burials from 



iS to 



, marriages from 1719 to 1727 ; (iii) marriages 

 from 1755 to 177;; (iv) marriages from 1776101812. 

 The advowson belonged to the 

 JDFOffHON lord of the manor from an early 

 date. In I z 1 1 it was the subject 

 of a dispute between Richard son of Godfrey de 

 Tewin and Ralph son of Brian de Tewin, respective 

 holders of half-fees in Tewin. Richard was successful 

 in making good his claim.' 6 Before 1 246 the advow- 



who presented in 1 7z8, :t and in whose possesion 

 it has since remained." In 1638 the glebe lands 

 amounted to 40 aires." 



In 1330 Roger de Louthe alienated in mortmain 

 various lands in the parish of St. Andrew, Hertford, 

 to the Prior and convent of St. Mary, Little 

 Wymondley, to find a chaplain to sing miss daily 

 in the church of Tewin for the good estate of the 

 souls of Roger and Joan his wife and their ancestors." 



Meeting-places for Protestant Dissenters in the 

 parish were certified in 1706, 1707 and i77i. M 



Tewin School" : The property 

 CHARITIES demised by will or Dr. Yarborough, 

 1 77 3, for the benefit of the parish clerk 

 and a schoolmaster was sold in 1896 in consideration 

 of a yearly rent-charge of £8 %i. upon property in 

 Bishop's Hatfield, which was redeemed in 1904. by 



son was given by Alexander de Swereford to the 

 monastery of St. Bartholomew, Smithlield, and was 

 confirmed to them by Godfrey and his son John." 

 It remained with St. Bartholomew until its dissolu- 

 tion, and afterwards continued with the manor of 

 Tewin "until it was sold by John Wrothe and others 

 to Thomas Montford of Tewin House, who died 

 seised of it in 1632." It then continued in the 

 possession of the owners of Tewin House and came 

 to Sir Francis Butler," whose daughter Isabella 

 Hutchinson sold it to Jesus College, Cambridge," 



the transfer to the official trustees of £356 consols, 

 of which y~2J2 consols was set aside as the endow- 

 ment of ' Dr. Yarborough's Educational Foundation,' 

 producing £6 61. yearly, and £84 consols, producing 

 £z z/. for the parish clerk. In 1783 Lady Cathcart 

 by deed gave £166 13/. \d. East India 3 per cent. 

 annuities for providing coals for the school. These 

 endowments are now attached to the endowed school 

 founded under the will of Henry Cowper in 1838, 

 which is endowed with government stocks producing 

 £62 a year or thereabouts. 



nj&brrv. PLc. (Ret Com.), Si. 



17 Feet of F. Herts, 31 Hen. IIT, 

 no. 319 ; 7 Edw. I, no. 79 ; Chart. R. 

 6 Ric. II, no. 7. 



19 L. and P. Hm. VIII, iii (l),g. Sit 

 (. 1+ )i g. 80 (48) J Feet of F. HetH. 

 Trin.isj«. I. 



19 Chan. Inq. p.n 



(P.R.O.). 

 11 Salmon, op. cit. ;o. 

 * rnst. Bl«. (P.R.O.), 



z), cccclrviii, 

 1 8 ; Inst, flki. 



and Aitria. iii, JJ7" g - 



d Church. 



" Urwiek, Nu 



* V.C.H. Htn 



mf. in Mr* S S«- 



