About the Village
Pirton lies at the eastern end of the Chiltern Hills and is on the Icknield Way,
an ancient trade route that links with the Ridgeway in Wiltshire and the Peddars
Way in Norfolk. It is a nucleated settlement with the village core at the centre
of the two and a half thousand acres of its parish. The village has a triangular
plan created by the three boundary roads at the edges of the village: West Lane/Shillington
Road, Walnut Tree Road/Royal Oak Lane and Priors Hill/Hitchin Road. Within the area
bounded by these roads, the village has developed as it has alternately prospered
and declined over the past thousand or so years.
In simple terms Pirton comprises a large open area to the south, which was the ancient
core (see below: Toot Hill Castle and the Bury), and a larger area of farms and
houses to the north and west, which date from the medieval period (c1200) to the
present day. This arrangement of roads and the particular way in which Pirton village
has developed gives it a unique character. Although the population doubled in the
first half of the nineteenth century, it has stayed remarkably constant over the
last 150 years at about 1,300.The number of houses has increased to the current
count of 470 as fewer people now live in each house.
Plan of the Motte and Bailey and medieval village as identified on the survey carried
out in 1988.
Archaeology
Several important prehistoric, Roman and Anglo-Saxon sites have been identified
in Pirton, but it is for the medieval (AD1066-1500) monuments that the village is
especially noted. The most famous is the Motte and Bailey castle, known as 'Toot
Hill' (meaning `look out'). This comprises a large earth mound (the motte) with
a water-filled ditch and two outer, defence areas (the baileys). The Grade 1 Listed
parish church of St. Mary, which dates from the 11th century, also lies within one
of the castle baileys.
To the south east of the castle and church is a large grassed area known as 'The
Bury' which contains the earthwork remains of the now deserted part of the ancient
village of Pirton. Long depressions are clearly visible which were once the streets
of the old village and the areas of raised ground indicate the position of the houses.
The site of the ancient village also extends to and can be seen in the field on
the far side of Walnut Tree Road.
An imaginary reconstruction of Norman Pirton in 1139.
Both the Castle and the Bury are nationally important and are designated as Scheduled
Ancient Monuments. Pirton village also contains a scheduled medieval moated site
at Rectory Farm and well-preserved remains of medieval 'ridge and furrow' ploughing
in several of the fields that surround the village .
History
The first written mention of Pirton was in the Domesday Book compiled in 1086 A.D.
when it was referred to as Peritone: peri- a pear tree and ton – homestead. From
the entry made it seems that the population must then have been about 200, and that
the village was fairly prosperous with four water mills.
Norman undershot watermill
The Manor of Pirton which, before the Norman Conquest, was held by Stigand, Archbishop
of Canterbury, was awarded to a Norman knight, Ralph de Limesy. It was eventually
divided into three manors: the manors of Pirton, Doddingselles and Rectory. Rectory
Manor was created by Ralph de Limesy when he granted the church at Pirton to the
Priory of St Mary at Hertford. The present manor house, known as
Rectory Farm, is a typical E-shaped Elizabethan
house but was much altered in the 18th and 19th centuries.
The
Limesy family were followed at the end of the 12th century by the Oddingselles.
The remainder of the Manor of Pirton was divided between two Oddingselles sons in
the 13th century, William and Hugh. William took the portion including the old manor
house [now known as Docwra manor] which was called the Manor of Pirton. Thomas Docwra
of Putteridge bought the manor in the 16th century and erected a new manor house
at Highdown. Hugh took the portion which became known as the Manor of Doddingselles
and included Burge End and Hammonds Farms. Eton College bought the Manor of Doddingselles
in 153? and the land and property was leased to local tenants. By the end of the
18th century the Delme-Radcliffes of Hitchin Priory owned both the manors.
The Lord of the Manor had a right to hold a court for his tenants and the business
transacted was recorded in the court rolls. Many of the rolls for the three manors
in Pirton still survive and can be found at the Hertfordshire Archive and Local
Studies at County Hall Hertford Manor of Pirton [1487-1921], Manor of Pirton Doddingselles
[1373-1925] and Manor of Pirton Rectory [1576-1809].These are not complete runs
and until the mid 18th century are in abbreviated medieval latin except for a brief
period during the Commonwealth.
Until the nineteenth century, the economy of the village was based on agriculture
with six open fields divided into half acre strips. It was mainly arable farming
growing crops such as wheat, oats, peas and beans, and barley supplying the malting
trade in Hitchin. The commonfield system continued until the fields were enclosed
by act of parliament in 1818. As Luton developed as the centre of the hat trade
in the middle of the 19th century, Pirton became a straw plaiting village. However
this source of supplementing the family income declined by the beginning of the
20th century because of cheap imports from abroad. The farmhouses and barns have
now mostly been sold as residential property and all the fields are farmed by business
farmers from outside the village. Like many villages in Hertfordshire, Pirton is
now a commuter village.
One hundred years ago there were five
bakeries, seven pubs and nine
shops,
but changing times means that only the
Fox, the
Motte and Bailey and the combined
village stores / post office remain. The thriving primary
school was established
in 1841 as a national school.
Buildings
Pirton has a large number of important historic buildings, 54 of which are Listed.
At least three former manor houses lie within the village, Rectory Farm,
Hammonds Farm and Docwra Manor. A Grade II*
Listed 16th century tithe barn also lies at Rectory Farm. A group of fine medieval
and Tudor timber-framed buildings are found on
Great Green and at Burge End. `Three Gables'
in Bury End was originally a medieval hall house with cross wings.
The village underwent a period of rapid population growth in the early 19th century
from under 500 at the beginning of the century to 1023 in 1861. New houses were
built to accommodate this rising population, most of which were terraces of the
characteristic
Arlesey white brick (made from local gault clay), a number of which are
spread throughout the village, but some much larger Victorian houses were also built,
for example
Pirton Court
and
Pirton Hall.
The next significant phase of Pirton's development occurred after the First and
Second World Wars in the 20th century when the municipal housing estates of
Davis Crescent and Danefield Road were constructed.
During the latter half of the 20th century the development of the village mainly
consisted of in-fill within the existing envelope. In 1965 a modern estate was built
at Cromwell Way and Bunyan Close and later small estates were also built, such as
St Mary's Close and Franklin Close in the 1980s. The last large in-fill development
was at
Coleman's
Close in the 1990s. A number of smaller developments, many comprising single
houses, continue to be built in the village's small open areas.