Part 33
[C] BENNINGTON, called Belintone in the Domesday Book, was a seat of the Mercian kings; and here a great council of nobility and prelates was assembled about the year 850, under King Bertulph, who on the complaint of Askill, a monk of Croyland, of the great devastations committed on the property of that monastery by the Danes, granted the monks a new charter of divers "splendid liberties," and several extensive manors. In the 33d of Edward I. a charter of a weekly market, and a fair annually, was granted for this manor; but the former has long fallen into disuse! The manor was long in possession of the Bourchiers, Earls of Essex. Robert, the third Earl, after his divorce from the infamous Lady Francis Howard, his first wife, in 1613, sold it to Sir Julius Cæsar, Knt., from whom it descended to his son and heir, Sir Charles Cæsar. This gentleman was appointed Master of the Rolls in 1638; and, after being twice married, and having fifteen children by both wives, died of the small-pox, at Bennington, in 1643: this disease proved fatal also to several of his issue, and among them, to Julius, his eldest surviving son, who dying within a few days, was buried in the same grave with his father. Henry, his next son, and heir, represented this county in the two first parliaments held in the reign of Charles II.; and he was knighted by that sovereign in 1660: he also died of the small-pox, in January 1667. This manor was sold to the trustees under the will of Sir John Cheshire, Knt. His great nephew, John Cheshire, Esq., resided in a small mansion near the ancient castle at Bennington, which stood westward from the church, and most probably occupied the spot whereon stood the palace of the Saxon Kings. The artificial mount of the keep, with the surrounding ditch, are still to be seen. The old manor-house that had been inhabited by the Cæsars, stood in the park, at a small distance from the village, but was burnt down about fifty years ago. A small edifice, since erected on the site, was for some years occupied by Mr. Bullock. Bennington church is a small fabric, consisting of a nave and a chancel, with a tower at the west end, and a chapel or burial-place connected with the chancel on the north. Here are two ancient monuments, under arches, which form part of them, each exhibiting recumbent figures of a knight and a lady. Many of the Cæsars lie buried here. The Benstede family, sometime lords of the manor, are supposed to have built this church, as their arms are displayed both upon the roof and on the tower. In a niche over the south porch, St. Michael and the dragon are sculptured.
[Sidenote: Ancient charters.]
[Sidenote: The small-pox fatal to Cheshires.]
[Sidenote: Their monuments.]
Map| Names of Places. | County. |Number of Miles From | +--+---------------------+----------+-------------+--------------+ 24|Benningworth pa|Lincoln |Wragby 6|Horncastle 9| 29|Bewridge to|Northumb |Morpeth 2|Rothbury 12| 31|Bensinton[A] pa|Oxford |Wallingford 2|Nettlebed 6| 14|Bentfield ham|Essex |Stanstead 2|B. Stortford 4| 33|Benthall pa|Salop |Wenlock 3|Madeley 6| 15|Bentham ham|Gloucester|Gloucester 5|Cheltenham 5| 44|Bentham pa & to|W.R. York |Settle 12|Ingleton 5| 16|Bentley pa|Hants |Farnham 4|Alton 6| 35|Bentley to & lib|Stafford |Walsall 2|S. Coldfield 7| 36|Bentley pa|Suffolk |Ipswich 6|Manningtree 12| 39|Bentley ham|Warwick |Atherstone 3|Coleshill 7| 46|Bentley to|W.R. York |Doncaster 2|Arksey 1| 10|Bentley, Fenny pa|Derby |Ashborne 3|Wirksworth 8| 14|Bentley, Great pa|Essex |Colchester 9|Manningtree 9| 10|Bentley, Hungry to|Derby |Ashborne 6|Derby 10| 14|Bentley, Little pa|Essex |Manningtree 5|Colchester 9| 42|Bentley, Up. & L. ham|Worcester |Bromsgrove 3|Redditch 3| 29|Benton, Little to|Northumb |Newcastle 4|N. Shields 6| 29|Benton, Long[B] pa|Northumb | ... 4| ... 6| +--+---------------------+----------+-------------+--------------+ |Dist.| Map| Names of Places. | Number of Miles From |Lond.|Population. +--+---------------------+------------------------+-----+--------+ 24|Benningworth pa|Louth 9| 145| 373| 29|Bewridge to|Blyth 11| 290| 53| 31|Bensinton[A] pa|Dorchester 3| 46| 1266| 14|Bentfield ham|Saff. Walden 9| 34| 505| 33|Benthall pa|Wellington 7| 150| 525| 15|Bentham ham|Painswick 7| 104| | 44|Bentham pa & to|Lancaster 13| 247| 3957| 16|Bentley pa|Odiham 6| 42| 728| 35|Bentley to & lib|Lichfield 8| 120| 99| 36|Bentley pa|Harwich 18| 69| 363| 39|Bentley ham|Birmingham 16| 106| 270| 46|Bentley to|Thorne 10| 164| 1144| 10|Bentley, Fenny pa|Derby 16| 142| 308| 14|Bentley, Great pa|Harwich 13| 60| 978| 10|Bentley, Hungry to|Uttoxeter 9| 136| 92| 14|Bentley, Little pa|Harwich 10| 60| 438| 42|Bentley, Up. & L. ham|Birmingham 14| 113| | 29|Benton, Little to|Blyth 9| 278| | 29|Benton, Long[B] pa| ... 9| 278| 5547| +--+---------------------+------------------------+-----+--------+
[A] BENSINGTON was an ancient British town, taken from the original inhabitants by Ceaulin, in the year 572. The west Saxons held the place for two centuries, and appear to have constructed a castle for its defence; but it was reduced by Offa, king of the Mercians, who defeated his rival in a sanguinary contest. To the west of the church are a quadrangular bank and trench. Three sides of the embankment are much defaced. Plot mentions an "angle of King Offa's palace near the church;" by which he probably alludes to the same spot. In this village are several modern buildings. The church, which is gothic, has been built at different times. In the brick flooring of the nave are some ancient stones, with mutilated brasses. Here is a Sunday-school supported by subscription; and a meeting-house for methodists.
[Sidenote: A Mercian King.]
[B] LONG BENTON. A dreadful calamity occurred at Heaton Colliery, in this neighbourhood, on the morning of May 3, 1815, when, by the sudden influx of water from an old mine, Mr. Miller, (the under-viewer, who left a wife and eight children), 22 workmen, 42 boys, and 37 horses, perished; and 25 widows, with about 80 children, were left to bemoan the sudden death of their husbands and fathers. Steam-engines were immediately employed, and every exertion was made for the recovery of the bodies; notwithstanding which, it was not till the 6th of January, in the following year, that the first body was found. It was that of an old man employed on the waggon-way: and a fact worthy of notice is, that the waste-water in which he had been immersed had destroyed the woollen clothes, and corroded the iron parts of a knife the deceased had in his pocket, yet his linen and the bone-haft of his knife remained entire. Shortly after, Mr. Miller, and a few others, were discovered: they had met a similar fate, having been overtaken by the water about a hundred yards from the shaft to which they had been hastening to save themselves. But the lot of these eight persons may be considered fortunate, when compared with the unhappy beings left at work towards the rise of the mine, and as yet unconscious of their dreadful situation. About the 16th of February, the higher parts of the workings were explored; and now a scene truly horrible was presented to view: for here lay the corpses of 56 human beings, whom the water had never reached, being situated 35 fathoms above its level. They had collected together near the crane, and were found within a space of 30 yards of each other; their positions and attitudes were various; several appeared to have fallen forwards from off an inequality, or rather step, in the coal on which they had been sitting; others, from their hands being clasped together, seemed to have expired while addressing themselves to the protection of the Deity; two, who were recognized as brothers, had died in the act of taking a last farewell by grasping each other's hand: and one poor boy reposed in his father's arms. Two slight cabins had been hastily constructed by nailing up deal boards, and in one of these melancholy habitations three of the stoutest miners had breathed their last. A large lump of horse flesh, wrapped up in a jacket, nearly two pounds of candles, and three others, which had died out when half-burned, were found in this apartment, if it can be so called. One man, well known to have possessed a remarkably pacific disposition, had retired to a distance to end his days alone, and in quiet. Another had been placed to watch the rise or fall of the water; to ascertain which, sticks had been placed, and was found dead at his post. There were two horses in the part of the mine to which the people had retired; one had been slaughtered, its entrails taken out, and hind quarters cut up for use; the other was fastened to a stake, which it had almost gnawed to pieces, as well as a corfe or coal basket that had been left within its reach. That these ill-fated people perished for want of respirable air, and not from hunger and thirst, is certain; for most of the flesh cut from the horse, with a considerable quantity of horse-beans, were unconsumed, and a spring of good water issued into this part of the colliery; besides, the unburned remains of candles afford evidence of a still stronger nature; and by these data the coroner's jury was enabled to pronounce a verdict accordingly. The overman had left the chalk-board, in which it is usual to take down an account of the work done, together with his pocket-book, in an empty corfe; on these some memorandum might have been expected to be noted: but no writing subsequent to the catastrophe appeared on either.--The bodies of those men which had lain in wet places were much decayed; but where the floor was dry, though their flesh had become much shrivelled, they were all easily recognised by their features being entire.
[Sidenote: Dreadful accident.]
[Sidenote: Fifty-six lives lost in a mine.]
[Sidenote: Cause of their death.]
Map|Names of Places. | County. | Number of Miles From | +--+-----------------+----------+------------+--------------+ 45|Bents-Green |W.R. York |Sheffield 3|Bakewell 13| 16|Bentworth pa|Hants |Alton 5|Alresford 8| 12|Benville ham|Dorset |Beaminster 4|Crewkherne 6| 23|Benwell to|Northumb |Newcastle 2|Corbridge 14| 6|Benwick chap|Cambridge |March 6|Chatteris 6| 42|Beoley pa|Worcester |Bromsgrove 8|Redditch 3| 38|Bepton pa|Sussex |Midhurst 3|Petersield 9| 14|Berdin pa|Essex |Stanstead 6|Saff. Walden 9| 15|Berdwick ham|Gloucester|Bristol 8|Marshfield 4| 14|Bere-Church pa|Essex |Colchester 2|Coggeshall 10| 12|Bere ham|Dorset |Blandford 7|Shaftesbury 8| 16|Bere-Lay ham|Hants |Newport 7|Niton 2| 36|Bergholt, East pa|Suffolk |Hadleigh 6|Ipswich 8| 14|Bergholt, West pa|Essex |Colchester 4|Witham 13| +--+-----------------+----------+------------+--------------+ |Dist.| Map|Names of Places. | Number of Miles From |Lond.|Population. +--+-----------------+-----------------------+-----+--------+ 45|Bents-Green |Castleton 12| 163| | 16|Bentworth pa|Basingstoke 8| 52| 592| 12|Benville ham|Yeovil 8| 130| | 23|Benwell to|Hexham 18| 276| 1278| 6|Benwick chap|Peterborough 6| 81| 526| 42|Beoley pa|Birmingham 11| 112| 673| 38|Bepton pa|Chichester 10| 53| 166| 14|Berdin pa|Bis. Stortford 6| 36| 342| 15|Berdwick ham|Sodbury 5| 97| | 14|Bere-Church pa|Aberton 3| 52| 142| 12|Bere ham|Sturminster 5| 109| | 16|Bere-Lay ham|Shanklin 10| 93| | 36|Bergholt, East pa|Manningtree 3| 63| 1360| 14|Bergholt, West pa|Halstead 10| 10| 786| +--+-----------------+-----------------------+-----+--------+
Map| Names of Places. | County. |Number of Miles From | +--+---------------------+----------+---------+-----------+ 15|Berkeley[A] m.t. & pa|Gloucester|Dursley 6|Chepstow 13| 34|Berkeley pa|Somerset |Frome 3|Bath 12| +--+---------------------+----------+---------+-----------+ |Dist.| Map| Names of Places. | Number of Miles From|Lond.|Population. +--+---------------------+--------------------+-----+-----+ 15|Berkeley[A] m.t. & pa|Thornbury 7| 114| 3899| 34|Berkeley pa|Warminster 7| 103| 531| +--+---------------------+--------------------+-----+-----+
[A] BERKELEY. This ancient, but small town, is situated upon a pleasant eminence in the beautiful vale of Berkeley, almost east from the Severn. In the Domesday book, it is termed a royal domain and free borough. A nunnery is said to have existed here in the reign of Edward the Confessor; the frail sisters of which were dispossessed of their estates, including the manor, by the craft of Earl Godwin, who found means to introduce into the community a profligate young man, by whom the nuns were seduced. This conduct being reported to the King, the nunnery was dissolved, and its possessions granted to the Earl. The Conqueror afterwards bestowed the manor on Roger, surnamed De Berkeley, a chieftain who had accompanied him to England. Roger, his grandson, taking part with Stephen, against Henry II., was deprived of his lands; and Berkeley was given by that monarch to Robert Fitzharding, Governor of Bristol, in reward for his eminent services. This nobleman was descended from the Kings of Denmark, and in his posterity the extensive manor of Berkeley, one of the largest in England, is still vested. Berkeley church appears to be of the age of Henry II., though it has undergone various alterations. Near the pulpit is a curious tomb, in memory of Thomas, second Lord Berkeley, and Margaret, his first wife. Here also are various other monuments of this family. The tower, which stands at some distance from the church, was constructed about seventy years ago. In the churchyard is the well known ludicrous epitaph, written by Dean Swift, in memory of "Dickey Pearce, the Earl of Suffolk's fool." Berkeley Castle appears to have been founded by Roger de Berkeley, soon after the Conquest; but various important additions were made to it during the reigns of Henry II., Edward II., and Edward III. The form of the castle approaches nearest to that of a circle; and the buildings are included by an irregular court, with a moat. The keep is flanked by three semi-circular towers, and a square one of subsequent construction: its walls are high and massive: the entrance into it is under an arched doorway, with ornamental sculpture in the Norman style, similar to one at Arundel Castle. This fortress has been the scene of various memorable transactions; the most remarkable, perhaps, was that of the murder of Edward II., in September, 1327, thus noticed by Gray:--
"Mark the year, and mark the night, When Severn shall re-echo with affright, The shrieks of death through Berkeley's roofs that ring; Shrieks of an agonising King!"
Tradition states, that when the murder of King Edward had been determined on, Adam, Bishop of Hereford, at the instigation of the Queen, wrote to the keeper the following words; which, not possessing the distinctness imported by punctuation, were capable of a double construction:
"Edwardum occidere nolite timere bonum est." Edward the King kill not to fear is good.