The English Village Explained: Britain’s Living History

Free The English Village Explained: Britain’s Living History by Trevor Yorke

Book: The English Village Explained: Britain’s Living History by Trevor Yorke Read Free Book Online
Authors: Trevor Yorke
often be up to two or three times older than an unmanaged tree of the same species, although willows are rarely very old. This also applies to those trees which were cut back and laid to make traditional hedges. Identification of these around a village may help in establishing old from new boundaries and previous land use.
    Increased demand for land and timber since the 18th century, especially in the boom years of the mid-Victorian period and since the Second World War, has seen the demise of much woodland. A curved or irregular-shaped area divided up into small fields may indicate where trees were grubbed up and put under the plough. Others were enclosed or converted to timberproduction, the more natural mix of flora and fauna being sacrificed in preference for the growth of one particular tree. Industries like shipbuilding, tanning, iron, furniture and mining also played their part in the decline of semi-natural woodland although many still managed the trees with coppicing and replanting to maintain their supply of fuel and timber.

    FIG 6.8: A traditional method of forming a barrier was by cutting trees low down and laying branches flat between uprights. Sometimes mature trees can be found in old boundaries with trunks running horizontal for a short way and then shooting up into a mass of smaller branches, indicating that this was formerly a hedge laid in this way and that the boundary and tree may be very old .
    In the 20th century the decline of grazing on those commons and wastes which survived the enclosure movement, permitted a secondary growth of trees to become established as there were no animals to eat the young shoots. Disused industrial and military land can also become scrub in an amazingly short time, and then develop into woodland. The humps and bumps which you probably would not think twice about in a wood today can be worth investigating as when viewed on old maps and photographs they can reveal a surprisingly recent yet forgotten landscape.

    FIG 6.9: Along a ridge of hills as here in the Chilterns, parishes were often shaped in long strips reaching up to the tops so that they would take in the woodland, as it was a vital asset to be shared by villagers for buildings and fencing .

    FIG 6.10: To protect woodland from grazing animals a bank would have been raised around its perimeter with a ditch on the outside face. These can still be found sometimes within a wood showing that the area of trees has increased since medieval times. A deer park boundary had the bank beyond the ditch making it hard for animals to jump out .
PARKS
Deer parks
    Their passion for hunting inspired the medieval gentry to create their own deer parks, which would usually be established within existing woodland on the lord’s own demesne land. It was enclosed by a ditch and beyond this abank with a timber fence or hedge along the top to prevent the precious animals escaping; they would only be released into the surrounding land at the time of a hunt. At their peak there were some 3,000 parks across England which could be up to 200 acres in size, but by the 16th century they had fallen from favour and many became incorporated within later landscaped garden schemes or were grubbed up for farming. Their boundaries, which were often a rough circle in plan, can still be identified on maps divided up by later fields and the remains of their internal ditches and external banks can sometimes be found today.
    With the loss of parks and woodland, hunting deer declined and firstly the hare and then after the Restoration in 1660, the fox which had previously been regarded as an inferior target, became a popular quarry. Stables and kennels to keep the horses and hounds were built and fox coverts or artificial earths created to encourage the foxes to breed. Shooting also became popular, with gamekeepers protecting open moorland and woodland for the breeding of birds like grouse and pheasants, especially in the agricultural depressions of

Similar Books

Skin Walkers - King

Susan Bliler

A Wild Ride

Andrew Grey

The Safest Place

Suzanne Bugler

Women and Men

Joseph McElroy

Chance on Love

Vristen Pierce

Valley Thieves

Max Brand