Chamberlayne

The church of the HOLY TRINITY, WESTON, is a stone building in fourteenth-century style. The register dates from 1866.

The church of ST. MARY, SHOLING, a building of stone, in the thirteenth-century style, was erected in 1866, and the register dates from the same year.

ADVOWSON
Jesus chapel, later known as Pear Tree Church, from its site on Pear Tree Green, has never been formally separated from the mother church of St. Mary's, Southampton. The living was a curacy in the gift of the founder, Captain Richard Smith of Pear Tree, governor of Calshot Castle. In 1685 the patronage was sold to Mrs. Mylles of Pear Tree House, from whom it descended by marriage to the family of Davies. In 1881 Mrs. Davies transferred the patronage to the rector of St. Mary's Southampton, in return for an annual endowment of the living out of the tithes of that church. In 1896 a scheme was sanctioned by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners for the further endowment of Jesus Chapel out of the revenues of St. Mary's, the result of the arrangement being the transference of the patronage to the bishop of Winchester, the diocesan, in whose hands it still remains. The living is now a vicarage. (fn. 27)
Until 1855 Pear Tree Church was the only one in that part of the parish of St. Mary's Southampton which lies on the left bank of the River Itchen. In that year, as before mentioned, the Rev. P. Hulton erected a building now used as a Sunday school at Weston, to act as a chapel of ease to Pear Tree Church. He supplemented this a few years later by building a church, consecrated in 1865 as the church of Holy Trinity, Weston. His son, who succeeded him as vicar in 1870, accepted a grant for the augmentation of the living from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, and this involved the transference of the patronage of the benefice to the bishop of the diocese. (fn. 28) The ecclesiastical parish was formed in 1866. (fn. 29)

Sholing was formed into a consolidated chapelry in 1867, out of the parishes of Hound and St. Mary Extra. The living is a vicarage in the gift of the bishop of Winchester.

There is a Congregational chapel, built in 1838, in St. Mary Extra parish. At Sholing there is a mission room, and chapels for the Primitive Methodists, Baptists, and Plymouth Brethren.

CHARITIES
Charity of Nathaniel Mill. See Southampton Municipal Charities.
The following payments are made out of the dividends of a sum of £1,525 £2 10s. per cent. annuities, held by the official trustees in trust for this charity, namely, £1 14s. 4d. to the minister of Jesus Chapel, 17s. 4d. for repair of same chapel, £1 14s. 4d. for the poor of this parish, and 13s. 8d. for a coat or gown to a poor person.

Footnotes
1 L.G.B. Order, 44465.
2 Statistics from Bd. of Agric. 1905.
3 Parl. Blue Bk. Inclosure Awards, 156.
4 Rev. T. L. O. Davies, 'Historical Notes,' published in the Southampton Times.
5 Papers and Proc. Hants Field Club, iv (3).
6 See South Stoneham.
7 V.C.H. Hants, i, 501a.
8 Chan. Inq. p.m. 41 Hen. III, No. 22.
9 Chan. Inq. p.m. 45 Hen. III, No. 9.
10 Ibid. 10 Edw. II, No. 33.
11 Pat. 2 Edw. III, pt. 2, m. 29.
12 Chan. Inq. p.m. 23 Edw. III, pt. 2, No. 116; ibid. 35 Edw. III, pt. 1, No. 123.
13 Ibid. 48 Edw. III, No. 41.
14 Cal. of Pat. 1388–92, p. 171.
15 Chan. Inq. p.m. 7 Hen. IV, No. 48.
16 Cal. of Pat. 1388–92, p. 171.
17 Ibid. 1422–29, p. 195.
18 Feet of F. Hants, East. 6 Chas. I. An extent of the manor at this time gives 8 messuages, 7 gardens, 150 acres of land, 50 acres of meadow, 60 of pasture, 35 of woodland, 45 of furze, and the passage over the River Itchen to Southampton.
19 Ibid. Hil. 15 Chas. I.
20 Ibid. Trin. 12 Will. III.
21 Ibid.
22 Feet of F. Hants, Trin. 6 Geo. III.
23 Recov. R. Trin. 1 Will. IV, No. 163. See Netley and Hound.
24 Feet of F. Hants, Hil. 15 Chas. I; ibid. Trin. 12 Will. III.
25 Chan. Inq. p.m. 10 Edw. II, No. 33.
26 Proc. Hants Field Club, iv, 3.
27 From information supplied by Rev. T. L. O. Davies, vicar of Woolston.
28 Rev. T. L. O. Davies, Hist. Notes, published in the Southampton Times.
29 Lond. Gaz. 27 June, 1873.

From: 'Parishes: St Mary Extra', A History of the County of Hampshire: Volume 3 (1908), pp. 297-99. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=41974&strquery=jesus%20chapel. Date accessed: 29 January 2007.

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