Felley Priory
Felley Priory is a 16th century house with gardens located in the village of Felley, Nottinghamshire, UK. It is situated on the grounds of a former priory established by Augustinians in 1156 and dissolved in 1536. The gardens were started in 1974 by Maria Chaworth-Musters and opened to the public through the National Garden Scheme just two years later. Since Maria's passing in 2010, the gardens have been managed by her granddaughter and expert gardener, Michelle Upchurch. In 2021, the gardens were one of the four finalists in the public gardens category in NGS's The Nation's Favourite Gardens competition.
Amenities
The gardens to the priory are open to the public. There is a cafe onsite.Image:Felley Priory, Nottinghamshire.jpg|thumb|Felley Priory
History
The priory was established by Ralph Brito in 1156 on the site of an earlier chapel served by a Hermit. The hermitage was dedicated to Saint Helen and had, in 1151, been endowed by Brito who placed it under the control of Worksop Priory. Worksop retained control when the priory was established, a situation which was confirmed in a papal bull by Pope Alexander III in 1161. Worksop remained in control until 1260, when Felley became an independent priory.Ralph Brito and his son donated to the priory the church at Felley. Other donations include the church of Annesley, a mill at Bradley, land in Nottinghamshire, land at Ogston and Brackenfield, land at Tibshelf, land at Ashover, land in Derbyshire, land at Whiteborough, land and rents in Chesterfield, and land at Newark, Colwick and Southwell. The priory also received charters of confirmation from both Pope Celestine III and Pope Gregory IX.
The priory was never very large: It was probably home to only five or six canons, and the priory church is thought to have been only a simple nave and chancel. The 1534 Valor Ecclesiasticus records the priory as having an income of £61 4s. 8d.
The priory was visited by two commissioners who recorded the priory had an annual income of around £40 but was almost as much in debt. The priory was dissolved in 1536, as part of King Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries. The last prior, Christopher Bolton, was given an annual pension of £6; this was, however, cancelled when Bolton became rector of Attenborough.
Priors of Felley
- Walter, probably first prior
- Adam de Nokton,
- William de Lovetot,
- Henry
- Thomas
- Walter, occurs c. 1240
- Henry, occurs 1260
- Ralph de Pleasley, occurs 1268, deposed 1276
- Thomas de Wathenowe, 1276
- Alan de Elksley, 1281
- William de Toveton, resigned 1315
- Elias de Lyndeby, 1315
- John de Kirkeby, 1328
- John de Holebroke, 1349
- Richard de Shirebrook, 1349
- Robert Eavys, died 1378
- Thomas Elmeton, 1378
- John de Mansfield, 1381
- William Tuxford, died 1405
- John Gaynesburgh, died 1442
- Peter Methlay, 1442
- John Throghcroft, died 1454
- William Acworth, 1454
- Richard Congreve, 1463
- William Symondson alias Bolton, 1482
- Laurence Ynggam, 1500
- Thomas Gatesford, resigned 1519
- Thomas Stokk, 1519
- Christopher Bolton
Monastic remains
Four semi-circular columns, thought to be from the priory church, survive and have been reused as gateposts for the house. The priory's precinct wall and fishponds also survive.
History after dissolution
In 1539 the priory's land was granted to William Bolles, but he did not hold them for long as Queen Mary sold the land to Sir Anthony Strelley, whose family held Strelley, near Nottingham.After the former priory reverted to the Crown again, King James I leased the former priory to Anthony Millington, who made it his family seat.
Gilbert Millington, Anthony's eldest son was probably born at the house built upon the former monastery. Gilbert was a member of the Long Parliament and Deputy Lieutenant of Nottinghamshire when the civil war broke out between King Charles I and Parliament. He was thus marked out for punishment by the Royalists who seized his estates. Gilbert Millington was one of those who signed King Charles I's execution warrant. When the monarchy was restored, he was condemned to death along with other regicides. He was, however, spared the gallows and spent the rest of his life in captivity on Jersey until he died in either 1666 or 1676.