From the preface:
"The aim of this modest history is to provide a record, as full as is possible to obtain, of the almost forgotten manor of Digswell, and that northern part of the parish of Hatfield on which Welwyn Garden City is being built. The record covers the period from earliest times to 1920, when part of the Digswell estate was bought by Ebenezer Howard for the site of his second Garden City."
From the Introduction:
"Long before the Norman Conquest Digswell was divided into two parts, each held by a Saxon farmer with the village in between. This division continued until the fourteenth century. After the Conquest the southern part, that which lay between the Mimram and the Lea, became the manor of Geoffrey de Mandeville. It lay in what later became the parish of Digswell and the parish of Hatfield. Part of this ancient manor became the site of Welwyn Garden City."
The main body of the book is in two parts:
Part I: The Manor (chapters I to IX)
Part II: The Parish (chapter X to XIII)
Part I takes the history from before the Norman Conquest up till the nineteenth century. Part II describes the Parish, the Church of St John the Evangelist, rectors of the church and the later history.
In chapter III Dora tells of the second Geoffrey de Mandeville (grandson of the Domesday one already mentioned). He founded Walden Abbey, but "is one of those few characters of whom little good can be said". It was round his manor, and the church which he founded that the life of the people centred for the next four centuries. By playing off Stephen and Matilda against one another he was able to extract more and more for himself including the Earldom of Essex.
Dora's account continues through the centuries. It is quite riveting and includes much detail. I agree with what it says on the rear of the dust-jacket:
"Miss Dora Ward, MA, has spent many years in the examination of scattered records and in weaving into a continuous account all that can be gathered together of the manor and parish and those who have lived in them.
"The families of St Michael, Perient, and Shalcross were lords of the manor before it passed to Lord Cowper and his descendants at the end of the eighteenth century. Their history and influence are recounted at length. The twelfth century church and its connection with Walden Abbey until the Dissolution are fully dealt with. The rectors of the church and the personalities of the village live before the reader.
"This is a book which will be numbered among the few outstanding local histories."
There are 25 black and white illustrations on glossy paper with very high quality of reproduction in my copy, plus glued into the back a fold-out tithe map (1842) in pen and ink 10" by 14". The black and white illustrations include buildings and scenes from around Digswell, manuscripts, maps, brasses and 2 aerial shots.
There are 4 appendices:
1. Grant of Digswell Manor (c. 1218).
2. The Will of John Perient (1432).
3. A Survey of the Manor in the Sixteenth Century.
4. Tithe notes (1841).
click on the images for a better view
The caption in the book for this photograph reads "Aerial view of Digswell (circa 1934) showing strips in medieval open field (Lines of strips have been lightly emphasized)". I am particularly fond of this photograph because it shows the house I lived in for the first 18 years of my life (1945-1963), as it was probably not long after it was constructed. Towards the bottom is the Cherry Tree on Bridge Road, with Hunters Bridge to the right and the inner semi-circle road (now paved over) of the campus to the left. The outer semi-circle has not yet been constructed and neither has the new Welwyn Stores. The houses are there in Digswell Road, Blakemere Road, Walden Road, Pentley Park, Sherrards Park Road, Coneydale, Mandeville Rise, etc. Beyond Coneydale are fields and woods as it was until I was about age 10, when the Knightsfield estate was started. My house (36 Digswell Road) is nextdoor but one to the large house at the apex of Digswell Road and Blakemere Road. At the top right of the picture is the lane leading off to Digswell.
The caption for this shot is "Aerial view of Digswell village (circa 1934)". The lane from Welwyn Garden City appears at the bottom right having followed the western side of the railway line from the previous shot. It goes under the second arch of the viaduct and round to form a junction with the road from Old Welwyn (off shot to the left) to Hertford (to the right). I attended the stables at this junction for riding and jumping lessons until a horse bit me and put me off it. At the bottom of the picture is the lake and the Mimram. When very small I visited here and was persuaded to walk along a wooden walkway suspended over the water. The water was very dark and the place quite eerie and frightening. When older I later often went there when our family had a key to Digswell Lake Society.