The Cheviot Hills, Northumberland National Park\n© Simon Fraser

Hethpool : The Tower

A ruined tower still stands in the garden of Hethpool House towards the north east end of the village. This is probably to be identified with the 'Turris de Hethepulle' recorded in the hands of Robert Manors, in the list of border fortifications compiled for Henry V, prior to the king's embarkation for France in 1415 (cf. Bates 1891, 17), and may be further equated with the 'little stone house or pile' noted in Bowes and Ellerker's Border survey of 1541 (Bates 1891, 32; see Selected Sources and Surveys no. 3).

On Christopher Dacre's plat or plan of the castles, towers and townships along 'the plenished ringe of the borders' in 1584, it is labelled Hethpole towr' and shown, schematically, as a tower, plus a collection of houses signifying an inhabited village township (PRO MPF 284; reproduced in Bates 1891, between pages 78 and 79; and Long 1967, facing p. 186, cf. p. 47). Although the RCHME (Ramm et al 1970, 89) suggest the extant remains represent those of a bastle, Ryder considers it to most likely to have been a small tower, and there is no reason which all the known documentary references could not apply to such a structure, perhaps with a stone dwelling house attached.

The inclusion of Hethpool Tower in the 1415 list of castle and towers implies it was constructed during the 14th century or perhaps at the very beginning of the 15th century. The Manners family are first mentioned at Hethpool in 1336 when one messuage was settled on Robert Manners and his son.  The County History suggests this tenement may be identified with the half a carucate of land (50-60 acres) held by Stephen de Coupland for a thirtieth of a knight's fee in 1242 (NCH XI (1922), 266), but there is no conclusive link between the two holdings.

Robert Manners is further mentioned holding land at Hethpool in 1345, and on his death in 1354, he was still seised of a single messuage there worth 3s. 4d yearly. The Robert Manners who held the tower in 1415 was presumably a descendent of this earlier Robert, but there is no other reference to the family at Hethpool during the medieval period. The County History suggests that Thomas Haisandes, whose name is inserted in the margin of the 1415 list next to Hethpool Tower, may represent the tower's inhabitant, presumably leasing it from Robert Manners (op. cit., 267, n.1).

The tenement was presumably the same as that known as Tower Lands or Tower Farms in 1688, when it was held by Katherine Grey (op. cit., 260, 267). As the County History points out, however, it is unclear why the Manners should have made such a relatively substantial investment - in the form of building the tower – in a township of which they held such a small proportion, even if the tower was quite small by comparison with many others of the type.

Hethpool Tower © NNPA
Picture : Hethpool Tower

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