Halfshire

Halfshire (Latin: Hundredum Dimidii Comitatūs, "hundred of half (the) county") was one of the hundreds in the English county of Worcestershire. As three of the five hundreds in the county were jurisdictions exempt from the authority of the sheriff, the hundred was considered to be half what was subject to his jurisdiction, whence the name.[citation needed]

The hundred seems to have been formed in the mid-12th century, by amalgamating the Domesday hundreds of Came (except three of the Came manors, viz. Alvechurch, Stoke Prior and Osmerley which went to the hundred of Oswaldslow),[1] Clent, Cresslau, and Esch, other than those parts where an ecclesiastical exempt jurisdiction existed, which were joined to the appropriate ecclesiastical hundreds about the same time.

Anciently, it contained the following manors:
Belbroughton, Bentley Pauncefoot, Bromsgrove, Chaddesley Corbett, Churchill, Church Lench, Cofton Hackett, Cradley, Doverdale, Droitwich, Dudley, Elmbridge, Elmley Lovett, Feckenham, Frankley, Hadzor, Hagley, Kidderminster, Kingsford (in Wolverley), Kings Norton, Kington, Lutley, Northfield, Oldswinford, Over Mitton (formerly in Hartlebury, but now part of Stourport), Pedmore, Rushock, Salwarpe, Stone, Stourbridge, Upton Warren, and Warley Wigorn. Of these, Kington and Church Lench were exclaves. Feckenham and Bentley Pauncefoot were also nearly exclaves until Tardebigge was added.

It also contained the extra-parochial places of Crutch, Grafton Manor, and Westwood Park.

By the late 17th century the hundred was administered in two divisions. The court for the lower[clarification needed] division met at Churchill "under a great tree".

Halfshire's Exclaves and Enclaves

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The following map and accompanying table is a breakdown of the exclaves, enclaves and parishes incorporated into Halfshire hundred between 1844 (following enactment of the Counties (Detached Parts) Act 1844)[2] and the creation of the district council structure in 1894.[3] For clarity, the map and table includes Halfshire's own parishes that were enclaves of other Worcestershire hundreds, and also the location of Upper Arley's inclusion in 1895.

Map of Halfshire, complete with enclaves and exclaves
Map of the Worcestershire Hundred of Halfshire (C19) – with enclaves and exclaves
Number Parish/Placename County and Hundred (before 1844) County and Hundred (1844–1894) Notes
1 Dudley Worcestershire, Halfshire Worcestershire, Halfshire Became a Municipal Borough in 1865,[4] superseded by County Borough status in 1889.
2 Halesowen (excluding Warley Wigorn, Cradley and Lutley) Shropshire, Brimstree Worcestershire, Halfshire Warley Wigorn merged with Warley Salop, plus parts of Ridgacre and Oldbury to form Warley Parish in 1884.
3 Clent Staffordshire, Seisdon South Worcestershire, Halfshire Seisdon Hundred: the Chapelry of Rowley Regis was originally dependent on Clent[5]
4 Broome Staffordshire, Seisdon South[6] Worcestershire, Halfshire
5 Upper Arley Staffordshire, Seisdon South Staffordshire, Seisdon South Transferred to Worcestershire in 1895[7]
6 Tardebigge (now Tutnall and Cobley) Warwickshire, Barlinchway Worcestershire, Halfshire Also formerly part of Staffordshire (Seisdon Hundred)
7 Feckenham Worcestershire, Halfshire Worcestershire, Halfshire No change
8 Kington Worcestershire, Halfshire Worcestershire, Halfshire No change
9 Church Lench Worcestershire, Halfshire Worcestershire, Halfshire No change
10 Yardley Worcestershire, Pershore Worcestershire, Halfshire Formerly part of Pershore Hundred, Policing duties transferred to Warwickshire between 1857 and 1899

References

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  1. ^ Survey of English Place Names: Came Hundred, accessed 22 October 2020.
  2. ^ HM Government Legislation - Counties (Detached Parts) Act 1844
  3. ^ HM Government Local Government Act 1894 - Retrieved 25 August 2013
  4. ^ A Vision of Britain through Time Dudley Municipal Borough/County Borough, Worcestershire Archived 2007-11-03 at the Wayback Machine – Retrieved 29 July 2011
  5. ^ Staffordshire County Council Staffordshire Place Guide – Clent – Retrieved 29 July 2011
  6. ^ Staffordshire County Council Place Guide – Upper Arley Archived 2012-03-21 at the Wayback Machine – Retrieved 29 July 2011
  7. ^ Staffordshire County Council Staffordshire Place Guide – Upper Arley Archived 2014-09-03 at the Wayback Machine – Retrieved 29 July 2011
  • Victoria County History, Worcestershire, volume 3, 1-4.[1].