New Forest: The Forging of a Landscape
By Hadrian Cook
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About this ebook
Hadrian Cook
Hadrian Cook teaches and writes on environmental science, environmental policy and landscape history. He was educated in the universities of Sheffield, London and East Anglia and taught in schools before taking up a teaching appointment at Wye College and Imperial College within the University of London. He presently teaches at Kingston University and in adult education.
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New Forest - Hadrian Cook
CHAPTER 1
A New Book on the New Forest
Into the forest
Some time ago, John Manwood could write:
‘A forest is a certain territory of woody grounds and fruitful pastures, privileged for wild beasts and fowls of the forest, chase, and warren, to rest and abide there in the safe protection of the King for his delight and pleasure; which territory of ground so privileged is meered [has boundary] and bounded with un-removable marks, meers and boundaries either known by matter of record or by prescription and also replenished with beasts of venery or chase and with great coverts of vert for the succour of the said beasts there so reside...’¹
By no means all covered by trees, a (legally defined) medieval forest was a mix of woodland, heath, pasture and scrub whose management was devoted to hunting by the king and those he favoured.² There were also forest dwellers, people who were of lower social rank, whose economic interests lay elsewhere. Furthermore there is nothing in this late sixteenth century passage concerning commercial forestry as may be understood in a modern sense (previously and more attractively termed ‘silviculture’) or about public enjoyment, conservation of landscape value and certainly nothing that even borders on the romantic. For Manwood, after all, was a lawyer.
Back in the mythical realms, it is also noted that hunting of both boar and deer was important in Celtic societies, evidenced by the boar Twrch Trwyth that appears in the Welsh epic The Mabinogion. He gave chase across the west of Britain and, like boar, deer (stags in particular) had mythic status among Celtic peoples.³ Herne the Hunter, a ghostly figure and likely a thinly disguised horned deity of uncertain pagan origins (Germanic, Celtic or both) is usually linked with Windsor Great Park. Tales of hunting and folklore in ancient forests indicate, at least, cultural links with antiquity.
As an identifiable wooded entity, what we know as the New Forest has a history dating back millennia, but the significant legal event was the creation of the royal forest, possibly about 1079 by William I, ‘the Conqueror’ (who reigned 1066–1087). His son, William II ‘the Rufus’ (reigned 1087–1100), was killed (or assassinated, it is unclear) while out hunting there in 1100. The Normans had furthermore imposed a governance system where there was already an established manorial system from the late Saxon period.
It was Domesday Book (1086) that caused the area first to be referred to as the New Forest (Nova Foresta).⁴ The term ‘forest’, as already noted originally a legal term, defined the laws of a defined area set apart from the common laws of England. And it was then felt appropriate to describe it as ‘new’, perhaps because of the new legal status it was to receive. This new status permitted the Crown to exact its (often arbitrary) rule in a fashion that, even to the Normans, would not have been possible where the manorial system operated alone. The open spaces in the New Forest, dominated by heath, sometimes gorse scrub, sometimes bog, remain because tree plantation has been controlled, and only permitted within the ‘inclosures’. Technically, these actually form ‘exclosures’ for large grazing animals whose grazing maintains the open areas where turf was also removed for domestic burning. Heaths have a history of their own, linked to peat cutting and burning, while the rabbit-grazed lawns appear as golf greens in a landscape rugged by lowland British standards.
FIGURE 1.1. The ‘vert’: a typical New Forest Scene.
PHOTO: AUTHOR
The Sovereign remains the legal owner of the Crown Estate which is in effect under Treasury regulation. Medieval monarchs inevitably made choices that would affect ordinary folk. Individual kings’ (and some queens’) desires and priorities affected royal forests. In management of the royal forests, we see the whim of individual rulers offering them as dower, selling of produce and taking an interest or otherwise in the venison, and a dwindling involvement in their management as the ‘vert’ (forest vegetation, Fig. 1.1) until wider state interests would replace the whims of the royal household. However, it is all too easy to become pre-occupied with the actions of the rich and powerful; ordinary people struggled to make a living from poor quality land in a highly regulated environment.
Overall, human actions have made an indelible mark on the land cover and land use patterns within the Forest. The social, economic and political influences are no less interesting. We have a first glimpse of the nature of the most powerful of the forest laws in the Assizes of Henry II (1166),⁵ the monarch who seems to have presided over forest law at its maximum development and imposition in order to protect the king’s interests in hunting.⁶ The Assize of the Forests, held at Woodstock, is dealt with in Chapter 5, and was apparently most savage indeed.
‘Bad’ King John granted away part of the forest to the Cistercians in 1204 demonstrating that there evidently remained a call on relatively better quality land in the formation of Beaulieu Abbey in 1204. There was thus created an agricultural estate in the south of the forest. Interestingly, their abbey was to be dissolved by that even more popular royal despot, Henry VIII (reigned 1509–1547). Well before Henry, reform was perhaps inevitable.
Legal reforms and management changes
Into a world infamous for alleged despotic rulers and like the more famous Magna Carta of 1215, the Carta de Foresta (Charter of the Forest) of 1217⁷ actually limited the expansion of aristocratic interests and went further to ensure the ‘rights’ of ordinary people against feudal overlords. The charter can therefore be seen as part of the long democratisation process in England as well as providing us with an early glimpse of forest governance in which Nova Foresta was a significant player. Given time, aristocratic interest in hunting waned yet what remained – or even grew – was the economic imperative of maintaining crown revenues.
As a result, we see efforts to reform silvicultural management. Coppicing, everywhere else in Britain today celebrated by conservationists and landscape historians, apparently was to fail as a system of economic return. It was the later construction and naval interests that benefitted from far-sighted re-afforestation in the seventeenth century that supplied shipyards at Buckler’s Hard. Governance, however, was to present problems for centuries and confusion was intertwined with genuine efforts to make this large tract of marginal land viable.
From Tudor times onwards, there was clear governmental interest (as distinct from crown interest) in the New Forest. The creation of new officials outside the royal forest hierarchy, and this time at the behest of the Exchequer, would be problematic, for these acted to improve, later maximise, revenue from the forest while the ancient officers with sinecures, were still in place. A Divisum Imperium (divided jurisdiction) thus arose in the mid-sixteenth century. It arose from the creation of the post of Surveyor General of Woods, Forests, Parks and Chases and his deputy surveyors by central government. It might have been seen that the old (Norman) governance system remained in parallel and this would be the case until the abolition of the post of Lord Warden in the nineteenth century. Legal and governmental reform would lead to a de facto recession of crown interests with the abdication of responsibilities to the Office of Woods.
More unfortunately, and well into the eighteenth century, there was corruption caused by incompetence and greedy forest officials, yet the national interest in sorting these problems resulted from a desire for efficient production of timber for the navy. Consequently legal changes in the nineteenth century within the forest were draconian. Then, in the immediate post-First World War period, the newly formed Forestry Commission (1919) replaced the Office of Woods and took charge of commercial forestry, a situation that pertains to the present. Throughout all this time, commoners’ rights to graze and use resources of timber and turf continued so as to create an interesting arena for conflict in resource management.
The New Forest as it stands is ‘typical’ of many royal hunting forests established by the Normans. It is also atypical because it has survived relatively intact, unlike (for example) the nearby Forest of Bere.⁸ This is likewise situated on an area of poor soil, is relatively close to the New Forest and it also supplied timber to the navy. The New Forest we experience today remains an outcome of changing political objectives combating economic interests and more nebulous cultural values that have shaped and preserved its landscape.
Previous accounts
William I’s officials apparently saw the New Forest as of sufficient merit to produce its own section in the Domesday Survey of 1086. In a masterful account of the royal forests of Northamptonshire (Rockingham, Whittlewood and Salcy forests) between 1558 and 1714, P. A. J. Pettit succeeded in synthesising economy, law, geography, history, land use and other facets of royal forests.⁹ Interest specifically in the New Forest is documented by many accounts written from very differing perspectives and meaning that a study of the literary accounts gave insight into the values of the writer and his time.
John Wise’s The New Forest, its History and Scenery, was first published in 1883 and prone to Victorian sentiment.¹⁰ Brian Vesey-Fitzgerald’s anecdotal and journalistic 1966 Portrait of the New Forest¹¹ contains some interesting material on post-medieval writers. Inevitably, stereotypes also forge an area’s identity in the popular mind, and the trickle of publications on the forest continued.
Following a serious outbreak of office clearing during the author’s time on the academic staff of Wye College, University of London a colleague presented him with E. M. Yates’s (1985) monograph on the medieval landscape of the forest.¹² This occasional paper from the Geography Department of King’s College London contains insights into historical geography that, one fears, may have been otherwise forgotten. There are also many quality research papers, notably those published in the Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society (Hampshire Studies) relating to many aspects of the archaeology, ecology and documentary history of the forest. For integrated historical ecology, there is no upstaging the late Colin Tubbs’s book The New Forest, published in 2001.¹³
For a beautiful modern illustrated introduction, we have Clive Chatters’ and Mike Read’s book on the New Forest National Park.¹⁴ In 2010 Adrian Newton edited an informative volume Biodiversity in the New Forest that, among other things, reminds us of this conservation resource in southern England, that is presented in an accessible and themed fashion.¹⁵ Stephen Ings’s title, Shot for a White-Faced Deer,¹⁶ refers to an earlier book¹⁷ recalling an accident when an unfortunate woman was allegedly killed, mistaken for a deer. The title gives clear indication of a lingering economic relationship with forest deer and manages to invoke earlier, brutal times. For those of more literary inclinations, there is a fine introduction to writers’ impressions of the forest in Ian McKay’s edited volume, A New Forest Reader.¹⁸ Alternatively, for transcriptions of historic documents together with commentaries of the period covered by each volume, there is the New Forest record series edited by either Richard Reeves or Peter Roberts.¹⁹
Within the perambulation of the New Forest are 145 square miles (37,555 hectares), including private estates, residential and farming land, ‘open forest’ and ‘inclosures’ (otherwise described as woodland enclosures).²⁰ The forest’s size as a parcel of land, its small area in private ownership and the unusual category of ‘inclosures’ confirm that it is an unusual area. By implication, the overwhelming majority belongs to the Crown, and there remains relatively little opportunity for agriculture, as understood in the usual sense. Inclosures have been deliberately planted, generally since the seventeenth century. The definition of an ‘ancient woodland’ adopted by most authorities for England and Wales is defined as dating from before AD 1600; ostensibly because plantation forestry only developed after this time and in any case maps were not sufficiently detailed to distinguish between type of woodland.²¹ In many respects this is arbitrary and, as will be later shown, it is unlikely that plantation was completely absent during the medieval period.
So, why do we need another book on the forest? One answer is that events have overtaken earlier accounts, and there is a need to ‘defragment’ interest in the area, producing what is humbly offered as a fresh and integrated look at history, conservation policy, changing economy and governance. These are written in the light of modern political and conservation imperatives while contemplating what remains as an optimistic, but uncertain future.
Characteristics of the New Forest
Perceptions have not always sat easily with modern ideas about environmental management or with contemporary world views. While modern values arose from Victorian romanticism (and to be fair it certainly was a driver for conservation), between 1882 and 1889 interests in landscape and amenity caused the introduction of around 300 ornamental trees or ‘exotics’ to the forest.²² This reflects something other than a will to conserve what is, or indeed might have been present under different (yet native) conditions. In deference to perceived earlier beliefs mentioned above, within the cultural matrix of aesthetic enjoyment, biological conservation and economic productivity, the high priestess white witch Sybil Leek (described as ‘an inspiration to other witches’) introduced a witchcraft theme to Burley by starting a forest coven.²³
All was not as intriguing and there was real resentment elsewhere. Following the Second World War, a period of frustration and friction (arising between the Forestry Commission and conservation interests) had included eschewing a New Forest National Park in the 1940s. Rising ‘conservation ethos,’ a continuing interest in countryside access and a realisation that all UK National Parks no longer belonged in ‘upland’ areas finally led to the National Park establishment in 2005.
Since 1949, the establishment of National Parks has been the means by which England, Wales and later Scotland chose to identify and manage cherished areas.²⁴ Ironically, the New Forest was to experience potentially negative developments arising from different legislation in the same year; as we have seen, it was to be 56 years before the New Forest achieved this status. Even if detractors from the National Park complained that the historic governance in 2005 was more than adequate (asking why another layer of bureaucracy is needed?), we can at least celebrate its recognition – for at last the New Forest has a single voice to speak for its interests.
While elites pleasured, planned, planted or plotted, so poorer members of society felt the need to guard common rights while marginalised people squatted or lived a nomadic life. Today urban dwellers of southern England demand access to the countryside. A consensus had emerged whereby the New Forest is an area recognised for its beauty, ecology, intrinsic landscape value and recreational provision. Despite agricultural activity on its southern side, much of the area occupies lamentably poor soil and this observation is essential to understanding the forest’s development. The subsequent landscape mosaic arises from historic systems of land holding, the hunting pleasures of elites, the development of silviculture and latterly culture, recreation and conservation, within a predominantly medieval landscape. Yet the historic stereotype is an oversimplification, for even if kings no longer hunt there, economic interests on the Crown lands co-exist with historic rights to graze alongside modern recreation.
Counterintuitively, a former chair of the New Forest National Park Authority informed the author that we are dealing with a functionally urban economy (Chapter 9).²⁵ This is not the rural England we might expect. To the casual visitor scrutinising deer or ponies safely grazing, or wondering at the Ancient and Ornamental Woods, a realisation that facets of the modern forest economy are more like urban areas than anything else would come as a surprise.
It is useful to conceptualise any account of the New Forest around five interwoven concepts. These are: economically marginal land, resource conflict, boundaries, governance and the resulting changing management objectives. Many royal hunting forests were clearly located on poor soils and difficult topographies that had limited potential for agricultural development.²⁶
1. Economically marginal land
The history of the New Forest may be seen as an exercise charting the utilisation and development of economically marginal land. With an abundance of soils that are developed on sands, gravels, acidic peat or nutrient poor clays with drainage problems, it would be found problematic to sustain, in the long term, agriculture as understood in conventional farming and horticulture and particularly as there are better soils within striking distance. Where agriculture became established in the middle ages, it was on areas of less problematic soil. Otherwise, land not in agriculture certainly does not mean it is abandoned nor bereft of human activity. Whether it was the royal forest, or else later interest in silviculture or modern forestry, the mosaic of heathlands, wetlands, lawns and trees including extensive tracts of woodland or modern forestry, means it had to be controlled and put to use in one way or another. Beyond the direct pleasure of kings, these generally had economic purpose.
The truth is that the New Forest would have looked very different left to nature’s own devices; it would scrub over and eventually mature secondary woodland would dominate. This not only would represent a loss of economic potential, but would also present opportunity for refuge by ‘marginal’ social groups such as outlaws or squatters who may be perceived by some to threaten social order. In practice, Romany people lived in the forest for much of the post-medieval period until their effective expulsion in the twentieth