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I own both halves of Sheldon, but this manor is small compared
with my other estates in Coleshill and Kingshurst. My home is Coleshill
Hall, once the stronghold of the de Montfords, a great moated house
beside the Cole. I have had Sheldon Hall rebuilt as a home for my
son : it is now a fine brick mansion with tall ornamental chimneys
outside, built alongside the old hall which was still in use (but
since pulled down) and covers part of the moat.
Brick and tiles are very fashionable for building nowadays, while
timber becomes scarce and dear. Most of Sheldon's woodland is cleared
now : wood and charcoal fetch high prices in Birmingham. But there
is abundant clay in the manor, and a pit near the hall keeps several
kilns busy all the time near the inn at Tile Cross.
West Hall disappeared a hundred years ago. When its last owners
moved elsewhere, most of the stone and timber were taken to build
the tower of St. Giles's church and other houses. Only the moat
is left to remind the passer-by of the once-great house that stood
within it, and it is called Kemps Moat and John and Marion Kemp
who were the last people to live within it. I have made the demesne
land of West Hall into a deer park, strongly fenced, and only my
gatekeepers live in it.
In Mackington, the old village, only a few houses remain. Most of
my tenants now live in Sheldon village or on small farms scattered
about the manor. The great fields are still worked in strips, but
some tenants have been able to exchange with others or take up vacant
holdings so that most of their land is now in one piece.
I sometimes have trouble with getting my own land cultivated, when
plague kills off many tenants for instance, or some of them leave
the manor to work in Birmingham : so my demesne land is now put
down to grass, and I grow wool instead of wheat - sheep are much
more profitable than crops. But I haven't done what other lords
have done, which is to turn their whole manor into a sheep-walk,
turning out the tenants and destroying their homes.
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