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       The 
			Photograph shows a Manor of Brierley Court Leet meeting on 1st 
			November 1961. On the left seated George Michael Foljambe, stood up 
			on the left is Thomas Moxon (b.1877) who is next to Arthur 
			Hargreaves 
			
			Photograph reproduced from an old newspaper 
cutting.  
      'Then 
      comes the task of appointing "byelaw men and pinders" responsible for 
      ensuring that the laws relating to the use of the local common lands are 
      observed. 
      
            'One young 
      farmer, attending his first court following taking over the farm, demurred 
      somewhat when he was nominated and asked what the duties entailed. It was 
      pointed out to him, a little sadly, I thought, that only in the unlikely 
      event event of some unauthorised person turning their livestock on to the 
      common to graze would he be required to assert his authority. 
      
           'As I have already 
      said, the duties of the Brierley Court are now reduced to caring for the 
      local commons upon which, according to the deeds of his property, each 
      member has the right to graze so many cattle, or geese, or donkeys. 
      
           'Now it is usually a 
      matter of confirming an application for a way leave over the common land 
      (permission to enter) and here it is interesting and not a little 
      ironical, to find two of the innovations, the Coal Board and the 
      Electricity Board, coming, almost cap in hand, to make applications to 
      this relic of feudalism. 
      
           'Generally, the 
      atmosphere of the meetings of the Court Leet is cordial, although several 
      of the common lands have been let of for farming - a development of the 
      last war, when every acre of land put under food cultivation was valuable 
      - a little acrimony has crept in with regard to what happens to the 
      revenue from the leasing of the land. 
      
           'There is a school of 
      thought that the court members (they are called "commoners", by the way), 
      having lost some of their grazing rights., should receive some of the 
      income by way of compensation. Leading advocates of this old school is 
      `old Arthur Hargreaves (see photograph) who farms at Shafton and who, with a temerity 
      which, I am sure, would have had his forebears quaking in their shoes, 
      repeatedly tells the Lord of the Manor. or his Steward, that "the 
      commoners are being done down", 
      
           'His suggestion is 
      that the revenue used to provide the commoners with the same "Goodly 
      Feast" that used to mark the closure of the court. Arthur has been a 
      member long enough to have personal recollection of the feasts, with 
      tables groaning with a baron of beef and plenty of whisky and rum - at 2d 
      a tot by the way - and beer at three ha'pence a pint. He agrees with the 
      song that "Things ain't what they used to be," and takes a poor view of 
      the pickles and sandwiches that are now dispensed. 
      
           'To attend the Court 
      brings home to one just how much times have changed, for a man who warned 
      his tenants about missing one of his meetings "at their peril", would 
      certainly have had a quick way of dealing with such recalcitrants as 
      Arthur. 
      
            
      
           Sadly, the Court Leet 
      of the Manor of Brierley is no longer held at the Three Horse Shoes. My 
      search for its records via the internet led me to Nottingham University 
      Library's Department of Manuscripts and Special Collection, where the 
      papers of the Monckton-Arundell Family, Viscounts Galway of Serby Hall, 
      Nottinghamshire, (early 13th century -1958) are held. Access to the 20th 
      century records is restricted. In addition, Sheffield Archives have the 
      Court Rolls for 1656-60 as part of the Spencer Stanhope Muniments. 
      
           Manorial records are 
      stored in a wide variety of places. Many can be located online by looking 
      at The National Archives website 
      www.archiveshub.ac.uk/, or 
      the access to Archives website 
      
      www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a. 
      
           Readers who are 
      interested in learning more about the court leet and baron will find a 
      good summary in Mark Herber's book Ancestral Trails, published by 
      Sutton. 
      'Footnote. 
      There is a transcription of a 1655 Brierley Manor Court Roll on the 
      Brierley Yorkshire England web site at 
      
      http://www.brierleyyorkshireengland.com in 
			the on
      line booklet  ‘Brereley a History of Brierley'.  Many of 
			the court rolls for Brierley Manor are in the Savile of Rufford 
			manuscripts at Nottingham County Record Office. Some copies
      may be loaned from Richard 
      Watson (please see the 
      Ask Richard link)).
      
      The Galway Manuscripts mentioned are for the estates of 
      Hodroyd Hall Felkirk.' 
			
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