What are Tithe Maps (2021)

https://news.ycombinator.com/rss Hits: 2
Summary

The skeletal remains were those of Richard Heming who had disappeared 24 years before. Heming had, the day before he was himself murdered in 1806, shot and killed the Rev. George Parker who, as the local priest, was responsible for collecting the Tithe from his parishioners. Tithes were taxes, paid directly to the church or private landlord and were equal to one-tenth of the goods produced by anyone working the land, whether they were tenants or landholders; they could be collected either in goods or a negotiated amount of cash. Tithes were a source of deep resentment throughout rural Britain and the village of Oddingley was no exception. Most of the farmers in the village had agreed to pay the yearly Tithe in cash which gave the Rev. Parker an annual income of £135 (a large amount at the time). Over the years, due to inflation cutting into his standard of living, the Rev. Parker had tried, unsuccessfully, to negotiate a higher amount. As the farmers refused to pay more money he decided to collect the Tithe in goods – the value of which was higher than the cash amount the farmers had been paying. Eventually after years of negotiations the locals did agree to an increase, only for the Rev. Parker to then demand a further £150 to cover his costs in collecting the increase. This, to put it mildly, led to a great deal of bitterness. Three farmers, Thomas Clewes, John Barnett and George Banks and the local magistrate, Captain Evans, employed Richard Heming to murder the Rev. Parker and, to keep Heming quite (permanently), they also employed a local farrier, James Taylor, to murder Heming and bury his body in the barn, owned by Clewes. A quirk of 18th Century law was that only someone who actually committed a murder could be tried for it. Accomplices could also be prosecuted, but only at the same time as the actual murderer. As Heming (who killed the Rev. Parker) had been killed by Taylor, who had died of natural causes during the intervening 24 years, neither of the actu...

First seen: 2026-01-18 00:25

Last seen: 2026-01-18 01:25