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For my first blog post on the theme of ‘ten’ (for the Society’s tenth anniversary; social media hashtag #OnePlaceStudies10) I decided to investigate a lane in my Waters Upton one-place study. This minor road runs from Waters Upton village to a tiny settlement in the south-eastern corner of the parish, The Terrill. The name of this lane – and some of the property associated with it – has been written in a variety of ways over the years and I had a feeling there might have been as many as ten different spellings. So I did a bit of digging, and found the following:
To summarise, over the course of 140 years of written records, the first part of this lane’s name evolved from ‘Cas’ to ‘Cats,’ with ‘Cast’ also appearing. The second part meanwhile changed from ‘pish’ and ‘pich,’ to ‘pit’ and ‘pits,’ and ultimately to ‘brich’ and ‘britch’ (and on one occasion, ‘brick’).
What might the origins of this changeable name be – could its etymology be enlightening? I decided to approach this research backwards, as it were, by starting with the second part of the name.
One obvious possibility is that the name referenced a pit of some kind. The 1837 Tithe Apportionment Schedule for Waters Upton included two fields described (in whole or in part) as Kynnersley Pit. There was also a single parcel of land called Great Britch & Marlpit Croft. This suggests the potential for there to have been a marl pit, now long gone, but after which the lane from Waters Upton to The Terrill was named.
The ‘Great Britch’ element of that last-mentioned field name points in another direction however. Including those already mentioned, there were in total 16 parcels of land which had ‘Britch’ as part, or as the whole, of their names: Britch x 4, Long Britch x 2, Upper Britch x 2, and one each of Lower Britch, Britch Head, and Far Britch. All of them lay in the south-eastern part of the parish near – or right next to – the road now known as Catsbritch Lane, and all were arable fields.
A bit of Googling led me to various sources including a thesis by David Horovitz, A survey and analysis of the place-names of Staffordshire. From these sources I learned that the word britch and variants of it (including brache, breche, bruche, brych and even bridge) occur in many other place names in England. It is derived from an Old English word referring to land recently cleared or broken up for cultivation, and there are examples of it being used in conjunction with personal names.
So Catsbritch Lane may have a name with origins going back several hundred years – to a time when the uncultivated land it led to, perhaps belonging to someone with the Old English personal name Catt, was cleared and broken up, ready to be planted with crops.
Steve Jackson