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A54665 Villare cantianum, or, Kent surveyed and illustrated being an exact description of all the parishes, burroughs, villages and other respective mannors included in the county of Kent : and the original and intermedial possessors of them ... / by Thomas Philipott ... : to which is added an historical catalogue of the high-sheriffs of Kent, collected by John Phillipot, Esq., father to the authour. Philipot, John, 1589?-1645.; Philipot, Thomas, d. 1682. 1659 (1659) Wing P1989; ESTC R35386 623,091 417

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in the Chancel of Eightham Church and Jo. Clement was his Brother and Heir whose Daughter Ann Clement was married to Hugh Pakenham who in her Right possest the Moat and he about the Reign of K. Edw. the sixth joyning with Sir William Sidney who had matched with Anne his only Heir passed it away to Sir John Ailen Lord Maior of London in the year 1526 and then again 1536 who left it to his Son Sir Christopher Allen and he about the latter end of Queen Elizabeth conveyed it by Sale to John Selby Esq whose Son Sir William Selby dying without Issue to continue it in the Name gave it to Mr. George Selby of London whom it acknowledges at this instant for Lord of the Fee In the North-side of the Church of Eightham in an Arch in the Wall beneath the Quire lyes the Representation of a Knight wrought in Stone and his Arms pourtrayed on the Coat Armour on his Breast according to the usage of eminent Souldiers in the Reign of Edward the third This was Sir Thomas Cawne extracted originally out of the County of Stafford he had not much Land of Inheritance in Kent all I find was at Nulcomb a place so called in Seal as appears by his Deed of Purchase of John Ashburneham dated the thirty ninth of Edward the third but matching with Lora de Morant the Daughter and Heir of Sir Tho. Morant of Morants Court after his Death remarried to James de Peckham he thereby improved and enhaunsed his Fortune in Kent He died without Issue for ought as yet can be discovered his Arms as they be inserted in the Rolls and Registers of Staffordshire are empaled in the Chancel window with the Arms of Morant Elmested in the Hundred of Wye was a Limb of that Revenue which fell under the Signiory of the noble and ancient Family of Heringod In Testa de Nevill there is mention of Stephen de Heringod who paid respective Aid in the twentieth year of Henry the third for Lands which he held at Hardres and Elmsted Stephen de Heringod this mans Grandchild dyed about the beginning of Edward the first and determined in a Daughter and Heir called Grace de Heringod who was matched to Philip de Hardres and so this Mannor in her Right became incorporated into the revenue of this noble Family and remained for many Generations fastned to this Name untill the Age which almost commenced from our Fathers Memory and then Dane-Court a Branch of this Mannor was sold to Cloake and Elmested it self by the same Fatality went out to Marsh whose Successor very lately hath fixed his Interest by Sale in Lushington Evington Court is an ancient Seat in Elmested which was the Inheritance of Gentlemen of that Sirname who bare a Fesse between three Steel Burgonets for their Coat Armour and in a Book coppied out from old Deeds and digested into a just Volume by William Glover Somersett Herald and now in my Custody there is the Copy of an old Deed without date wherein William Fitz-Neal called in Latin Filius Nigelli does passe over some Land to Ruallo de Valoigns which is fortified by the appendant Testimony of one Robert de Evington who was Ancestor to the Evingtons of Elmsted of whom there is mention in the Deeds of this place in the Reign of Hen. the third and Edward the first After this Family was gon out the Gays a Family of no mean Account in this Track were incorporated into the Possession descended originally out of France where there is a Family which even at this Day is known by the Name of Le-gay and is planted in Normandy from whence those of Jersey and Gernesey are extracted a Branch of which is transplanted into South-Hampton and there for ought I know flourishes at present And to justifie the Truth of this their Extraction in the Leiger Book of Horton-Priory there is mention of one John le Gay who was a Benefactor to their House and though they are called at this day only without the Addition Gay yet this hath happened by Disuse and Intermission by not adding it in their Customary writing and affixing it to their Name But to proceed Evington Court though it was not originally erected by this Family yet certainly it was much inforced by Supplement and additionall Building for diverse places of the House are in Relation to the Name adorned with Nose-Gays In Conclusion after it had owned many of this Name of no vulgar Ranck for its Proprietaries it was about the beginning of Henry the seventh by Christopher Gay alienated to John Honywood Esquire of the eldest Family of the Honywoods from whom in a direct Line Edward Honywood Esquire Son and Heir of Sir John Honywood lately deceased is extracted and is now invested in the Possession of this place Elmested had the Grant of a Market obtained to it to be observed weekly on the Thursday and a Fair yearly on the Vigil and Day of Saint James by the Procurement of Henry de Haut Pat. 28. Edwardi tertii N. 20. Elmeston in the Hundred of Wingham was parcell of the Demeasne of the Lord Leybourn Juliana de Leybourn Wife of Roger de Leybourn had an estate here at her Death which was in the first year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 86. and her sole Heir was the Lady Juliana Leybourn first married to John de Hastings and after to William de Clinton but dyed without Issue by either in the forty third year of the Reign of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 57. and as it appears without any visible Alliance that could justify their Title to her Estate for the Crown feised upon it as legally escheated Richard the second granted Elmston to Simon Burleigh and upon his Attaint it returned to the Crown by Defailance of any who could pretend a Claim unto it King Richard the second about the fourteenth year of his Reign granted it to the Abby of Childrens Langley Before I proceed any farther in this Discourse I shall justifie what I before asserted that is that the first Husband of Juliana de Leybourn was John de Hastings a Kinsman of Lawrence de Hastings Earl of Pembroke but not his Son John de Hastings as some suppose and this is obvious if we consider that William de Clinton deceased by the Testimony of all in the twenty eighth yeer of Edward the third Juliana his Widow called in the Escheat Roll Comitissa de Huntington dyed in the forty third year of that Prince and John de Hastings Earl of Huntington in the year 1375 which happened in the forty ninth year of Edward the third which must necessarily upon a serious Computation of Time fall out six years after this Countesse's Decease to whom had she been matched she would have preserved the Stile of Comitissa de Pembroke and not that of Huntington But to return into that Track from whence this Digression hath made me wander after it remained Cloistered up in the Revenue of
Folkstone But before the latter end of Edward the second this Family had diserted the Possession of this place and surrendered their Interest here to Valoigns whose Time was very brief in the enjoyment of it for Waretius de Valoigus dying without Issue Male this Mannor accompanied his Daughter and Co-heir and was upon the division of his Estate linked with much other Land to the Demeasn of her Husband Sir Thomas Fogge who was Knight of the Shire for Kent several times under the Scepter of Edward the third and Richard the second Sir Francis Fogge another of this Family lies entombed in Cheriton Church with his portraicture Cross-legged affixed to his Sepulchral Stone which implies that he had obleiged himself by some vow to assert the Cross and Sepulchre of our Saviour finally after the Proprietie of this place had by the Current of many Descents flowed in this Family it devolved to George Fogge Esquire who about the latter end of Q. Elizabeth passed it away to Mr. Henry Brockman Grand-father to Mr. James Brockman Esquire the instant Lord of the Fee Enbroke is another Mannor in Cheriton which in the twentieth year of Henry the third was the Patrimony of Peter de Alkam and after his Descendants were Extinguished at this place it came by the ordinary fate of Purchase to Enbroke who having erected a Mansion upon the Demeasn it is probable adopted it into his own Sirname and called it Enbroke John de Enbroke held it in the twentieth year of Edw. the third and paid an auxiliarie supply for it as appears by the book of Aid at making the Black Prince Knight Michael Enbroke was a great Benefactor to the Fabrick of Choriton Church in the time of Rich. the second and it is probable those antient Tombs yet visible related to these two or some of this Family the last of which was John Enbroke who flourished here in the Reign of Henry the fourth after whose departure it came to be enjoyed by Thorold or Torold and Walter Torold conveyed it to Nicholas Evering in the seventeenth year of Henry the sixth in which Family the Possession was permanent and constant until that Age which was circumscribed within our Grand-fathers remembrance and then it was alienated to Mr. John Honywood of Elmsted Ancestor to the instant Proprietary John Honywood of the same place Esquire The Tombs in the Church adorned with several Portraictures and Sculptures of Persons deceased related to these two formerly recited Families which the rude hand of Time hath crushed into the disorder of so great a Ruine that now even the Monuments and Sepulchres themselves have found an enterment in their own Dust and Rubbish Godinton in Great Chart was an ancient Mansion of a Family of that Sirname Place Godinton Court Wurthin Singleton and Nin House in Page 105. after Chelmington Simon de Godinton lived here as appears by very ancient Deeds and so did Lucas de Godinton likewise John de Godinton is portraied in Coat Armour in an ancient window in the North-Isle of the Church having an aspect upon a Crucifix in the same Glass placed above him accompanied with eleven others of eminent note in this Track depicted in the same posture with him and this John had Issue William de Godinton who flourished here as appears by his Deed in the fourth year of Richard the second but before the beginning of Henry the fourth had passed away his Interest here to Richard Simon and John Champneys and they in the sixth year of the abovesaid Prince conveyed it to Thomas Goldwell Son of William de Goldwell and he determined in a Daughter and Heir called Agnes who was affianced to Thomas Tooke of Bere by whom he had Issue Ralph Tooke Richard and John Ralph went into Hertfordshire Richard planted himself at Bere by Dover and John Tooke by Donation from his Father was invested in Godinton and continued ever since an eminent Seat of that Family and is at present the residence of that worthy person Captain Nicholas Tooke descended from * See Fox Acts and Mon. pag. 182. Holinshed Chro. pag. 2. Stows Chr. pag. 103. Sieur de Toque or Toc who is recorded in the Rolls of those who entred England with William the Conqueror who hath so industriously and elegantly cultivated and improved our English Vines that the wine pressed and extracted out of their Grapes seems not onely to paralell but almost to out-rival that of France Court Wurthin is a place of good Account in Great Chart which likewise afforded a residence to Possessors of that Sirname William de Wurtin by his Deed without Date demises Land which lay circumscribed within his Mannor of Wurtin to Quikemanus de Bere Henry de Wurtin is in the Register of those twelve eminent persons who are depicted kneeling in a Glass window in this Church the last of this Name at this place was Thomas de Wurtin who about the beginning of Henry the fourth passed it away to Thomas Goldwell by whose Heir General it came with Godinton to Thomas Tooke of Bere who setled it on his third Son Mr. John Tooke from whom it is successively by Descent come down to my Noble Friend Captain Nicholas Tooke Esquire It is observable that there is a Coat of Augmentation united to the Paternal Coat of this Family which the Tookes of Godinton bear in the first quarter viz. Argent upon a Cheveron between three Greyhounds-Heads crased Sables three Silver Plates which was given to John Tooke by Henry the seventh as a reward for his diligence in that Embassie in which he was employed by that Prince the Plates were an Embleme of his Guerdon or Salary and the Creyhounds-Heads a Symbol of his Celeritie Singleton is another eminent Mansion in this Parish which had owners of that Sirname and bore in ancient Armorials as appears by their Deeds Two Cheverons between three Martletts Henry de Singleton is one of those twelve eminent Persons that are depicted kneeling in Coat Armour in a window in Great Chart Church and John Singleton this mans Successor was Justice of the Peace for this County in the Reign of Richard the second and Henry the fourth as appears by an old Roll of the Justices of those times collected by Thin But after this mans Exit the Title was not long wedded to this Family for about the latter end of Henry the sixth I find the Edinghams or Enghams to be by Purchase entituled to the Possession wh● added much to the Lustre of the ancient Pile by adorning its Fabrick with increase of Building and contniued proprietaries of it untill the beginning of King James and then it was passed away by Sir Edward Engham to Richard Brown Esquire a Cadet or younger Branch of the Browns of Betsworth Castle in Surrey from whom it descended to his Grandchild Mr. Richard Brown who being very lately deceased it is now in behalf of Dower the Habitation of his Widow Mrs. Elizabeth Brown Daughter of Sir William Andrews
to Mr. Bathurst The Borough of Twisden is a fifth place which invites us to a Survey It was in elder Generations the Inheritance of Twisdens upon whom I may without any Supply of Flattery strew those just Attributes of Ancient and Noble The first that I find by Deed to be of this Family Possessor of it was Adam de Twisden and he was seised of it This Rog. Twisden was Steward to the Abby of St. Augustins a place of great Trust in those Times in the one and twentieth of Edward the first In times of a lower Descent Roger Twisden was possest of it and in the fifth year of H. the fourth affixes to a Deed now in the Hands of Sir Roger Twisden of Roydon Hall Baronet the Signature or Impression of a Cockatrice on Wax The Crest which at this Day is annexed to the paternal Coat of this Family a rare thing in those Times when Crests were infrequent and unusuall and began to be customary when those eminent Familyes who were embarked in the two Factions of York and Lancaster assumed them to serve as Evidences or Symbols of Distinction whereby the Son might avoid the plunging his Sword in the Bowells of his Father or a Brother the Sheathing his in the Entrails of his Brother But to proceed the last of this Name who possest this place was Roger Twisden who about the Beginning of H. the sixth passed it away to Roger Twisden and he immediately after conveyed it by Sale to Geffrey Allen who about the latter end of H. the sixth setled the Right of it by Deed in Thomas Windhill And thus far do the Copies of diverse original Evidences which relate to this Place extend and no farther After this it was for diverse Descents wrapt up in the Propriety of Austin who not many years since expiring in a Female Inheritrix she by matching with Mr. Fowle a Cadet of the Fowles of River-Hall in Sussen hath made it the present Possession of that Name and Family Shingley is another Mannor in Goudherst which belonged to that Revenue which did own the Signory of the Priory of Leeds and upon the suppression when the Patrimony of this Cloister was broken to peeces by the Scepter of Henry the Eighth this was in the thirty sixth year of that Prince granted to Thomas Colepeper of Bedgebury Esquire with all the Priviledges which it was fortified with when it related to the abovementioned Cloister as namely to be Tith-free c. But the Title such a Moath and Canker cleaves to the Patrimony of the Church when it is transplanted made no long stay in Colepeper for in the thirty eighth year of Henry the Eighth this Thomas Colepeper alienated it to Stephen and Thomas Darrell but in this Family likewise was the Possession of as frail a permanence for they nor long after conveyed it to William Campion Esquire Counsellor at Law from whom it descended to Sir William Campion Governor of Borestall House near Oxford for His Late Majesty and who was after slain at Colchester asserting the Royal Interest and in his Descendants is the Propriety of it still wrapped up Bokinfold is the last place of Consideration in Goudherst it was a Mannor which related to that Chauntry which was founded here by Hamon de Crevequer and confirmed with all the Franchises annexed to it by Edward the Third in the one and fortieth year of his Raign and in this Patent of Inspection and Ratification it is mentioned that Hamon de Crevequer was its Founder But the common Dissolution in the Raign of Henry the eighth renting away like some suddain and impetuous Torrent this Mannor from those Ends and Uses it was first designed to lodged it in the Crown and then the abovesaid Prince in the one and thirtieth year of his Raign granted it to Paul Sidnore Gentleman and he not long after conveyed it to Sir John Gates but he being one of the principal Emissaries or Complices of John Seymour Duke of Somerset being inwrapped and ingaged past Recovery in the Design of the above said Duke sunk in the Ruines of that unfortunate Peere and was convicted of High Treason and beheaded on Tower-Hill in the fourth year of Edward the sixth Upon his Tragedy this Mannor returned to the Crown and stayed there until the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth and then it was granted to Katherine Tong who not long after passed it away to Colepeper of Bedgebury who almost in our remembrance passed away that part of this Great Mannor which is circumscribed within the Verge of Goudherst to the instant Proprietary Brewer Joan Widow of Roger de Bedgebury in the third year of Richard the second obtained a weekly Market to Goudhurst on the Wednesday and a Fair yearly on the Day of our Ladies Assumption Cart. de Anno tertio Richardi secundi Numb 13. H. H. H. H. HAckington otherwise called St. Stephens lies partly in the Hundred of Bredge and Petham and partly in that of Westgate and did in elder Times appertain to the Monks of Christ-Church in Canterbury until it was exchanged by the Prior and that Covent and the Monks of it with Stephen Langton Arch-bishop of Canterbury for other Houses situated near the Priory of St. Gregories in Canterbury and he having here at Hackington erected a new Fabrick bestowed and setled it on his Brother Simon de Langton Arch-deacon of Canterbury from whom it successively came down to the following Arch-deacons and became their fixed Mansion until the Raign of Henry the eighth of those who were invested with that Office But in the general suppression the impious hand of sacriledge having plucked it off from the Church it was annexed to the Crown and continued there until Queen Elizabeth granted it to Sir Roger Manwood chief Baron of the Exchequer and from him did it devolve to his Grand-child Sir John Manwood who passed it away in our Memory to Colonel Sir Thomas Colepeper Colonel of a Regiment of Foot in the Low Countries in whose Descendants the Possession is now resident In Times of a very high Ascent Arch-bishop Hubert and after him Arch-bishop Baldwin had a Design to have erected a Colledge first here at Hackington and then upon second Thoughts at Lambeth but the Monks of Christ-church believing that this intended new Seminary of Religion might something by its Interposition darken the Glory and Grandeur of their Covent first by Alanus their then Prior and afterwards by Proxie so vigorously opposed this Project at Rome that by the Favor and Indulgence of the then Popes it was vacated and extinguished But in times subsequent to these these Monks having much endeared Stephen Langton the then Arch-bishop by bestowing some Signal Favors on Simon de Langton his Brother the Controversie which was fomented by the above mentioned Design by his compliance with the Monks was appeased and entombed in an amicable Pacification Broad-oake is another little Mannor in Hackington which anciently made up the Demeasne of the Noble Family of
Sheriff before in the twenty third was now again Sheriff in the twenty eighth year of Henry the sixth Gervas Clifton that had served this Office in the eighteenth year of this Kings Reign was called again to discharge in the twenty ninth of K. Henry the sixth Robert Horne of Hornes Place in Apuldore was Sheriff of Kent the thirtieth year of Henry the sixth Thomas Ballard of Horton near Canterbury was Sheriff of Kent the thirty first year of Henry the sixth John Fogge of Repton in Ashford Esquire was Sheriff of Kent the thirty second year of Henry the sixth Sir Iohn Cheyney of Shurland and Patricksbourn Cheyney was Sheriff of Kent the thirty third year of K. Henry the sixth Philip Belknap of the Moate in Canterbury was Sheriff of Kent the twenty fourth year of Henry the sixth Alexander Iden of Westwell who slew Iack Cade and married the Widow of Will. Cromer slain before by that Rebell was Sheriff of Kent the thirty fifth year of Henry the sixth John Guldford of Halden Esquire was Sheriff of Kent the thirty sixth year of Henry the sixth This Man flourished under the Scepter of Henry the sixth Edward the fourth under whom he was Sheriff and likewise Comptroller of his House-hold Richard the third at whose Coronation he was Knighted and lastly that of Henry the seventh by whom he was admitted as his Monument in the Middle Isle of the Body of Christ Church in Canterbury does attest into his Privy Councell Sir Gervas Clifton who formerly in the eighteenth and twenty ninth years of this Prince had managed this Place was again summoned to execute it in the thirty seventh year of Henry the sixth Sir Thomas Brown of Bechworth Castle in Surrey was again Sheriff of Kent in the thirty eighth year of Henry the sixth John Scot of Scots-Hall Esquire was Sheriff of Kent part of the year above mentioned He was afterwards Knighted by K. Edward the fourth and by him called to be of his Privy Councell Deputy of Callis and Comptroller of his House-hold Sheriffs of Kent under K. Edward the fourth John Isaack of Howlets in Patricksbourne was Sheriff of Kent the first year of King Edward the fourth Sir William Peche of Lullingston Knight was Sheriff of Kent the third and fourth years of Edward the fourth and had likewise the Custody of the Castle of Canterbury annexed to his Office as this Record does inform me Rex concessit Willielmo Peche Milititotum Comit. Cantii una cum Castro Cantuariensi ac constituit eum Vicecomitem Cantii ac ei concessit 40 libras Annuas quousque ei dederit 40 libras Annuas in speciali Taellio Haeredibus Masculis Pat. 2. Edw. quarti Parte secunda John Diggs of Diggs Court in Barham was Sheriff of Kent the fourth year or Edw. the fourth Alexander Clifford of Bobbing Court Son of Lewis Clifford Esquire was Sheriff of Kent the fifth year of K. Edward the fourth Sir William Haut of Hautsbourn Son of William Haut and Elizabeth his Wife Sister to Richard Woodvill Earl Rivers and Aunt to Elizabeth Woodvill Queen of England and Wife to K. Edward the fourth was Sheriff of Kent the sixth year of that Prince Sir Iohn Colepeper of Pepenbury and Bedgebury was Sheriff of Kent the seventh year of Edward the fourth Ralph St. Leger of Ulcomb Esquire was Sheriff of Kent the eighth year of Edward the fourth Henry Ferrers of Chilesmore and Tamworth in the County of Warwick was Sheriff of the County of Kent in the ninth year of Edward the fourth He married Mawde one of the Coheirs of William Hextall of Hextall Place in great Peckham John Brumston of Preston near Feversham Esquire was Sheriff of Kent the tenth year of Edward the fourth This year the King likewise by his Letters Patents committed to his Custody the City of Canterbury Richard Colepeper of Oxenhoath in Little Peckham was Sheriff of Kent the eleventh year of Edward the fourth James Peckham of Yaldham in Wrotham was Sheriff of Kent the twelfth year of Edward the fourth Sir John Fogge of Repton in Ashford sometime Comptroller of the House to Edward the fourth was Sheriff of Kent the thirteenth year of that Prince John Isley of Sundridge Cousin and Heir Generall of William Isley who was Sheriff of this County the twenty fifth of Henry the sixth was Sheriff of Kent the fourteenth year of Edward the fourth Sir William Haut of Hautsbourn formerly mentioned was again Sheriff the fifteenth year of Edward the fourth John Green who lived at Scadbery in Chiselhurst in Right of his Wife Constance Widow of Sir Thomas Walsingham was Sheriff of Kent the sixteenth of Edward the fourth William Cheyney of Shurland Esquire was Sheriff of Kent the seventeenth year of Edward the fourth Richard Haut of the Moat in Ightham younger Brother to Sir William was Sheriff of Kent the eighteenth of Edward the fourth Richard Lee of great Delce● in Rochester was Sheriff of Kent the ninteenth year of Edward the fourth Sir John Fogge of Repton formerly mentioned was again Sheriff of Kent the twentieth year of Edward the fourth Sir George Brown of Bechworth Castle Son of Sir Thomas Brown was Sheriff of Kent the twenty first of Edward the fourth Richard Haut of the Moat in Ightham who served the Office of Sheriff of Kent the eighteenth of Edward the fourth was after he had been three years from the place according to the Statute made Sheriff of Kent again the twenty second year of Edward the fourth in which year this worthy Prince cast off the Luggage of humane Frailty by paying the last Debt he owed to Nature Sheriffs of Kent under Richard the Third Sir William Haut of Hautsbourn that had been Sheriff twice before in the Time of K. Edward the fourth was made Sheriff of Kent again in the first year of K. Richard the third from Michaelmass the twenty second of Edward the fourth to the ninth of April and then to the twenty third which day K. Edward the fifth fell an Oblation to the Avarice and Ambition of his usurping Uncle who cast trains no less for his Life then for his Crown and then again to the twenty fifth of June and from the twenty sixth of June untill the Michaelmass following Sir Henry Forrers supplied the place of Sheriff for him John Bamme Esquire of the Mannor of Grench in Gillingham descended from Adam Bamme Lord Maior of London was Sheriff of Kent in the second year of Richard the third Sir Robert Brackenbury of the Moate in Ightham was Sheriff of Kent the third year of Richard the third Will. Cheyney Esquire of Shurland was Sheriff of Kent the last year of Rich. the third Sheriffs of Kent under Henry the Seventh William Cheyney of Shurland Esquire Sheriff of Kent the seventh year of Edward the fourth and last of Richard the third continued in that Office the first year of K. Henry the seventh John Pimpe of Pimpes Court in Farleigh and Lose Esquire was Sheriff
that Cloister by Henry the eighth was by his liberal Concession made Parcel of his Inheritance and remained so until the Reign of Q. Mary and then being attainted and convicted of High Treason in the second year of that Princess his Estate here fell back to the Crown and continued there untill K. James in the Beginning of his Reign passed away Shawsted and Windlehill to the City of London and they again by their Trustees invested the Propriety of them by Sale in Sir William Garaway of London Father to Sir Henry Garaway Knight in whose Descendants the Title of them is still resident Place House in this Parish is secondly to be remembred which was anciently part of the Demeasn of the illustrious Family of the Pimps of Pimps Court in the Parish of Loose near Maidston and Philip de Pimp was one of those Men at Arms which the Prior of Rochester was to furnish out for the Guard of the Seacoast at Genlade or Yenlade in the Hundred of Hoo in the eleventh year of Edward the third In Times of a more modern Inscription I find Thomas Pimpe the elder to be Buried in Alhollows in Hoo and that he made his Will the twenty seventh of August as appears by the Repertorie of Rochester Diocess and in the fourteenth of Edward the fourth William and John were his Sons Elizabeth unmaried Margery Lady Prioress of Malling and Alice a Nun there Sir William Hampton about that Time bought much Land of him He I mean this Sir William was Lord Maior of London in the Time of Edw●rd the fourth but whether this Place was part of this Purchase or not there is no Light from any publick Intelligence can illustate it certain I am that the Coppingers imediately almost after this Time became possessors of the Place and the Proprietie is now by Female Right of a Daughter and Heir of a Branch of these Coppingers resolved into Sir Harbotle Grimston of Essex Alresford anciently written Aiglesford hath Places of considerable Animadversion within the Limits and Boundaries of it The Priory or rather now the Skeleton of it was founded by Richard Lord Grey of Codnor Anno Dom. 1240 in the twenty fifth of Henry the third for Carmelite or White Friers in Honour of the Virgin Mary the Mother of this Lord was Isolda Daughter and Coheir of Hugh Bardolph Lord of Hoo in Kent from whom he inherited fair Possessions in this County And many of his Posterity in Relation to that Particular were buried in the Conventual Church of this Monastery Upon the suppression it was granted with the Royalty of it by Henry the eighth to Sir Thomas Wiat from whom it descended to his Son Sir Thomas Wiat upon whose Defection this being with other Lands escheated to the Crown Queen Elizabeth granted it to Mr. J. Sidley and he bequeathed to his Brother Sir Will. Sidley and from that Name it was lately passed by Sale unto Sir Peter Ricaut whose Heir 1657 conveyed it by the same Vicissitude to Mr. Caleb Banks of Maidston Tottington and Eccles two Mannors in this Parish Richard Sonne of Malger de Rokesley gave Tiths of Tottington to the Priory of Rochester See Textus Roffensis anciently belonged to the Family of Rokesley of whose Heir General it came to of Poynings and Richard Lord Poynings the eleventh of Rich. the second held the Mannor of Tottington which with Eccles one of his Ancestors in the Time of King Henry the sixth gave in frank Marriage with his Daughter to J. Palmer of the Courtlodge in Snodland Esquire whose Posterity after they had held them some space of Time sold them to Warcup descended from the Warcups of Cumberland in which Name the Tenure was not long resident for by Sale it was alienated to Sidley of Southfleet and his Successor suddenly after by the like Fatalitie invested Ricaut in Eccles and Madox in Tottington Cosington is a Seat of much Eminence in this Parish and gave Residence and Sir-name to a Knightly Familie of the same And King Edward the first rewarded Sir Stephen de Cosenton whom he had made Banneret in the twenty eighth of his Reign for his signal Service at Carlaverock in Scotland with a Charter of Free Warren to all his Lands at Cosenton Acris and South-Burton vulgarly called South-Blabden in Elham in Kent The Mannor it self holdeth by Knights Service of the Barony of Rosse of Horton Kirbie from whom they received it by ancient Feoffement and bear in similitude of their Lords the Rosses the same Charge in their Arms viz. Azure three Roses Or. The Arms of Rosse being Or three Roses Gules But when in the Beginning of Hen. the eighths Government the Fatality of Time had concluded this Family in three Daughters and Coheirs married to Duke Hamon and Wood this Mannor of Cosenton accrued by Co-partition to Duke in which Name it hath ever since resided There was a Free Chappel belonging to this Mansion founded as private Evidences advertise me by Sir Stephen de Cosenton which is now crumbled into so desolate an Heap of Rubbish that we can hardly trace out its Ruines even amidst its Ruines There was another Free Chappel in his Parish annexed to Tottington by Richard Lord Poynings in the eleventh year of Rich. the second which hath been so dismantled by the impressions of Time and the fury of the Elements that there is very little Testimony or Evidence remaining that this Oratorie ever had a Being Preston in this Parish of Alresford is a Seat of that venerable Antiquity and hath for so many Descents been incorporated into the Demeasn of Colepeper that it is questionable which is the ancient Cradle or Seminary of this Family either Bayhall in Pepenbury or Preston in Alresford Sir Thomas Colepeper as the old Evidences and Muniments of this Name instruct me was of this Family and was Governour of Winchelsey under Edward the second by whom he was beheaded for defending that Town in behalf of the Barons then combined in an hostile League against him Walter de Colepeper flourished under Edward the first and Edward the second and seal'd with a Bend engrailed which is still the paternal Coat-Armour of this Family which I the rather mention because these Deeds are the first of that Nature which I have seen since Sealing with Coats of Arms grew customary in this Nation and argues him to be a Man of eminence in this County as did that spreading Revenue likewise of which he died possest not onely here but at Farleigh Peckham Wrotham and divers other places in the first year of Edward the third John Colepeper was a Judge in the Reign of Henry the sixth and concluded in a Daughter and Heir who by matching with Harrington added a considerable Supplement to the paternal Revenue of that noble Family I shall not more dilate my self in this Discourse it is enough that I inform the Reader that this ancient Seat which hath been for so many Centuries of years under the
Mr. Cha. Tucker Father to the present Owner The Rectory of Brenchley was given by Richard de Clare to the Canons of St. Mary Magdalen in Tunbridge and compounded with the Bishop of Rochester with this Provision reserved that the Rector for the Time being should pay two wax Tapers of four pound Weight to the Priory of Tunbridge at the Feast of St. Mary Magdalen The Mannor which was annexed to this Rectory was upon the Dissolution of this Cloister in the thirty first year of Henry the eighth granted to Paul Sidnor and he not long after passed it away to William Waller Esquire from which Family not many years since it was by Purchase invested in the Family of Courthop Moatlands was the Inheritance of a Family who extracted their Sirname from hence and were called Brenchley a Branch of which was Sir William Brenchley Lord Cheif Justice of the Common Pleas who founded a Chauntry or Chappel in the Navy of the Cathedral at Canterbury and dyed in the year 1446 without Issue nor did these Lands continue much longer in the Name for in the Beginning of Edward the fourth I find them in the Tenure of More who had matched with the Heir Generall and here the Propriety of this place remained interwoven with the Inheritance of this Family untill that Age which fell under our Fathers Remembrance and then it was transplanted by Sale into Roberts the Family with now possesses it There are two other Seats in this Parish which may deserve our notice the first is Cats-Place which gave Seat to Hugh de Cat and in Recompence took its Denomination from him and after the Title of it had lodged in this Name many Descents even until the Reign of Henry the sixth it was passed away to Tilden of Tildens Place in Marden and after the Possession had some Ages been united to their Interest it was some few years since unfastned and the Propriety of it carried over to Bassage The second is Vanes which yielded both Seat and Sirname to as Illustrious a Family as any in this Track Robert Vane or Fane for they are proimiscuously so written in ancient Rolls paid respective Aid for it at making the Black Prince Knight in the twentieth of Edward the third and is from him by a continued Series still transported along in the Demeasn of this Name and Family so that here if my Light fail me not should I look for the original of that Noble Name and Family that since hath so fairly spread into so many several Branches issued primitively from this first original Stem Bredgar in the Hundred of Milton hath several places in it observable The first is Bexon from whence the Borough of Bexon or Bexon Street derives it self It gave Sirname to a Family in whom in clder Times the Inheritance was planted and there is yet extant in the Church Windows in coloured Glass a superannuated Portraicture mangled by rude hands and demolished almost by the Injuries of Time with this Inscription affixed to the pedestal Orate pro Anima Joannes de Bexon which discovers to us whose Effigies is represented by it this Iohn Bexon flourished in the Reign of Edward the second as appears by Deeds and Edward the third and had Issue Iohn Bexon likewise Rroprietary of this place after whom I can track no more of the Family at Bredgar In the Reign of Richard the second I find it invested in Tong who it is probable were extracted originally from Tong not far distant a Family of good estimate in this County for I find by some old Deeds that Semanus de Tong who in the sixteenth year of Richard the second was Tenant to the Maison le Dieu in Ospringe for Lands at Lurdinden in Challock sealed with a Bend cotised between six Martletts and sometimes with the Bend uncotised and from him are the Tongs who are now Possessors of this place originally descended Swanton Court was parcel of that Estate which claimed the Lords Leybourn for Proprietaries and from them descended to the Heir General of the Family Iuliana de Leybourn who dying in the forty third year of Edward the third without Kindred or without Issue either by Hastings or Clinton this upon a Defailance of both escheated to the Crown and King Edward the third in the fiftieth year of his Reign setled it upon the Abby of Grace upon Tower Hill in whose Reverue it rested until the Suppression of that Cloister and then it was by Henry the eighth in the thirty sixth year of his Reign granted to Christopher Sampson and he in the second year of Edward the sixth conveyed it to Sir Thomas Wiat and he being attainted in the second year of Queen Mary it returned by escheat to the Crown from whence by a new concession it came over to Reader who not many years since conveyed his right in it to Aldersey branched out from the ancient Family of Aldersey of Aldersey in Cheshire so that it is now the Inheritance of Terrey Aldersey Esquire The Colledge of Bredgar was converted from a Parish Church first into that we now call a Colledge by Robert then Parson thereof in the reign of Richard the second which was establishsd and ratified saith Harpsfield by Thomas Arundell Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and in this Capacity or posture it stood until the Dissolution and then being born away into the royal Revenue it was by Exchange with the Crown in the twenty ninth year of Henry the eighth annexed to the revenue for the future of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury There is a place in this Parish called Mans as being in elder Times a Mansion of that Name as Deeds both of an ancient and modern Date do inform me which whether it were the ancient Seat of the Mans who have since been transplanted to Canterbury is uncertain onely it is very probable because it had Proprietaries of that Denomination that this was the Fountain whence this Family issued forth Brenset in the Hundred of Aloesbridge had still the same Proprietaries with Newington Belhouse near Hieth and therefore is called Newington Brenset and thither for farther satisfaction I shall refer my Reader only I must inform him that here is an old Mansion in this Parish which for several Descents was the Seat of the Edolphs before they were transplanted to Hinxhill and certainly in elder Times were of good Account in this County and writ their Names in old Deeds Edulf for so is Stephen Edulf written in an old Commission directed to him John Peckham and Martin Horne wherein they were made Collectors for the Cinque Ports in the sixth year of Richard the second but now this Family hath deserted this Place having not many years since alienated their Interest here to Mr. John Fagge of Rye Father to John Fagge of Wiston in Sussex Esquire to whose Revenue it remains now annexed Betshanger in the Hundred of Eastry was in elder Times the Patrimony of a Family called Marney or Marin for so the
the Rowths of Darbyshire from which Alliance Sir John Rowth claims at this instant the Possession Nash Court is a Seat of very reverend Antiquity especially since for some Centuries of years it hath been as is apparent by their own private Evidences the Mansion of the Hawkins a Family of deep Descent and illustrious Account in this Track but made more eminent by being the Cradle of that Learned Gentleman Sir Thomas Hawkins who for his accurate Translation of Caussinus his holy Court from the French Original into English and his other well polished Labours cannot be decyphered or limned out to Posterity under too worthy an Attribute Colkins is the last place though not of the least Account which in this Parish is to be considered it was built by John Colkin originally a Citizen of Canterbury and he at his Death which was in the tenth of Edward the third was in possession of it there are several of this Mans Posterity which lye entombed in Boughton with a Griffin Segreant which was their Paternal Coat affixed to the Front of the Gravestone William Colkin and Agnes his Wife are there enterr'd with this Inscription Orate pro animâ Will. Colkin Agnet Ux. qui quidem obierunt Anno Dom. 1460. and the rest is defaced this Mans Father John Colkin sleeps there with this Inscription annexed to the Marble Hic jacet Johannes Colkin qui obiito ctavo Die Aprilis Anno Dom. 1405. But not long after the Decease of William Colkin abovesaid did the Possession of this Seat continue permanent in this Family for his Son John Colkin sold it to Henry Petit Father to Cirjacus or Sidrach Petit who drew up a Survey of all the Mannors of Kent which held by Knights Service of the Crown in the twenty eigth year of Henry the eighth from whom Mr. Petit the present Lord of Colkins does extract both his Descent and Title Dane Court in this Parish also cannot be passed by without some Inspection In elder Times Sir Allan de Dane challenged the Signorie of it and as he took his Sirname from it so he had his Habitation here in the Reign of Edward the third and it continued a Mansion for his Descendants divers years after but in the Reign of Henry the fourth I find the Foggs Lords of the Fee the last of which that held it was Sir Jo. Fogge who died possest of it as appears by his Will in the seventeenth year of Henry the seventh and left it to his Son and Heir Sir Jo. Fogge from which Family not many years after it came to own the Propriety of Petit of Colkins in the Descendant of which Family the Interest of it is yet resident Tho. At Hurst here founded a Chappel in the eighth of Richard the second and dedicated it to Saint Nicholas which was for the use of Lazars and poor Leprous people lodged in an Hospital not far distant of this Mans Foundation also Bourdfield or Boresfield in the Hundred of Eyhorn was formerly a Parish and the remains of some part of the Stonework of the Church as likewise the Bounds of the Church-yard are yet obvious but since its decay it hath been incorporated into Oltringden and is now looked upon as an Hamblet of that Parish It was for many Descents the Patrimony of the Lords Cobham of Sterborough and so continued untill Thomas Lord Cobham died in the eleventh year of Edward the fourth and left one onely Daughter and Heir called Ann Cobham who was matched with Edward Borough after in her Right as Heir General created Lord Borough of Sterborough from whom this Mannor descended to his Grandchild Thomas Lord Borough who in the twenty fifth year of Q. Elizabeth conveyed it to John Pakenham and he not long after alienated it to John Lewin Esquire in which Family it remained untill our Remembrance and then by the Heir General it was carried off to Rogers of the County of Somerset and the like vicissitude hath by the Female Inheritrix of that Family brought it now to acknowledge Charles Cavendish Viscount Mansfield Heir apparent to William created Marquess Newcastle by the late King at Oxford Bishops-Bourn in the Hundred of Bredge and Petham is called so because it was given by K. Kenulfus at the Request of Athelard Arch-Bishop of Canterbury to the Priory of Christ Church in the year of Grace 789 and in the Charter there is a Recital of one Aldhun a pious Citizen of Canterbury who first bequeathed it to that Covent and the Charter of Confirmation informs us that it was given to the Monks ad Vestimentum corum for a supply of Vesture In the year 811. Arch-Bishop Ulfred exchanged Eastry of Bourn with the Covent above mentioned and in the Demeasne of that See it lay couched untill the latter end of Hen. the eighth and then Tho. Arch-Bishop of Canterbury exchanged it for other Lands with Sir Thomas Colepeper of Bedgebury who in the thirty fourth year of the abovesaid Prince conveyed it to Sir Anthony Aucher Ancestor to Sir Anthony Aucher Knight and Baronet the instant Proprietary both of this and Hautsbourn which next summons a Remembrance Hauts-bourn before it was enlarged with the Additional Appellation of Haut afforded both Seat and Sirname in elder Times to a Family of venerable Antiquity in these Parts John de Bourn lived here and had a Charter of Free-warren granted to it in the seventeenth year of Ed. the first but when this Name resolved into a Daughter and Heir who was married to Shelving this Mannor lost the Name of Bourn and was called by Addition Shelving Bourn and remained sometime under that Notion untill a Vicissitude of the same Nature with the former entombed this in a Female Inheritrix likewise who being married to Edw. Haut the first Addition was removed and wrapped up in a second for thenceforth in publick Records it was frequently stiled Hauts-bourn and so continued under that Name and in that Family untill Sir William Eaut about the latter end of Hen. the eighth dying without Issue Male this Family determined in two Daughters and Coheirs one of whom called Elizab. being matched to Sir Thowas Colepeper of Bedgebury brought Bourn to be the Inheritance of that Family and he in the thirty fourth year of Henry the eighth passed it away to Sir Anthony Aucher descended from Aucherus the Saxon who was of eminent Note at Newenden in this County of whom more shall be spoken when I come to treat of that place Bursted is the last Place to be taken Notice of in this Parish which in ancient Deeds is written Burghsted and was the Inheritance of a Family of that Sirname but the cheifest Honour which it acquired in times of a more modern Aspect is that for several Descents last past it hath constantly confessed it self to be part of the propriety and Patrimony of Denne a Cadet of the Denns of Denne Hill Boxley in the Hundred of Maidston had an Abby filled with Cistertian Monks and
came after to be the Possession of Roger Lord Leybourne and from him did descend to Juliana Leybourne his Sole Heir who matching with William Clinton Earl of Huntington made it his Inheritance but he deceasing in the twenty eighth of Edward the third without Issue and his Lady after dying and leaving no visibleor avowed Alliance knit to her by the indisputable tye of Consanguinity to claim it it escheated to the Crown and K. Richard the second in the twenty first of his Reign granted it to the Royal Chappel of St. Stevens in Westminster where it remained till the Dissolution and then it was granted in the second year of Edward the sixth to Sir Edward Wotton from whom by a successive Right of Descent it was transmitted to his great Grandchild Thomas Lord Wotton of Marley whose Widow the Lady Mary Wotton does at this instant possess it Lastly Chilston is an eminent Seat and Mannor likewise situated within the Precincts of this Parish In the fifty fifth year of Henry the third Henry Hussey had a Charter of Free-Warren to his Mannor of Chilston and his Grandchild Henry Hussey died seised of it in the sixth year of Edward the third and in this Family was the Inheritance in an undivided Succession resident till our Grandfathers Memory and then Henry Hussey by Sale translated the Proprietie into John Parkhurst whose Successor Sir William Parkhurst alienated it to Richard Northwood whose Son Mr. Oliver Northwood by the same transmission passed it over to Cieggat he very lately disposed of his Concernment in it to Mr. Manly of London who very lately hath conveyed it to Mr. Edward Hales Grandchild to Sir Edward Hales of Tunstal Knight and Baronet Buckland in the Hundred of Feversham was as Sidrach Petits Inquest into the Mannors of Kent informs me as high as the Reign of Henry the third the Possession of John de Buckland who it seems extracted his Sirname from hence and is likewise mentioned in Testa de Nevil to have held Land in this Track in the twentieth year of Henry the third But before the end of Edward the second this Family was vanished from this place and immediately after they were gone out the Frogenhalls of Frogenhall in Tenham were entituled to the Possession and Richard Frogenhall was seised of it at his Decease which was in the thirty fourth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 37. and from him did it descend to John Frogenhall Esquire who was with Edmund Brook Lord Cobham then Ceneral of the Kentish Forces under Richard Earl of Warwick at the Battle of North-Hampton where the House of Lancaster by that vigorous Assistance the Kentish men that day afforded the House of York received so fatal a Wound that all the Art of the Lancastian Partisans could hardly ever after close it and this Man had Issue Thomas Frogenhall who about the Beginning of Henry the seventh passed it away to Gedding and Thomas Gedding in the twenty fifth year of Henry the eighth held this Mannor and conveyed it by Deed to Henry Atsea of Herne and he in the thirtieth of Henry the eighth was possest of it at his Death and from him did the Thread of Descent guide the Title down to his Grandchild William Atsea who in the tenth year of King James conveyed it by Sale to ....... Saker of Feversham Gentleman whose Son Mr. Christopher Saker in our Fathers Memory alienated it to Sir Basill Dixwell of Terlingham in Folkstone Knight and Baronet who upon his Decease about the year 1641 gave it to his Kinsman Mr. John Dixwell Esquire in whom the Possession is still resident Buckland by Dover is situated in the Hundred of Bewsborough and was a Branch of that spacious and wide Demeasn which made the Patrimony of Hamon de Crevequer so considerable in this County and he held it at his Decease which was in the forty seventh year of Henry the third Rot. Esc Num. 33. Afterwards I find the Wilghebies or Willoughbies invested in the Possession and Thomas de Willoughbie was seised of it at his Decease which was in the seventh year of Edward the second But the Title had no long residence in this Family for in the Reign of Edward the third I find it in the Tenure of Barrie of Sevington for Agnes Wife of William Barrie was possest of it in Right of Dower as appears by an Inquisition taken after her Death in the forty eighth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 7. After the Barries were worn out the Callards or Calwards now vulgarly called Collard became Lords of the Fee a Family of deep Extraction in this Track and who were in elder Times entituled to the Possession of Land and Houses in Canterbury as appears by a Composition made between the Monks of St. Austins and those of Christ Church in the forty first of Edward the third recited by Mr. Somner in his Survey of that City Pag. 192. wherein it is mentioned that the Abby of St. Austins had purchased Land and Houses of Iohn Calward But to proceed after this Family had for divers Descents held this Mannor in a fair repute John Callard Esquire being one of those who accompanied Sir Henry Guldford of this County to serve Ferdinand of Castile in his War commenced against the Moors where for some Signal Service performed against those Infidels he had this Coat assigned to him and his Posterity by Clarenceux Benolt vid. Girony of six pieces Or Sables over all three Blackmores Heads decouped in our Fathers Memory they surrendred the Possession of this place by Sale to Fogge who not many years after passed away his Concernment in it by the same conveyance to Mr. William Sherman of Croyden Esquire Steward both to George Abbot and William Laud Successively Arch-Bishops of Canterbury Dudmanscombe is another Mannor in this Parish which in elder times made up the Revenue of the Priorie of St. Martins in Dover and continued annexed to that Cloister until the general Suppression and then being torn from the Church it was again exchanged with Thomas Cranmer Arch-Bishop of Canterbury by Henry the eighth in the twenty ninth of his Reign and so remained wound up in the Demeasn of that Sea untill that ruinous and fatal popular Tempest which arose in these Times supplanted it and cast it into the Possession of a secular Interest Burham in the Hundred of Lark field is in Doomsday Book written Burgham and was in the twentieth year of William the Conquerour held by Ralph de Curva Spina In Ages of a lower Approach to us I find it under the Signorie of Jeffrey de Say and he died possest of it in the twenty third year of Edward the first Rot. Esc Num. 48. and for the future remained so chained to the Propriety of this Family that it was esteemed Parcel of their Barony of Birling and when Jeffrey Lord Say in the Reign of Richard the second ended in two Female Coheirs one matched to John Lord Clinton
Denne who deceasing without Issue Male Margaret his only Daughter and Heir brought it over to her husband Edw. Hougham after whose death it is to devolve to two Daughters who are the surviving Issue of that Wife namely Elizabeth matched to Mr. Edward Rose of Chistlet and Ann wedded to Mr. John Betentham now of Canterbury The Dungeon is another Mannor in Canterbury It was formerly belonging to an ancient Family called Chich Ernaldus de Chich was a man of principal note under Henry the second Richard the first and K. John and the Aldermanry of Burgate in Canterbury did in elder times appertain to this Family Thoma Chich was was Bailiff of Canterbury 1259. and again in the year 1271. was a principal Benefactor to the Church of S. Mary Bredin in Canterbury whose Name in an old Character together with his Effigies are set up in the west Window as his Coat is likewise in Stone-work in the Chancell John Chich was Bailiff of Canterbury in the twenty third and again in the twenty sixth year of Edward the third in the year 1320. Robert Malling then Commissary of Canterbury gave Sentence upon clear Evidence by ancient muniments and otherwise that the Hospital of St. Laurence in Canterbury should not only receive the Tithes of the Mannor of the Dungeon but likewise of 300. Acres adjacient to it but this was not without the Tye or Tribute of some Remuneration for in Autumne John Chich who was then Lord of the Dungeon was to receive for his Servants five loaves of Bread two Pitchers and an half of Beer and half a Cheese of four pence and he himself was to receive unum par Cirocecarum ferinarum one pair of Holyday Gloves and one pound of Wax in Candles and for his Servants three pair of Gloves Thomas Chich this mans Son was Sheriff of Kent in the forty fourth year of Edward the third and held his Shrivealtie at the Dungeon but in Valantine Chich this mans great Grandchild not only the male line but likewise the possession of this place failed for he about the beginning of Edward the fourth passed it away to Roger Brent Esq and he died seised of it as appears by his Will recorded at Canterbury in the year 1486. But in this Family it was not long after this resident for in the beginning of Henry the eighth by an old Court Roll I find one John Butler of Heronden in Eastrye possest of it and he conveyed it to Sir John Hales Chief Baron of the Exchequer and when Leland visited Kent which was in the thirtieth year of Henry the eighth he lived here and from him is it now come down to his Successor Sir James Hales the instant Proprietarie of it The Moate alias Wyke is a third Mannor within the precincts of Canterbury and had owners of that Sirname For I read in Testa de Nevill that Stephen de VVyke possest it in the twentyeth year of Henry the third and paid respective Aid for it at the marriage of Isabel that Princes Sister and in the Book of Aid where there is an Enumeration of the ancient owners there is a Recital of Stephen de Wyke William le Taylour John Tancrey and Richard Betts who had an Interest in it but before the beginning of Richard the second all these Families were mouldred away and vanished For in that Kings Reign I find it by the Court Rolls of this place in the hands of Sir Richard de Hoo and Richard Skippe and they about the latter end of Richard the second by deed conveyed it to Simon Spencer and he some few years after alienated it to John Standford Gentleman who suddenly after Passed it away to Richard Smith in whose hands it had not long continued when the same Devolution brought it over to John Eastfield Esquire Son of Sir William Eastfield who was Knight of the Bath and Lord Maior of London in the year 1438. and from him it was by Sale carried off to William Rogers and he by a Fine levied in the thirty third year of Henry the sixth demises and sells it to Philip Belknap of Canterbury Esquire Maior of that City in the year 1458. and Sheriff of Kent in the thirty fourth year of Henry the sixth he married Elizabeth Daughter of John Woodhouse Esq by whom he had Issue Alice his only Daughter and Heir who was matched to Henry Finch of Nitherfield Esq Father of Sir William Finch Banneret who in his Mothers right was invested in the possession of the Mo●t and from him is it now by Successive right devolved to the Right Honourable John Lord Finch created Baron of Fordwich by the late K. Charles when he was Lord Keeper of the great Seal of England St. Dunstans in Canterbury was the Ancient Seat of the noble Family of Roper VVilliam Rosper or de Rubra Spathâ for so the Name is written in old Dateless Evidences and Elnith his Wife the Daughter and Heir of Edward de Apuldore flourished in the Reign of Henry the third and were great Benefactors to the Priorie of Saint Martins in Dover Iohn de Rubrâ Spathâ or Rosper did eminent Service in Scotland under Edward the third for which that Prince rewards him and William Clifford as appears by a Deed recorded in the Earl of Dorsets Pedigree about the twenty ninth year of his Reign with the third part of those Forfeitures that were due from the Jews then inhabiting in London for the Violation of some Penal Statutes enected against them Edmund Son of Ralph Roper was an eminent Man in the Reign of Henry the fourth and Henry the fifth under whom he was Justice of the Peace for this County and died the third year of Henry the sixth 1433 and lies buried in this Church of St. Dunstans John Roper his Son and John VVestcliffe as the Records of this Family instruct me were Correctors and Surveyours of the Customes of the Cinque Ports in the ninteenth year of Henry the seventh Jo. Roper his Grandchild was Attorney General to Henry the eighth and Prothonotary of the Kings Bench as appears by the Inscription on his Monument in St. Dunstans Church 1524 and VVill. Roper who was Sheriff of Kent the first and second year of Philip and Mary and matched with Margaret Daughter of Sir Thomas More Lord Chancellor of England who as the Inscription on her Monument was Graecis Latinisque Literis Doctissima succeeded his Father in the Office of Prothonotary of the Kings Bench which he discharged with much of Fidelity and Care fifty four years and left it to his Sor Thomas Roper Esquire 1577 in which year he died and from this Thomas is this Mannor of St. Dunstans which for so many Centuries of years hath constantly confessed the Signorie of this Name now descended to his great Grandchild Mr. Edward Roper Esquire Capell in the Hundred of Folkstone was parcel of that Estate which celebrated the Family of Averenches to have been its Proprieraries which continued no longer in the
Sepulchre of Christ against the Assaults of Infidels is incertain for it was customary in those times if they did but vow to undertake the protection of the Crosse in the Christian Quarrel to insculpe their Figures upon their Sepulchres armed and Crosselegged This abovesaid Sir Henry de Cobham was again Sheriff of Kent in the first and ninth years of Edward the second Stephen de Cobham Son and Heir of this Sir Henry was Sheriff of Kent the eighth ninth and tenth years of Edward the third Tho. de Cobham was Sheriff of Kent in the first year of Richard the second John de Cobham was one of the Conservators of the Peace in this County in the third fifth sixth ninth twelfth and eighteenth years of Edward the third a place of no small Consequence in that Age the end of it being to appease Tumults regulate and bridle the Disorders and Excesses of all Irregular Persons whether Felons Outlaws or other Malefactors of what Complexion soever and lastly to secure the Peace of the County from all Eruptions either inbred or forraign This man had Issue Thomas Lord Cobham Father to John Lord Cobham in whom the male Line determined so that Joan became his Daughter and Heir who was first matched to John Delapole secondly to Sir John Ouldcastle by whom she had only a Daughter that died an Infant and thirdly to Reginald Braybrook who dyed as appears by the Inscription on his Tombe in Cobham Church in the year 1433 and by him she had only Joan who was Heir to them both and she by being wedded to Thomas Brook of the County of Somerset Esquire knitt Cobham and a large Income besides to her Husbands Patrimony And this man had Issue by her Sir Edmund Broke who was summoned to Parliament as Baron of Cobham in the twenty third year of Henry the sixth and he was in the direct Line Ancestor to Henry Broke Lord Cobham Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports in the first year of King James who being too deeply concerned in the Design of Sir Walter Rawleigh which was as some who pretend to unravell it in the whole Webb by private Collusion and Treaty with Count Aremberg the Spanish Legat to draw over some Forces from Flanders by whose powerfull Concurrence they might engage this Nation in the Flame of Civill Contention since from that they expected their Light though others wrap it up in so many Vails and Umbrages that the whole Scene of this Attempt becomes perplexed and mysterious made the forfeiture of his Estate here at Cobham though not his Life become the price of his undertaking which being thus rent away by this Escheat from the Patrimony of this Family was soon after by King James invested by Grant in his Kinsman Lodowick Stuart Duke of Lenox who expiring without Issue it did successively devolve to his Nephew James Duke of Lenox upon whose late Decease it is come over to ....... his Dutchesse Dowager only Daughter to George Villiers Duke of Buckingham in whom the blood of those three noble Families Villiers Manours and Beaumont appears to be concentered Cobham-Colledge was founded by John Baron Cobham of Cobham in year 1362 for a Master and Chaplains to pray for the Souls of him his Ancestors and Successors Cobham-Bury lyes likewise in this Parish and was always esteemed as an appendant Mannor to Cobham having originally and successively the same Proprietaries and being found wrapped up in the Patrimony of the infortunate Henry Lord Cobham it escheated upon his Attainder to the Crown and was suddenly after by King James granted to Robert Earl of Salisbury whose Son and Heir the right honorable Robert Cecill Earl of Salisbury some few years since transferred his Right in it by Sale to one Zachary King of Watford in the County of Hertford Henherst is the last place of note in Cobham which as the Records in Rochester inform me was given to the Priory of Leed Castle by Robert de Crevequer upon his Foundation of that Cloister and continued folded up in its Revenue until the Whirlwind of the generall Suppression rent it off and King Henry the eighth granted it to George Lord Cobham who immediately after conveyed it to Sir George Harpur Esquire whose Son Sir Edward Harpur about the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth passed away his Concernment here to Mr. Thomas Wright from whom it descended to his Son and Heir George Wright Esquire who dying without Issue gave it to his Kinsman Sir George Wright and his Son not many years since surrendered it by Sale to Doctor Obert Physitian to the late Queen Mary The Tythes of this Mannor were given by one Goscelinus as the first Book of of Compositions at Rochester discovers to me in the year 1091 to the Priory of St. Andrews in that City which upon the Suppression were by King Henry the eighth granted to George Brook Lord Cobham which upon the Attainder of his infortunate Grandchild Henry Lord Cobham in the second year of King James returned to the Crown and here the Propriety made its aboad untill the late King Charles by his royal Concession made them the Inheritance of Mr. Stephen Alcock of Rochester Esquire Cobham had the Grant of a Market weekly on the Monday and a Fair yearly on the Day of St Mary Magdalen procured to be observed there at those stated times abovesaid by John Lord Cobham in the forty first year of Edward the third Because I have mentioned before and shall have frequent occasion to mention hereafter those Kentish Gentlemen who were embarqued with Edward the first in his victorious and triumphant Expedition into Scotland and were dignified with the order of Knighthood for their Assistance given to that Prince in his succesfull and auspicious Siege of Carlaverock in the twenty eighth year of his Reign I shall represent to the Reader a List which I have collected from an Authentick Roll gleaned from very ancient Registers and other Records by that eminent Antiquary Robert Glover Esquire Sir Henry de Cobham Sir Reginald de Cobham of Cobham and Roundall in Shorn Sir Stephen de Cobham Sir Henry de Cobham le Uncle Sir Simon de Leybourn Sir Henry de Leybourne of Leybourne Castle Sir Jeffrey de Say de Birling Sir Ralph de St. Leger Sir John de St. Leger of Vlcombe Sir Thomas de St. Leger Sir Jeffrey de Lucy Sir Aymery de Lucy of Newington Lucies Sir Thomas de Lucy Sir John de Northwood Sir John de Northwood his Son of Northwood in Milton Sir John de Savage Sir Thomas de Savage of Bobbing Court Sir Roger de Savage Sir Stephen de Cosington in another old Roll there is mention of Sir William de Cosington it is probable they were deslinct persons but both of Cosington Hall in Alresford Sir Peter de Huntingfield of West-Wickham Sir Robert de Crevequer but of what place is not mentioned in the Roll. Sir Simon de Crioll of Walmer Sir Maurice de Bruin de Bekenham Sir Bartholomew de
941 and was as Mr. Lambert out of some old Records conjectures to find the Covent with Eele-Pies If you will see how it was rated in the Conquerours Time Dooms-day Book will tell you that Farnelege est Manerium Monachorum est de Cibo eorum in tempore Edwardi Regis se defendebat pro VI. Sullingis est appretiatum XXII lb. This Mannor upon the Resignation of the Revenue of the above-mentioned Cloister coming to the Crown King Henry the eighth in the thirty fourth year of his Reign granted this and West-Farleigh which was given to the Priory of christ-Christ-Church by Queen Eleanor in exchange for the Port of Sandwich which Donation of hers Edward the first as the Book of christ-Christ-Church informs me fully ratified and confirmed and likewise devolved from the Crown upon the former Surrender to Sir Thomas Wiatt who was then one of his Privy Councel and remained entwined with his Demeasne untill his infortunate Attaint and Tragedy in the second year of Queen Mary brought them back as escheated and forfeited to the Crown The Mannor of East-Farleigh of vast Extent was lately sold by the State to Colonel Robert Gibbons and then that Princesse the same time granted the Mannor of West-Farleigh and the Site and Demeasne of East-Farleigh to her Atturney General Sir John Baker who dying in the first year of Queen Elizabeth gave East-Farleigh to his second Son Mr. John Baker and West-Farleigh to his Son and Heir Sir Richard Jo. Baker had Issue Sir Richard Baker who about the latter end of Queen Elizabeth passed away East-Farleigh to Sir ....... Vane of Burstow in Hunton in whose Descendants the Propriety of it continues at this instant but West-Farleigh devolved by Descent from the abovesaid Sir Richard to his great Grandchild Sir Jo. Baker Baronet who hath very lately conveyed it by Sale to Mr. Thomas Floyd of Gore Court in Otham Esquire Smiths Hill in East-Farleigh hath been ever since the Reign of Henry the sixth the Residence of the Brewers though that Seat where they were anciently planted before was Brewers in Merworth which was a Mansion entituled to the Possssession of this Family some hundreds of years and from whence William de Brewer did originally issue out who was Lieutenant of Dover Castle under King John to whom that King directs a special Praecipe or Command to deliver that important Fortresse to Hubert de Burgh Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports as appears Pat. 17. Reg. Joannis Memb. 2. Num. 102. This I rather mention to manifest that this Family anciently as now hath been under no contemptible Character in this County Totesham Hall lyes within the Limits of West-Farleigh and was the Mansion of a Family of eminent Rank in this Track Jo. de Totesham was one of the Recognitores magnae Assisae as appears by the Pipe Rolls in the Reign of King John and he was Grandfather to John de Totesham who held this Seat at his Decease as appears Rot. Esc Num. 17. Taken in the fifth year of Edward the third And from him did it in an uneven Channel of Successive Interest come down to Anthony Totesham Esquire the last of this Name at this place who about the latter end of Henry the eighth alienated this and Henherst in Yalding to Chapman in which Family the Posession dwelt untill the latter end of Queen Elizabeth and then it was by the same Conveyance passed to Lawrence from which Name not many years since it went away by Purchase to Augustine Skinner Esquire descended from an ancient Family of the Skinners in Lincolne-Shire and now by this new Acquisition transplanted into Kent Farningham in the Hundred of Clackstan vulgarly called Acstane with the Moiety of Chartons was in the Time of the Conquerour held of the Arch-bishop of Canterbury by Ansgodus Rubitoniensis that is Ansgod de Rosse and was rated in Dooms-day Book at one Sulling or Ploughland as it was before in the Reign of Edward the Confessor But this Name of Rosse determining here about the end of Henry the third it came afterwards to be the Pattimony of Fremingham and Ralph de Fremingham obtained a Charter of Free-Warren to this Mannor in the fifty fifth year of Henry the third after whom it descended fortified and fenced in with this new acquired Priviledge to John de Fremingham who was first Assistant to John de Malmains of Faukham not far distant in his Office of Sheriff which was in the tenth of Edward the second and was afterwards Sheriff of this County himself in the twelfth year and then again in the eighteenth and nineteenth years of the above-mentioned Prince and dyed possest of Farningham in the twenty third year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 145. Pars secunda Ralph de Fremingham this Mans Son was Sheriff of Kent the thirty second of Edward the third and in the twentieth year of that Prince paid an auxiliary Contribution at the making the Black Prince Knight for Lands conveyed over to him by his Father and whose Tenure was in Knights Service and lay in this Parish and held them at his Decease which was in the thirty eighth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 19. This Mans Son and Heir was John Fremingham who was one of the Conservators of the Peace of this County in the first year of Richard the second and Sheriff of Kent in the second year of that Prince and afterwards had the Custody of this County again in the twelfth year of Henry the fourth but dyed without Issue so that Ann his Sister matched to Roger Isley of Sundrich became his Heir and so Farningham was with her brought to acknowledge the Interest of this Family from whom it devolved to John Isley whose Widow Alice Isley dyed possest of Farningham in Right of Jointure in the first year of Henry the eighth and from her it devolved to her Son Thomas Isley and he dyed seised of it in the eleventh year of Henry the eighth and it was found at his Decease that it was held in Knights Service of Dover Castle by the payment of a Rent-service of twenty one Shillings per An. and had the Estimate of a whole Knights Fee After him his Son Sir Henry Isley succeeded in the Possession of this place and being infortunately convicted of high Treason in the second year of Queen Mary Farningham and Chartons escheated to the Crown and that Princesse in the same year granted it back to his Son William Isley Esquire and he in the third and fourth of Philip and Mary by a Deed enroll'd in Chancery passes away Farningham and the Moiety of Chartons to William Roper Esquire Grandfather to Sir Anthony Roper and Mr. Henry Roper from whom upon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Will made by his Brother Sir Anthony Roper wherein he demises the Fee-simple to Sir John Cotton of Cambridge-Shire it is by Verdict taken away and enstated on the above mentioned Person The other Moiety of Chartons gave Sirname
conveyed it by Grant to Sir Walter Henley and he in the thirty fourth year of Henry the eighth transmitted it by his Deed to Sir John Baker whose Successor Sir John Baker even in those Times which entrenched on our Remembrance passed it away to Mr ....... Cleyton of London Bewper is the second place of account in this Parish It was in elder Times an Appendage or Fragment of that Demeasn which did contribute to the Support of the Abby of Feversham and upon the Suppression of that Cloister or Seminary by Henry the eighth it was in the thirty fifth year of that Princes Reign granted to Sir Thomas Moil who not long after passed it away to Robert Prat. And his Son Master Franci Prat primo Elizabethae by Fine conveyed it to Mr Edward Bathurst who not many years after transplanted his Interest here by Sale into Sir Richard Baker Ancestor to Sir Jo. Baker of Sisinghurst Baronet who now by paternal Succession is entituled to the instant Signory of it Wallinghurst and Buckhurst are two petty Mannors which belonged to the Abby of Feversham but upon the Suppression of that Covent they were pared off and by Grant from Henry the eighth in the twenty ninth year of his Reign were enstated upon Thomas Lord Cromwell Earl of Essex But long he was not endowed with them for in the thirty second year of that Prince's Government he was bespattered and blasted with an Accusation of high Treason which the Subtlety of his Adversaries had woven so closely together that he was entangled in it and being attainted forfeited both his Life and Estate to the Fury I cannot say Justice of an incensed Prince Amongst the Ruines of his Patrimony these two places were comprehended and upon his Shipwrack it returned to the Crown And then King Henry the eighth by a new Grant in the same year they escheated passed them away to Sir John Baker of Sisingherst in Cranebroke from whom they are now come down to Sir John Baker Baronet his Successor Upper Peasridge was involved in that spatious Inheritance which fell under the Dominion of the Lord Badelesmer of whom I shall speak more at Leeds and when he by his Disloyalty had forfeited both Life and Fortune to the Crown this was enwrapt in the Escheat But was restored in the second year of Edward the third to Bartholomew Lord Badelesmer this Mans Son and he in the twelfth year of that Prince held it at his Death Rot. Esc Num. 44. But Giles his only Son dying without Issue his great Estate was split into parcells and this with some more of his Demeasne was allotted to Mawd his Sister and Coheir who was matched to John Vere Earl of Oxford and he in her Right was possest of it at his Death which was in the thirty fourth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 84. And in this Family did it reside untill the Beginning of Henry the fourth and then it was passed away by Sale to St. Leger to whose Patrimony it remained annexed untill the Government of Philip and Mary and then an Alienation like the former brought it over to Lone descended from the Lones of Lancashire where there is yet a House of the Name and being thus fixt in this Family the Possession continues still united to it Fordwich in the Hundred of West-Gate was given to the Abbot and Monks of St. Austins as the Annalls of that Convent testifie by King Edward the Confessor and was given ad Vestitum for Reparation of their Apparell And there is a Tradition that Hemp-Hall which was an Appendage to this Mannor did pay a quit-Rent in Hemp but certainly it must be then for the use of those secular persons which related as Officers and Servants to this Cloister for the Monks themselves being under the Rule of Bennet harrowed their Skin with Shirts of Hair and slept vestiti in their Apparell the more to tame and controle the Mutinies and Disorders of the Flesh But to advance After this Mannor which the Piety of former Ages had planted in the Revenue of the Church had for a large Decursion of Time owned no other Proprietary it was by the Dissolution in the twenty ninth of Henry the eighth emptied into the Income of the Crown where it lay untill Edward the sixth in the seventh year of his Reign granted it to Sir Thomas Cheyney and he not long after alienated his Concernment in it to John Johnson from whom it came over by Purchase to Paramour who passed it away to the Lady Elizabeth Finch Widow of Sir Moile Finch whose Son Thomas Finch Earl of Winchelsey almost in our Memory passed it away to John Finch Baron of Fordwich late Lord Keeper of the great Seal of England in the year 1640 and in him does the instant Signory of it reside Folkstone does contribute a Name to the Hundred in which it is situated The Mannor it self with the Mannor of Walton was given to the Nunnery by Eadbald King of Kent which it seems was of that Repute in those Times that Eanswide his Daughter was there vailed a Nun under the Rule of St. Bennet and Ermenred and Ercombert his Sons changed their hopes of a Crown into those of one more celestiall and folded up all their Earthly Glories in a Monastick Cowle which they assumed at this place under the Discipline of St. Bennet But this Cloister was some Ages after partly by the Fury of the Danes and partly by the Impressions of the Sea reduced into a heap of Ruines so that in the Reign of William the Conquerour William de Muneville laid the Foundations of a new Priory in another place of the Town which was much augmented afterwards by William de Averenches who had married his only Daughter But it seems upon the former Devastation of this religious Seminary the Mannor had returned to the Crown for in the year one thousand thirty and eight Canutus restored to Christ-church in Canterbury as the Records of that Covent do intimate this Mannor of Folkston which Athelstan Son of King Edward in the year nine hundred twenty and eight had formerly granted to them for the health of his Fathers Soul and to the Honor of Vlfhelme Arch-priest of Canterbury but with this Restriction he limits and bounds this his Concession that this Mannor thus returned to the Church should never be alienated by the Arch-bishop without the Consent of the King and the Covent of Christ-church who it appears joyned with William the Conquerour and the Archbishop of Canterbury and fastned it again to this Priory where it remained untill it was torn away by the Suppression in the Time of Henry the eighth and annexed to the Crown Afterwards that Prince in the thirtieth year of his Reign transplanted his Interest in it and Walton by Grant into Edward Lord Clinton and he the same year passed them away to Thomas Lord Cromwell Earl of Essex who being attainted in the thirty second year of the abovesaid Prince
County for in the Pipe-Rols relating to the Raign of King John I discover that Robert de Malavill was one of the Recognitores magnae Assisae in the fourth year of that Prince and then again in the seventh year of his Rule he was dignified with that eminent Place of Trust and he had Issue William de Malavil who was in the enjoyment of this Mannor at his Death which was in the Raign of Henry the third as appears by an escheat Roll marked with the number 56. And in this Family did the Right and Title of it lie involved untill the latter End of Edward the third and then the noted Family of Bures stept by Purchase into the Possession and John Bures as appears to me by an old Deed held it in the fourth year of Richard the second he was Son of William Bures who paid respective Aid for part of a Knights-fee which lay in Bromley in the twentieth year of Edward the third at making the Black Prince Knight and William Bures Son of John lies entombed in Halsted Church pourtraied at length in Brass and mail'd in Armor upon a fair Grave-stone being Marble with this Inscription Hic jacet Willielmus Bures Armigeri Dominus Manerii de Halsted qui obiit 1454. And this was he who was Sheriff of Kent in the eleventh year of Henry the sixth But after his Death it was not long in the Fruition of this Name for about the Beginning of Edward the fourth I find it in the Hands of Thomas Bourchier descended from the Bourchiers of Essex and he about the Latter End of that Prince passed it away to Stephen Petley Esquire who lies buried in Halsted Church And in this Family was the Title fixed untill the Beginning of King James and then the Fatality of Sale did alternate the Possession and annexed it to the Inheritance of Sir Thomas Watson who dying without Issue-male his only Daughter and Heir was espoused to Sir William Pope afterwards created Earl of Downe in Ireland by King James and so in her Right this Mannor became the Inheritance of his Son the Right Honourable William Earl of Downe who not many years since passed it away to Mr. Edward Ash whose Widow Mrs. ........ Ash holds it at this instant in Right of Dower Halstow in the Hundred of Milton hath nothing memorable in it but Berkesore alias Basser-court which was as high as any print of Antiquity can direct me to discover the Patrimony of the Church for King Stephen devoted it to find a supply of perpetual Lights before the Chest or Shrine ante Capsam those are the words of the Record of Anselme the eminent Arch-bishop of Canterbury and it hath been many years past held by the Darrels of Cale-hill as Lessees and is still by that Right enjoyed by Sir John Darrell of the same place The Church of Halstow as the Records of Christ-church instruct us was given by Boniface Arch-bishop of Canterbury to buy Books for the Chaunter of that Covent Hamme in the Hundred of Eastry was as the Records of Christ-church in Canterbury inform me given to the Prior and Monks of that Covent in the year 934. by one Eylfleda but how it was rated in the Conqueror's Time when if not all yet at least the principal part of this County was surveyed the Pages of Doomesday Book are silent In brief the Moity of this Mannor for one Half of it was alwaies under the Jurisdiction of Lay-proprietaries being by the Donation abovesaid made parcel of the Spiritual Patrimony remained treasured up in the Revenue of the Church as in an unviolable Exchequer until both the Covent of Christ-church and all its Demeasne was surrendered into the Hands of Henry the eighth and that Prince in the thirty fifth year of his Raign granted that part of it which belonged to the Priory of Christ-church to Sir Thomas Moile who not long after passed it away to Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knight from which Family in our Grand-fathers memory it went away by Sale to Bois of Betshanger The other Moity of Hamme belonged to the Criolls of Walmer of which Family I shall speak more at that Place Simon de Crioll as I discover by old Deeds held it in the Raign of King John and Henry the third and transmitted it to his Son Nicolas de Crioll who held it at his Death which was in the one and thirtieth of Edward the first and from him did it by the steps of several Generations descend to Sir Thomas Crioll who was slain at the second Battle of Sr. Albans tamely and in cold Blood that is he was beheaded by Queen Margaret wife to King Henry the sixth in the thirty eighth of that Prince's Raign because he had been an eager Partisan of the House of Yorke and being thus infortunately cut off left that great Estate he was possest of in this County to two Daughters and Co-heirs one of which was matched for his second wife to John Fogg of Repton Esq Son and Heir of Sir William Fogg and he had Issue by her Thomas Fogg Serjeant Porter of Callis Esquire a Place of eminent Trust and Concernment in those Times And he ended in two Daughters and Co-heirs Anne first matched to Mr. William Scott Brother of Sir Reginald and secondly to Mr. Henry Isham and Alice first wedded to Edward Scott of the Moat in Sussex Esquire and after to Sir Robert Oxenbridge of the County of South-hampton but the Moity of this Mannor of Hamme upon the dividing the Estate into equal Portions fell to be the Inheritance of Edward Scott in Right of Alice his wife and his Descendant in our Grand-fathers Remembrance alienated all his Interest and Concernment here to Bois of Betshanger whose Successor Mr. John Bois of Betshanger Esquire is now entirely possest of this Mannor as namely of that Moity which came over to this Family by Purchase from Oxenbridge as well as of that which devolved to this Name by Purchase from Scott Harbledowne in the Hundred of Westgate though at present but an obscure Village and not of much Eminence was in Time of more ancient Date famous for three memorable Places First for an old Chappel situated upon the Margin of that Precipice which overlooks that way which leads to Canterbury In which Oratory as Tradition informs us was preserved the Slipper of Thomas Becket taken from one of his Feet after his being destroyed at his own Church at Canterbury and which as Report insinuates was bespattered with his Blood this being curiously enchased with Diamonds so much did those Times dote on this then reputed Saint and Martyr was let down for Passengers who travelled to Canterbury to offer up their Orizons at his Shrine to adore with a kiss nor was it returned but full fraighted and laden with the Benevolences of devoted Pilgrims The second was Polres which anciently had and still keeps the Repute of a Mannor John de Polre Son of John de Polre payd respective Aid for it in
augmented the Revenue of that Priory Yet there is an ancient Seat in this Parish called Rumpsted which never was couched in the Spiritual Patrimony for it had anciently Owners of that Appellation Sir William de Rumpsted held this and a Castellated Mansion in Sevenoke of that Denomination in the Raign of Edward the first and he had Issue Sir John Rumpsted possest of this place and Rumpsted in Sevenoke and as the Tradition asserts educated Sir William Sevenoke Lord Mayor of London in the year of Grace 1418. In Ages of a nearer Descent to us that is in the third year of Henry the sixth I find Richard Peverell to have enjoyed it And in Times subsequent to these the Peckhams but their Possession was very frail for in the Raign of Queen Elizabeth I find it to be in Figge a Name of no despicable Character in this Parish but it was very transitory here likewise for about the Beginning of King James the Title was interwoven with the Interest of Thompson who in our Fathers Remembrance conveyed it by Sale to Mr. ...... Taylor Fruiterer to the abovesaid Prince and his Discendant not many years since alienated it to Mr. Stringer of Goudherst I. I. I. I. ICkham in the Hundred of Downehamford was given by King Offa to Christ-church and to the Monks of that Covent in the year 781. under the Notion of fifteen Plough-lands and was for a Supplement of Dyet This Donation in the year 958. was confirmed by Athelward Odo the Arch-bishop of Canterbury being then present and attesting the Ratification In the Time of Edward the Confessor when the first Design of Doomesday Book was started it was rated at four Sullings or Plough-lands nor did it fall in that Account when that generall Register was perfected which was in the twentieth year of the Conqueror defending it self at the same Estimate and upon the Appraisment was valued at thirty pound And here it was fastned until King Henry the eighth finding the Revenue of the Church was diffused into too wide a Latitude and Circumference contracted it by a general Dissolution into a narrower Orbe and having rent off this Mannor from the Ecclesiastical Demeasne like an Excrescence sprouting out from a luxuriant Stem he ingrafted it again by his Letters Patent on the Dean and Chapter of Christ-church and they settled it by Lease on Edward Isaack a Noble Confessor for the Protestant Religion in the Raign of Queen Mary when so many were sent to Heaven like so many Elias's Flammeis vecti Quadrigis in Chariots of fire who rather chose to desert his Country then abandon his Religion and to lose his Estate rather then to debauch or relinquish his Conscience as his Epitaph on an old Tablet affixed to a Pillar contiguous to his Grave-stone in the Nave of Christ-church at Canterbury does instruct us Upon his Recesse this was seized upon by the Crown and Queen Mary by Grant united it to the Revenue of George Lord Cobham whose infortunate Grand-child Henry Brooke being attainted in the Raign of King James that Monarch restored his Estate forfeited here to Robert Cecill Earl of Salisbury his Brother in Law whose Son Robert now Earl of Salisbury holds the instant Possession of it but hath lately alienated some part of it to Mr. Roger Lukin of London Apulton is a second Mannor in Ickham written in old Deeds Apylton as being the Inheritance of a Family of that Name for in an old Deed of Reginald de Cornehill that was owner of Lukedale in Littlebourne not far distant one William de Apylton of Ickham is a Witness but whether this Family was knit by any Relation to the Noble Family of the Apyltons of Essex and Suffolk I am incertain Afterwards the Denis's were possest of it and one John Denis of Apulton in Ickham who was Sheriff of London in the year of Grace 1360. Founded here a Chauntry in the Raign of Edward the third as appears by an old Manuscript in the Hands of Mr. Thomas Denne lately deceased and was called Denis Chauntry and the Lands which relate to it are at this Day styled Denis Lands After this Family was worn out I find one Adam Oldmeade by the private Deeds to be in the Raign of Henry the fifth and Henry the sixth owner of it from whom before the latter end of that Prince it came over by Sale to Bemboe and from him to Hunt in which Family it made no long stay For about the latter of Henry the seventh I find it alienated to Dormer a Branch of the Dormers of Buckinghamshire and from this Name not many years after it went away to Gason a Name very ancient in this Parish and here likewise was the Possession of as brief a Date for Dormer by Sale passed it away to Hodgekin whose Ancestors were formerly possest of Uffington in Gonston and transmitted it by Sale to Ashenden and here likewise was the Title very variable for within the Circle of fourscore years it acknowledged not only this Family but Rutland Winter and d ee to have been its Successive Proprietaries from the last of which not many years since it was by Sale carried off to Frostall in which name it is still resident The Mannor of Baa in this Parish had anciently Possessors of that Sirname as appears by an old Fragment of Glass in the Church Windows whereon is superscribed this incoherent Inscription Hic ...... Ba ..... and at the Pedestal of another antiquated Portraiture Thomas de Baa After the Baas the Wendertons of Wenderton in Wingham were possest of it for several Generations until William Wenderton about the Beginning of Henry the eighth passed it away by Sale to Hugh Warham Esquire Brother to the Arch-bishop and he gave it in Dower with Anne his Daughter matched to Sir Anthony St. Leger Lord President of Ireland whose Descendant Sir Warham St. Leger passed it away to Mr. ...... Denue of Denne Hill in Kingston whose Heir Mr. Thomas Denne late Recorder of Canterbury almost in our Memory alienated it to Curling Before I leave Ickham I must inform the Reader that Peter de Ickham was born in this Parish a man whom both Ball in his Centuries and Pitseus in his Track de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis do highly magnifie for a man of eminent Literature whither I refer my Reader Ivie-church in the Hundred of St. Martins and Aloesbridge contains sundry Places within its Confines not to be entombed in silence The first is Capells-Court the Seat of a Family of that Sirname and were written frequently At Capell and in Latin de Capella and were a Family certainly of signall Account in Kent as appears by their Land which lay scattered in Linton and Boxley where John de Capell held Land called Tattellmell in that Parish in the thirty seventh year of H. the third as appears by a Charter of Inspection of that Prince wherein he confirms Land to the Abby of Boxley which bordered on the Land of John de Capell at Tattellmell
this Mannor to his Patrimony and he the better to inforce and perpetuate the Memory of this Alliance and the Estate which devolved to him by so fortunate a Conjunction inverted his Sirname and writ it for the future Clerc alias Woodchurch in which Name the Propriety of this Place continued until the latter end of Q. Elizabeth and then it was alienated to Taylor of Shadoxherst in which Name the Interest of it had not long continued but that it was in our Remembrance by Sale conveyed to Whitwick West-Halks is a third Mannor in Kingsnoth which in elder Times was ennobled for affording a Residence to a Family of this Sirname who bore in ancient Seals a Fesse between three Hawks or Falcons and sometimes one a Family of no contemptible Estimate or shallow Antiquity in this Track as appears by old Escripts Pedigrees and other venerable Muniments which represent this Family under the Character of Gentlemen for above three hundred years Sampson de Halk died about the year 1360 and held not onely this place Ex Autographis penes Dom. Tho. Taylor but much other Land about Petham and other Parishes in that Track but about the latter end of Henry the sixth this Family had demised the Propriety of this place to Taylor of great Chart in which Name it was constantly fixed untill the latter end of Henry the seaventh and then it was sold to Clerc who about the latter end of Q. Elizabeth passed it away to Robert Honywood of Charing Esquire who upon his Decease settled it by his last Will on his second Son by his second Wife Col. ....... Honywood now the instant Lord of the Fee Knowlton in the Hundred of Eastrye was parcel of the Patrimony of the noble Family of St. Leger Hugh St. Leger who was one of the Recognitores magnae Assisae in the Raign of King John held this Mannor in the fourth year of the Raign of that Prince and left it to his Son John St. Leger who in the twelfth year of Henry the third exchanged it for other Lands with Reginald de Cornhill and he in the twenty fifth year of the abovesaid Prince passed it away by Sale as the Book of christ-Christ-Church informs me to the Prior and Monks of that Covent but it seems not long after they exchanged it with Thomas Perot for he in the fourth year of Edward the third died possest of it as appears by his Office Rot. Esc Num. 31. and left onely a Female Heir who carried it along with her to Langley descended out of the County of Warwick and being thus chained by this Match to the Interest of this Family it remained for many Descents fastned to it and was productive in several Ages of Men of no vulgar Account William de Langley Son of William Langley was Sheriff of Kent the twenty first twenty third twenty fourth and twenty fifth years of Edward the third William Langley of Knolton was Sheriff of Kent in the fourth year of Henry the fifth and likewise Justice of the Peace for this County under that Prince John Langley Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the twentieth year of Henry the seventh and had Issue Edward Langley Esquire who matched with Elizabeth Daughter of Thomas Peyton of Peyton Hall in the County of Cambridge descended from Peytonus de Vfford but he dying without Issue about the latter end of Henry the eighth his Wive's Brother Sir Robert Peyton by Reason of a former Match in the Raign of Henry the fifth between Peyton and a Daughter of Langley entered upon it as Heir General at Law and he not desirous to desert Cambridgeshire to transplant himself into Kent assigned Knowlton for Livelyhood to his second Son Sir John Peyton Grand-father to Sir Thomas Peyton the Primier Baronet of this County who as lineally extracted from him does enjoy the Propriety of it See more of this Family of Peyton in my Discourse of Werd L. L. L. L. LAmberherst lies in the Hundred of Little Bernefield and was sometimes written Lamberts-hurst from Lambert a Saxon Owner in old English this Name imports as much as bright or holy and glorious Lamp as Herebert is bright Lord. Part of this Parish is in Kent and the other part in Sussex distinguished by a small Stream which rises nere Cowden and glides through this Town towards Medway The Lordship of Lamberhurst it self with the Mannor of Woodroff belonged to the Monastery of Roberts Bridge and after the Dissolution were by Henry the eighth granted in the thirteenth of his Reign to Sir William Sidney Tutor to King Edward the sixth when he was Prince whose Successor Robert Sidney Earl of Leicester sold Lamberherst in our Fathers Memory to Mr. Porter and Woodroff to Sir Edw. Henden one of the Barons of the Exchequer who bequeathed it to his Nephew Sir John Henden lately deceased Hodleigh in this Parish was part of that Demeasne which related to the Colledge of Lingfield in Surrey which upon the Suppression was by Henry the eighth granted to Thomas Cardan from which Family it passed away to Edward Filmer Esquire Ancestor to Sir Edward Filmer eldest Son to Sir Robert Filmer lately deceased to whose Demeasne the Propriety of it is at present united The Abby of Begham in this Parish was founded by Ela de Sackvill and Sir Robert de Thurneham a man of principal Account in the time of Henry the third This Priory was suppressed by Cardinal Wolsey and filled with Cannons Praemonstratenses or white Cannons called so from their Habit. The Mannor which belonged to it was by royal Concession From Q. Elizabeth it passed away to Anthony Brown Viscount Montague who not long after alienated the Fee-simple to Alderman Barneham of London who gave it to Benedict a second Son and he dying without Issne-male one of his Daughters and Coheirs married with Dobell of Sussex and so carried it into the Inheritance of that Family where the Possession has ever since been setled Scotney in this Parish which hath borrowed that Appellation from its locall Situation and the over-shooting of the Water was the Residence of a Family distinguished by that Sirname and Denomination for one Walter de Scotney in Times of high Ascent was Proprietary of this Place but added not much Reputation to this Mansion for as Edmund de Hadenham a Chronicler of great Antiquity attests he in the year 1259 administred poyson by tacit Stratagem to the Earl of Gloucester and his Brother to destroy them of which the last dyed and the first escaped not without Danger of Life But to goe on After this Family was mouldered away at this place which was about the midst of Edward the third the eminent Family of Ashburnham of Ashburnham in Sussex were entituled to the Signiory of it Roger Ashburnham who was one of the Conservators of the Peace for this County of Sussex in the first year of Richard the second had here a castellated Mansion did sometimes inhabit at this place and was
Horspoole Esquire who in the Memory of these Times alienated the Fee-simple to Mr. English of Sussex Secondly the Mannor of Maidstone it self with the Palace fall under Consideration They were in Times of elder Account belonging to the Family of Cornhill and so continued till William de Cornhill desiring to exemplifie his Zeal and Devotion by some eminent Acts of Piety to the Religion which those Times asserted gave them to Stephen Langton Arch-Bishop of Canterbury in the seventh year of the Raign of King John many of whose Successors were Benefactors both to the Church and Palace Boniface of Savoy Arch-Bishop of Canterbury about four hundred years since built here an Hospital then styled the New-work to the Honour of St. Peter and Paul and Thomas the Martyr which Hospital William Courtney likewise Arch-Bishop pull'd down and instituted a Colledge upon the Ruines of it for secular Priests devoted to the Honour of All Saints And also erected the Collegiate Church as the Walls diaper'd in sundry places with his paternal Coat do easily evince John Vfford also Arch-Bishop about three hundred years since began the Foundation of the Palace here but dying before he had compleated the same Simon Islip his Successor gave it its Perfection and being afterwards crumbled into Decay Iohn Morton likewise Arch-Bishop not onely repaired but augmented it Maidston was governed by a Portreve until the Time of King Edward the sixth by whose incorporation it came to be governed by a Maior which Priviledge being lost because this Town was enwrapped in Sir Thomas Wiats Insurrection against Q. Mary Q. Elizabeth not onely restored the same but to improve it to more eminence with a farther Addition of Honour raised it into the Degree of a Borough Maidstone by the Influence of Boniface of Savoy Arch-Bishop of Canterbury had the Grant of a Market procured to be held here weekly on the Thursday as is manifest Pat. 45. Hen. tertii Memb. secunda Thomas Arundel Arch-Bishop of Canterbury about two hundred and forty years since erected a Chauntry for the Brothers of Corpus Christi now converted into the Free-School who by the Rules of their Primitive Institution were to pray for the Fraternity of the Guild The Mannor and Palace of Maidston being exchanged with the Crown by Thomas Arch-Bishop of Canterbury was by K. Henry the eighth about the thirty second year of his Raign granted to Thomas Wiat the elder and his infortunate Son Sir Thomas VViat being attainted in the second year of Queen Mary it devolved by Escheat to the Crown and continued there untill Queen Elizabeth granted it to John Astley Esq Master of the Royall Jewells from whom it descended to Sir Jacob Astley created Lord Astley by the late King Charles at Oxford in whose Descendants the Propriety is at this instant resident But the Mannor continued in the Tenure of the Crown even untill the Raign of King Charles For when King James had by his gracious Charter created Dame Elizabeth Finch Widow of Sir Moile Finch of Estwell onely Daughter and Heir of the right Honourable Sir Thomas Heneage of Copped-hall in Essex Vice-Chamberlane and one of the Privy Councel to Queen Elizabeth Vice-Countesse Maidston to her and her Issue-male She obtained the Mannor in Fee Farme for ever and transmitted it to her Son Sir Thomas Finch in her Right Earl of VVinchelsey from whom both the Title of Viscount Maidston and the Right of the Mannor are devolved by Paternal Succession to the Right honourable Heneage Finch the present Earl of VVinchelsey and Vicecount Maidston Leland notes that the Arch-Bishop's Palace was anciently a Castle and I verily believe it was the Caput Baroniae for the Arch-Bishops had more than one and excepting that at Saltwood I have diligently Searched and can find none so likely as this Goulds and Shepway do thirdly expose themselves to our Survey they were formerly the Demeasne of Vinter of Vinters not far distant and so remained till Robert Vinter Founded in Maidston Church that Chantry which bears the Name of Gould's Chantry about the fortieth year of Edward the third and then he annexed both these places to the Found●tion for those Divine Offices which were there to be performed but upon the Suppression of this Oratorie King Henry the eighth granted Goulds and Shepway to Sir Thomas VViat who afterwards sinking under the crime of High Treason in the second year of the Government of Queen Mary She upon his attaint granted them to Sir VValter and Gervas Henley Esq from which Family by Purchase they came over to Andrews but stayed not long there for in our Fathers Memory they were sold to Sir Humphrey Tufton late Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1654. and part of the year 1655. Bigons alias Digons was the ancient Seat of the worthy Family of the Mapelysdens and I have a Deed in my Custody wherein one Edward Mapelysden is mentioned with this Addition Edwardus Mapelysden de Digons The Deed bears Date from the twenty fifth of Edward the third and after the possession had been for many Generations Successively resident in this Family one of this Name being unfortunately concerned in the Defection of Sir Thoma Wyat was blasted with the guilt of High Treason and so by Consequence his Estate by Confiscation escheated to the Crown from which it was granted to Nicholas Barham after Serjeant at Law who did much improve this Fabrick with a Supplement of Building from whose Heir it passed away by Sale to Hawle and from him again soon after to Sir Francis Berneham to whom this Mansion owes much of its Magnificence and Splendor whose Son and Heir Mr. Edward Barneham Esquire has lately alienated his Interest in it to Mr. Beale of London Jordans-Court is a fifth place which may exact our Notice because it gave Seat and Sirname to a Family of that Denomination the next Family after this was expired which held it was Roper of the Ropers of St. Dunstans in Canterbury and John Roper sold it to Edw. and Wil. Brouch of Bersted about the thirty sixth year of Henry the sixth and they quickly after alienated their Concernment to Atwood from whom the same Fate carried it away to Peirce who by Sale transmitted his Right to Cook and he suddenly after demised it to Crooke where after the Title had made some short abode the Possession was passed over to Potkins extracted from the Fotkins of Sevenoke where the Name was very ancient from Potkin by his Daughter and Coheir it descended to Virgo who about the latter end of Q. Elizabeth by Sale translated the Possession into Washington Justice of Peace and often in the Commission of Sewers who sold it to Godwin from whom by Purchase it came to be the Inheritance of Crisp who in our Memory conveyed it away to Smith and he some few years since by Sale invested the Propriety in Mr. Beckman Sixthly Sheals is not to be forgotten because it was the Inheritance of Fremingham for Ralph de
of Henry the third at the marriage of Isabell that Prince's Sister and it is probable that this VVill. de Valoigns dyed possest of Otham in the tenth year of Edward the first for his Name was VVilliam likewise as appears by the escheat Roll marked with the Number 54. after whom his Successor Stephen de Valoigns held it who was certainly a man of some important Account in those Times for he was one of the Conservators of the Peace in the raign of Edward the third After Valoigns the knightly Family of Pimpe was by purchase invested about the latter end of Richard the second both in the Possession of Otham and Gore-court and to this Name was the Inheritance both of Otham and Gore-court by a Chain of severall Descents successively united till at last the ordinary Devolution of purchase brought them over to Isley of Sundrich and within the Circle of this Family was the Propriety of them circumscribed till the second year of Queen Mary and then Sir Hen. Isley being fatally engaged and entangled in the unsuccessefull Attempt of Sir Thomas Wiatt could not unravell himself untill he had satisfied the Justice of that Queen with the forfeiture of his Life and augmented the Revenue of the Crown with the Confiscation of his Estate from which these two places as being parcell of his escheated Patrimony were by Patent soon after passed away to Sir Walter Henley one of the Serjeants at Law to the abovesaid Queen Mary who dying without Issue-male bequeathed Gore-court to Hellen his Daughter and Coheir who was matched to Thomas Colepeper and Otham to his Brother Thomas Henley from whom it is come down to Walter Henley Esquire who is the present Lord of the Fee but Gore-court was by Colepeper demised by Sale to Buffkin where after the Possession had for severall years been fixed it was almost within the Pale of our Remembrance by purchase made the present Inheritance of Tho. Floyd Esquire Stoneacre in this Parish is an Ancient Seat which for some Centuries of years has acknowledged no other Proprietary then Ellys but whether Burton in Kenington or this Mansion were the original Fountain from whence this Family did extract its first Etymology is incertain for once they had one and the same Possessor The Deeds that fortifie their Interest in this place reach as high as the Time of Edward the second and instruct us that Ellis which enjoyes it now is by a stream of many unintercepted Descents issued out from John Ellis who possest it then There was the Foundation of a Religious Seminary of Canons Praemonstratenses or white Canons begun at Otham by Ralph de Dene but the Situation of the Place being not accommodated to Health they were by Ela de Sackvil removed and transplanted into her new erected Priory at Begham where till the common Suppression they continued undisturbed and fixed Otteringdon in the Hundred of Eyhorne does represent to us in Prospect the Memory of a Family to whom it contributed in Times more Arcient both Seat and Sirname Ralph de Ottringden held it at his Decease which was in the fifteenth year of Edward the first Rot. Esc Num. 29. But in his Son Sir Lawrence de Ottringden both the Name and Male Line failed together for his Daughter and Heir brought it along with her to Peyforer who about the latter end of the raign of Edward the third was extinguished likewise by the same Fatality in Julian Peyforer who was his Heir General and she by espousing Thomas St. Leger Esquire intermixed the Right of this place with the Inheritance of this Family and who lies entombed in this Church with this Compendious Superscription endorsed upon his Grave-stone Hic jacet Thomas St. Leger de Otteringden qui obiit 1408. But a Revolution as suddain as the former quickly snatched away Otteringden from the Patrimony of this Name for by Joan who was Co-heir to the above-mentioned Thomas St. Leger it was rowled into the Revenue of Henry Aucher Esquire sprouted out from the Illustrious Stem of Aucher of Losenham and in this Family was the Interest of this place successively laid up till the Time of Queen Elizabeth and then the whole Demise was by Sale transmitted to Lewin in whom a Descent or two after the Male-Line determining the Female Heir brought it to Rogers of the West from whom the like Fatality hath lately devolved it to Charles Lord Mansfeld eldest Son to the Right Honorable William Cavendish Marquess of Newcastle Putwood is another Mannor in this Parish which in Times of elder Etymology did acknowlede it self to be under the Signory of a Family who extracted their Sirname from Vienne in Dauphine in France and in several Deeds without Date there is mention of William de Vienna who was invested in Land here at Putwood and Ospringe and in the twentieth year of Edward the third Lucas de Vienna paid respective Supply at the making the Black Prince Knight for Lands which he held at Putwood and Ospringe After this Family was dissolved and gone the Quadrings which was about the beginning of Richard the second were settled in the possession where after some small Residence of the Title it went away by Sale about the latter end of Henry the fourth to the Ancient Family of Goldwell of great Chart and here after it had made some cursory aboad the same Devolution cast it into the Inheritance of Dryland of Cokes-ditch in Feversham to whose possession after the Title had for many years cleaved it was transported by purchase into the Patrimony of Atwater so styled because it is probable this Family had formerly their Residence near some Fountain or Stream but their Original from whence they primitively issued was from about Ospringe for there I find Robert Atwater possest Land at his Death which was in the fifth year of Edward the third and in this Name did the Title of the place lie couched until the latter end of Henry the eighth and then by Sale it was incorporated into the Revenue of Sir James Hales but long it remained not thus mingled for the Fate of purchase untwisted it and not many years after threw it into the Possession of Sayer from whom in Times which almost bordered upon our Memory it was by Sale wafted over to Mr. James Hugison of Dover and he bequeathed it to a second Son whose Female Heir Mrs. Jane Hugison by lately matching with Mr. John Roberts Esquire eldest Son to Sir John Roberts of Canterbury hath entituled him to the Propriety of it Herst in this Parish was the Ancient Demeasne of Filmer and here were they seated until by matching with the Heir of Argall they were transplanted to East Sutton I have seen an old Court-roll relating to the Mannor of Monkton in this Parish which by the Antiquity of it seemed to commence from the raign of Edward the second although the Date which stood in the Front by the in urious Hand of Time was almost expunged and so hardly
Alexander de Cheney Grand-child to the above-said Alexander Rotulus Pipae de scutagio Walliae An. 42. Henrici tertii is enrolled in the List of those eminent Kentish Persons who in the forty second year of Henry the third accompanied that Prince when he marched from Chester to suppress the emotions of the Welsh Sir Alexander de Cheyney this mans Son was with King Edward the first in his victorious and triumphant Expedition against the Scots in the twenty eighth year of his Raign as appears by the Rolls of those Kentish Gentlemen who were embarked in that succesful Design with that Prince and from this Alexander did the possession of this place by an undisordered and even Thread of Descent through all the Mazes of Time transmit it self to Henry Lord Cheyney and he having by his excess and exorbitancy embezelled an Estate of vast Extent and Grandeur amongst the Rest passed this away in the beginning of Queen Elizabeth to William Partrich Esquire whose Grandchild Sir Edward Partrich in that Age which was within the Verge of our Remembrance alienated it to Mr. Arnold Brams Howletts in this Parish with Hode in Patricksbourn also were the Ancient Demeasne of Izaack and there is a Chancel in the Church which formerly bore the the Name of Izaacks Chancel John Izaack in the twentieth year of Edward the third as appears by the Book of Aide paid an auxiliary supply for his Lands at Patriksbourn at the investing the Black Prince with Knighthood John Isaack his Son lies entombed in Patricksbourn Church with this Inscription upon his Grave-stone Orate pro Animabus Joannis Izaack Armigeri Ceciliae uxoris eius qui obiit ...... Anno Domini 1443. Thomas Izaack as the private Annals of this Family do discover to us had a Command in France under the Duke of Bedford where he performed exemplary Service against the French The last of this Family at this place was Edward Izaack Esquire who determined in two Daughters and Coheirs Mary who was matched to Thomas Apylton of Waldenfield in Suffolk and another first wedded to ...... Sydley and after to Sir Henry Palmer to whose Son she gave Howletts as being upon the Division of her Fathers Estate made her Inheritance from whom Sir Henry Palmer now of St. Martins-hill in Canterbury is descended who hath lately alienated Howletts to Sir Robert Hales Knight and Baronet Peckham in the Hundreds of Twyford and Littlefeild is distinguished from the other first by its Bulk and Dimension this being called commonly great Peckham and then secondly by its Situation being styled in Records East-Peckham It was given to the Church of the Trinity that is Christ-church in Canterbury by Queen Edgiva to the Monks of that Covent ad Cibum for a support of their Diet and Alimony in the year of Grace nine hundred forty and one and if you will see how it was rated in the great Register of Domes-day Book take here a View of it Peckham saies that Record Tempore Edwardi Regis se defendebat pro VI. Sullings and so forth Peckham in the Time of Edward the King that is the Confessor went for seven Plough-Lands and defends it self now that is in the Time of the Conqueror after the same Estimate and was rated upon the Appraisement formerly at twelve lb. but now is stated at eight And thus regulated was it for many Ages fastned to the Patrimony of the Church until the Dissolution in the raign of Henry the eighth unloosned the Cement in the twenty ninth year of that Prince who afterwards about the thirty sixth year of his Raign grants this and divers other parcels of the Church-Demeasne to Sir Thomas Wiatt who not long after by Livery and Seisin passes away his Right in it to George Moulton Esquire but because there was a Fine and Recovery wanting the Sale was imperfect so that he had it only in Abeiance as the Law styles it or in Expectance so that the Crown in the second of Queen Mary upon the Defection and Attaint of Sir Thomas Wiat finding this in the Tenure of Moulton seised upon it as parcel of Wiats Estate because it had not been before legally conveyed And here it rested till Queen Elizabeth in the second year of her raign granted it to Anthony Weldon Esquire one of the Justices of Peace for this County under the raign of Queen Mary at which Time he became eminent by his vigorous opposing Sir Thomas Wiat in that Design he was then embarked in and in this Family though not without some Struglings and Conflicts at Law about the Title does the Propriety of this Mannor at this instant reside There is an eminent Seat in this Parish called Roydon-Hall which was before called Fortune but was of no great Account until about the beginning of Henry the sixth and then Roydon of Suffolk came into this County and seated himself here and erected this Pile upon which he fixed his own Name which it hath been known by ever since though it hath changed its Possessor for this Family was extinguished in a Daughter and Heir called Elizabeth who was the only surviving Issue of Thomas Roydon Esquire who by matching with William Twisden Esquire made it the Inheritance of William Twisden Esquire Great Grand-father to Sir Roger Twisden Knight and Baronet who obtained a Charter of Free-warren from the late King to reduce a certain proportion of Ground into a Parke which is that the House is surrounded with at present though the House owe much of its Magnificence and Splendor to the Care and Expence of his Grand-father Roger Twisden Esquire and his Father Sir William Twisden Knight and Baronet Alban vulgarly called Auburne is another place of eminent Consideration in East-Peckham This with Black-pits in this Parish was anciently the Inheritance of a Family called Pollard for John the Son of John Pollard in the thirty forth year of Edward the first demises it to Alban de Wandesworth who it is probable erected some Mansion House upon it from whence Posterity took the Advantage to adopt it into his Sirname and from him did it devolve by successive Right to his Grandchild William de Wandesworth who dying without Issue gave it to his Widow Mabell Wandesworth who was remarried to Richard Ryner and they both by a joint Concurrence in the second year of Richard the second passed Albans and Black-pits away to John Mew yet I find a Family called Onley interessed in some part of both these Mannors which was purchased of William de Wandeshine in the raign of Henry the third and in this Family was the Title lodged untill the second year of Richard the second and then Joan Only in whom the Name and Possession both concluded alienated her Proportion to the abovesaid John Mew nor was some parcell of both these Mannors free from the claim of a Family called Goldsmith for in the ninth year of Richard the second Richard Goldsmith does devest himself of all Concernment in it
Patent conveyed in the thirteenth of Richard the third to John Brockman In Times of a lower step that is in the reign of Henry the eighth I find it in the Possession of John Newland but whether by Purchase from Brockman or not for want of Intelligence I cannot discover And in this Family the Propriety continued until the latter end of Queen Elizabeth and then it was conveyed to Sir George Perkins from whom almost in our Memory the same Mutation brought it to confess the instant possession of Mr. ...... Aldridge of Tilers near Reding Rucking in the Hundred of Hamme in Ancient Records written Roking was by the Piety and Charitable Munificence of King Offa in the year seven hundred eighty and one given to the Prior and Monks of Christ-church and was in the Original Donation granted ad Pascua Porcorum for the Pasture of their Hoggs and it continued clasped up in their Revenue until the Tempest of the general Dissolution arose and overtook it for there being a Surrender of the Revenue of this Covent into the Hands of Henry the eighth in the thirty third year of his reign he united it to the Dean and Chapiter of Christ-church which he shortly after established and moulded out of their Ruines and here it continued until a late Storm arose again and tore it off Barbedinden is another eminent Mannor within the Boundaries of this Parish which had in Ages of a more Ancient Inscription Proprietaries of the same Denomination William de Barbodinden held it at his Death which was in the ninth of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 3. And left it to his Son and Heir John de Barbodinden who in the twentieth year of Edward the third as appears by the Book of Aid paid an Auxiliary supply for it at making the Black Prince Knight After this Family was extinguished Robert Belknap the Judge succeeded in the Possession of it and I do not find that though the Crown upon his Attaint seised upon much of his Estate that ever his Interest here was ravished away from him for he was in Possession of this place at his Death which was in the second year of Henry the fourth and disposed it by Will to his Son John Belknap who about the Beginning of Henry the sixth alienates it to Engham amongst whose Demeasne the Propriety of this Mannor had not many years dwelt but the Title was by Sale supplanted and cast into the Possession of Sir Matthew Brown Knight and his Son Thomas Brown Esquire in the last year of Edward the sixth passed it away by Sale to Anthony Lovelace Esquire Ancestor to Richard Lovelace who some few years since alienated his entire Concernment in it to the late Possessor Mr. Richard Hulse descended from the ancient Family of Hulse of the Borough of Hulse lying within Namptwich in the County of Chester S. S. S. S. SAltwood in the Hundred of Hene hath an open Prospect into the Ocean which flowed up much nearer then now it doth and imparted its Nature to its Name for in Latin it is written de Bosco Salso The Arch-bishops of Canterbury had here formerly a magnificent Castle which Time hath much dismantled and a Park well stored with Deere now vanished and gon Many Mannors in this Track are held of it by Knights Service which justly made it to be counted and called an Honour It was granted to the Church in the year 1096 by one Halden who for Grandeur and opulency was reckoned one of the Princes of England The Value and extent of it are more particularly set forth in the Records of the Church of Canterbury in the Conquerour's Time and they speak thus In Limwarlaed in Hundred de Hede habet Hugo de Montfort de Terra Mouachorum I Manerium Saltwode de Archiepiscopo Comes Godwinus tenuit illud tunc se defendebat pro VII Sullings That was Godwin Earl of Kent who by a possessory right held many Towns along this Coast nunc sunt V. tamen non Scottent nisi pro III. Et in Burgo de Hede sunt CC. XXV Burgenses qui pertinent huic Manerio de quibus non habet Hugo nisi III. Forisfacta for it lies in the Franchise of the five Ports and the King was to have their Serice est appretiatum XXVIII lb. IIII. This was Hugh Montfort who was one of those powerfull Men which entered England with William the Conquerour In the Time of K. Henry the second Henry de Essex Baron of Ralegh in that County Lord Warden of the Cinque-ports pro Tempore and the King's Standard-bearer in right of Inheritance held this Castle of the Arch-bishop who having in a leight Skirmish against the Welsh in Flintshire not only cast away his Courage but his Standard also was appealed of high Treason and in a legal Duell or Combate vanquished by his Challenger and being possest with regret and shame contracted from this Defeat shrouded himself in a Cloister and put on a Monks Cowle forfeiting a goodly Patrimony and Lively-hood which escheated to King Henry the second But Thomas Beckett acquainting the King that this Mannor belonged to his Church and Sea that Prince being beyond the Seas directed a Writt to K. Henry his Son the Draught of which is represented to us by Matthew Paris whither I referre the Reader for Restitution But in regard of new emergent Contests between King Henry the second and that insolent Prelate it was not restored unto the Church untill the Time of Richard the second The Castle was magnificently inlarged and repaired by William Courtney Archbishop of Canterbury in the Time of Richard the second as his Will doth declare and his Arms in Stone-work eminently demonstrate and remained after his Decease annexed to the Archiepiscopal Revenue untill Thomas Cranmer in the twenty ninth of Henry the eighth exchanged it with that Prince And his Son King Edward the sixth in the fourth year of his Raign granted it to Edward Lor● Clinton who not long after conveyed it to Mr. Henry Herdson whose Grandchild Mr. Francis Herdson passed it away about the latter end of Queen Elizabeth to Robert Cranmer Esquire by whose Daughter and Heir Ann Cranmer it devolved to Sir Arthur Harris of Crixey in Essex whose Son Sir Cranmer Harris not many years since alienated it to Sir William Boteler Father to Sir Oliver Boteler Baronet the instant Lord of the Fee There is an old vast Mansion House of Stone at Brochull in this Parish on the side of a Steep Hill which was the Seat and ancient Residence of a Family as eminent for Antiquity as any in this Track and extracted their Sirname from hence and were called Brochull who flourished here in Knights Degree and in some Parliaments in the Time of Edw. the third and Edw. the fourth sate there as Knights of the Shire Margaret the Wife of William builded or caused to be built an Isle on the Northside the Parish Church You may rove at the Time by
old Rentall discovers to me and farther none of the ancient Evidences do reach the Patrimony of Thomas Champneys and he makes it over in part to Sir William Wroth of Enfield and he in the second year of Richard the second alienated all his Right and Interest in it to Thomas Lovell but some part remained unsold untill the nineteenth of the abovesaid Prince and then it was wholly invested by Sale from Robert Champneys in the aforesaid Thomas Lovell and he by his Feoffees in Trust as namely John Osborne John Arnold Richard Marshall and John Atsheath conveyed it in the eleventh year of Henry the fourth to Thomas Theobald or Tebald and Mawde his Wife and so by this Purchase did it become the Inheritance of this Family and made its aboad here untill the twenty fourth year of Henry the seventh and then John Theobald alienated it to William Porter which Family it is probable were concerned in it before for in the tenth year of Edward the fourth I find John Alphey releases by Deed his right in Hall to William Porter Esquire and from William Porter abovesaid did the Title slow down in the Chanel of paternal Right to Mr. Andrew Porter who concluding in a Daughter and Heir called Elizabeth it is now by matching with her become the Patrimony of Mr. Peter Stowell Register of the Diocesse of Rochester Stidulfe is a third Mannor in Seale which afforded both Seat and Sirname to a Family so called Robert de Stidulfe is mentioned in Deeds without Date to have held this and much other Land in Seale In the thirty sixth year of Edward the third I find Reginald Stidulfe of Stidulfe accounts with Thomas Champneis for Land held of his Mannor of Hall And lastly I discover that William Stidulfe about the eleventh year of Henry the sixth by Sale conveyed it to William Quintin whose Son William changed the Name of Quintin into Oliver upon what Grounds I have discovered at Leybourn and in this Name was this Mannor lodged untill the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth and then it was passed away to Richard Theobald whose Son John exchanged it with his Kinsman Stephen Theobald who dying without Issue-male left two Coheirs Katharine matched to Edward Michell and Margaret wedded to David Polhill who shared his Inheritance and this upon the Division of the Estate augmented the Revenue of Michell and his Descendant Mr ....... Michell is now the Heir apparent of it Sedingbourn in the Hundred of Milton hath several places in its confines remarkable whereof Bayford and Goodneston first claim our Notice the last of which had a Castle whose Banks and Ruines are yet visible it anciently acknowledged the Family of Nottingham who likewise in elder Times were possest of Bayford for Proprietaries Robert de Nottingham flourished in the reign of Edward the first and dates several of his Deeds in the Beginning of that Prince's Rule apud Castellum suum de Goodneston Robert de Nottingham his Successor was Sheriff of Kent the forty eighth year of Edward the third and held his Shriovalty at Bayford in Sedingbourn in which year he dyed and was found to have held at his Death Lands at Sharsted Pedding in Tenham a place called Newland and another called la Herst Higham in Milsted Bixle in Tong now called Bex and lastly Goodneston and Babford now named Bayford in this Parish all which descended to his only Son John Nottingham whose only Daughter and Heir Eleanor Nottingham was matched to Simon Cheyney second Son of Sir Richard Cheyney of Shurland who brought all this spreading Revenue to acknowledge the Signory of this Family and the Coats of Cheyney and Nottingham viz. Azure six Lions Argent a Canton Ermin and Gules two Pales wavee Argent stand empaled in Milsted-church in coloured Classe But this Alliance though it much enhaunsed by additional improvement the Patrimony of Cheyney yet could not so strongly entwine the Interest of Bayford and Goodneston with this Name but that about the latter end of Henry the sixth they were conveyed away by Sale to Lovelace for Richard Lovelace of Queenhith in London a younger Branch of the Lovelaces of Bethersden made his Will the first of Aprill 1465 and there ordained that his Feoffees should make an Estate of his Mannors of Bayford and Goodneston in Sedingbourn which he had purchased of Cheyney to John Lovelace his Son and Heir which accordingly was performed and he invested in the Possession of them and from him did they by Descent devolve to his Crandchild Thomas Lovelace of Kingsdown who in the tenth year of Queen Elizabeth passed them away to Mr. Ralph Finch from which Family they went away by the same Revolution almost in our Fathers Memory to Alderman Garret of London who had Issue Sir John Garret of the County of Hertford whose Widow Dowager the Lady ..... Garret by right of Jointure now enjoys the Profits of both these Mannors Chilton is another Mannor in Sedingbourn which had Owners of this Sirname who likewise held another Mannor of this Name in Ash both which places William de Chilton held at his Death which was in the thirty first of Edward the first but after his Exit it did not long confesse the Propriety of this Family for about the Beginning of Edward the third it was demised by Sale to Corbie and Robert Corbie was possest of it at his Decease which was in the thirty ninth year of that Prince Rot. Esc Num. 9. and he had Issue Robert Corbie whose Sole Daughter and Heir Joan Corbie espoused Sir Nicholas Wotton twice Lord Maior of London by whom this Mannor and much other Land came by a fruitfull Augmentation to swell the Inheritance of this Family yet I find the Interest in Chilton was not solely lodged in Corbie for by ancient Deeds I discover that an old Family called Maris was concerned in some part of it likewise John de Maris held a Knights Fee in Wicheling and much other Land at Herietsham the twentieth year of Ed. the third as likewise the Mannor of Ackmere in St. Mary Crey in Castle-guard of Dover-castle and his great Grand-child William Maris was Sheriff of Kent the twenty first year of Henry the sixth and was Esquire to Henry the fifth and afterwards to Cardinall Kemp and lyes enter'd in Preston Church with so much of the Inscription left as may instruct the Reader that his Ashes slumber beneath the Tomb-stone yet before his Decease he had alienated his share in this Mannor to Nicholas Wotton Esquire from whom the united Interest of this place came down to Thomas Lord Wotton who not many years since setled it in Marriage on Katherine his eldest Daughter matched to Henry Lord Stanhop Son and Heir to Philip Earl of Chesterfeild lately deceased who still enjoyes the propriety of it In the year 1232. Henry Bishop of Rochester as Thomas Rudborne a Monk of St. Swithens in Winchester does relate came on a Sabbath Day with much exultation out of Sedingbourn Church
Life and Forfeiture of his Estate and then this Seat upon his unsuccessful Exit returning to the Crown it was by the abovesaid Princess granted to her Cousin Reginald Poole Cardinal for his Life and a year after as he should by Testament dispose After his Death it reverts again to the Crown and then Queen Elizabeth in the third year of her reign grants it to Robert Dudley Earl of Leiceister and he the same year resigning it back into the Hands of his Soveraign it was by Lease made over to John Lennard of Chevening Esquire but the Fee-simple was by Royal Concession invested in the seventh year of Queen Elizabeth in Thomas Sackvill Lord Buckhurst and his Grand-child Richard Sackvill Earl of Dorset almost in our Remembrance conveyed the Fee-simple reserving it yet still in Lease to himself and his Heirs paying such a Rent-charge as is there specified for ninety and nine years to Mr. Richard Smith vulgarly called Dog-Smith who upon his Decease not many years since setled the propriety of it for ever upon St. Thomas Hospital in Southwarke The Honour of Sevenoke was granted by Queen Elizabeth to her Kinsman Henry Carey Lord Hunsdon in the first year of her reign from whom it devolved to his Grand-child Henry Carey Earl of Dover he passed it away by Sale to Richard Sackvill Earl of Dorset who alienated his Interest in it to Mr. Richard Smith who upon his above-mentioned Decease gave it with Knoll which both were exchanged and so united to the Royal Demeasne by William Warham to the Hospital of St. Thomas in Southwarke Kepington is the last place considerable in this Parish which was wrapt up in that Demeasne which owned the Signory of the Lords Cobham of Cobham as appears by an Inquisition taken in the thirty fifth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 62. Parte secundâ and after a Decursion of several Descents came by the Heir General of this Family to be possest by Brook whose Descendant about the beginning of Queen Elizabeth conveyed it to Burges and by his Sister and Heir it came over to Hanger who alienated it to Cowper and he not long since to Mr. Thomas Farnaby Spelherst in the Hundreds of Somerden Codsheath and Watchling stone hath many places in it of Repute First Grome-bridge which is a Chappel of Ease belonging to Spelherst and is dedicated to St. John it is in old Registers written Gromen-bridge and Gormen-bridge from some Saxon who was anciently Owner of it as Godmanchester in Huntingtonshire upon the same Account in old Orthography bears the Name of Gormonchester a Saxon having been possessor of it of that Denomination This Mannor in elder Times confessed the Dominion and Title of the Noble Family of Cobham Henry de Cobham and Joan his Wife obtained a Market to be observed weekly on the Thursday and a Fair three Dayes yearly videlicet the Vigil the Day of St. John Port-latine and the Day after as is manifest from an old Charter which I have seen whose Date commences from the fourteenth year of Edward the first the Market and Fair were kept where now the new Chappel is erected by the piety and expence of that Worthy Patriot John Packer Esquire late one of the Clerks of the Privy Seal After the Cobhams were departed from the possession of this place the Lords Clinton became by purchase Proprietaries of it and John de Clinton who was often summoned to fit as Baron in Parliament in the Time of Richard the second died possest of it in the twenty second year of that Prince Rot. Esc Num. 16. from whom the Title flowed in this Family until the latter end of Henry the fourth and then it was passed away to Waller of Lamberherst where and in Sussex they were before Masters of very ample Possessions for Thomas Waller and Katharine his Wife granted to Thomas Waller of Lamberherst his Father Richard Brenchley and John Brook all his Lands Messuages and Tenements in the Villages and Parishes of Rotherfeild Witheham Wadhurst Lamberhurst Little Horsted Alfricheston and Bucksted together with the moiety of the Advouson of the Church of Little Horsted as appears Claus 11. Richardi secundi in Dorso Memb. 35. Richard Waller Esquire was Sheriff of Kent the sixteenth year of Henry the sixth and kept his Shrievalty at Grome-bridge and was before Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex in the twelfth year of that Prince This is that renowned Souldier that in the Time of Henry the fifth took Charles Duke of Orleans General of the French Army Prisoner at the Battle of Agin-court brought him over into England and held him in honorable Restraint or Custody at Grome-bridge which a Manuscript in the Heralds-Office notes to be twenty four years in the Time of which his Recess he newly erected the House at Grome-bridge upon the old Foundation and was a Benefactor to the repair of Spelherst Church where his Arms remain in Stone-work over the Church-porch but lest such a signal peece of Service might remain entombed in the Sepulchre of unthankful forgetfulness the Prince to convey the Memory of this glorious Action to Posterity assigned to this Richard Waller and his Heirs for ever an additional Crest videlicet the Arms or Escocheon of France hanging by a Labell on an Oake with this Motto affixed Hae Fructus Virtutis This Richard was great Grand-father to William VValler of Grome-bridge Esquire Sheriff of Kent the twenty second of Henry the eighth and he was Father to Sir VValter VValler who was Grand-father to Sir VVilliam VValler now possessor of Winchester-castle and Father of Sir Thomas Waller which Sir Thomas almost in our Fathers Memory passed away Grome-bridge to Thomas Sackville Earl of Donset whose Grand-child Edward Earl of Dorset not many years since conveyed it to John Packer Esquire Father to ...... Packer Esquire now possessor of this place There was a Chauntry founded at Grome-bridge in the thirty eighth year of Henry the third by VVilliam Russell and Hawis his Wife as appears by the first Book of Compositions in Registro Roffensi Hollands in this Parish next cals for a View It was in Ages of a very high Date the Patrimony of a Noble Family of that Sirname and are in the Chartularies of this Parish recorded to have been great Benefactors to the Church of Spelherst and were allied to Thomas Holland Earl of Kent who matched with Joan Daughter of Edmund of VVoodstock but before the beginning of Henry the sixth this Family was worn out and vanished and then the VVallers stepped into the possession in which Family the Right of it did many years reside until it was in our Fathers Memory alienated to Thomas Sackville Earl of Dorset from whose Successor it passed away by Sale to Lindsey and from him not many years since the like Revolution carried it off to Caldicot Ferbies is another Seat of no vulgar Consideration in Spelherst if we consider that it gave Sirname to a Family of important Account in this
by a Chain of Descent to his Grand-child Sir Charles Sydley Baronet the present Lord of the Fee Pole vulgarly called Poole is another Mannor in Southfleet And was in elder Times the Inheritance of a Family called Berese for I find by a fine levyed in the thirty seventh year of Henry the third that Richard de Berese fells this Mannor under the Notion of a Carucate of Land to Reginald de Cobham of Roundall in Shorne and from him did it by a continued Thread of Succession devolve to John Cobham Esquire in whom the Male-line of that Name ended and he dyed seised of it in the ninth year of Henry the fourth Rot. Esc Num. 10. And lett it to Joan his Sole Inheritrix who by Reginald Braybrook her third and last Husband had Issue Joan her only Daughter and Heir who brought this Mannor and a liberal Revenue besides to her Husband Thomas Brook of the County of Somerset Esquire Grand-father to Thomas Lord Brook who about the Beginning of Henry the seventh passed it away to Sir Henry Wiat one of the Privy Councel to that Monarch from whom it descended to his noble but infortunate Grandchild Sir Tho. Wiat who in the second year of Q. Mary forfeited this and his Life together so that from thenceforth it was clasped up in the Income of the Crown untill Queen Elizabeth in the twenty fifth year of her reign restored it to his Widow the Lady Joan Wiatt and George Wiat Esquire his Son and Heir father to Sir Francis Wiat who upon his Decease left it to his Widow Dowager the Lady ..... Wiatt who is now in possession of it Scadbery in Southfleet hath been for some Centuries of years the possession of the Family of Sidleys who were in Times of very high Ascent seated in Romney Mersh for there are some Lands there which at this Day they call by the Name of Sidleys and Sidleys Mersh In this Mansion there is a Room whose sides are covered with Wainscot and on one of the Plates or Pains which appears to be exceeding ancient the Arms of Sidley are carved in embost-work viz A Fesse wavee between three Goats heads erased and these Letters underneath W. and S. with the year of our Lord affixed in Figures whose Date commences from 1337. And although the Structure of this House hath like a Snail shifted its ancient Shell yet in all its Mutations and Vicissitudes which must certainly have very much disordered the Fabrick when it was cast into a new mould and frame and ravelled and discomposed the Materials yet this Panel of Wainscot hath been like a Relique religiously preserved to justifie not only the Antiquity of this Seat but of the Family of Sydley also which is presumed to have been resident at this place before the above-mentioned Calculation from whom Sir Charles Sidley Baronet claims the Original of his Title to this Mansion and his Extraction or pedigree likewise untwisted into many Descents and now at last wound up in him Shouldon in the Hundred of Deal hath two remarkable places which are situated within the Limits of it First Hull presents it self to our View it was formerly under the Signory of the illustrious-Family of Ratling or Retling in Nonington Thomas de Retling paid respective Aid for this and divers other Lands of ancient Inheritance in the twentieth year of Edward the third at the making the Black Prince Knight and left it to his Son Sir Richard de Retling whose Widow the Lady Sarah Retling and afterwards Wife of John de St. Laurence died possest of it in the tenth year of Richard the second and left it to John Spicer who had married Joan Daughter and Heir to her first Husband but he concluding in a Daughter and Heir by this his first Wife called Cicely who was Heir to her mother Joan Spicer shee by matching with Iohn Isaack knit it to the Propriety of that Family But before the twenty first of Henry the sixth he had fixed the Inheritance in Iohn Bresland in whom it was not long resident for he suddenly after altered his right and about the Beginning of Edward the fourth put it over by Sale to Phineux of Swink-field whose Successor Robert Phineux by as quick and early a Vicissitude placed the possession about the Beginning of Henry the eighth in George Monins Esquire whose Successor in that Age which was circumscribed within the Pale of our Fathers Remembrance passed it away to Crayford of Great Mongeham Secondly Cotmanton puts in its Claim for some memorial likewise even in this respect that it was the Demeasne of the noble Family of Crioll or Keriell who were of some considerable Repute in this Track as appearsby by the Book styled Testa de Nevill kept in the Exchequer where they are represented in the twentieth year of Henry the third to have held Land in this Skirt of the County and in Ages of a modern Aspect that is in the twentieth year of Edward the third I find Iohn de Criol gave a pecuniary supply at the making the Black Prince Knight but before the end of Edward the third he was departed from the possession of this place which by Sale was resigned up to Roger Digge and he dyed in the possession of it in the third year of Ric. the second Rot. Esc Num 19. And in this Family it continued untill the reign of Henry the seventh and then it was alienated to Barton descended from the ancient Family of Barton of Barton-hall in the County of Lancaster from whom the like Mutation about the latter end of H. the eighth carried it off to the Family of Brown and from them it passed away by Sale into the Possession of Richardson upon whose going out the Family of Smith by a Devolution like the former not many years since stept into the Inheritance of it Sundrich in the Hundred of Codsheath was the Possession as high as any Light collected from Antiquity can waft us to a Discovery of an Ancient Family called in Latine-Records de Insula and in English Isley Iohn de Insula obtained a Charter of Free-warren to his Lands at Sundrich in the eleventh year of Edward the second and he had Issue Iohn Isley who married Joan Daughter to Sir Ralph de Fremingham and by her had Issue Roger Isley Esquire who in Right of his mother became Heir to his Uncle Iohn Fremingham Esquire who deceased without Issue in the twelfth year of Henry the fourth and this Roger Isley had Issue William Isley Esquire who was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty fifth year of Henry the sixth and he had Issue John Isley Esquire who was Justice of the Peace and Sheriff of Kent in the fourteenth year of Edward the fourth and deceased in the year 1484 as appears by an Inscription affixed to his Monument yet extant notwithstanding the late general Shipwrack of the Remains of Antiquity in sundrich-Sundrich-church and he had Issue Thomas Isley Esquire Father of Sir Henry Isley who was
Q. Elizabeth whose Son Mr. William Hewson of London transmitted Haly with Sawters by Sale some few years since to Mr. Edward Badbie Grandisons is the last place remarkable in this Parish It was the ancient Inheritance of the noble and illustrious Family of Grandison before Otho de Grandison who was Governour of Jersey for life by Grant from Edw. the first in the fifth year of his Reign did transplant himself to Seale which he had purchased in the thirteenth year of that Prince William de Grandison this mans Son was likewise Lord of this place to whom K. Edward the second assigned the Value of 44 lb. yearly Rent out of his Mannor of Dartford in Exchange for the Mannor of Iden and other Lands in Sussex and from this Man did the Signory of this Mannor accrue by Descent to his Grand-child Sir Thomas Grandison who dying without Issue in the forty ninth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 62. left it partly to John de Northwood who had married Agnes his Sister and Co-heir and partly to Margaret his Lady Dowager who died possest of it in the eighteenth year of Richard the second but after her Exit the Title was not long permanent in Northwood for in the twenty first year of the Prince abovesaid Richard Fitz Allen Earl of Arundel held it and died that year possest of it And here I confess for want of Light and just intelligence I must make a Leap to the Reign of Henry the sixth and then I find it in the Tenure of Richard Nevill Earl of Warwick and it is probable it devolved to him by the Heir of Beauchampe After his Decease it became the Possession of George Duke of Clarence who had matched with Isabel his Daughter and Co-heir by whom he had Issue Edward Plantagenet Earl of Warwick who was offered up on an early Scaffold to the waking suspitions and weary Jealousies of those two politick Princes Henry the seventh and Ferdinand of Castile being invited to an escape from his long Duress in the Tower by the Arts and Stratagems of that eminent Impostor Perkin Warbeck But indeed those who have calculated this Action and surveyed the whole Scene of this Tragedy have discovered that his nearness to the Crown as being the last Relick of the Male-Line of Plantagenet was the cheiefest Ingredient in the severe Sentence of this infortunate Gentleman After his expiration this Mannor came over to be the Patrimony of his Sister Margaret Countess of Salisbury who was matched to Sir Richard Poole by which marriage this Mannor was annexed to his Demeasn and he had Issue by her Henry Poole who with his Mother was attainted in the Reign of Henry the eighth upon whose fatal Shipwrack Grandisons was in the thirty fifth of that Prince placed by Grant in his Brother Geffrey Poole who not long after passed it away to Sir Thomas Moile by whose Daughter and Co-heir it came to be the Inheritance of Sir Thomas Kempe and he about the tenth year of Q. Elizabeth conveyed it to Mr. Jo. Mabbe who not long after transmitted it by Sale to Sir Christopher Heron who about the beginning of K. James alienated his concernment here to Cole by whom not long after it was demised to Sir Thomas Smith second Son of Customer Smith of Westenhanger in the Heirs and Descendants of which Name and Family the Possession is still resident Hackstaple is likewise within the Bounds of this Parish and was as high as the reach either of private or publick Evidence can bring down any light to our knowledge the Killingworth's and here for an indivisible succession of Ages did the Possession fix and reside until at last the common Fate of Families brought this Name here at Hackstaple to find its interment or Grave in a Daughter and Heir for George Killingworth had an onely She-Inheritrix whose name was Elizabeth and she was matched with Christopher Eglesfield Gentleman so that Hackstaple in her right was intermingled with the Demeash of this Family and here some years did it by this Conjugall Knot appear fastned till lately the Possession received an alienation for Francis Eglesfield of London Son to Christopher Eglesfield some few years since sold it to Mr Christopher Searle T. T. T. T. TAningnton is situated in the Hundred of Bredge and Petham and in Times of a very ancient Inscription did own the Name and acknowledge the Signory of a Family called Wallis Richard de Wallis held it in the twenty first of Edward the first and as it appears by the Pleas of that year had a signal Contest with the Prior of St. Gregories in Canterbury about his Right to the Presentation of that Church After Wallis was worn out it fell under the Signory of a Family called Mesingham but it seems was not long resident in their Possession for about the beginning of Richard the second Nicholas Mesingham releases to Thomas Chich all his Interess and Right in Tanington and other Lands situated in Heckington and other places but here likewise was the Possession as brief and inconstant for before the Expiration of the Reign of Henry the fourth I find it by purchase from Chich and Wallis setled in the Tenure of Geo. Ballard and he died seised of it in the eighth year of Henry the sixth and in this Family did continue until the reign of Edward the sixth and then it was alienated by Nicholas Ballard Esquire to Sir James Hales of the Dungeon from whom the right by Successive Delegation is now transmitted to Sir James Hales the instant Lord of the Fee Terstan in the Hundred of Twyford was involved in the Revenue of the Crown until Eleanor Q. of England exchanged this and West-Farleigh with the Monks of Christ-Church for the eminent Port of Sandwich which Exchange Edward the first as appears by the Records of that Cathedral by his Charter fully strengthened and confirmed Yet though it was prop'd and supported by that Authority yet it could not be so fastened and riveted into the Ecclesiastical Patrimony but that that storm which arose in the reign of Henry the eighth tore it away and then that Prince in the thirty fifth year of his rule passed it away to Sir John Baker from whom it is now devolved by successive right to his descendant Sir John Baker of Sisingherst Knight and Baronet and he hath lately passed it away to Mr. Jasper Cleyton of London Barham Court in this Parish re-presents to our remembrance that it was once the Mansion or ancient residence of the noble and illustrious Family of Barham this Name was in Times of a very reverend Inscription written Fitz-Urse Randal Fitz. Urse was one of those four who were concerned in the Assassination of that turbulent and ambitious prelate Thomas Becket Arch-Bishop of Canterbury who though peradventure for his violent invasion made upon the royal prerogative of his Soveraign Henry the second might have deserved the Guerdon of an exemplary Death yet the manner of taking
him off cartied with it so deformed an Aspect in those times which were wholly consecrated and offered up to a superstitious Adoration of his memory and contracted so black a Character on those who were interessed in his extra-judicial ruine that Randal Fitz-Vrse fled into Ireland and there altered his Name to Mac-Mahon which in Irish imports as much as the Son of the Bear upon his recess Robert de Barham his Kinsman entred on his Estate here at Terstan and from him did it descend by paternal Devolution to his great Grand-child John de Berham who was by Henry prior of Christ-Church created publick Notary of the Diocess of Canterbury in the year 1309 an Office of as much Eminence as it was of Trust and Concernment and which the abovesaid Henry received by Commission to invest any with whom he should discover to be fortified with Abilities proportionate to so illustrious an employment from Bassianus de Alliate Count Palatine of Millaine and he again was impowered and commissionated to grant it to any whom he should judge meet to receive it by Authority delegated and transmitted to him originally from the Emperour and it is probable that it was the above mentioned John de Berham or his Son who paid an Auxiliarie supply for his Lands at Terstan as appears by the Book of Aid at the making the Black Prince Knight in the twentieth year of Edward the third and in that Roll kept in the Exchequer wherein there is mention of all those of this County who paid respective Aid in the fourth year of Henry the fourth at the Marriage of Blanch that Monarch's Daughter there is a Recital of Nicholas Berham who contributed a supply for his Lands at Terston and from him by an un-interrupted Line of succession was the Title of this place conducted down to Thomas Berham Esquire who determined in a Daughter and Heir called Anne Berham who by her intermarriage with Sir Oliver Boteler descended from an ancient Family of that Name in the County of Bedford made this Seat which had been so many centuries of years in the Tenure of this Family alter its Proprietary and become the Patrimony of another Name Sir Oliver Boteler had Issue Sir William Boteler Knight and Baronet who fell a Sacrifice to the late King's Quarrel whilst he vigorously asserted his Cause and Interest at Cropredy Bridge but left Issue the instant Proprietary Sir Oliver Boteler Baronet whose Ancestors in Bedford hire were descended from Thomas Pincerna who flourished in the reign of King John and did Seal with a Covered Cup with this Inscription as appears by the old Deeds of this Family encircling the Seal Sigillum Thomae Pincernae and it is possible was chief Butler to the abovesaid Prince from which eminent Office of his his Successors assumed the Sirname of Boteler Tenham contributes and affords a Name to that Hundred where it is placed but is of more Eminence and repute since it was given to Christ-Church in Canterbury at the Intreaty of Athelard by Cenulfe K. of the Mercians by the Estimate of twelve Plough-Lands for the like Proportion of Land in Ballance to the exchange in Creges Emeline that is the Isse of Elmely by Crogdepe that is the water which parts the Royaltie of Swale between Tenham and Feversham And in the Patrimony of the Church did it lie wrapt up till the suppression of all Frieries Abbies and other Religious Convents by Henry the eighth and then Thomas Cranmer finding that the spreading Demeasn of the Church was in danger to be torn off by the tallons of Avarice and Rapine he to mortifie the growing Appetite of Sacrilegious Cormorants in the first of December and in the twenty ninth year of that Prince's Government exchanged it with the Crown and thenceforth it was accounted a Limb of the Royal Revenue until King James by grant invested Sir Iohn Roper in it and presently after created him Baron Roper of Tenham in Gratitude it seems for that Service he performed in being the first who openly proclaimed him King in the County of Kent and by successive Derivation from him does his great Grand-child Christopher now Lord Roper of Tenham not onely possess the Dignitie but the Royaltie of this Mannor likewise There is another Seat in this Parish called Frogenhall which in elder Times had the repute of a Mannor though since by Disuse that Character is almost shrunk away from it That it was a Mansion of the Frogenhals is most evident for Richard Frogenhall was seised of it at his Death which was in the thirty third year of Edward the third and Thomas Frogenhall was his Son and Heir who resigned up his Interest in it with Anne his Daughter and Heir to Thomas Quadring and not long after by the same Mutation was the Interest of it by this man with his Daughter and Heir Joan Quadring given up to Richard Dryland Esquire who likewise not many years after going out in a Daughter and Heir called Katharine she by being wedded to Reginald Norton Esquire by that Conjugal Union knit Frogenhall to the Interest of that Family where after it had been some Ages fixt it was by purchase brought to be the Inheritance of Greene who upon what Exigent or Occasion I know not in the Conveyance is called Greene alias Norton but in this Name it made no permanent Residence for even in our Memory from Greene by Sale the Title and Right of it was translated into Clerke Tenham had the Grant of a Market procured to it on the Tuesday and a Fair to continue yearly three dayes at the Assumption of the Virgin Mary by Boniface Arch-bishop of Canterbury as appears Pat. 44. Henrici tertii Memb. 37. Tenterden in the Hundred of Tenterden had its denomination as some vulgar Phansies conjecture from the tenderness of the Soile adjacent to it but indeed it was in elder and more true Orthography written Theinwarden that is the Thanes or Theins Ward or Guard in the Valley for it was very probable it was subservient to that Signory or Dominion which the Governour of Andredswaldt so called by the Saxons but Anderida by the Romans did exercise and pretend to in this Track of the County Now if you will question where this Castle of Anderida or Andredswaldt was placed I answer it was upon Reding-hill not far removed from this place a Fortress in those Times of eminent Value and Reputation though since by the multiplied Onsets of Time upon it it lies forgotten in its own neglected Ruines yet though this be languished away both in Fame and Fabrick Tenterden has sundry Seats in it which may make it eminent enough First Heronden resigns it self up to an Inquisition though now it be scattered into severall parcels yet anciently it was collected as into one Name so into one possession likewise and the ancient Ordinaries in the Heralds Office do assign a Coat to this Name something proportionate to it that is an Heron rising upon its
with his Hand supported that Prince when he first went out of his Ship to Land in Sussex afterwards when in the twentieth of that King's Government there was an universal Survey taken of each Mans particular Demeasn thoroughout the Nation who was of any Account or Eminence which we call Dooms-day Book there is a recital of the above mentioned Robert de St. Leger to have held Lands at Ulcomb which the Evidences of this Family do inform us were taken from a Pagan Dane whom he before had conquered and who inhabited at this place Guy de St. Leger as Mr. Fuller discovers to us in his Ecclesiastical History was appointed by William the Conquerour to be an Assistant Knight to Adelmere one of the Monks of Ely Raefe de St. Leger is registred in the Roll of those Kentish Gentlemen who accompanied Richard the first to the Siege of Acon and as the Inscription on his Leaden Shroud in the Vault of this Church does signifie was engaged in the Holy Quarrel fifteen years Another Rafe St. Leger and Hugh St. Leger were Recognitores magnae Assisae in the second year of K. John Sir Rafe de St. Leger Sir Jo. de St. Leger and Sir Tho. St. Leger were with Edw. the first at the Siege of Carlaverock in the twenty eighth year of his Reign and for their signal Atchievements there received the Order of Knighthood Indeed in times subsequent to this there was scarse almost any noble and generous undertaking but the Annals of our English History represent a St. Leger concerned and interessed in it And for their Collateral Alliances by which they became knit in Consanguinitie to several illustrious Families none in that particular have been more Successeful then themselves Sir Thomas St. Leger second Brother to Sir Rafe St. Leger married Anne Dutchesse of Exeter Sister to King Edward the fourth and so became twisted into the Family of that Prince by a Nearness of Alliance as he had before been taken into his Bosome by a union of Friendship by whom he had only Ann his Daughter and Heir who was wedded to Sir George Manners L. Rosse from whom the Earls of Rutland are in a direct Line branched out Sir James St. Leger this mans Brother matched with Anne one of the Co-heirs of Thomas Boteler Earl of Ormond from whom the St. Legers of the County of Devon were extracted out of which Stem was Sir William St. Leger who was Lord President of Munster in Ireland one thousand six hundred forty and two Sir Anthony St. Leger Father of Sir Warham was Lord Deputy of Ireland which place he managed with much of Prudence and Magnanimity his second Son Sir Anthony St. Leger Father to Sir Anthony St. Leger now of Wierton House in Boughton Monchensie died Master of the Rolls in Ireland which Office he discharged with a great deal of Faith and no less integrity Thus have I in Landskip pourtraied this noble Family which in an undivided Chain of Descent was setled at Ulcomb from the Conquerour's Time even till of late and then Sir Anthony St. Leger alienated his right in it which was grown reverend by a prescription of so many Ages to Serjeant Clerk of Rochester Father to Mr. Francis Clerk descended from Henry Clerk who was second Brother to Sir John Clerk who took the Duke of Longuevil prisoner at the Battle fought between Bomy and Spours The Church of Ulcomb belonged to Christ-Church in Canterbury and being Snatched away was restored by K. Edmund in the year 941. And about 430 years since was made a Collegiate Church by Stephen Langton Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Head thereof was called Arch-presbyter Boycot is another Mannor in Ulcomb which afforded both Seat and Sirname to a Family of that Denomination as appears by several old Deeds some of which are without Date which remember Stephen de Boycot John de Boycot and Alexander Boycot which last flourished here in the Reign of Edward the third and Richard the second and from him did it by paternal Delegation devolve to John Boycot and he had Issue John Boycot and Stephen Boycot one which sold his Proportion which accrued to him by the custome of Gavelkind to Richard Hovenden and the other by the like alienation transmitted his Interest in it to William Adam from whom it came over by Donation to Thomas Glover as is specified in the Deed of Sale by which the above-mentioned person in the first year of Henry the seventh alienates it to Richard Hovenden After Hovenden was crumbled away it came by purchase to be the possession of Clerk of wood-Wood-Church the last of which Name which was entituled to the Inheritance was Humphrey Clerk Esquire who in the ninteenth of Q. Elizabeth alienated it to Thomas Sands and he in the twentieth year of the abovesaid Princess conveyed it to the Lady Elizabeth Berkley whose Grand-child Mr. ....... Berkley Esquire is now proprietarie of it Kingsnoth is the last Mannor in Vlcomb It was part of that Demeasn which related to the Abby of Feversham and continued united to its patrimony until the publick Dissolution filed it off and then it became the Interest of the Crown until Henry the eighth in the thirty second of his reign granted it to Sir Anthony St. Leger Knight of the Garter Lord Deputy of Ireland and one of his Privy Councel whose Son Sir Warham St. Leger in the tenth year of Q. Elizabeth conveyed it to William Isley Esquire who not long after passed it away to Anthony Sampson who in the twenty first year of Q. Elizabeth alienated it to James Austin and he in the year 1599 sold it to Robert Cranmer who dying without Issue Male Anne his Daughter and Heir brought it along with her to her Husband Sir Arthur Harris of Crixey in Essex who upon his Decease gave it to his second Son Mr. John Harris and his Son and Heir Mr. Cranmer Harris of Lincolns Inne enjoys the instant Inheritance of it Vp-Church in the Hundred of Milton was in elder Times in the Register of those Lands Mannors and Hereditaments which owned the dominion of the illustrious Family of Leybourn Rog. de Leybourn in the fiftieth year of H. the third had a Grant to hold his Lands at Hartlip Reinham and Up-Church by the fourth part of a Knights Fee and from him did the Clew of successive Descent in a continued Track transport it to his Great Grand-child Juliana de Leybourne Widow of John de Hastings not Father of Laurence de Hastings E. of Pembroke as some have erroneously printed but his Kinsman and next of William de Clinton Earl of Huntington whom she survived and died possest of this Mannor in the forty third year of Edward the third and as the inquisition after her Decease informs us without any Issue or kindred who might supersede the Interest of the Crown by pretending a direct or Collateral Title to her Estate so that King Edward the third by escheat became invested in this Mannor
and Geffrey de Camville was with Edward the first at the Siege of Carlaverock in Scotland in the twenty eighth year of his reign and there received the Order of Knighthood and here this Family concluded for afterwards I find this Mannor in the Hands of the Abbot of VVestminster who obtained a Market weekly to be held at this place on the Munday and a Fair yearly upon the Vigil the day and day after the Nativity of our Lady as appears Pat. 25. Edwardi tertii Num. 32. And here it remained with their revenue untill the Suppression of that Cloister in the reign of Henry the eighth and then being rent away by that Tempest it was in the thirty second year of that Prince granted to Sir Iohn Gresham which Concession was again confirmed to the Lady Beatrix Gresham Widow of Sir Thomas Gresham his Son by Queen Elizabeth from whom it is now devolved to Marmaduke Gresham Esq the Heir apparent of the Family Broxham is a place of eminent Account in this Parish Iohn de Insula or Isley was Lord of this Mannor and obtained a Charter of Free-warren here in the eleventh year of Edward the second After the Isleys were gon out the Ashways successively stept into the possession Stephen de Ashway obtained a Licence to inclose a Park here in the forty first year of Edward the third the Characters and Reliques of which are not so generally demolished and disparked by Time but that they are still obvious to a Curious eye yet this Priviledge could not fix it long in this Family for about the latter end of Richard the second I find it by Sale cast into the possession of Edward Lord Clinton who held it at his Decease which was in the first year of Henry the fourth Rot. Esc Num. 16. But here likewise the Title was as volatile and transitory for about the Beginning of Henry the sixth Iohn Lord Clinton passed it away to Thomas Squerie who was Lord of Squeries-court in this Parish and was descended from Iohn de Squerie whom I find by some old Evidences to have lived at Westerham in the Reign of Henry the third and it is possible either erected or very much augmented the Seat called Squeries-court The Arms viz. a Squirrel brousing on a Hasell-nut are depicted in very ancient coloured Glasse in westerham-Westerham-church but this Thomas above-mentioned dying in the seventeenth year of Henry the sixth without Issue-male Margaret his eldest Daughter matched to Sir William Cromer and Dorothy his youngest wedded to Richard Mervin of Fontels in Wiltshire became his two Coheirs and upon the division of the estate Squeries-court and Broxham were annexed to the patrimony of Cromer in which Family they made their aboad until the reign of Henry the eighth and then VVilliam Cromer Esquire having by some Delinquencie forfeited them to the Crown that Prince granted them to Thomas Cawarden or Carden Esquire from which Family about the middle of Queen Elizabeths reign they went off by Sale to Beresford who almost in our memory sold Squeries-Court to Sir George Stroud and he some few years since alienated it to Thomas Lambert Esquire who hath lately demised it to Mr ...... Leech but Broxham was conveyed to Mr. Tho. Petley of Vilston whose Grandchild Mr. ..... Petley is the Heir apparent of it Well-street and Gaysam in this Parish did anciently confess the two Families of Atwell and Shelley for its proprietaries William Atwell held Wellstreet as appears by an ancient Court-roll in the thirty fifth of Edward the third and Thomas Shelley in the forty sixth year of the same Monarch settles Gaysam by Testament on Thomas his Son and Heir who in the eighth year of Richard the second conveys it to his Son Thomas Shelley whose Descendant about the latter end of Henry the sixth demised it to John Potter and his Successor about the Beginning of Henry the fourth purchased VVellstreet of the Heirs of Cothull and is in the List of five of this Family who lye buried in Westerham-church and this Branch of the Name here was descended from Iohn Potter who held Lands at Dertford the twelfth of Edward the second and whose posterity continued Lords of these two places untill the Beginning of King James and then ...... Potter dying without Issue-male his only Daughter and Heir brought them to be the Inheritance of Sir Iohn Rivers of Chafford who not many years since demised his Interest in Well-street to Mr. Thomas Smith of Milk-street in London Scrivener Valons in this Parish was formerly the Mansion of a Family called in old datelesse Deeds de Valoniis and in English Valons but the greatest Honor which accrued to it was that Islip Abbot of VVestminster bought it in the reign of Henry the seventh of Casinghurst a Family which had been possest of it many Descents before and gave it to his Servant VVilliam Middleton who much improved it with Building And in his Family it was resident untill the latter end of Queen Elizabeth and then it was conveyed to James Verseline descended out of Flanders who gave it with his Daughter Anne Verseline to Peter Manning from which Family not many years since it passed away to Mr. Randall Manning of London whose Son and Heir Mr. Thomas Manning is now in the enjoyment of it Werd or Werth in the Hundred of Eastry is a Parish if you consider it in its precincts but narrow if in position low and unhealthful or if again in its number of Communicants not considerable but yet there are two places within the Ambuts and Boundaries of it which claim some consideration The first is the Mannor of Sandowne which was anciently the Perots who held this Mannor as the private Deeds of this Name and Family inform me as high as the Reign of Henry the third Thomas de Perot died possest of it in the fourth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 31. and then it was found fenced in and fortified with these priviledges It had Infangthef and Outfangthef Toll and Theam Sac and Soc Tumbrell and Pillory and other Franchises of the like Complexion but after this the Tenure was but of a brief Duration in this Name for the Female Heir of Perot brought this Mannor with much other Land to Langley of the County of Warwick and about the Reign of Henry the fifth there was a match between this Family and Peyton of the County of Cambridge which match at length brought this Mannor to descend to this Family For Edward Langley of Knolton Esquire deceasing about the beginning of Henry the eighth without Issue Sir Robert Peyton of Peyton Hall entred upon this and other Lands as his Heir at Law and he assigned it to his second Son John Peyton Esquire from whom it is now descended to Sir Thomas Peyton Baronet the instant proprietary of it Before I leave this Discourse of Sandowne I must inform the Reader that the Family of Peyton above mentioned and that of Ufford were primitively one and
years united for from them it passed away by Sale to Wilson where the Title was not less violate and cursory for from Wilson the like Alienation translated the right of it into Parboe whose Widow Mrs. Parboe does now enjoy it as being made part of her Jointure when first she matched with Parboe Fourthly Grove and upper Hamwold are two little Mannors circumscribed likewise within the Limits of Wodnesborough and were in the thirty second year of Ed. the third the Inheritance of Pet. de Goldesburgh or Goldesborough but the Title made no long abode in this Name after this Man's Exit for both about the latter End of Richard the second were conveyed to Langley of Knowlton from whom as suddain a Devolution about the latter end of Henry the fixth passed them over to Sir John White of Canterbury a Merchant of the Staple and he died possest of them in the ninth year of Edward the fourth as appears Rot. Esc Num. 25. After this Family was worn out I find Stokes planted in the Possession from which Name about the latter end of Henry the eighth they came over by Purchase to one Nicholas Mois Gentleman and when that Family deserted the Possession which was in our Grand-fathers Remembrance a Fatality proportionate to the former made them both parcel of the Patrimony of Everard by whom not many years since they were alienated to James to the Inheritance of which Family they remain yet linked and united Fifthly Poltmans vulgarly called Poultmans yielded both Seat and Sirname to a Family of some Estimate in this Track who had here a Castellated Mansion invested with a Moat and continued Lords of this Habitation until Peter Poltman by descendant right came to be possest of it and he about the fifteenth year of Richard the second conveyed it by Fine to Langley of Knowlton in whom the Propriety was setled but until the latter end of Henry the sixth and then it was passed away by Sale to Sir John White who dying seised of it in the ninth year of Edward the fourth by Testament ordered it to be sold for the improvement of Acts of Charity and pious Uses and was according to the Tenor of his will conveyed by Sale to Boteler of Heronden in Eastry and there it made its abode until our Fathers Remembrance and then it was passed away to Benskin in which Family the Title is yet permanent Woditon in the Hundred of Kinghamford hath three places in it of considerable Estimate The first is Gedding which K. Cedwall and Keneldrith his Queen in the year of Grace 693 gave to Theodore Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Covent of Christ-Church in Canterbury free as the original Donation informs me as Adesham and was by them afterwards assigned to the Sacrist or Sexton of Christ-Church for his livelyhood and Subsistance an Office in elder Times of no contemptible Account in the Repute and Vogue of the Monks of that Cloister for the sacred Utensils of the Church were not only committed to his Care and Custody but he was likewise to make Preparation for the Celebration of the Mass and the performance of other divine and sacred Officers and because he might be more active and vigorous in the Managery and execution of his Trust these under-Officers were to be subservient and and ministerial to him their Catalogue sollows 1 Custos de Wexhouse 2 Primus serviens Ecclesiae ad pulsandum 3 Vigil Ecclesiae 4 Plumbarius Sacristae 5 Duo Clerici Altaris beatae Mariae 6 Duo Clerici Tumbae Martyrii 7 Quatuor servientes Ecclesiae ad pulsandum 8 Vitriarius Garcio ejus 9 Ostiarius Chori 10 Serviens Feretri 11 Aurifriga lotrix Ecclesiae For which last the rest being of easie understanding I conceive it was one that either wrought the Church Vestments or Hangings and the like in Gold or that refreshed them when they were dim or tarnished But to proceed this Mannor being with the Remainder of the Revenue of the Priory of christ-Christ-Church surrendred into the Hands of Henry the eighth in the twenty ninth year of his reign who afterwards in the thirty first of his Government granted it to Mr. Edward Foch of Hells Court in this Parish from whom it descended to Thomas Foch of Monkton in the Isle of Thanet Esquire who deceasing not many years since gave it to his second Son Major John Foch of London and he hath lately passed it away to his elder Brother Thomas Foch Esquire Hells is a second place of Note which for divers Descents until the reign of Henry the fourth confessed no other Proprietaries but Hells of Hell Court in Ash and then they abandoning the Possession it came to be enjoyed by Merywether and remained linked to the Patrimony of this Name until the latter end of Henry the eighth and then by a Female Inheritrix is came to confess the Signory of Foch in Right of which Alliance it is now the Inheritance of Thomas Foch Esquire Wickham Bushes is another Mannor which has its Situation within the Limits of Woditon and was as the Light of the most ancient Evidences does guide us to believe the Patrimony of Guldeford for Henry de Guldeford as the Book of Aid discovers to us did hold it by Knights Service of Geffrey de Say in the twentieth year of Ed. the third but in a Descent or two after this Family was shrunk away from the possession of this place and then the ancient and illustrious Family of Digge of Digge's Court in Berham was the next which succeeded in the Propriety and Inheritance and to this Name was the Title of this place by a successive Series of many Generations fastned till in our Fathers Memory it was by sale rent off and by that Alienation linked to the Revenue of Coppen in whose Demeasn the Interest of it at this Day continues included Woodchurch in the Hundred of Blackbourn was the Habitation of a Family of as deep Root in Antiquity as any in this Track who extracted their Sirname as well as borrowed their first Original from this place Roger de Woodchurch is the first who does occurre who in the ancient Evidences and the Deeds of this place which are not cloistered within any Date finds a frequent Mention and from him as appears by an old Pedigree of this Family did it devolve to his Grandchild Sir Simon de Woodchurch who is in the Register of those eminent Persons who accompanied Edward the first in his Victorious and triumphant Expedition into Scotland where his Victories entailed upon his Memory the Character of Malleus Scotorum but in this Sir Simon the Name though not the Male Line determined for he by matching with Susan Heir of Henry le Clerke of Munfidde brought a large Inheritance to own the Signory of Woodchurch and his Successors in Gratitude to a Family which had added so much of splendor and annexed so plentiful a Revenue to this Name altered their paternal Appellation from Woodchurch
from whom they came to his Grandchild Juliana Sole Heir of Roger de Leybourn who having no Issue in the forty third year of Edward the third either by John de Hastings or William de Clinton Earl of Huntingdon constiuted the Abby of St. Augustins her heir to both these places a more certain Inheritor then any loose Unthrift in the devout estimate of those Times with this Clause annexed that the Brotherhood of that Covent should pray for the Souls of John de Hastings Laurence de Hastings Earl of Pembroke John de Hastings his Son and lastly for that of William de Clinton Earl of Huntingdon Which grant of hers was confirmed as appears by Thorne the Chronicler of St. Augustins lately printed by Edward the third in the year 1363 and it is probable that those two Chappels which the fabulous Tradition of the Island is were erected at the two abovesaid places by two Virgins were built by the beforementioned Juliana for two Chauntry Priests to celebrate Masse for the Souls of her two deceased Husbands But to proceed upon the Suppression of the Abby of St. Augustins by Henry the eighth these two Mannors being united to the demeasn of the Crown the Fee-simple was lodged in the Royal patrimony untill King James in the Beginning of his reign granted them to Mr. William Salter who demised them to Mr. Manasser Norwood whose Grandchild Mr. Alexander Norwood for ought I know is yet the proprietary of them Salmeston is the last place of account in St. Johns and did belong as appears by a Quo Warranto cited at large in the late printed Chronicle of Thorne to the Abby of St. Augustins in the year 1362 and remained treasured up in the Demeasn of that Covent untill its final Suppression in the reign of Henry the eighth and then being rent away from the Church it was by a new settlement enstated again upon the Church being granted by the abovesaid Prince in the twenty ninth of his Rule unto Thomas Arch-bishop of Canterbury and is at present held in Lease for Life by the Lady Mary St. Leger Widow of Sir Warham St. Leger who had it in Exchange when he passed away the Mannors of Bersted and Leeds Castle to Sir Thomas Colepeper of Hollingbourne Fleet is a place of Account which is situated partly in the Parish of St. Johns and partly in St. Peters and was the Inheritance in Ages of a very high Extraction of a Family who were written in Latine-Records de Fleta and were planted here as appears by their datelesse Deeds about the reign either of King John or Henry the third And when in times of a more modern Inscription they began to seal with Coats of Armes appendant to private Muniments and Evidences I find the parernal Coat of this Family to have been Checqueè ....... upon a Canton a Lion Rampant ....... which still lies registred in all old Ordinaries and Alphabets of Arms and other ancient Rolls and Records of the Kentish Gentry but as all Families have their Ebbings and Vicissitudes so had this For in our Fathers Memory one of this Family expired in a Daughter and Heir who was matched to Philipott and in our Memory another of this Name concluded in two Females married to Smith and Pomflet and so the ancient patrimony of Fleet being thus crumbled into parcels is now divided between these three Families Dane-court is another Seat of good Antiquity and is placed likewise in Sr. Peters It afforded both Seat and Sirname to a Family called Dane who bore for their Coat Armour Gules four Flower de Lis Or. But the Custome of Gavelkind having split this Family into two branches and consequently rent the estate into two parcels one of these branches withered away before the end of Henry the fourth and went out in a Daughter and Heir called Margaret married to John Exeter and she by paternal right held some Lands here at Dane-court at her decease which was in the fourth year of Henry the sixth But the other branch of this Family flourished something longer for about the latter end of Henry the sixth John Dane the last of this Family at this place determined in a sole Daughter and Heir who was matched to Denne of Den-hill who had in her right Dane-court but possest not long his new Acquists for about the latter end of Edward the fourth I find it the Norwoods from whom in the Chanel of successive Interest the Title flowed down to Mr. Alexander Northwood who hath lately alienated all his Concernment in it to Mr ...... Smith Ellington is an ancient Seat in the Parish of St. Lawrence which was the Residence many Ages since of a Family called Ellington some of which lay buried under very ancient Gravestones in this Church of St. Lawrence with Inscriptions too upon them as Mr. Sprackling not long since deceased informed me but the Injuries of time and barbarous Hands have now so violated those Remembrances that even the memory of this Family were it not for private Evidences which still preserve Life in it would have found a Tomb in Oblivion as well as their Ashes But to proceed After this Family had been fixed here for many Descents about the latter end of Edward the fourth it vanished away from this place being succeeded in the possession by Thatcher a Family of an high Antiquity as to the Name both here in Thanett and at Canterbury For in the Crown-Office I discover as the Record is cited by Mr. Somner in his Survey of that City Pag. 77. that a dysastrous Accident brought an untimely Fate to one of this Name for Simon the Son of Adam de Colynham and Henry the Son of Henry Thetcher in the seventeenth year of K. Edward Son of Edward the King that is Edward the second Son of Edward the first were sitting in a place beneath the Ground at Monksdane neer Canterbury and were preparing of Lime-stones quos per infortunium Terra supercidit it a quòd corpora eorum conquassabantur unde moriebantur incontinenter says the Latine-roll That is the earth sunk in upon them and crushed them into the disorders of an early Sepulcher But to return After this Seat had rested in this Name untill the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth it was passed away to Spracklin and remains part of the Demeasn of Mr. ..... Spracklin Fellow of Peterhouse in Cambridge at this instant Manston is another ancient Seat in St. Laurence which was the Inheritance of Manston for many Generations Richard de Manston as I find by the Bundles of incertain years kept in the Pipe-Office was one of the Recognitoros magnae Assisae in the Time of King John from whence we may conjecture that even in those times of so high an Ascent this Family was under no narrow or contemptible Character or Repute In latter times that is in the fourteenth year of Henry the sixth I find William Manston was Sheriff of Kent and held his Shrievalty at this place and