MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
In the mid
10th century much of the parish, including land
called Horsham, was detached pasture belonging to
Washington manor. (fn. 38) The estate which four knights
held at Washington in 1086 and which apparently
did not lie in Washington parish perhaps included
land in Horsham. (fn. 39) Much land in the parish was
later held in demesne, like Washington, by the
Braose family and its successors. (fn. 40)
The estate later called the manor and borough of
HORSHAM
(fn. 41) belonged before 1208 to William de
Braose (d. 1211). (fn. 42) It afterwards descended with the
rape through the Braose family and its successors the
Mowbray and Howard (later Fitzalan-Howard)
families, dukes of Norfolk and earls of Arundel. (fn. 43) In
the earlier 17th century a distinction was claimed
between the manor of Horsham, belonging to Lord
Arundel, and the manor and borough, which the
bailiffs and burgesses, alternatively called the corporation, were said to hold of him by the rent of 52s.
a year. (fn. 44) The distinction seems merely to be a
lawyers' gloss to explain the different jurisdictions of
the lord and the corporation, the 52s. being in fact
the total of the burgage rents, which the corporation
collected on the earl's behalf; (fn. 45) nor is there any
evidence, as has been suggested, that the manor and
borough, so called, was smaller in area than the
manor. (fn. 46)
No manor house of Horsham manor is known; the
house called The Manor House in 1982 belonged to
Hewells manor. (fn. 47)
Land called CROCKHURST, part of Washington
manor in the mid 10th century, (fn. 48) was evidently the
land of the same name lying south of the town,
which later belonged, like Horsham, to the Braoses. (fn. 49)
In 1254 William, Lord Braose (d. 1290), granted it
to Sele priory in Upper Beeding. It was then described as 229 a. in area; (fn. 50) if the figure is correct it
was evidently much reduced later, since in 1535 rents
in Horsham belonging to the priory's successor,
Magdalen College, Oxford, totalled only 28s., (fn. 51) and
little more than 40 a. there was listed among the
college's estates in 1578. (fn. 52) No more is heard of
Crockhurst, though Magdalen College still owned
property in Southwater in the late 18th century. (fn. 53)
The manor of CHESWORTH south-east of the
town was perhaps also part of Washington manor in
the 10th century, since it later too descended in the
Braose family. (fn. 54) William, Lord Braose (d. 1290),
held it in 1281; (fn. 55) after his death it was held in dower
by his widow Mary, (fn. 56) at whose death in 1326 it
passed under a settlement of 1281 to her grandson
Thomas de Braose. (fn. 57) Edward II apparently stayed
at Chesworth in 1324, as his father may also have
done 25 years earlier. (fn. 58) Thomas de Braose was
assessed to the subsidy in the rural part of Horsham
parish in 1327 (fn. 59) and died in 1361 seised of Chesworth
jointly with his wife Beatrice. (fn. 60) Thereafter it descended with Bidlington in Bramber until 1395,
when at the successive deaths of Thomas de Braose
and his two infant children (fn. 61) it passed to George
Braose or Brewes, nephew of Thomas (d. 1361), (fn. 62)
who had it in 1412. (fn. 63) By 1418 the manor was again
descending with Bidlington, as it continued to do
until at least 1506. (fn. 64) During the minority of Hugh
Cokesey in 1419 and later it was held by William
Philip and others. (fn. 65)
After the death of Thomas Howard, duke of
Norfolk, in 1524 the manor was held in dower by his
widow Agnes until her attainder in 1542. Like him,
she lived at Chesworth, (fn. 66) as also, after 1542, did her
son Thomas, duke of Norfolk. (fn. 67) After his forfeiture
in 1547 Chesworth, like Horsham borough, descended with the rape (fn. 68) until 1549 when the Crown
granted a life interest to Thomas Wriothesley, earl of
Southampton. The reversionary interest granted in
1550 to Edward Fiennes, Lord Clinton, was granted
by him in the same year to Henry Peckham (fn. 69) and
presumably became a freehold on Lord Southampton's death, also in that year. (fn. 70) Peckham was dealing
with the manor in 1551, (fn. 71) but by 1560 it had come to
Thomas Howard, duke of Norfolk, (fn. 72) who exchanged
it two years later with the Crown; (fn. 73) in 1570 he
received a 21-year lease of the demesnes, (fn. 74) which
was forfeited on his attainder in 1572. (fn. 75) Thereafter
the manor remained with the Crown.
In 1573 John Blenerhassett and William Dix were
granted a 21-year lease of the demesnes. (fn. 76) Bishop
Curtis of Chichester was living at Chesworth as
lessee between 1577 and his death in 1582. (fn. 77) In 1602
Sir John Caryll received a 60-year lease of the manor
house, the demesne lands, the park, and a lodge
called Chesworth Lodge, with the proviso that he
should entertain the royal steward and surveyor on
two days in each year. (fn. 78) Sir John's son, also Sir John,
succeeded in 1613 (fn. 79) and made over his interest in
1646 to his son John, who retained it in 1650 but by
then had sublet the entire property, comprising
313 a. (fn. 80) In 1660 or 1661 the manor was settled on
Queen Henrietta Maria (fn. 81) (d. 1669), (fn. 82) and by 1674 (fn. 83)
on Queen Catherine of Braganza (d. 1705), (fn. 84) who
still held it in 1699. (fn. 85) During the later 17th century
the manor house, the demesne lands, the park, and
Chesworth Lodge were leased, sometimes separately
and sometimes in combination, to various tenants,
some of whom were royal servants. (fn. 86)
In 1725 Charles Eversfield of Denne (d. 1749)
received a Crown lease of Chesworth Lodge and part
of the former park, which was renewed in 1754 and
later to his son Sir Charles. (fn. 87) Meanwhile the elder
Charles had bought part of the demesne lands,
apparently including the manor house, from a Mr.
Stonor of Oxfordshire, perhaps Thomas Stonor, a
mortgagee of 1696, (fn. 88) and his son had bought the rest
by 1757. (fn. 89) Thereafter the estate descended with
Denne manor (fn. 90) until the early 20th century. Quit
rents were apparently still paid to the Crown in
1827. (fn. 91) In 1911 or afterwards (fn. 92) Chesworth was sold,
passing through various hands to Mr. L. A. Evans,
who owned the manor house and much land in
1982. (fn. 93)
The manor house which existed at Chesworth by
1324 (fn. 94) and possibly by 1299 (fn. 95) seems to have occupied the moated site south of the present Chesworth
House; a drawbridge was mentioned in 1427. (fn. 96) The
south arm of the moat was apparently formed by the
river Arun itself; the northern and western arms also
survived in 1982. (fn. 97) Other earthworks south-east of
the moat apparently represent medieval fishponds. (fn. 98)
A large two-storeyed timber-framed range was
later built north of the moat, aligned from north to
south. Stylistically it is late 15th- or early 16thcentury, and it was perhaps the work of Thomas
Howard, duke of Norfolk (d. 1524), who lived at
Chesworth in the 1520s. (fn. 99) The building was extended southwards in the mid 16th century by
another range, erroneously described in 1836 and
later as a chapel, (fn. 1) which had its principal room on the
first floor; it is of brick, with elaborate details including niches on the inner walls (fn. 2) and octagonal
buttresses at the corners of the south front. The
16th-century house was possibly approached from
the north through two courtyards, of which the outer
one, called the base court in 1650, had a gatehouse. (fn. 3)
The western side of the base court was apparently (fn. 4)
formed by the large surviving contemporary sixbayed barn, which has a queen-post roof and evidence of internal cross walls; what might have been
the north and south sides of the court incorporate
remains of brick and stone walling also apparently of
the 16th century. The inner courtyard perhaps
extended alongside the mid 16th-century brick
range, which has a first floor doorway in its east wall,
as if to give access to a gallery. In 1549 the house
included a hall, a great chamber, a dining chamber,
and a chapel, besides at least 20 other rooms and
service buildings; it had evidently been neglected,
however, since many of the furnishings were described as old and worn. (fn. 5) A later description refers to
a tower called the earl of Surrey's tower. (fn. 6) In 1570
Chesworth House was said to be greatly decayed, (fn. 7)
and despite repairs carried out c. 1590 (fn. 8) it remained so
in 1608, when its site was described as low and unhealthy. (fn. 9) Between 1611 and c. 1636 most of the house
was demolished, so that in 1650 there were said to be
only ten rooms on ground floor and first floor together, besides garrets and offices; (fn. 10) a small timber
building described as the former slaughterhouse had
been re-erected on the estate as a farmhouse. (fn. 11) The
present west range, of 17th-century character, was
presumably built during or after the demolitions
mentioned; it is of stone, and abuts on the junction
of the two surviving earlier ranges. From presumably
that date until the earlier 20th century Chesworth
House was a farmhouse; (fn. 12) the mid 16th-century
brick range was used as a wash house in 1836, (fn. 13) and
as a wash house, storehouse, and dairy in 1868. (fn. 14)
Meanwhile the 17th-century west range was extended to north and south during the 19th century. (fn. 15)
In 1928 the house was bought by Capt. C. R.
Cook, (fn. 16) who enlarged it on the north side and
restored it to his own designs, inserting old fittings
from other houses. Capt. Cook also laid out extensive
gardens along the Arun valley, and built a new
entrance drive to the house from the west, away from
the farm buildings on the north side. (fn. 17)
Chesworth park lay south of the house, on the
eastern slopes of Denne Hill. It may have existed by
1271, when Maud of the park (de perco) was recorded
as living in the parish. (fn. 18) William, Lord Braose (d.
1290), was granted free warren at Chesworth in
1281. (fn. 19) Pannage at Chesworth park was mentioned
in 1427, when the park pale was apparently five furlongs in length. (fn. 20) There was a parker in 1529. (fn. 21) In
1549 there were both cattle and a herd of c. 100 deer
in the park, the keeper then receiving a salary of
£6 1s. 8d. (fn. 22) By 1570 the park had been disparked, (fn. 23)
though the pale survived in 1617. (fn. 24) There was still a
rabbit warren at Chesworth, apparently south-east
of the house, (fn. 25) in the 17th and 18th centuries. (fn. 26)
There were two lodges, Chesworth Lodge, apparently ruinous in 1608 (fn. 27) but still standing in 1770, (fn. 28)
and the High Lodge, also recorded from 1608; (fn. 29) one
lay east of Denne Park house, and the other further
south, occupying the site of the 19th- and 20thcentury Bourne Hill House. (fn. 30) The closes created at
the 16th-century disparking could be partially traced
in 1982, when the former park still seemed remote,
despite the proximity of Horsham.
The manor of DENNE, south of the town, lying
between Horsham, Crockhurst, and Chesworth,
evidently also formed part of Washington manor in
the mid 10th century; (fn. 31) its name indicates its origin
as a pasture place, (fn. 32) and an annual quit rent was still
payable to the lord of Washington in the earlier 19th
century. (fn. 33) Various persons surnamed 'of' or 'at'
Denne are recorded in Horsham between the 13th (fn. 34)
and 15th centuries. (fn. 35) A William at Denne was living
in the parish in 1301; (fn. 36) he or a namesake was taxed
in the rural part of it in 1327, (fn. 37) and served as a juror
in Horsham in 1341, (fn. 38) and the same or another held
land in Horsham and Washington in 1346 or 1347. (fn. 39)
The manor was settled in 1499 on Walter Broadbridge, whose father Thomas had previously held
it, (fn. 40) and may include the land with which Richard
Broadbridge had been dealing in 1414 or 1415. (fn. 41)
Walter Broadbridge presumably still had the
manor in 1524 when taxed in Horsham, (fn. 42) and Henry
Broadbridge was dealing with it in 1587. (fn. 43) Henry
evidently died soon afterwards, for c. 1588 his
daughter Timothy was seised of it in fee tail with
reversion to her half-brother James Booth. After
Timothy's death c. 1592 the estate was settled in
1594 on Booth, (fn. 44) who conveyed it in 1599 to Stephen
Barnham, apparently a relative. (fn. 45)
About 1605 Barnham sold the estate to Sir Thomas
Eversfield (fn. 46) (d. 1616), in whose family it descended
until the 20th century. Sir Thomas's son and namesake, (fn. 47) knighted in 1621 and later a prominent
parliamentarian, died in 1654, (fn. 48) and by 1663 the
estate had passed to his cousin John (d. 1669), of the
Hollington branch of the family. (fn. 49) In 1671 Edward
Eversfield had Denne, being succeeded before 1682
by his brother Anthony, (fn. 50) from whom it had passed
by 1702 to his great-nephew Charles (fn. 51) (d. 1749), (fn. 52)
M.P. for Horsham 1705–41. (fn. 53) Thereafter the descent
followed that of Charlton in Steyning, the family
residing at Denne, until 1818; when Charles Eversfield died in that year (fn. 54) the manor passed to his
brother James (d. 1826). (fn. 55) At that period the Eversfield estates in Horsham comprised c. 1,200 a. (fn. 56)
James's son Charles Gilbert was succeeded in 1886
by his sister Ann (d. 1904), widow of Charles G.
Bethune. Their son Edward Maximilian Bethune,
who took the surname Eversfield in 1903, succeeded
to the estate and was himself succeeded in 1912 by
his son Charles (d. 1914). Charles's successive heirs
were his two aunts Isabella (d. 1928) and Sophia
Bethune (d. 1942), who each took the additional surname Eversfield in 1915. (fn. 57) After the latter's death the
property passed to March St. Andrew-Vaughan,
nephew by marriage of Edward M. Eversfield (d.
1912), at whose death in 1947 the estate, then comprising 593 a., was broken up. (fn. 58)
No trace has survived of the medieval manor house
which presumably existed at Denne. A new house
was built of local sandstone in 1605. (fn. 59) It apparently
consisted of four ranges round a central courtyard,
the entrance being on the west side. The three gabled
bays of the east front, with their tall chimneys, survived in 1982, though the bay window which originally decorated the southernmost bay had been
removed at some time after 1788. (fn. 60) The tall gabled
north tower, of four storeys and with a contemporary
staircase, is also early 17th-century. The original
west front was similar to the east, and had an arched
entrance doorway. (fn. 61) In the 1720s a visitor mentioned
a spacious hall and a marble-floored lobby at the
house, which then also had a collection of paintings. (fn. 62)
About 1730 the west range was rebuilt or refronted
with a five-bayed two-storeyed facade in classical
style, finishing in a high parapet pierced by circular
windows, and flanked by rusticated pilasters. (fn. 63) The
pilasters were retained when the west front was
returned to an early 17th-century style c. 1875; (fn. 64) at
the same time the house was enlarged to the south,
also in a pastiche of the 17th-century style, though
using coursed rubble and not the large ashlar blocks
which characterized the earlier work. In 1948 or soon
afterwards the building was bought by Capt. C. R.
Cook of Chesworth House and c. 1950 was converted into flats, (fn. 65) as it remained in 1982.
A parcel of pasture ground called Deanes park
which existed in Horsham in 1588 (fn. 66) was perhaps
Denne park. There was a rabbit warren north and
north-east of Denne Park house in 1617, which Sir
Thomas Eversfield (d. 1616) had laid out, allegedly
encroaching on Chesworth park to the east. (fn. 67) The
warren seems later also to have extended south-east
of the house, where field names Great and Little
Warren hills were recorded c. 1844. (fn. 68) Most of its
area was later incorporated in the park. A park with
fallow deer, on the east and perhaps also on the west
side of Denne Park house, was mentioned in the
1720s. There were certainly avenues there by that
time, (fn. 69) but it is not clear whether the double avenue
of lime trees nearly ⅓ mile (0.5 km.) long, which
forms a grand approach to the house from the west,
was laid out in the 17th century, as tradition avers; (fn. 70)
the first certain reference to it is of 1790. (fn. 71) Part of the
avenue was derelict in 1982. Two rectangular pieces
of water, aligned north–south across the west front
of the house, also existed in the 1720s; (fn. 72) they survived in 1982. There was a north–south avenue west
of the house as well in 1794, (fn. 73) part of which remained
in 1982. (fn. 74) In the earlier 19th century the park comprised c. 230 a. and abounded in game; (fn. 75) at its
northern end at about that time was a grass terrace,
rolled and mown for the benefit of the townspeople,
who came on summer evenings to enjoy the view
over Horsham. (fn. 76) There were 150 fallow deer in the
park in 1892. (fn. 77) Deer were still kept in 1935 (fn. 78) and in
1982, when the park remained open grazing land. (fn. 79)
The manor of COLTSTAPLE, adjoining Chesworth on the south, was a sub-manor of it. (fn. 80) In 1397
it belonged to Richard FitzAlan, earl of Arundel. (fn. 81)
After his execution in that year it was granted, like
Heene Falconer manor near Worthing, to John
Holand, duke of Exeter (beheaded 1400), (fn. 82) and was
presumably afterwards restored like Heene Falconer
to Richard's son Thomas, earl of Arundel (d. 1415),
who had it in 1406. (fn. 83) Margaret, wife of Roland
Lenthall, held a life interest in it between 1412 (fn. 84) and
her death in 1423, (fn. 85) as did Beatrice, widow of the
last named Thomas, earl of Arundel, at her death in
1439. (fn. 86) John Mowbray, duke of Norfolk (d. 1461),
settled the manor on Thomas Charles. (fn. 87) In 1504 it
was settled on Thomas Howard, earl of Surrey, (fn. 88) as
lord of Chesworth, and thereafter it descended with
that manor through the Crown to the Eversfield
family. (fn. 89) Between 1602 and c. 1844 Coltstaple farm
was recorded as containing between 100 and 120 a. (fn. 90)
Between the mid 16th and early 17th centuries members of the Michell family were often described as of
Colstaple, (fn. 91) perhaps as tenants, though Peter
Ravenscroft held the lease at his death c. 1574. (fn. 92)
A manor house at Coltstaple is recorded in 1397. (fn. 93)
By 1650 there were two chief houses on the estate, (fn. 94)
which were evidently identical with the houses called
Coltstaple Farm and Little Coltstaple Farm in 1982.
The former, which in 1650 had a hall and parlour
and at least five upstairs rooms, is a T-shaped building of the 17th century or earlier, timber-framed with
brick infilling, and with an early 19th-century range
added at the south end. Little Coltstaple Farm is a
15th-century hall house with parlour cross wing. A
moulded dais beam survives in the hall. A chimneystack and upper floor were inserted in the 16th or
early 17th century, and in 1650 there were two rooms
on each floor besides service rooms. (fn. 95) The service
wing was demolished and additional rooms were
constructed beyond the parlour at an unknown date.
The manor of ROFFEY, another sub-manor of
Chesworth, (fn. 96) lay north-east of the town but included
property within it and also in Rusper parish. (fn. 97) It is
not recorded before the 15th century. Thomas Hoo,
half-brother of Thomas, Lord Hoo, and M.P. for
Horsham in 1472, (fn. 98) was dealing with it in 1457–8 (fn. 99)
and perhaps had it earlier too, since his father-in-law
Walter Urry is said to have owned it. (fn. 1) At Thomas's
death in 1486 it passed to his niece Anne, wife of Sir
Roger Copley. (fn. 2) His son, another Sir Roger (d. 1549),
was succeeded by his son Sir Thomas, (fn. 3) M.P. for
Gatton (Surr.) and a noted recusant, who died in
1584, having left the country before 1572. (fn. 4) Sir
Thomas's widow Catherine was apparently living at
Roffey in the 1590s. (fn. 5) After her death in 1608 her son
William Copley, of Gatton, had the manor. (fn. 6) In 1615
he settled it on his son and namesake, (fn. 7) who died
seised of it in 1623 in the lifetime of his father, (fn. 8)
Roffey passing then or after the elder William's death
in 1643 to the younger William's daughter Mary,
wife of John Weston of Sutton (Surr.). (fn. 9) Weston was
dealing with the manor by 1649 (fn. 10) and died between
1684 and 1690. (fn. 11) Richard Weston was said to be lord
in 1700, (fn. 12) and was evidently succeeded at his death
in 1700 or 1701 by his son John, (fn. 13) who was dealing
with Roffey in 1702 (fn. 14) and died seised of it in 1730.
John's unmarried daughter and heir Melior Mary (fn. 15)
was recorded as lady in 1759; (fn. 16) at her death in 1782 (fn. 17)
Roffey passed to John Webb who took the additional
surname Weston, (fn. 18) and who had the manor between
1783 and 1797. (fn. 19) Before 1803 he conveyed it to
Charles Howard, duke of Norfolk, (fn. 20) who in 1812
had over 1,000 a. at Roffey. (fn. 21) The lordship of the
manor remained with later dukes of Norfolk until the
20th century. (fn. 22) Between 1868 and 1889, however,
the demesne lands were sold to James Innes, whose
son Capt. J. A. Innes had them in 1910. (fn. 23) The Innes
family were great benefactors to the new suburb of
Roffey at that period. (fn. 24)
A manor house at Roffey was mentioned in 1537, (fn. 25)
but no trace of it survived in 1982. At the west end of
the existing building, called Roffey Place, is a timberframed, gabled range perhaps of the early 17th century. A new red brick double-pile house on a stone
base was built c. 1700; it is of five bays and two
storeys, and originally had mullioned and transomed
windows on both floors, dormer windows in the roof,
and end chimneys. (fn. 26) Two staircases and some panelling survive from the early 18th century, and there is
also reset late 17th- or early 18th-century oak carving. Additions were made in the 19th century and
especially in the mid 20th, when the house incorporated successively a school for the mentally handicapped and a training centre for the R.S.P.C.A. (fn. 27)
Woodwork apparently from the pre-18th-century
house is said to have been transferred in the later 19th
century to the new house called Roffey Park which
James Innes built in Lower Beeding parish. (fn. 28)
There seems to have been a park at Roffey, described as within St. Leonard's Forest, in 1439. (fn. 29) In
1480 a distinction was made between an old park and
a home park there, (fn. 30) and in 1499 there was a forester
for Roffey, Shelley, and Thrustlehole bailiwicks in
St. Leonard's Forest taken jointly. Deer were mentioned at that date, (fn. 31) and apparently in 1641. (fn. 32) The
park lay south-west of Roffey Place and Roffey hamlet, between the Horsham–Crawley and Horsham–
Colgate roads. (fn. 33) The building misidentified in
1830 as the manor house, which had apparently
comprised a moated quadrangle 120 ft. (36.6 metres)
square, (fn. 34) seems likely to have been a lodge in the
park; it may have occupied the same site as the
modern Roffeyhurst, formerly Roffey Park, on the
Horsham–Colgate road, a house of c. 1900 which
incorporates an earlier timber-framed structure. In
the early 19th century the park comprised 139 a. and
was perhaps being used as a rabbit warren; 14 a.,
however, had already been converted to arable, and
the rest was apparently converted soon afterwards. (fn. 35)
A new park, partly in Horsham and partly in Lower
Beeding, was created before 1896 for the new house
called Roffey Park. (fn. 36)
Two manors, Hawksbourne in the north and Nutham in the south of the parish, were originally outliers of Applesham manor in Coombes near
Shoreham. The manor of HAWKSBOURNE
appears to be the 'Ablesborna' from which tithes
were granted to Bramber college by William de
Braose in 1073. (fn. 37) It descended with Applesham until
at least 1242, (fn. 38) and the mesne lordship continued to
descend with that later. (fn. 39) By 1262, however, the date
of his death, Sir John de Gatesden, lord of Broadwater, had become undertenant, (fn. 40) and thereafter the
undertenancy descended with Broadwater until the
mid 15th century. (fn. 41) The mention of a park at
Hawksbourne in 1335 indicates that the then lord,
Ralph de Camoys, had free warren there. (fn. 42) Robert
Radmyld died seised of a moiety of the manor in
1457, (fn. 43) but his moiety is not afterwards heard of. The
other moiety belonged to Sir Thomas Lewknor
(attainted 1484), being afterwards leased by the
Crown in 1485 to Thomas Hoo of Roffey and
others. (fn. 44) Sir Roger Lewknor presumably had it in
1509 and 1515, since he then held the advowson of
Rusper rectory which descended with the moiety at
that period. (fn. 45) He or a namesake had the moiety in
1538 (fn. 46) and died seised of it in 1543. (fn. 47) The estate in
Hawksbourne which passed in 1572 from John
Worsfold to his son Thomas was probably a lease of
the demesne. (fn. 48) Richard Lewknor was dealing with
the second moiety in 1588 and Thomas Lewknor in
1606. (fn. 49) Thereafter the estate was called the manor
rather than a moiety of the manor. John Mill
(created Bt. 1619), apparently a relative of the
Lewknors, (fn. 50) was dealing with it in 1617, (fn. 51) and after
his death in 1648 it evidently passed in the direct line
through his grandson Sir John (d. 1670) to the latter's
son, also Sir John, (fn. 52) who conveyed it c. 1672 in payment of debts to Nathaniel Tredcroft, vicar of
Horsham (fn. 53) (d. 1696). Nathaniel's son and namesake
was succeeded in 1720 by his son Edward (d. 1768),
whose son and heir Nathaniel had Hawksbourne at
his death in 1825. (fn. 54) After the death of Nathaniel's
son Henry in or before 1844 (fn. 55) it was sold c. 1856 by
Edward Tredcroft to R. H. Hurst of Horsham Park, (fn. 56)
afterwards descending in the Hurst family.
A manor house at Hawksbourne was mentioned in
1485 (fn. 57) and 1572. (fn. 58) In 1639 it was leased to two
Southampton merchants. (fn. 59) The present house is
L-shaped and 16th- or 17th-century in date; it is
faced with brick below and tilehung above. (fn. 60)
The manor of NUTHAM, which extended into
Nuthurst and Rusper parishes, (fn. 61) remained a member of Applesham manor until the early 16th century.
About 1349 its demesne lands comprised c. 150 a. (fn. 62)
Maud, widow of Sir Henry Roos (d. c. 1504), sold it
in or before 1512, (fn. 63) apparently to John Caryll of
Warnham, who is said to have died seised of it in
1523. (fn. 64) Thereafter it evidently descended with
Warnham Place to John Caryll (d. 1681). (fn. 65) Philip
Caryll, apparently John's grandson, (fn. 66) was dealing
with it in 1693 and later. (fn. 67) In 1727 he sold it to John
Wicker of Horsham Park (d. 1741), (fn. 68) who was succeeded by his son John (d. 1767), whose daughter
Mary married Sir Thomas Broughton, Bt. (fn. 69) In 1776
Broughton sold Nutham to the Revd. Joseph Jackson, (fn. 70) who sold it c. 1780 to John Manley. (fn. 71) He sold
it apparently c. 1811 (fn. 72) in trust for Robert Aldridge of
St. Leonard's house in Lower Beeding, who still had
it in 1826. (fn. 73) Thomas Sanctuary of Rusper had it in
1829 and 1835, (fn. 74) but by 1868 it had again joined the
Horsham Park estate, descending afterwards in the
Hurst family. (fn. 75) The demesne lands meanwhile, later
known as Easteds farm, were sold by Philip Caryll in
1714 to Charles Sergison, (fn. 76) whose great-nephew and
heir Thomas Sergison (fn. 77) sold them in 1757 to
Philippa Clitherow and Samuel Blunt. (fn. 78) The Blunts
later acquired the Clitherow moiety, and the lands
afterwards descended with Newbuildings in Shipley (fn. 79) until 1838 when F. S. Blunt sold them to the
Revd. Sir John Godfrey Thomas, Bt. (fn. 80) By c. 1844
Easteds farm belonged to C. G. Eversfield of
Denne, (fn. 81) but by 1868 it had been re-united with the
lordship of Nutham manor. (fn. 82)
There was a manor house at Nutham c. 1349, (fn. 83)
which presumably occupied the same site as its
successor, the modern Easteds Farm. The latter is a
medieval hall house on a high stone base. The hall
preserves a moulded bressummer at the dais end and
two arched doors to the screens passage; the entrance
door to the hall is reached by an external staircase,
and the south front is weatherboarded. (fn. 84)
Two other manors, Marlpost and Shortsfield, also
originally formed parts of manors in the south of the
county. MARLPOST in the south-west of the parish
was a member of Tarring manor, long the property
of the archbishops of Canterbury, which was often
called Tarring with Marlpost or Tarring Marlpost. (fn. 85)
The manor also had tenements on the west side of
Horsham town, including Needles farm, the estate
called Tanbridge, and lands in Bishopric. (fn. 86) The archbishop evidently had free warren at Marlpost in
1333. (fn. 87) About 1650 the demesne comprised 109 a. (fn. 88)
In 1806 Marlpost was sold by the lord of Tarring
manor, Edward Barker, to Charles Howard, duke of
Norfolk (d. 1815); his executors sold it shortly after
his death to Robert Hurst of Horsham Park, (fn. 89) after
which date it descended with the Hurst family
estates. (fn. 90) Marlpost Farm, presumably the manor
house, is 17th-century or earlier, and is an L-shaped
timber-framed building faced with bricks, weatherboarding, and hung tiles, and with a massive stepped
chimney breast at the south end.
The manor of SHORTSFIELD, originally an outlying part of Fécamp abbey's Steyning estate, (fn. 91) was
first apparently recorded in 1203 when the abbey was
confirmed in tithes from lands of John de 'Strotefeld'
within Chichester diocese. (fn. 92) The manor house lay
west of the town in later times, being indentical with
the demolished Coote's Farm, (fn. 93) but lands belonging
to the manor also lay in the north and east of the
parish, and in Nuthurst and Rusper. (fn. 94) The estate
was augmented in 1313 by a grant of 90 a. from
Robert at Hurst, (fn. 95) an ancestor of the Hurst family
later of Horsham Park, and in 1535, when it had
passed with Steyning to Syon abbey, it comprised
fixed rents and farms worth £20 6s. 6d. (fn. 96)
In 1540 the manor, first so called, was granted by
the Crown to Thomas Howard, duke of Norfolk. (fn. 97)
After his forfeiture in 1547 the Crown first in 1550
leased it and then in 1553 granted it in fee to John
Caryll of Warnham (fn. 98) (d. 1566). Thereafter it descended with Nutham. In 1568 Thomas's grandson
and namesake, also duke of Norfolk, quitclaimed his
rights in the manor to the Carylls. (fn. 99) Free warren was
claimed by the Carylls in 1578. (fn. 1) The demesne lands
of the manor belonged between 1737 and 1844 to the
Shelleys of Field Place in Warnham, (fn. 2) but by 1868
had rejoined the descent of the manor itself. (fn. 3)
Two reputed manors were held of Shortsfield.
STAMMERHAM
(fn. 4) in the south-west part of the
parish, which was called a manor in 1262 (fn. 5) and
apparently in 1627 (fn. 6) but not, it seems, at other dates,
probably derives from the land there with which
Nicholas of Stammerham was dealing in the earlier
13th century, described as ½ hide in 1224 (fn. 7) and as 80 a.
in 1255. (fn. 8) The estate was settled on Walter de la Hyde
in 1262, together with Cokeham in Sompting. (fn. 9)
Other persons surnamed of Stammerham are recorded as holding land in Horsham in the 14th
century, (fn. 10) but the descent of the estate is lost until
the mid 15th. John Michell, who held land in Horsham of Tarring Marlpost in 1448, (fn. 11) was described
as of Stammerham in 1463. (fn. 12) At his death in 1474 he
was succeeded by his son John (d. 1520 × 1522),
whose son Richard died in 1524 or 1525. Richard was
succeeded by his grandson John, who died seised of
Stammerham in 1555, (fn. 13) and the estate later passed to
John's cousin John (d. 1610). (fn. 14) The last-named John
was also succeeded by a cousin, Edward, (fn. 15) who died
seised of Stammerham in 1639. Edward's son
Theobald (fn. 16) (d. 1641) was succeeded by his brother
Edward (fn. 17) (d. 1666), and Edward's son Walsingham
(d. 1704×1713) by his son the Revd. Theobald (d.
1737), whose daughter and heir Mary Catherine
(d. 1760) married Bysshe Shelley. (fn. 18) After 1790
Stammerham descended with Field Place in Warnham (fn. 19) until c. 1870, when it was sold by the Shelleys
to Henry Padwick, lord of Hewells manor, who sold
it in 1885 to the Aylesbury Dairy Co.; (fn. 20) in 1892,
when the company's estate at Stammerham comprised over 1,300 a., most of it was sold to Christ's
Hospital, providing the site for the new school. (fn. 21)
Christ's Hospital still had the Stammerham estate in
1982.
A house at Stammerham existed in 1520; it
apparently had a chapel, since provision was made
for saying mass there at that date. (fn. 22) It is presumably
represented by Stammerham Farm, which comprises
a 16th- or 17th-century L-shaped south range, of
timber-framing faced with brick and weatherboarding, and a north range of the later 19th century
in revived vernacular style, also using brick and
weatherboarding. The paths around the house
include huge slabs of Horsham stone.
The reputed manor of HILLS, so called by 1548, (fn. 23)
was held freehold of Shortsfield, (fn. 24) and perhaps
derives from land in the parish held by the Hill
family recorded in 1340–1 and later. (fn. 25) Richard
Wakehurst and others are said to have endowed
Butler's chantry in Horsham church with part of the
demesne lands in 1444, (fn. 26) and what may have been
Hills was settled in 1499 by Thomas Mauncell on
members of the Michell family. (fn. 27) In the early 16th
century a John Hill held lands in Horsham of Shortsfield. (fn. 28) At some date between 1504 and 1515, however, John Caryll owned Hills, (fn. 29) and it seems to have
descended between that time and 1620 or later with
Nutham. (fn. 30)
John Middleton, M.P. for Horsham from 1624, (fn. 31)
had the estate between 1610 (fn. 32) and his death in 1636.
His son and heir Thomas, (fn. 33) also M.P. for the town,
was a prominent figure in county politics in the 1640s,
first as a lukewarm parliamentarian, and then as a
supporter of the abortive royalist rising at Horsham
in 1648. (fn. 34) Between 1648 and 1651 or later the estate
was forfeit. (fn. 35) In 1659 it comprised 180 a. (fn. 36) At his
death in 1661 or 1662 Thomas was succeeded by his
grandson and namesake, who in 1668 sold Hills to
John Machell, (fn. 37) also M.P. for Horsham, (fn. 38) and perhaps already tenant, since in 1664 his house, in
Shortsfield tithing, was taxed at 22 hearths. (fn. 39) At
Machell's death in 1704 (fn. 40) Hills passed to his grandson the Hon. Richard Ingram, (fn. 41) later Viscount Irwin
(d. 1721), and thereafter descended with the Irwin
title through Richard's younger brothers Arthur
(d. 1736), Henry (d. 1761), and George (d. 1763).
Arthur and Henry both sat for the borough before
succeeding to the title, the Ingram interest being the
dominant one in Horsham elections after c. 1738. (fn. 42)
Members of the family often lived at Hills house
during that time. (fn. 43) After the death of George's
nephew and heir Charles Ingram, Viscount Irwin, in
1778, the estate was held in dower by the latter's
widow Frances (d. 1807), (fn. 44) who also lived at Hills (fn. 45)
and who continued to wield political influence. (fn. 46) Her
daughter and heir Isabella married Francis Seymour
Conway, marquess of Hertford, (fn. 47) who sold Hills in
1811 to Charles Howard, duke of Norfolk. (fn. 48) After
his death in 1815 the estate was divided among
various proprietors including Robert Hurst of Horsham Park. (fn. 49) In 1844 William Sharp both owned and
occupied Hills farm, of 95 a., (fn. 50) and in 1876 Charles
Sharp was said to own much of the former Hills
estate. (fn. 51) In 1912 the house and adjacent land belonged to R. F. Bacchus. (fn. 52) The later history of the
estate has not been traced.
There was a timber-framed house at Hills by the
16th century. It became offices (fn. 53) when in 1610 John
Middleton built a new range on its south side, whose
impressive east front, of five bays and three storeys,
had polygonal bay windows, tall chimneys, and
Dutch gables. (fn. 54) After the acquisition of the estate by
the duke of Norfolk in 1811 the 17th-century building was demolished, together with part of the earlier
one. (fn. 55) Various additions were made west of the
surviving part of the timber-framed range in the
19th century. That timber-framed part, which contained some fine panelling, was demolished c. 1925, (fn. 56)
and in 1982 only 19th-century work survived.
The 17th-century house at Hills had a small formal
garden to the south, including a 'mount', (fn. 57) but deer
mentioned 'in Mr. Middleton's ground' in 1641 seem
more likely to have been at Bewbush park in Lower
Beeding. (fn. 58) By 1766 a long lake had been constructed
east of the house, extending south-westwards from
the Horsham–Guildford road. (fn. 59) A scheme for the
reconstruction of the park made in 1768 by Capability
Brown (fn. 60) was carried out in part c. 1769–73, (fn. 61) the
existing lake being given a serpentine outline, and a
large evergreen shrubbery being planted. (fn. 62) A bridge
perhaps across the lake was mentioned in 1774. (fn. 63) In
the early 19th century the grounds were open to the
public, but they were destroyed evidently not long
after the house was demolished. (fn. 64)
Horsham RECTORY belonged between 1230 and
the Dissolution to Rusper priory, (fn. 65) which leased it
in 1534 for 60 years to Thomas Shirley and Thomas
Michell. In 1537 the reversion was granted by the
Crown to Robert Southwell and his wife Margaret, (fn. 66)
who exchanged it back in or before 1539; (fn. 67) in 1551
it was apparently granted to the bishop of Winchester. (fn. 68) Peter Ravenscroft at his death c. 1574
devised to his son John the remaining term of the
1534 lease, (fn. 69) and John in 1594 was granted a new
lease by the Crown; (fn. 70) in 1607 his interest was converted to a fee simple. (fn. 71) At the time of John's death
in 1615 (fn. 72) the estate was estimated at 100 a. (fn. 73) John's
son and heir Hall Ravenscroft (fn. 74) conveyed the rectory
in 1649 to Sir Henry Delves, Bt., (fn. 75) father-in-law of
his daughter Elizabeth. He was succeeded in 1663 by
his son Sir Thomas (d. 1713); the Thomas Delves
who was dealing with the estate in 1705 seems to have
been the latter's son, another Thomas. (fn. 76) John Wicker
(d. 1720) (fn. 77) had the rectory in 1707, (fn. 78) and in 1724 it
belonged to his son and namesake. (fn. 79) From 1727 it
descended with Nutham (fn. 80) until 1776, when it was
retained by Sir Thomas Broughton, (fn. 81) who sold it c.
1790 to Robert Hurst, (fn. 82) after which it descended in
the Hurst family. (fn. 83) About 1844 it comprised 207 a.,
including Parsonage farm north of the town. (fn. 84)
The manor of HEWELLS, which had tenements
in Cowfold and other parishes besides Horsham, (fn. 85)
seems originally to have been part of the rectory
estate: it is not mentioned before the 16th century,
in 1532 it belonged to Rusper priory, the impropriate
rector, (fn. 86) and the town mill which was later part of it
seems likely to be a successor to the rectory mill mentioned in 1231. (fn. 87) In 1537 the reversion of Hewells,
together with that of the rectory, was granted by the
Crown to Robert and Margaret Southwell, (fn. 88) who
conveyed it back in 1546. (fn. 89) In 1608 John Ravenscroft claimed to hold the manor under a lease from
Southwell of 1545, (fn. 90) but at his death in 1615 his
estate, like his estate in the rectory, had become a fee
simple. (fn. 91) Thereafter Hewells descended with the
rectory until 1704 or 1705 when Elizabeth Delves
conveyed it to Nathaniel Tredcroft, (fn. 92) lord of Hawksbourne (d. 1720). Afterwards Hewells descended
with Hawksbourne (fn. 93) until c. 1857, (fn. 94) when Edward
Tredcroft sold it to Henry Padwick, a local solicitor
who had acted as election agent for R. H. Hurst of
Horsham Park. (fn. 95) Padwick was living at Hewells
manor house in 1871. (fn. 96) His son and namesake had
succeeded by 1910 (fn. 97) and died in or before 1916. (fn. 98)
A manor house existed at Hewells in 1608; (fn. 99) part
of it seems to have survived as offices in 1789, (fn. 1) and
some re-used panelling from it remained in its successor in 1982. A new house was built in 1704; (fn. 2)
called The Manor House in 1982, it is a seven-bayed
three-storeyed pedimented double-pile house of
brick with corner quoins, the general design apparently being based on that of Winslow Hall (Bucks.). (fn. 3)
A large additional range was built on the north c.
1888, having two gables on the garden front, (fn. 4) and
further additions were made in the 20th century.
Two sets of 18th-century stable buildings survived
in 1982, one north and one south of the house. The
house was sold in or after 1916 (fn. 5) and from c. 1920 to
1970 was a private school, part of the southern stable
block then being converted into a chapel. (fn. 6) Since 1973
The Manor House has been the national headquarters of the R.S.P.C.A. (fn. 7) There may have been a
park west of the house in 1734, when an avenue of
trees led from the modern Worthing Road, across
land which in 1982 was school playing fields. (fn. 8)
From the 18th century onwards four small or
medium-sized estates, each based on a large house,
were formed on the outskirts of Horsham town. The
nucleus of the estate later called HORSHAM
PARK, north of the town, was a burgage called
Cockmans in 1611. (fn. 9) By the early 1720s it belonged to
John Wicker, (fn. 10) later lord of Nutham, and son of
another John Wicker who had been M.P. for Horsham. (fn. 11) After 1727 it descended with Nutham, and
in the 1770s John Baker the diarist was tenant of the
house. (fn. 12) In 1776 Sir Thomas Broughton sold the
estate with Nutham to the Revd. Joseph Jackson,
from whom it passed to William Smith (d. 1798),
whose son Edmund sold it c. 1800 to Robert Hurst,
M.P. successively for Steyning and Horsham. (fn. 13) The
Hurst family had held land in the parish possibly
since the mid 13th century; (fn. 14) Robert Hurst (d. 1483)
lived at Moated House Farm north of the town. (fn. 15)
The Robert Hurst who bought Horsham Park died
in 1843. (fn. 16) By that date the Hurst estates in the parish
totalled over 2,100 a., (fn. 17) being later further enlarged
by the acquisition of the Tredcroft estates. (fn. 18)
Robert's son Robert Henry, also M.P. for Horsham
(d. 1857), left the country to escape his creditors in
1845, (fn. 19) and was succeeded by his son, another
Robert Henry, who was also M.P. for Horsham, and
who wielded a great influence in the town until his
death in 1905. (fn. 20) His younger son Col. A. R. Hurst (fn. 21)
sold Horsham Park house and grounds in 1928 to
the urban district council. (fn. 22)
Horsham Park house, known since c. 1930 as Park
House, (fn. 23) incorporates in an inner wall part of a
timber-framed range which seems to have occupied
an area of the front half of the house. The present
house, which has a double-pile plan and a main east
front of 9 bays, dates from a rebuilding of the early
18th century; (fn. 24) the west front, however, seems to be
mid 18th-century. (fn. 25) Both east and west fronts are
pedimented and of brick with stone dressings, the
east front having pilaster strips with channelled
rustication; the architectural inspiration for both
was evidently Hewells manor house, built shortly
before. The staircase is apparently 18th-century, as
is the entrance hall with a screen of Ionic columns.
Many other rooms also have mid 18th-century doorcases, fireplaces, or ceilings. An 18th-century Chinese
wallpaper from one room was sold by the urban
district council in 1937. (fn. 26) Some additions to the
house were made after its purchase by the council,
and in the early 1980s it was fully restored after a
fire.
The park belonging to the house was presumably
laid out after the early 18th-century remodelling of
the building, through the engrossment of adjacent
closes, including several burgage properties. (fn. 27) By
1787 it extended some way west of the house, (fn. 28) and
by 1812 as far as North Parade. Two lakes had been
created by that time. (fn. 29) The park was further enlarged
before 1982, when the two lakes survived as a single
piece of water.
Samuel Blunt, a member of a family recorded in
Horsham since the 17th century, (fn. 30) built a new house,
Springfield, north-west of the town, shortly before
1758. (fn. 31) At his death in 1799 it passed to his grandson
Francis Scawen Blunt (d. 1842), (fn. 32) who leased it between 1819 and 1836 to the Thornton family. In
1819 the estate comprised 206 a. (fn. 33) Blunt's son and
namesake owned it in 1870, when it was again
tenanted, but died two years later. (fn. 34) By 1888 the
house had become a school called Horsham College, (fn. 35)
a successor to which was opened in 1904 by Gerald
Blunt. (fn. 36) Springfield was still a school in 1982. The
house is of brick, and has seven bays and three
storeys, its east faôade, like that of Horsham Park
house, deriving stylistically from the east front of
Hewells manor house. (fn. 37) One room has a fine rococo
plaster ceiling, but other rooms have 18th-century
decoration of a character which was old-fashioned
for the 1750s. The stables and offices to the west are
contemporary with the house, and are connected to
it by curved passages. In 1758 there was a park of c.
35 a. with a lake, lying south of the house; (fn. 38) most of
its area was built on in the 1960s. (fn. 39)
The estate called Coolhurst, south-east of the
town, which c. 1844 comprised 55 a., (fn. 40) was in origin
a copyhold of Shortsfield manor, recorded from
1402. (fn. 41) In 1642 Sir William Ford and John Caryll
owned it. (fn. 42) Later it passed to the Linfield family: (fn. 43)
John Linfield was dealing with land in Horsham in
1715 and 1722, (fn. 44) and Charles Linfield in 1793 leased
Coolhurst to Edward Carter, who was apparently
already tenant. (fn. 45) In 1807 he or another member of
the Linfield family sold it to George Stewart, earl of
Galloway, (fn. 46) who was living there in 1813. (fn. 47) He sold
it to Arthur Chichester (created in 1831 Lord
Templemore), (fn. 48) who had sold it by 1830 to Mary
Compton, dowager marchioness of Northampton.
At her death in 1843 (fn. 49) it passed to her daughter
Frances Elizabeth, wife of Charles Scrase-Dickins. (fn. 50)
He held it in 1870, (fn. 51) but was succeeded before 1887 (fn. 52)
by Charles Robert Scrase-Dickins (d. 1947). (fn. 53) The
later history of the estate has not been traced.
A house existed by 1642, (fn. 54) part of which, of stone
and red brick, survived in 1959 at the rear of the
former service range. (fn. 55) The rest was rebuilt shortly
before 1835 in Elizabethan style to the designs of
P. F. Robinson; it is asymmetrical and cemented,
with large bay windows, and the parapets of the
south and west fronts are decorated in 16th-century
style by Latin psalm sentences in large openwork
characters. (fn. 56) About 1950 the house was a country
club, (fn. 57) but by c. 1957 (fn. 58) it had become a school, St.
John's College, as it remained in 1981. The attached
park was created apparently at the same time as the
present house, and by 1868 included Birchen Bridge
pond in Nuthurst. (fn. 59) In 1835 it had fine trees and
rhododendrons. (fn. 60) In the early 20th century it was
enlarged greatly on the south in Nuthurst, (fn. 61) but by
1981 it had returned to roughly its late 19th-century
size. In 1936 it included a woodland garden. (fn. 62)
Holbrook, north of the town, which comprised
172 a. c. 1844, (fn. 63) was mentioned as a tenement of
Tarring Marlpost manor perhaps from c. 1285, (fn. 64) and
the Holbrook family was recorded in Horsham in the
15th century. (fn. 65) In 1799 the estate belonged to John
Manley, who sold it c. 1811 to Admiral Sir James
Hawkins Whitshed. He sold it in 1843 to R. H. Hurst
of Horsham Park, whose mortgagee Henry Padwick
sold it c. 1844 (fn. 66) to (Sir) W. R. Seymour Fitzgerald,
M.P. for Horsham from 1852. (fn. 67) In 1877 it was sold
to H. D. Harrison, who sold it in 1888 to A. R.
Creyke (fn. 68) (d. before 1895). (fn. 69) His widow lived there
until her death in 1905, and was succeeded by her
niece, whose husband H. Alan Scott, a businessman
with New Zealand connexions, had Holbrook in
1910. (fn. 70) W. A. Wigram was living there in 1927. (fn. 71)
About 1950, when the estate comprised 175 a., it was
sold by the executors of E. T. Neathercoat. (fn. 72)
There was a house of red brick at Holbrook, described as of recent construction, c. 1800. (fn. 73) After c.
1844 it was greatly enlarged by Sir Seymour Fitzgerald (fn. 74) as an asymmetrical, rendered building in
Italianate style, with a north-east tower. A park had
been laid out by c. 1844, including a sheet of water
south of the house, (fn. 75) and comprised 82 a. in 1950. (fn. 76)
The house had been converted by c. 1975 into luxury
flats. (fn. 77)
Archbishop George Abbot in 1629 gave to Holy
Trinity hospital, Guildford, which he had founded
ten years earlier, Highland farm (100 a.) in the east
part of Horsham parish. (fn. 78) About 1844 the estate was
described as 131 a. (fn. 79) The hospital sold it c. 1878. (fn. 80)
The printer Bernard Lintott (d. 1736) bought
estates in and near Southwater. He was succeeded
by his son Henry (d. 1758), whose daughter and heir
Catherine married Sir Henry Fletcher of Walton-onThames (Surr.) (created Bt. 1782; d. 1807). Thereafter the estates descended in the direct line through
Sir Henry (d. 1821) and Sir Henry (d. 1851) to Sir
Henry (d. 1910), who took the surname AubreyFletcher. (fn. 81) About 1844 the Fletcher estates in Horsham totalled nearly 750 a. (fn. 82) The last-named Sir
Henry's brother and heir Sir Lancelot (d. 1937) was
succeeded by his son Sir Henry (d. 1969), whose son
Sir John was still alive in 1983, when the estates still
totalled over 450 a. (fn. 83)