BOXGROVE
The parish, containing 3,677 acres, consists of a
main block about 2 miles from north to south and the
same from east to west, with a projection southwards
for about a mile on the east. On the west a detached
portion containing Goodwood House and part of the
Park lay within Westhampnett, into which parish it
has now been absorbed for administrative purposes.
The southern part is flat, lying at a height of about
60 ft., but north of the village it rises fairly rapidly,
reaching 400 ft. on Hat Hill at the north-west corner
of the parish. The road from Chichester to Petworth
crosses the parish diagonally, running on the line of the
Roman Stane Street for 2 miles, when it diverges
slightly to the east, rejoining the old line near Seabeach on the eastern boundary. The road to Arundel
runs from west to east in the south of the parish, these
two main roads being connected by one road to
Strettington and another, past the church and village,
to Halnaker.
The remains of the conventual buildings of Boxgrove
Priory, which lie to the north of the church, are scanty. (fn. 1)
Of the cloister arcade, most probably of wood, there is
no trace; its width (10 ft.) may be inferred from the
foundations of two piers to carry flying buttresses to
support the west wall of the dorter; the corbels on the
walls of transept and nave give some clue to the design
of the cloister roof.
The front of the chapter-house, early-12th-century,
follows the usual design of a doorway flanked by twolight windows; the responds of the former are square
with attached shafts carrying an inner order, which in
the flanking windows is that of the lights, divided by a
shaft with capital and base. The vault was in three bays
and three alleys; the foundation of one of the four supporting piers is traceable, and the springings of a ribless groined vault, and the corbels they rest on, are
visible on its south and west walls.
North of this is one jamb of a doorway leading either
into the warming-house or into a passage.
No other part of the buildings surrounding the
cloister exists above ground, though dry weather has
made it possible to detect foundations. The frater (in
the usual position for a Benedictine house) and kitchen
were converted into a dwelling-house at the Suppression and pulled down in about 1780. (fn. 2) The ancient
well, steened with hard chalk, and conveniently placed
for the kitchen, still exists. The foundations north of it
are presumably those of post-Suppression buildings.
North-east of the cloister lay a separate building,
most probably the monastic guest-house, (fn. 3) of the early
14th century. It consisted of a rectangular building
running north and south divided into two unequal parts;
on the west side of this there was a subsidiary wing at
the northern end and a porch farther south; the
northern and larger part of the main building alone
survives, though roofless. (fn. 4) It was of two stories; the
lower was vaulted in five bays and two alleys; some
corbels and moulded springings still exist. Access was
by a porch (destroyed) whose vaulting sprang from
corbels carved with foliage, through a doorway with
moulded pointed arch, flanked by a small lancet window. In the south wall a plain pointed doorway led to
the ground floor of the southern part of the building
(which was not vaulted). Remains of a small doorway
exist in the east wall and, farther north, the opening of
what evidently was a two-light window; on the south
side where the subsidiary wing adjoined are the remains
of a narrow skew passage, awkwardly placed and perhaps not part of the original design, and in the next bay
the tiled back of a large fire-place.
The upper floor seems to have resembled a contemporary layman's house, the surviving building being
the Great Hall, the north-west wing containing the
stairs and perhaps the buttery, while the south wing
and the upper story of the porch served as withdrawingrooms. Three doorways with plain pointed heads
exist; one at the north-west corner presumably led to
the screens passage, the other two to the two withdrawing-rooms. In the north wall is a large two-light
window with trefoil-headed lights surmounted by a
quatrefoil (the mullion and part of the head are
missing), the rear-arch is moulded, below sill level are
two stone seats. What is apparently a similar window
exists in the west wall, and the older drawings give
reason to believe that there were two similar ones in
the east wall, which is now ruined above ground-floor
level. In each gable above tie-beam level are three
lancets intended as smoke outlets.
The village street runs north and south to the west
of the Priory Church. Most of the buildings are post1700, but at least two are earlier. On the west side is a
thatched house with an inscription, RB 1641, on a stone
panel in the chimney-shaft. The north half of the
house is of timber-framing of that period with red
brick infilling and stone foundations. The south half
has flint-rubble walls and was probably an earlier building adapted in the 1641 lengthening. The chimneystack in this half has a wide fire-place. East of it is the
entrance lobby and west of it an ancient steep staircase
of oak. The entrance is flanked by low buttresses and
above it is a tiny blocked window of stone. The ceiling
beams are chamfered.
A quarter of a mile to the south on the other side is a
late-17th-century thatched cottage of flint rubble with
lacing courses, angle dressings, and window openings of
red brick. The chimney-stacks are at the ends.
The group of buildings at Crockerhill, a mile farther
east on the Arundel road, is mostly of the 18th century
with walls of flints or bricks. One thatched cottage
bears the inscription, M/IM 1738. Another on the west
side of the Eartham road is partly of flints with 17thcentury brick dressings and has, in the south end-wall,
a blocked window with a label.
Oldbury Farm, ¼ mile south of Crockerhill at the
angle of a loop-road, incorporates the remains of a
building of c. 1500, but has been much altered. It
faces south. The west end is of flint rubble and has a
massive projecting chimney-stack of similar masonry
with stone angle-dressings and plinth; it is gathered in
above the eaves of the roof to an 18th-century brick
shaft. The fire-place inside is of stone with moulded
jambs and four-centred and square head with carved
foliage spandrels. North and south of the chimneystack are small windows of brickwork with labels. The
front wall, with thin brick dressings at the west angle,
is of flint-work up to a straight joint, c. 30 ft. from the
west; beyond this it is of 18th-century brickwork. The
doors and windows are modern. One ceiling beam in
the west room is of early-16th-century moulding and
is carried on similarly moulded east and west posts.
The roof is thatched.
A farmhouse, now tenements, 3/8 mile to the west of
Oldbury Farm on the loop-road, is an early-17thcentury or earlier house facing south. The west end is
of flint and stone rubble with a stone plinth and angle
dressings, but the front is covered with rough-cast
cement. The easternmost part was a low building of
17th-century brickwork, heightened much later to
tally with the main block. The west wall has blocked
windows, the upper with a brick label. The massive
central chimney-stack, of thin bricks, is of rebated type
with a V-shaped middle front pilaster and square back
pilaster. The fire-places are reduced for modern grates.
The ceilings have stop-chamfered beams. The back
wall, covered by later additions, is of timber-framing.
Oar Farm, a mile south of the last and ½ mile west
of Aldingbourne, is a house of c. 1600 refronted with
18th-century and later brickwork, but the gabled east
wall is of original bricks with a chamfered plinth and
a string-course. It has a central chimney-stack with a
wide fire-place having a cambered and chamfered
bressummer, and the ceilings have chamfered beams.
At Strettington, about a mile west of the church, is
an early-17th-century thatched house facing east. The
walls are of flints and some free-stone, with 17th-century brick angles and later brick window openings.
The north half has an internal chimney-stack with
reduced fire-places and a rebated shaft of thin bricks.
At the south end is a fine projecting chimney-stack of
flints with brick angles gathered in above with brick
cross-stepping to a rebated shaft.
Farther south a farmhouse, formerly known as
Strettington House, now called 'The Old House', dates
from c. 1550–60. The south front is faced with dressed
flints and has a moulded brick plinth and thin-brick
angle-dressings. The windows have moulded brick
labels and have been reduced for narrower frames. An
upper window on the west wall is blocked and retains
vestiges of the original plaster applied to represent
stonework. The central chimney-stack has original
four-centred fire-places of brick, one plastered, and
above the tiled roof a shaft of a modified cross-plan.
Most of the rooms have encased beams and early-18th-century wall linings, but the westernmost room shows
wide flat ceiling-joists. A gabled stair-wing behind is of
ancient flint rubble in the lower part and timberframing above.
Other buildings in Strettington are of flint and brickwork with tiled roofs, but apparently all later than 1700.
At Halnaker hamlet, about ¼ mile north of the
church, most of the domestic buildings are of the 18th
century or later, but a thatched cottage on the north
side of the road has walls partly of 17th-century timberframing and partly of flint-work, some of it ancient. At
one end is a late-17th-century chimney-stack.
Seabeach, 1¾ miles north-east of the church, is a
small house of two stories and attics, facing south-east.
The front wall is of checker-work in flints and pieces of
freestone and may be of the 16th century. The windows are modern reductions of wider openings. At
the first-floor level is a brick string-course. The northeast end is of similar material, but the back half of the
gable-head was heightened at some later period, and it
has a late-17th-century brick chimney-shaft. At the
south-west end is a modern lengthening, but above the
original end is a similar chimney-shaft. Both rise from
wide-splayed fire-places (now reduced for modern
grates) across the rear angles of the two rooms. The
ceiling beams are chamfered.
On Halnaker Hill south-west of Seabeach stands
an 18th-century windmill, (fn. 5) forming a conspicuous
landmark. It is of round tapering form with a wooden
cap and the skeletons of the four sails.
Halnaker House, (fn. 6) which was allowed to fall into
total ruin during the 19th century, was a semi-fortified
manor house, surrounded by a curtain-wall with a gatehouse in the south range and a square tower at the
south-west angle. There may have been towers at
the other angles. Buildings occupied three sides of the
court, those on the north including the hall. The main
structure of the buildings was of the 14th century, with
modifications in the 16th century; but the chapel, in
the middle of the east range, was of the 13th century,
having six lancet windows on each side and a group of
three at the east end.
The Goodwood Park estate, on which a house had
been built before 1675, was bought c. 1720 by the 1st
Duke of Richmond. (fn. 7) A house was built for the second
duke by Sir William Chambers, with the principal
front, of Portland stone, facing south. This was much
enlarged for the 3rd duke by James Wyatt in squared
flints, (fn. 8) the front, facing east, having a central portico
of two stories of six columns and dome-capped angleturrets. The house is architecturally undistinguished,
its interest lying mainly in its furnishing and pictures,
mostly portraits, (fn. 9) and in the beauty of its grounds. In
the park are many fine trees, including a large number
of cedars of Lebanon planted in 1761. An 18thcentury 'grotto', known as 'Carne's Seat' from the name
of an old retainer of the 3rd Duke, is famous for the
beauty of its view. (fn. 10)
MANORS
Boxgrove was held of Edward the Confessor by two unnamed freemen. In 1086
it was held of Earl Roger by William,
whose estates afterwards formed the honor of Halnaker
(see below); of its 6 hides 'the clerks of the church'
held 1 hide, Humphrey 3 hides 1 virgate, Nigel 1 hide
1 virgate, and William ½ hide. (fn. 11) Robert de Haye in
1105 gave to the abbey of Lessay in Normandy the
church of St. Mary of Boxgrove, with 2½ hides of land
round it, and the whole tithe of that parish and of his
Christmas rents there, and the tithe of his wood from
pannage and sale, with firing and timber for their
buildings, pannage for their swine, and pasture for
their stock, as well as other churches and tithes. (fn. 12) This
resulted in the formation of the priory of Boxgrove, (fn. 13)
at first a cell of Lessay, but after 1339 independent of
the mother house, and the prior's estates in Boxgrove
and Worth (fn. 14) constituted in 1349 a ½ fee held of
Halnaker. (fn. 15) In 1535 the manor of BOXGROVE was
farmed at £20 12s., (fn. 16) and after the dissolution of the
priory it was acquired by Thomas West, Lord de la
Warre, (fn. 17) and descended with Halnaker.
HALNAKER
HALNAKER
(fn. 18) is alleged to have been given by
King Eadwig to Bishop Brithelm in 956. (fn. 19) If such a
grant was made, it was soon lost to the see, and the
manor was held in the time of the Confessor by Alward
and in 1086 by William under Earl Roger. The main
portion was assessed at 9 hides, (fn. 20) but there was an
additional hide, held by the same persons, surveyed
separately; (fn. 21) there were appurtenant to the manor 3
burgesses in Chichester, where houses in St. Pancras
were still held of this manor in the late 18th century. (fn. 22)
The estates of this William (fn. 23) came into the king's hands
and were granted in or before 1105 by Henry I to
Robert de Haye, son of Rannulf the steward of Count
Robert of Mortain. (fn. 24) They constituted the honor of
Halnaker, held of the honor of Arundel as 12 knights'
fees. (fn. 25) The honor passed by the marriage of Robert's
daughter Cecily to Roger de St. John, (fn. 26) who died about
1130. His sons William and Robert were still living in
1187 and apparently held the honor jointly; (fn. 27) they
left no issue and it passed through their sister Muriel,
who had married Rainald d'Orival, (fn. 28) and her daughter
Mabel, wife of Adam de Port of Basing (Hants), to
the latter's son William, who took
the name of St. John. His son
Robert left a son John (fn. 29) who died
in 1301, holding the manor of
Halnaker of Sir Robert de Mohaut, one of the coheirs of the
Earl of Arundel, by service of 4
knights' fees; the manor then contained 400 acres of arable, 20
acres of meadow, a windmill, and
a pigeon-house; there were 21
freeholders and 14 customary
tenants, each with a yardland containing 12 acres, and the total value was £38 12s. 8¼d.;
the manors of Walberton, Barnham, and Woodcote in
Westhampnett were members of Halnaker. (fn. 30) His son
and heir John de St. John married Isabel de Courtenay
and had two sons, William who died without issue (fn. 31) , and
Hugh who succeeded his father in 1329. (fn. 32) Hugh de
St. John died in 1337, holding Halnaker of Queen
Isabelle, with whom Robert de Morley, heir of Robert
de Mohaut, had exchanged the overlordship in 1335, (fn. 33)
and leaving an infant son Edmund, aged 4. (fn. 34) Edmund
died in 1347 while still a minor in the king's custody.
The manor at this time was said to be held as 1½ fees,
and to be charged with the render at Christmas of a pig
and two trees to the hospital of St. James outside
Chichester, and of a 'second best' pig and a tree to the
hospital of 'Lodesdon', (fn. 35) in Westhampnett. (fn. 36)

St. John. Argent a chief gules with two molets or thereon.
Edmund St. John left a widow Elizabeth, who
received one third of the manor in dower, (fn. 37) and two
sisters his coheirs. The elder, Margaret, married John
de St. Philibert, and in October 1347 they agreed to a
division of the estates by which Halnaker passed to
the younger sister Isabel, then wife of Henry de
Burghersh. (fn. 38) Henry died in November 1349 and
Isabel immediately married Sir Luke de Ponyngs. (fn. 39)
On the death of Margaret St. Philibert and her young
son in 1361 the whole St. John inheritance was reunited. (fn. 40) Sir Luke died in 1376 (fn. 41) and was followed by
his eldest surviving son Sir Thomas, who succeeded
his mother in 1393 and used, but apparently incorrectly,
the title of Lord St. John. (fn. 42) Sir Thomas possibly
moved to Basing (Hants), (fn. 43) the headquarters of the
St. John barony, as he made over Halnaker to his son
Hugh. (fn. 44) The latter, however, predeceased his father,
dying in December 1426, when Halnaker reverted to
Sir Thomas, (fn. 45) who, with his wife Maud, made a settlement of these estates in the following year (fn. 46) and died in
1429. (fn. 47) His widow Maud, who subsequently married
Hugh Halsham, held the manor till her death in 1453, (fn. 48)
when it passed under the settlement of 1427 to John
Bonville, son of Joan, eldest of the three daughters of
Hugh Ponyngs. (fn. 49) John died in 1495 and Katherine
his widow held Halnaker until her death in 1498, (fn. 50)
when it passed under settlement to their younger
daughter Elizabeth and her husband Thomas West,
Lord de la Warre. (fn. 51) At the time of the Dissolution
Lord de la Warre tried to save Boxgrove Priory, (fn. 52) but
failing to do so secured for himself the site and the
manor of Boxgrove. (fn. 53) In 1540, however, he and his
wife were induced to convey Halnaker and Boxgrove
to the king in exchange for the suppressed abbey of
Wherwell (Hants). (fn. 54)
Henry VIII made John Jenyns steward and bailiff
of the manors of Boxgrove and Halnaker, with its
members, and keeper of the house and parks in 1544, (fn. 55)
but two years later gave these offices to Henry, Earl of
Arundel, (fn. 56) to whom Queen Elizabeth in 1561 granted
the manors. (fn. 57) Five years later the earl settled these and
other manors on John, Lord Lumley, who had married
his elder daughter Jane. (fn. 58) They seem, however, to
have been in the hands of Thomas
Howard, Duke of Norfolk, who
had married the earl's younger
daughter Mary (died 1557), in
1570. (fn. 59) The duke was attainted
and executed in 1572, and in
1587 Lord Lumley sold the two
manors to John Morley, (fn. 60) of
Saxham in Suffolk. (fn. 61) His son Sir
John died in 1622 (fn. 62) and left a son
Sir William Morley, K.B., who
died in 1701, leaving no male
issue. Sir William's daughter
Mary married in 1704, in Halnaker chapel, James, Earl
of Derby, and died at the age of 84 in 1752. As she
had no surviving child she left Halnaker to her distant
relative Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, bt., greatgrandson
of Sir John Morley's eldest daughter. (fn. 63) Sir Thomas
in 1765 sold the estate for £48,000 to Charles, Duke
of Richmond, Lennox, and Aubigny, (fn. 64) from whom
it has descended to the present Duke of Richmond.

Morley. Sable a fleur de lis or coming out of a leopard's head argent.
The PARK of Halnaker possibly originated in a
grant of free warren made in 1253 to Robert de St.
John for his demesnes at Halnaker, Goodwood, and
elsewhere, outside the limits of the forest. (fn. 65) An inquiry
as to the recent enlargement of the park by 60 acres
was ordered in 1283, (fn. 66) and it was said to contain 150
acres in 1329, and to be 2 leagues round in 1337. (fn. 67)
Hugh, elder son of Lord St. John, had licence in 1404
to inclose 300 acres of land and wood within the lordship of Halnaker and make a park, according to the
metes begun by his father, (fn. 68) but possibly did not avail
himself of it, as the licence was renewed to Thomas and
Elizabeth West in 1517. (fn. 69) This may be the origin of
Goodwood Park, which first appears in 1540, when it
was part of the Halnaker estate, (fn. 70) as it was also in 1561. (fn. 71)
In 1570 Halnaker Park was estimated to be 4 miles in
compass and supported 800 deer. (fn. 72) It continued to
descend with the manor, but Goodwood Park was sold
in 1584 by Lord Lumley to Henry and Elizabeth
Walrond, who transferred it in 1597 to Thomas Cesar;
he conveyed it in 1599 to Thomas Bennett, who in
1609 sold it to Sir Edward Fraunceis. (fn. 73) The Earl of
Northumberland in 1657 sold it, with 'the house lately
erected therein', to John Caryll, (fn. 74) who conveyed the
park and mansion house to Anthony Kempe in 1675, (fn. 75)
and it subsequently came to the Comptons of East
Lavant, from whom it was bought, about 1720, by the
Duke of Richmond. (fn. 76)
EAST HAMPNETT (fn. 77)
EAST HAMPNETT was held in the time of the
Confessor by Alward, and in 1086 by Nigel under
William the tenant of Halnaker, and was assessed at
7 hides. (fn. 78) Nigel seems to have been the ancestor of the
Sartilli family, (fn. 79) and Gilbert de Sartilli at the end of the
12th century gave to Boxgrove Priory 1½ virgates in
East Hampnett, and 10s. rent there to provide wine
for mass. (fn. 80) In 1214 Godfrey de Craucumbe, who was
grandson of Clarice daughter of Gilbert de Sartilli, (fn. 81)
granted to William Morand for life 2/3 fee here. (fn. 82) East
Hampnett is next found in the hands of the Lovels of
Castle Cary (Somerset). Richard Lovel and Thomas
de Argentein were holding, apparently jointly, lands
and pasturage rights here in 1225. (fn. 83) Richard's grandson Hugh Lovel (fn. 84) died in 1290 holding a knight's fee, (fn. 85)
of which ⅓ was held by his daughter Olive de Gurney,
to whom he had given half the manor of Hampnett ten
years before she married John de Gurney; (fn. 86) ⅓ by
William Dawtrey, which was given to his mother
(Alice, probably the daughter of Hugh's father Henry) (fn. 87)
as a marriage portion; and ⅓ by John de Chaggele in
dower of Alice his wife, of the inheritance of William de
Argenteyn, given in marriage with William's grandmother (probably Henry Lovel's other daughter
Christiane). (fn. 88) Accordingly the three chief contributors
to the subsidy of 1296 in East Hampnett were Olive
de Gurney, John de Chaggele, and William Dawtrey. (fn. 89)
Olive de Gurney died in 1296, holding of the heir
of Hugh Lovel ⅓ fee in East Hampnett, her heir being
her daughter Elizabeth 'de Badeham'. (fn. 90) Elizabeth and
her husband John 'de Badeham', or 'Abadam', settled
the manor of Hampnett and other manors, including
Beverston (Gloucs.), on themselves and her heirs in
1297. (fn. 91) In 1329 Thomas ap Adam, son of Sir John
ap Adam of Beverston, granted the manor to Sir John
Inge. (fn. 92) Eight years later a messuage, 2 carucates of
land, a mill, and rent in East Hampnett was settled for
life on John Inge and Alice Basset, (fn. 93) and in 1340 they
sold their respective rights in the manor to Richard,
Earl of Arundel. (fn. 94) A further sale to the earl in 1376 of
a messuage, 2 carucates, a mill, and rent by Roger Dore
and Joan his wife (fn. 95) probably represents the reversionary
interest of Alice's daughter Joan. (fn. 96) The manor, held
of the king, (fn. 97) descended with the Earls of Arundel and
passed to Lord Lumley, who mortgaged it in 1568 to
Edward Jackman, (fn. 98) and sold it in 1584 to Edward
Peckham and Grace his wife. (fn. 99) Their son Henry died
on 1 November 1616 seised of the manor, (fn. 100) and his
grandson John held courts until 1674. (fn. 101) The manor is
said to have been sold in 1682 to Sir George Jeffreys,
the notorious Lord Chancellor of James II, (fn. 102) and he
held courts from 27 April 1682 to 22 June 1686; (fn. 103)
in the following year he sold the manor to Richard
Smith of London, to the use of John Gore for life, and
then to his sons and their heirs male, or in default to
John Gore's grandson Arthur Turnour. (fn. 104) A court of
the manor was held on 11 May 1688 by John Gore, (fn. 105)
and Arthur Tournour held courts from 1696 to 1721. (fn. 106)
From Arthur Turnour's son Edward, who died in 1736,
the manor passed to his cousin Sarah wife of Joseph
Garth. Her son Edward took the name of Turnour
and was created Earl Winterton in 1766, (fn. 107) and the
manor of East Hampnett descended in that family until
1920, when it was acquired by the West Sussex County
Council.
Reverting to 1290, the ⅓ fee of the Argenteyns may
have been assimilated with the holdings of that family
in Northmundham. The ⅓ held by William Dawtrey
descended to his granddaughter Eve, the widow of
Edward de St. John at the time of her death in 1354; (fn. 108)
and her heir Roger, son of her first husband John de
Shelvestrode, in 1364 released his rights in his inheritance in East Hampnett to Richard, Earl of Arundel, (fn. 109)
after which time it was presumably united with the
portion already in the earl's hands.
STRETTINGTON (fn. 110)
STRETTINGTON
appears in Domesday as three
estates; the largest, rated at 10 hides, with 3 haws in
Chichester, had been held of King Edward by four
free men and was held in 1086 by William; the second,
rated at 3 hides, with 1 haw, had been held by Godwin,
a free man, and was then held by Austin; the third, of
2 hides, had also belonged to Godwin and was then
held by Arnald, (fn. 111) who was probably the Ernald who
held at Up-Waltham, Graffham, and South Stoke.
William's estate seems to have been united to his chief
manor of Halnaker and only appears as 'the manor of
Stretehampton' in 1506, (fn. 112) 1536, (fn. 113) and 1566, (fn. 114) being
elsewhere referred to only as tenements or lands.
William de St. John in about 1187 gave to Boxgrove
Priory the tithes of his rents in Strettington, amounting
to 8s., and pasturage rights there. (fn. 115)
Tithes in Graffham and Strettington were given in
about 1100 to the abbey of Troarn, (fn. 116) presumably by
Ernald or his successor. Strettington seems to have
come to Hugh de Falaise, who held 5 knights' fees of
the honor of Arundel c. 1135. (fn. 117) Hugh left two
daughters, Emma and Agnes, of whom the latter
married Hugh de Gundevill and also had two daughters,
Agnes who married Geoffrey son of Azo, and another
who married Richard Murdac. (fn. 118) Hugh de Gundevill
died in 1181, (fn. 119) holding land in Strettington, (fn. 120) and
Henry II gave this land to Henry Turpin, who was his
chamberlain. When Richard I went to the Holy Land
Henry went with him, and in his absence Geoffrey son
of Azo and Agnes brought a suit against him and
obtained possession. Henry seems meanwhile to have
died, as his son William Turpin sent to King Richard
at Messina and recovered Strettington and held it until
William, Earl of Arundel, 'knowing the ill will which
King Richard had to the said William', disseised him. (fn. 121)
Eventually, in 1207, William Turpin sold his claim to
this knight's fee to Agnes de Gundevill. (fn. 122) In 1229 the
Strettington fee was in dispute between the representatives of the two daughters of Hugh de Falaise, (fn. 123) and
in 1235 the whole fee was assigned by William Aguillon,
Richard de Grensted, and Gilbert Marshal and Cecily
his wife, descendants of Emma de Falaise, to Margaret
widow of Nicholas de Limesy, granddaughter of Agnes,
and Walter de Limesy her son. (fn. 124) At about this time
Margaret de Limesy and Walter made arrangements
with the Prior of Boxgrove and the Vicar of Westhampnett by which they were allowed to have a chapel
in their manor of 'Westrethampton', provided that
their chaplain did not celebrate any offices but the mass
and the blessing of bread and water, and that only for
members of the household, not admitting parishioners. (fn. 125)
On the partition of the Arundel fees after the death of
Hugh d'Aubigny, Earl of Arundel, in 1243 John
FitzAlan received 1⅓ fee in Strettington, and ½ fee
which Walter de Cherleton held in the same vill, (fn. 126)
but neither these fees nor this manor of (West)
Strettington can be traced later.
In two lists of the fees attached to the honor of
Halnaker is found 1/10 fee in Strettington held in 1337
by John Haket, Ralph St. Oweyn, and William atte
Cleye, (fn. 127) and in 1347 by John Haket, Ralph St.
Oweyn, and the Master of the Knights Hospitallers of
Poling. (fn. 128) As these last three names are those of three
of the holders of the manor of Islesham, which had been
divided, c. 1233, between the four daughters of
Reynold Aguillon, (fn. 129) it is probable that the 1/10 fee had
been held by Reynold, but of its earlier and later history
there seems to be no trace.
In 1327 the largest taxpayer, with the exception of
John de St. John, in the vill of Halnaker was Thomas
de Seuebech, (fn. 130) who died in 1329 holding land in
Halnaker, Seabeach, and Boxgrove, (fn. 131) which constituted 1/8 fee held in that year of the honor of Halnaker
by the heirs of the said Thomas, (fn. 132) evidently Hugh de
Seuebeche who appears in the subsidy of 1332. (fn. 133)
Richard de Seuebech held 1/10 knight's fee in Seabeach
in 1336 (fn. 134) and 1/16 fee in Halnaker in 1349. (fn. 135) In the
subsidy of 1332 in the vill of Easthampnett occurs the
name of Ralph atte Moure, (fn. 136) who in 1336 held 1/10 fee
at Crocker Hill (fn. 137) and was presumably an ancestor of
Thomas atte More who held part of a fee at Crocker
Hill in 1349 (fn. 138) and died in 1374 holding of Sir Luke
de Ponynges land at Oldbury and left a son John. (fn. 139)
Lands in 'Oldebery alias Eldebery' and 'Seebeche alias
Sewenbech' were held by Humphrey Hiberden at his
death in 1517, when his son and heir John was aged
10. (fn. 140) In 1540 John and Thomas Hiberden sold to
Richard Sackville the manors of OLDBURY and
SEABEACH. (fn. 141) Sir Richard Sackville made certain
leases of the manorial lands in 1551, (fn. 142) but shortly after
this the manors seem to have come into the hands of
Lord Clinton and to have been granted by him to
Edward VI in exchange for other property. (fn. 143) A
survey of the combined manors in 1608, (fn. 144) when they
were in the tenure of John Holney under a lease for
sixty years dating from 1551, shows at Oldbury a
ruinous house and 60 acres of arable and pasture, at
Seabeach a house and 61 acres, and grazing rights for
sheep on the downs of Halnaker and Eartham. Further
details are given in the Parliamentary Surveys of the
two manors, treated separately, made in 1650. (fn. 145) They
were at this time in the tenure of Sir William Morley
of Halnaker. The manors were sold in 1650 to William
Cawley of Chichester, (fn. 146) but at the Restoration reverted
to the Crown, (fn. 147) and were leased during most of the
18th century to the Dukes of Leeds. (fn. 148)
CHURCH
The church of ST. MARY AND ST.
BLAISE, (fn. 149) formerly the priory church,
stands east of the village street on the south
side of the site of the former conventual buildings; it is
built of flint with ashlar dressings, mostly of Caen stone,
and is roofed with tile. It consists of aisled choir flanked
by a sacristy on the north, transepts, crossing and
central tower, nave and south aisle with porch (formerly
a chapel) in the angle between it and the transept. The
nave and aisle originally extended some distance west
of the present building, and there was a north aisle west
of the monastic cloister.
The church mentioned in Domesday Book (fn. 150) seems
to have been collegiate; but no remains of that date
exist, though the absence of a north aisle next to the
cloisters suggests that an un-aisled pre-Conquest nave
may have formed part of the original priory church.
In the 12th century, after the foundation of the priory,
there was built an aisled (fn. 151) east limb, transepts, and two
bays of the nave. Later in the 12th century the crossing piers were reconstructed and the present tower
built; about the same time the nave was extended to its
(pre-Suppression) full length, and the clearstory of the
earlier part reconstructed. Shortly after, probably very
soon after 1200, (fn. 152) the whole east limb was rebuilt.
The chapel south of the nave is of the 14th century,
the sacristy of the 15th; the de la Warr chantry chapel
is dated 1532. The unroofing of the western part of
the nave and the conversion of the flanking chapel into
a porch must have followed hard on the suppression of
the priory in 1537.
At the east end of the choir are two buttresses of
three stages each with sloping offsets.
The east window is a group of three lancets with
moulded rear-arches and Purbeck marble shafts; the
middle lancet is higher than the others.
The choir itself is vaulted in four bays, but its aisles
in eight; the arcades separating them have a form more
usual in triforia than in ground stages, that of an arch
(in this case semicircular) inclosing two arches (in this
case pointed). The first and second principal piers,
counting from the east, are of freestone, each surrounded by a cluster of four attached shafts and four
detached ones of Purbeck marble; the bases, of freestone, and the capitals, of Purbeck, are moulded; the
east responds have the form of half-piers. The third
principal pier is a plain octagon of freestone with
moulded Purbeck capital, and the west respond is like
half of it. The arches supported by these are of one
order, moulded and with hood-mould, and extend
through the wall. (fn. 153) The intermediate piers in the first
two double bays are of five Purbeck shafts each, (fn. 154) and
support moulded arches of two orders; but the second
pier on the south side has been removed, and the two
pointed arches converted into a single four-centred one,
to provide room for the de la Warr chantry. The pier
in the third double bay is cylindrical, of Purbeck, that
in the fourth is octagonal, of freestone with Purbeck
capital. The tympanum over each intermediate pier
has a moulded quatrefoil panel.
There is no triforium stage; but the aisle vault goes
no higher than the crowns of the sub-arches, and the
glazed openings of the clearstory windows are not
carried so low as the moulded string-course over the
pier arches; the triforium chamber lies behind this
space. The clearstory passage, reached from a newel
staircase at the west end of the south choir aisle, is
carried across the sills of the windows in the east wall;
thence doorways give access to the triforium chamber.
The inner face of the clearstory consists of three pointed
arches, the two outer almost, if not quite, straightlined, moulded, and carried on Purbeck shafts with
moulded freestone capitals and bases; the outer face
has a single-light lancet window whose hood-mould is
continued as a string-course at springing level. A
corbel table supports the dripping eaves.
The vaulting, quadripartite, rests on attached shafts
of freestone, with Purbeck capitals, which rise from the
level of the springing of the principal arches of the
arcade, and rest on corbels in the form of human heads;
it has moulded groin, division, and wall ribs (the groin
ribs alone have nail-head moulding), but there is no
wall rib on the west side. Bosses at the intersection of
the groin ribs are carved with foliage. (fn. 155)
The whole of this work, which is carried out in
ashlar, is on one date, about 1200.
In the 16th century the vault received some elaborate
heraldic painting, (fn. 156) the style of which suggests that it
was the work of Lambert Barnard, who worked for
Bishop Sherburne and died in about 1567.
The de la Warr chantry chapel (1535) in the
second bay of the south arcade is the sole example in
Sussex of that form of building within building which
evolved from the practice of flanking a chantry altar
with screens; it is made of Caen stone, and is interesting for its mixture of Gothic and Renaissance detail, the
latter evidently derived from pattern-books. (fn. 157) Its plan
is that of an oblong divided into two bays, each subdivided both in length and breadth into two. At each
corner and halfway along each side and end is a pier
to which is attached an external shaft covered with
carving in Renaissance style in relief. Up to sill level
the walls are covered externally with rectilinear panelling charged with badges, the crampet, leopard's face
jessant de lys, &c.; the entrance, on the north side, is
closed by a two-leaved gate of contemporary wrought
iron.
In the east wall is a reredos in three bays divided by
narrow vertical strips of Renaissance ornament; the
side bays contain niches for statues (fn. 158) and have normal
Gothic canopies; the central was presumably intended
for a scene in high relief such as exists in contemporary
tombs, probably by the same craftsman, at Selsey and
West Wittering. At the base of this is inscribed of your
charite pray for the souls of thomas la ware and
elyzabeth his wyf. This reredos is flanked by two
coats of arms. (fn. 159)
On each of the north and south sides of the chapel
are four openings under multifoil four-centred arches,
each pair of which rests on the piers of the building and
meets in an ornamental pendant; the eastern of these
on the north side is inscribed thomas la war anno
d(omi)ni m vc xxxii, the western elyzabetha la war;
those on the south side are uninscribed. Similar but
smaller openings exist in the walls at the east and west
ends of the building. The vaulting is of fan-tracery
form in four bays and two alleys; on a central pendant
are carved figures of angels (upside down) and on
subsidiary pendants are volutes of Renaissance design.
The entablature is in two stages; in the lower the
piers and pendants are surmounted by niches for
images; between each of these are shields of arms supported alternately by angels vested in amice and alb,
and by naked winged amorini. The upper stage of the
entablature has a second tier of niches, between which
are more varied carvings, ranging from amorini holding
badges to a lion in a thicket. The upper edge of the
chapel is finished, appropriately enough, by battlements alternating with the Classical anthemion.
The south aisle of the choir has a shallow buttress
on the east, four buttresses of greater depth on the south,
and a projection containing a newel staircase west of
all; these are contemporary with the choir save that the
second buttress from the east was reconstructed late in
the 15th century. The east buttress is of one stage with
sloped offset, the easternmost on the south side is of
three with two sloping offsets and gabled head; it
seems to have been designed to carry a flying buttress,
subsequently deemed superfluous. The next resembles
it, but bears the arms of Bishop Story (1478–1503),
six pieces argent and sable on each argent a stork sable,
and the initials P.R.C., usually interpreted as those of
Prior Richard Chese (1485–c. 1510). The next two
resemble the last but are finished with offsets, not
gables; on the second are three Mass dials, one having
the hours marked in Arabic numerals, of perhaps the
15th century. These three support plain, and very
heavy, flying buttresses of a single order, which abut
against shallow pilasters on the outside of the clearstory
wall. (fn. 160)
In the east wall of this aisle is a three-light window
with net tracery of the 14th century; on the south side
of the 1st, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th bays are single lancet
windows of the 13th century, in the 4th bay is a twolight window, apparently of the 14th but subsequently
altered by removal of the upper part of the tracery; in
the 3rd and 5th are modern windows having a general
resemblance to it; between those of the 5th and 6th
is a blocked doorway of the 13th century, with doubtful traces of a squint beside it, perhaps part of the
remains of an anchorite's cell.
In the eastern bay are an aumbry and a piscina side
by side, each having moulded jambs and pointed head,
of the 13th century; a moulded string-course runs
below the sills of the 13th-century windows, and has
been cut into by those of later date. The doorway to
the newel stair has plain jambs and segmental arch.
The vaulting of this aisle, in eight bays, has moulded
groin ribs with carved bosses at their intersections and
division ribs of semi-octagon section; on the choir side
it springs from the arcade capitals (save at the east end,
where there is a nook-shaft), on the outer side from
moulded corbels.
A tomb in the third bay has panelled front and plain
slab under a multifoiled depressed arch, probably 16thcentury; east of it two chest tombs of the same or
earlier date have panelled fronts.
The north choir aisle resembles the south; the east
window, of three lights, has net tracery of the 14th
century; in the north wall there are lancet windows of
the 13th century in the 1st, 2nd, and 6th bays, three-light windows with Perpendicular tracery of the 15th
in the 3rd and 7th; in the 5th is the sacristy door with
plain jambs and pointed arch, and in the 8th a blocked
doorway, visible with difficulty on the outside, of uncertain date, originally leading to a small sacristy now
destroyed. There is no newel staircase on this side; in
the easternmost bay there is an aumbry in the north
wall and a piscina, with attached pillar, in the
east.
A niche tomb in the third bay resembles, and is
approximately coeval with, that in the opposite aisle;
a similar one east of it has the letters T and M in the
spandrels; from this and the resemblance of the workmanship to that of the de la Warr chantry it was
probably prepared for Thomas Myles, the last prior,
who left Boxgrove before his death.
The sacristy (15th-century) has a two-light window
with ogee cinquefoil-headed lights under a square head
in both the east and north walls; higher in the north
wall a former cross-shaped ventilation opening has been
blocked with knapped flint.
The four arches of the crossing are pointed, of two
moulded orders each, resting on a common scalloped
capital with circular abacus; below the capital each
respond is of two attached shafts, one round, the other
keeled, resting on moulded bases. The next stage of
the tower, open to the church internally, (fn. 161) has on each
side an arcade of four pointed arches, grouped in two
pairs, resting on shafts with foliaged capitals and square
abaci; behind these runs a wall-passage giving access
to the bell-chamber. This has on each face two windows with round-headed arches of two orders, abaci
continued to form string-courses, and nook-shafts to
the responds; all this work is of about 1200. The
tower is finished with a corbel table and battlement of
the 15th century and a pyramidal tiled roof.
In the north transept the arch opening into the choir
aisle is semicircular, of one order resting on imposts
with crude torus mouldings and plain jambs, of the
12th century; north of this is a narrow window, now
blocked, with round head, of the same date. In the
north wall is an opening, now a window, which was
originally the doorway leading from the monastic
dorter to the night stairs in the church; it is square
headed, but a four-centred arch is visible on the outside. In the gable is a single-light window with plain
jambs and round head, of the 12th century; this interrupts the weathermould which covered the junction
of the dorter roof.
In the west wall, next to the crossing pier, is a doorway, (fn. 162) now blocked, with anse de panier head resting
direct on jambs, both moulded; this is of the 15th or
16th century. Next to it is a round-headed window,
now blocked, of the 12th century; next is a small doorway, the present means of access to the church on the
north side, of similar design to that farther south, apparently 15th-century work but not inserted in its
present place till after the Suppression, as it cuts into
the space occupied in monastic times by the newel
stair from the dorter. At a higher level in this wall are
two two-light windows, one with cinquefoil heads, one
uncusped, of the 15th or 16th centuries, near the level
of the wooden ceiling with moulded beams which was
inserted, probably in the 16th century, at the level of
the capitals of the crossing arches. Above this is a
chamber, normally inaccessible, lit not only by the
window already mentioned but formerly by two
round-headed windows in the east and west walls.
There is also in the north wall a fire-place of probably 16th-century date. (fn. 163) The roof is of trussed
rafters.
The south transept resembles the north generally,
but in the south wall, against which no conventual
buildings abutted, are two shallow buttresses of the
12th century and two three-light windows, with fourcentred heads and Perpendicular tracery, inserted in
about the 16th; above these is a small round-headed
window of the 12th. In both east and west walls are
blocked windows, round-headed and apparently of the
12th century; the eastern one was subsequently converted into an image niche by partial hollowing and the
addition of a bracket. In the west wall is an opening
into the south aisle of the nave resembling those which
open into the choir aisles. There is a pillar piscina
against the south wall and a chest tomb with panelled
sides; a similar tomb abuts against the east wall. The
roof-framing above the wooden ceiling is modern.
The nave was originally of twelve bays, though
vaulted in six; the two easternmost alone are roofed
to-day. In the north wall is the doorway, now blocked,
which was the monks' principal entrance into the
church. This has moulded jambs, arch, and hoodmould externally; internally the rear-arch is set in a
square frame, both moulded, having shields in the
spandrels; this is of the 15th century; over it is a single
lancet window, late-12th-century, at clearstory level.
On the south side is an arcade of two bays having one
cylindrical pier with moulded base and scalloped
capital, and two responds having the form of halfpiers; (fn. 164) the arches are semicircular, of two orders, and
are plain save where a start has been made at cutting a
cheveron ornament on them. Above these can be seen
the remains of a single clearstory window of like date;
this was blocked when the present window, resembling
that opposite, was put in at a higher level.
The lower part of the west wall incorporates the
remains of the monastic pulpitum, having two doorways,
now blocked, with plain jambs and round-arched heads
on the outside and segmental pointed rear-arches; on
the west side the remains of the piscina of the nave
altar are visible next to the southernmost, and a small
recess or niche next to the other. In the post-Suppression wall built on the pulpitum to close in the end
of the church is a modern two-light window in 14thcentury style.
In the south wall of the aisle, besides the remains of
a blocked window of perhaps three lights, is a single
archway with semi-octagonal responds, moulded
capitals and bases, and pointed arch of like section,
which gives access to the present south porch. In the
west wall is a doorway, now blocked, of one moulded
order with pointed arch and segmental rear-arch,
formerly giving access to the western part of the aisle.
The vaulting, 12th-century, in two bays, is groined
but with neither groin nor division ribs.
The porch, formerly a side chapel, has a two-light
window with tracery, partly restored, of the 14th
century, in the west wall; the blocked remains of
another, perhaps similar, window in the south, and,
east of this, a doorway of one order with pointed arch
and moulded arch and jambs, of like date but evidently
refixed; remains of a stoup east of the arch leading into
the aisle give ground for inferring that this was fitted
up as a porch at a date later than the Suppression but
before the use of holy water was discontinued.
The western part of the nave, now ruined, was built
in the late 12th century and had ten bays, the piers of
the arcades being of two designs alternately; one was a
Greek cross on plan surrounded by detached Purbeckmarble shafts with freestone capitals carved with
foliage; the east respond of the south arcade survives
(minus the shafts). The alternate piers, of which the
easternmost on the south side survives, were cylindrical
with moulded bases and scalloped caps; the arches were
of two chamfered orders, pointed. For five bays on the
north side, where the cloister took the place of the aisle,
the nave wall had blind arches copying the design of
the arcade; in the westernmost of these are traces of the
west processional doorway. In the foundations of the
west wall of the nave the position of the west doorway,
and the lowest steps of a newel staircase, are traceable.
The clearstory and vaulting were of the same design as
those of the bays still roofed.
The outer wall of the south aisle has disappeared,
but traces of the vaulting, with moulded groin and
division ribs, are visible at the east end. Opposite the
fifth and sixth bays from the pulpitum the foundations of a large building, probably a porch, have been
traced.
Of the north aisle, west of the cloister, part of the
exterior wall exists, pierced by a single lancet on the
north, and by a doorway on the west.
It is on record that in 1535 the Prior of Boxgrove
had five bells made. (fn. 165) On the suppression of the priory
in the following year three bells, weighing 38 cwt., were
sold to Lord de la Warre. (fn. 166) At the present time there
is only one bell; this was cracked and recast in 1937,
reproducing the old inscription which stated that it was
made in 1674 by William Eldridge. (fn. 167) The further
inscription—'Resurgimus e ruinis fulgure factis 2 Junii
1673'—suggests that at least one other bell was cast at
that time.
At the restoration of the church in 1865 the Elizabethan silver cup was melted down, and the only piece
of plate older than that date is a paten of 1763. (fn. 168)
The registers begin in 1561.
ADVOWSON
The Domesday Survey speaks of 1
hide in Boxgrove being held by 'the
clerks of the church', (fn. 169) which points
to the existence of a small collegiate body. In 1105
Robert de Haye gave to the Norman abbey of Lessay
the church of St. Mary of Boxgrove with 2½ hides
round it, the tithes of the whole parish and of his
Christmas rents there, and the tithe of his woods. (fn. 170)
The Priory of Boxgrove was subsequently established
as a cell of Lessay, becoming independent by the end
of the 14th century, (fn. 171) and the advowson of the church,
of which the nave was parochial, remained in the hands
of the convent until its dissolution in 1537. A vicarage
was ordained in 1257, (fn. 172) and in 1291 the rectory was
valued at £26 13s. 4d. and the vicarage at £8. (fn. 173) The
vicarage was increased in 1409, when in addition to a
house and land the vicar was assigned 14 marks and the
tithe of all pot-herbs (olerum), 'both kale and leeks and
other herbs of which by custom of the country potage
is made'. (fn. 174) In 1535 the rectory was farmed for
£28 6s. 8d. and the vicarage was worth £9 13s. 4d. (fn. 175)
After the Dissolution the advowson and rectory followed
the descent of the manor of Boxgrove, being now held
by the Duke of Richmond.
An order for the union of the livings of Boxgrove
and Tangmere was made in April 1658, (fn. 176) but if ever
effective it was reversed at the Restoration.
William de St. John in 1159 established a chantry
at Halnaker endowed with rents in Winchester, which
he subsequently exchanged for land in Compton. The
chaplain was not to take any tithes or any offerings
from parishioners of Boxgrove, except on the eve and
day of St. Mary Magdalene, in whose honour the
chapel was dedicated, and the monks were to provide
him with food whenever the lord was not in residence. (fn. 177)
In 1519 the other Halnaker chantry, in the church of
North Mundham, being too poorly endowed to support a chaplain, was united to this; the cantarist was to
reside at Halnaker but to celebrate at least four times
a year at North Mundham. (fn. 178) The chantry was usually
served by one of the monks, (fn. 179) and was held from 1513
to 1519 by Thomas Myles, who at the latter date was
Prior of Boxgrove. (fn. 180) The advowson of the chantry
was transferred with the manor to Henry VIII in
1541. (fn. 181) When valued previous to its suppression in
1548 it was worth £6 16s. clear, (fn. 182) and the chaplain,
Thomas Deane, was given a pension of £5. (fn. 183)
A fraternity of St. Blaise connected with the parish
church of Boxgrove is mentioned in 1487 and 1507, (fn. 184)
and a bequest was made to 'the Brotherhed prest' in
1539. (fn. 185) At the suppression of fraternities in 1548 the
property of 'the Brotheredde of Bosgrave' was only
6s. 8d. (fn. 186)
CHARITIES
Lady Derby. By an indenture dated
2 January 1740 Mary, Countess
Dowager of Derby, granted a piece of
ground called Mary Garden together with a yearly
rentcharge of £140 to trustees to lay out the same in
erecting almshouses on the said ground for the habitations of a schoolmaster and twelve poor widows or
aged maidens of the Church of England, six of them
to be of the parish of Boxgrove, four of East Lavant,
and two of Tangmere. The almshouses were erected
about 1742. By an Order dated February 1915 the
Charity Commissioners determined that part of the
endowments of the charity which ought to be applied
to educational purposes. Particulars of the part so
determined are set out in the Order.
The Rev. Henry Legge by a codicil dated 2 March
1878 to his will dated 2 June 1874 bequeathed £200,
the income to be applied in augmentation of the
allowances then made to the inmates of the Lady
Derby's Almshouses being pensioners from the parish
of East Lavant. The annual income of the charity
amounts to £5 0s. 4d.
Lady Hyde. By an indenture dated 31 May 1695
Dame Margaret Hyde conveyed to trustees five pieces
of land called Kingsland in the parish of Yalding upon
trust to dispose of the yearly rents in the following
manner: 40s. to the minister of Boxgrove for preaching
a sermon in the parish church on Christmas Day, the
30th January, Good Friday, and Ascension Day; 40s.
to eight poor widows of Boxgrove on 5 November, and
if there should not be in the parish eight poor widows
then to such other poor people of the parish as the
trustees and the minister and churchwardens should
think fit; and with the remainder of the rents to buy
English bibles to be given to poor maids or girls of the
parish of Boxgrove on 29 May. By a scheme of the
Charity Commissioners dated 28 January 1896 it was
provided that the trustees may from time to time apply
the surplus income of the charity in aid of the stipends
of the inmates of the almshouses of the charity of Mary,
Countess Dowager of Derby. By a further scheme
dated 25 January 1946 it was provided that so far as
the income cannot usefully be applied in the manner
prescribed by the above-mentioned indenture and
scheme, the income may be applied for the spiritual
benefit of such poor maids or girls of Boxgrove as the
trustees think fit. The annual income of the charity
amounts to £41 9s. 5d.
Elizabeth Nash. Particulars of the foundation of
this charity will be found under the parish of Bosham.
The share of the income of the charity for this parish
is applicable for the schooling and clothing of two poor
children of the parish. By an Order of the Charity
Commissioners dated 22 April 1904 one moiety of
the income is to be applied to educational purposes.
Trustees of the above-mentioned charities, with the
exception of the part of the charity of Mary Countess
Dowager of Derby for educational purposes and
Nash's Educational Foundation, are appointed by
Order of the Charity Commissioners.
The Hon. Mrs. Dorothy Nelson Ward by her will
dated 5 September 1939 bequeathed to the vicar and
churchwardens of Boxgrove £1,000, the income to be
applied in keeping the churchyard of Boxgrove in
good order. The income of the charity amounts to
£26 5s. 2d.