ABINGER
Abinceborne (xi cent.); Abinworth, Abyngworth
(xiii cent.); Abyngeworth (xv cent.).
Abinger is a parish bounded on the north by West
Horsley and Effingham, on the east by Wotton and
Ockley, on the south by the county of Sussex, on
the west by Ewhurst and Shiere. It is 9 miles from
north to south, and varies from 1½ to ½ mile from
east to west. It contains 7,560 acres. The church is
8 miles south-west of Dorking. Abinger, Wotton,
and Ockley were formerly much intermixed, but on
5 December 1879 (fn. 1) a long outlying strip of Ockley
between Abinger and Ewhurst, and two smaller
portions of Ockley isolated in Abinger, were added to
Abinger; at the same date (fn. 2) a part of Wotton on the
Sussex border was added to Abinger. On 25 March
1883 (fn. 3) a very small curiously outlying piece of Ockham and two very small portions of Cranleigh and
Ewhurst, near the eastern slope of Holmbury Hill,
were added to Abinger. The northern portion of
the parish is on the chalk downs, nearly 700 ft. above
the sea. It runs southward over the narrow Upper
Green Sand and Gault, and on the western side of Leith
Hill on the Lower Green Sand rises to over 800 ft.
on High Ashes Hill. Abinger Church is 550 ft.
above the sea, and is the highest old parish church in
Surrey, except Tatsfield. The southern part of the
parish sinks rapidly down to the Wealden Clay.
The streams which rise in the parish flow to the
Tillingbourne, which runs from Leith Hill to join the
Wey at Shalford, and in the other direction to the
head waters of the Arun. The parish is agricultural;
but at Abinger Hammer, on the Tillingbourne, was
an iron forge. (fn. 4) The South Eastern Railway, Redhill
and Reading branch, and the road from Dorking to
Guildford traverse the northern part of the parish.

Abinger: Crossways Farm House
The ancient remains in Abinger, since the extension
of the parish in 1879–83, are extensive and interesting. Neolithic flints, including a fine axe-head in
private possession, have been found about Holmbury
Hill. In a field near Abinger Hall a small Roman
villa was found in 1877, with some coins of Constantine the Great and his family. The remains were
left open, and Dr. Darwin used the Roman mosaic floors
in situ for observations upon the work of earthworms,
aided in his investigation by his niece, Miss Wedgwood
of Leith Hill Place. The remains mostly perished
from exposure, or were removed, and the remainder
is now covered up again. It appeared to be a small
country house, of no great pretensions.
On Holmbury Hill—now in Abinger, but in
Ockley when the old Surrey histories were written—is
a considerable earthwork, covering almost exactly 10
acres, 857 ft. above the sea. The four sides are
nearly opposite the cardinal points. The western,
northern, and eastern ditches make nearly three sides
of a square, but the southern side follows the irregular
contour of the steep slope of the hill. There are
double banks and ditches on the north and west,
where the ground outside is nearly as high as the inside, and double, or treble, scarped banks on the
south, obscured by diggings for sand. On the east,
where the ground falls more rapidly, is a bank and
ditch, with a low outside bank to it, but no ditch
visible beyond. There is a poor water supply inside,
near the east side, and an abundant supply a little
way down the hill. The entrance was at the northwest corner, by a causeway across the ditches, the
banks being raised slightly to command it on either
side. (fn. 5) The arrangement of the old parishes about it
was curious, and can scarcely be fortuitous. The
work was in Ockley, which was also outside it to the
south-east. Ewhurst was bounded by the works on
the south-west. Shiere enveloped it to the northwest, north, and east, bounded by its ditches. But
across a strip of 200 yds. of Shiere on the east were
three patches of Ewhurst, Cranleigh, and the fardistant Ockham, and just outside these the old parish
of Abinger. An archer on the banks in Ockley
parish could have shot into four other parishes with
ease, and nearly into Abinger. The bits of
Ewhurst, Cranleigh, and Ockham were on habitable
ground, with wood and water.
The visitor to Holmbury Hill is not usually
interested in the banks and ditches as his first object.
It commands what may fairly challenge the place of
the finest view in Surrey. The whole expanse of the
Weald, with the South Downs as a background, from
Portsdown Hill to Lewes; the adjacent range of sand
hills, with Leith Hill forming a half distance on the
one hand and Pitch Hill on the other; the Hindhead
range, with Hampshire behind it, crossing the
western distance; the chalk hills to the north and the
country beyond them—offer a panoramic view only
surpassed by that from Leith Hill, which, 100 ft.
higher, here cuts off the country to the east. But the
growth of trees on the back of Leith Hill intercepts
the sight northward, except from the top of the
tower. The immediate foreground to Holmbury
Hill is more broken and picturesque. The Pilgrims'
Way from Winchester to Canterbury passes north
of the parish at the foot of the North Downs.
Close to the west end of Abinger Church, by the
farm which was the old manor-house of Abinger, is a
mound which seems to have been raised from a ditch
round it, part of which remains as a pond. It is
marked on the Ordnance map (6-in.) as a barrow;
but it is large for a barrow, and perhaps not too
small for a fortress—a mota, standing, as often happened,
close by the church. It has never been explored.
At Abinger Cross Ways is a fine old brick house,
dating from the latter half of the 17th century.
Abinger Hatch, the well-known inn, has ancient
features, and there are many picturesque farms and
cottages, especially to the south, in the Weald.
Abinger Hall, under the chalk down in the north of
the parish, has succeeded a small house called Daniells
belonging to a family named Dibble, many of whom
occur in the Parish Registers. It was bought by the
Dowager Countess of Donegal after the death of her
husband in the War of the Spanish Succession, 1706,
and she resided here 'during her son's minority,' (fn. 6)
which terminated in 1716. It was in the hands of
her grandson, John Chichester, whose heir was his
elder brother Arthur, first Marquis and fifth Earl of
Donegal, who about 1783 sold it with 16 acres of
land to Captain Pitts of the Engineers, who had
previously bought other land in the neighbourhood. (fn. 7)
He rebuilt the house, then called Paddington House,
on the site of the present cricket ground. This house
was built in 1783. (fn. 8) Captain Pitts sold it in 1797 to
Commodore Robinson of the H.E.I.C. Marine
Service, who died in 1803. (fn. 9) His executors sold it to
Mr. Shardon, who died in 1810. (fn. 10) In 1814 it was
bought by Sir James Scarlett, who became chief
baron of the Exchequer, was created Lord Abinger,
and died 1844. The third Lord Abinger sold it in
1867 to Mr. Gwynne, who sold it to Thomas Farrer,
subsequently Lord Farrer, in 1869. He built the
present Abinger Hall in 1872. The second Lord
Farrer now resides there.
At the north-eastern edge of Pasture Wood, adjoining the Common, is a house called Parkhurst, which
in 1766 belonged to John Spence, "formerly of
Wandsworth, Dyer," who sold it in that year to
Richard Durnford, of Gracechurch Street, pin-maker.
He in the year 1799 sold the property to Charles
Lynd, of Berners Street, from whom it passed to his
nephew and heir, Charles Lynd, of Belfast, and
was by him conveyed in 1786 to the Right
Honourable George Lord Macartney, whose greatest
service was that of going on the first embassy to
China in 1792. In 1795 he sold Parkhurst to
William Philip Perrin, who partly rebuilt and
enlarged the house, and with great public spirit
made good the road hereabout at his expense. (fn. 11) On
Mr. Perrin's death in 1820 he left Parkhurst to his
nephew, Sir Henry FitzHerbert, by whom in 1838
it was sold to Mr. Edmund Lomax, of Netley Park,
Shiere, who had resided at Parkhurst since before
1827. Mr. Lomax died in 1847, leaving the estate
to his daughter, Mrs. Peter Scarlett, from whom it
passed to her son, Colonel Leopold Scarlett. He in
1884 sold the property to Colonel T. H. Lewin, its
present owner, who considerably enlarged the house
and gardens. There is a priest's hiding-place in the
north-west corner of the older portion of the house.
Parkhurst is remarkable for possessing the first
larch trees introduced into the south of England.
Tradition has it that the seedlings were sent to
Lord Macartney, the then owner of Parkhurst, by
John, Duke of Atholl, in 1780. The trees stand in
the Long Meadow, on the east side of the park. The
largest is 10 ft. 6 in. in circumference, and 118 ft.
high. The park contains remarkably fine timber.
In all the earlier documents relating to Parkhurst
prior to 1814 it is described as 'a tenement and farm,'
but after that year it takes the style of 'mansion.'
The celebrated scene in Bulwer Lytton's novel, My
Novel, where Riccabocca is put in the stocks, is laid at
Abinger Church, near Parkhurst, where the stocks are
to be seen to this day. During Mr. Spence's tenure
of Parkhurst he was visited there by the French
philosopher, Jean Jacques Rousseau, who stayed with
him some days, but being haunted by fear of spies
fled in terror, having accidentally met the curate of
Abinger, who he was persuaded was an emissary of
the Government. Mr. William Bray, the distinguished historian of Surrey, left some diaries
which have been privately printed, in which the following entry occurs:—' July 23, 1759. To the
"Hatch" to dinner, Mr. Evelyn, Mr. Godschal,
Mr. Bridges, Mr. Steere, Mr. Spence, (fn. 12) Mr. Cour
tenay, and Mr. Walsh there; left at 7; paid for
dinner and wine, 4s. 6d.' (fn. 13)
The house called Pasture Wood, built fifteen years
since, is the seat of Mr. F. J. Mirrielees. Feldemore
is the seat of Mr. Edwin Waterhouse. High Ashes
is the seat of Lord Justice Vaughan-Williams; it
was a small farm-house, which he has improved.
The schools (National) were built in 1863, and
the school at Abinger Hammer in 1873.
MANORS
At the time of the Domesday Survey
ABINGER was held by William Fitz
Ansculf, who also held the honour of
Dudley. In the time of King Edward a huscarle
had held it of the king. (fn. 14) From Fitz Ansculf the
overlordship evidently passed with Dudley through
the Pagenels to the Somery family, who held it at
least as late as the 13th century. The lord of
Abinger owed suit to their court at Bradfield. (fn. 15)
Early in the 13th century Gilbert de Abingworth
(Abinger) held one knight's fee in Surrey; (fn. 16) his name
is also found in a list of the jurors in a suit concerning
land in Titings. (fn. 17) Possibly he was connected with
the family of Jarpenvill, who appear about this time
in the history of Abinger. Geoffrey de Jarpenvill
shortly afterwards held a knight's fee in Abinger; (fn. 18)
and in 1273 David de Jarpenvill was holding Abinger
Manor. (fn. 19) At David's death, 1293, the manor, which
should have passed to his daughters, fell into the
hands of his brother Thomas, who in 1295 settled it
on himself, with remainder to his son Roger and Nora
his wife. (fn. 20) Evidently Roger succeeded his father
before 1316, for about that date he was concerned in
a dispute touching the church of Abinger, (fn. 21) and in
1322 he was holding the manor. (fn. 22) Ten years later
he made a settlement on his son Thomas and Avice
his wife, daughter of William de Latimer. The
effect of this settlement, however, was nullified by a
suit brought against Thomas de Jarpenvill in 1348
by Margaret wife of Henry de la Marlere, and
Margery wife of William de Harpesbourne, the daughters of Joan daughter of David de Jarpenvill, who had
married Geoffrey Fitz Waryn. (fn. 23) Also in 1360 Sir
John de Aylesbury, knight, the great-grandson of
Margaret, another daughter of David de Jarpenvill,
asserted his claim against Thomas and Avice. (fn. 24) The
plaintiffs apparently succeeded in ousting Thomas de
Jarpenvill, for some years later Hugh son of Margaret
de la Marlere released his right in Abinger Manor to
Sir John de Aylesbury, (fn. 25) a course which was also
followed by Margery Franklin, formerly the wife of
William de Harpesbourne. (fn. 26) Sir John de Aylesbury,
who filled the office of high sheriff for the county of
Buckingham, (fn. 27) died in 1409 seised of the manor of
Abinger, (fn. 28) and was succeeded by his son Thomas, who
held until his death in 1418. (fn. 29) John son and heir of
Thomas, who was a minor at the time of his father's
death, died in 1422, (fn. 30) leaving Hugh his son and heir,
an infant, who survived his father only about a year. (fn. 31)
The heirs of Hugh were his father's two sisters, Isabel
wife of Sir Thomas Chaworth, knight, and Eleanor
Aylesbury. Evidently in some ensuing division of
the property (fn. 32) Abinger fell to the share of Eleanor,
and through her marriage with Sir Humphrey Stafford
passed into his family. (fn. 33) Eleanor's son Humphrey,
who had been one of the leaders in Lord Lovel's
Worcestershire rising, was attainted and executed at
Tyburn in 1486; (fn. 34) his lands, including the manor of
Abinger, were granted to Sir John Guldeford, knight, (fn. 35)
who, however, does not seem to have retained them
long, for in 1511 another grant was made, to Sir
Richard Jermigan. (fn. 36) Before 1546, however, Abinger
passed again into the possession of the Staffords; in
that year Humphrey, presumably the son of that
Humphrey who was attainted under Henry VII,
having been restored to his father's lands died in
possession, (fn. 37) leaving Humphrey his son and heir,
whose death took place two years later. (fn. 38) In 1551 Sir
William Stafford and his wife Dorothy, and Sir Humphrey Stafford (presumably son and heir of the lastnamed Humphrey) and his wife Elizabeth sold the
manor to Thomas and Edward Elrington. Thomas
Elrington held a court in 1563. (fn. 39) In 1578 and
1580 Thomas and Edward alienated in two moieties (fn. 40)
to Richard Brown of Cranleigh, trustee for Richard
Hill, and William Morgan of Chilworth. Hill and
Morgan held a court as joint lords in 1586, and in
1589 William Morgan settled his moiety on his son
John, (fn. 41) who settled it on his daughter Anne on her
marriage with Edward Randyll of Chilworth 1602. (fn. 42)
He was knighted, and in 1622 conveyed his moiety
to Richard Evelyn. (fn. 43) The other moiety, which was
sold in 1580 by the Elringtons to Richard Browne (fn. 44)
in trust for Edmund Hill of Sutton in Shiere, was
conveyed by his son Richard in 1595 to Sir Oliph
Leigh of Addington, (fn. 45) to avoid making sale 'of any
lands of his more ancient inheritance.' This conveyance was probably in trust, for in the same year it
was acquired by George Evelyn of Wotton. (fn. 46) The
whole manor is still in the possession of the Evelyn
family. (fn. 47)

Aylesbury. Azure a cross argent.

Stafford. Or a cheveron gules.
The Domesday entry for PADDINGTON (Patisdene, Patinden, xii cent.; Padyngden, xvi cent.),
afterwards known as PADDINGTON PEMBROKE,
states that William Fitz-Ansculf then held it, and that
a huscarle had held it of King Edward. (fn. 48) The overlordship passed, as in the case of Abinger, with the
honour of Dudley. (fn. 49)
The first notice of immediate lords of the
manor occurs in 1188, when William Buffere (fn. 50) paid
seven pounds fourteen shillings towards the ferm
of Paddington. William Buffere gave shelter
to a certain outlaw named Avice Wylekin,
which occasioned the forfeiture of his lands to the
Crown. (fn. 51) A grant was then made to Alan Trencherman, lord of Gomshall, who is described as holding
the 'vill' of Paddington; (fn. 52) his tenure marks the
beginning of a close connexion which apparently
existed between a portion of Paddington and the
manor of Gomshall. At Alan's death Paddington
reverted to the Crown, and was then granted to
William de Braose, (fn. 53) who fell under King John's displeasure, and had to flee from England. He died
abroad, and his wife and son were put to death by
order of King John. (fn. 54) Paddington meanwhile was
granted to Peter de Maulay, (fn. 55) but afterwards Giles,
Bishop of Hereford, a younger son of William de
Braose, succeeded in recovering it. (fn. 56) Reginald, brother of Giles, was the next
lord; he was succeeded by
his son William, (fn. 57) who met
his death in the Welsh wars.
Paddington then passed to
Eva, daughter of William de
Braose, who had married William de Cantlow, (fn. 58) and on
the death of her son George
without issue the manor passed
to John, son of his sister
Joan by Henry de Hastings. (fn. 59) John de Hastings died
seised in 1325, leaving a son and heir Lawrence. (fn. 60)
Part of the manor seems to have been leased by Lawrence to his nephew, William de Hastings, whose
tenure was probably, by the date of his death, ended
by the Black Death of 1349. The inquisition on
his death is among the many evidences of the
severity of the visitation, for it records that
almost all the tenants were then dead. (fn. 61) John
son and heir of Lawrence committed Paddington
to the charge of trustees, who apparently held it for
his heirs. (fn. 62) His widow Anne was holding part of
Paddington in dower at her death in 1384; she left
a son and heir John, who was then fifteen years of
age. (fn. 63) John married Philippa, daughter of the Earl
of March, (fn. 64) but had no issue; and after his death in
1590 Philippa became the wife of Richard, Earl of
Arundel, and held Paddington in dower. (fn. 65) After the
death of Richard, (fn. 66) who held the manor for life, the
trustees enfeoffed by John de Hastings the elder released the manor to William de Beauchamp, his
kinsman, on condition of his assuming the title of Earl
of Pembroke, (fn. 67) from which title it took the name of
Paddington Pembroke. After the death of William
his wife Joan held Paddington in dower, (fn. 68) and at her
death it passed to the family
of Nevill by the marriage of
Edward Nevill with Elizabeth
daughter of Richard Beauchamp, the son of William and
Joan. (fn. 69) Edward Nevill died
seised in 1476, (fn. 70) leaving George
Nevill his son and heir, then
aged thirty-six. Probably the
manor remained in the hands
of the Nevills from this
time until it passed to the Evelyns, since George
Nevill, lord of Abergavenny, was holding it in the time
of Elizabeth, (fn. 71) and it formed part of the possessions of
the Edward Nevill who died in 1623. (fn. 72) Six years later
Henry Nevill, lord of Abergavenny, conveyed the
manor to Richard Evelyn, (fn. 73) from whom it descended
with Wotton to the present owner.

Abinger: Mill House

Hastings, Earl of Pembroke. Or a sleeve gules.

Nevill. Gules a saltire argent with a rose gules thereon.
The manor of PADDINGTON BRAY, which
still retains a separate identity, may perhaps be
identified with the three hides which were held of
Paddington Manor by a certain Hugh, a homager,
in 1086. Later they seem to have been held in
demesne by William and Eva de Cantlow, who, in
1250, sub-enfeoffed Adam de Gurdon of the 'manor'
of Paddington. (fn. 74) Adam de Gurdon died in 1305, (fn. 75)
leaving a daughter and heir Joan, aged '40 and
more.' No record of Joan's death has been found,
but in 1337 Agnes de Gurdon, presumably a kinswoman, died seised, leaving as her heir Thomas son
of Thomas de Syndlesham. (fn. 76) He was followed by
his son Thomas, (fn. 77) who died in 1361, and his kinsman
Robert de Lenham is named as his heir in the inquisition taken after his death. (fn. 78) There is, however,
record of a conveyance by Thomas de Syndlesham
of his share in the manor during his lifetime to one
John Kingesfold, who afterwards alienated to William
Rykhill. (fn. 79) The next lord of whom there is record,
after William Rykhill, is a certain Robert White,
who was holding about 1475. (fn. 80) His daughter Alice,
by her marriage with Sir John Yonge, brought her
share in Paddington to his family, and it was inherited
by her son John Yonge, who in 1492 conveyed it to
John Leigh. (fn. 81)
After the death of John Leigh in 1524 (fn. 82) his
nephew and heir of the same name ceded his Surrey
property to the king in return for lands in other
counties; (fn. 83) and the king soon after granted Paddington to Sir William Roche, (fn. 84) from whom it ultimately
passed to the family of Bray,
and thus obtained its name of
Paddington Bray. In 1556
Owen Bray alienated to Owen
Elrington, (fn. 85) with whom he
was connected by marriage. (fn. 86)
Edward Elrington alienated
the manor in two moieties as
in the case of Abinger, and
here also one moiety passed to
William Morgan. (fn. 87) John Morgan, the son of William, sold
his share in Paddington to Sir
Christopher Parkins, (fn. 88) whose
widow Anne transferred it to
Richard Evelyn in 1624. (fn. 89) The other moiety passed
with the second moiety of Abinger to the Evelyn
family through the hands of Richard Browne, Richard
Hill, and Oliph Leigh.

Bray. Argent a cheveron between three eagles' legs torn off at the thigh sable.
Some land in Paddington belonged to the monastery of St. Mary Graces on Tower Hill, (fn. 90) and was
after the Dissolution granted to John Leigh under
the title of 'Paddington Manor.' (fn. 91) It seems possible that this land was identical with the hide of
land in Gomshall which was said in 1086 to be in
the hundred of Wotton. (fn. 92)
There was a water-mill at Paddington which is
first mentioned in Domesday as worth 6s., and again
in the inquisition taken after the death of Adam
de Gurdon as worth 10s. 3d. Possibly it stood on the
site of the existing mill on the Tillingbourne just
above Abinger Hammer.
CHURCHES
The church of ST. JAMES consists of a chancel 29 ft. 7 in. long and
18 ft. wide, a large north chapel with
arcade of three bays 38 ft. 4 in. long and 17 ft. 9 in.
wide, a south vestry and organ bay, a nave 47 ft. 9 in.
long and 18 ft. wide, a south porch and western bellturret. The roofs are covered with Horsham slates.
The present nave is that of an early 12th-century
church which had a chancel smaller than the present
one. About 1220 this chancel was rebuilt and made
equal in width to the nave, and a north chapel was
added at the same time or very soon after. From
that date the building remained little altered to
modern times, when a south vestry and organ bay were
added and a south porch built (1857). The bell-turret
is old, but of uncertain date. The east window of
the chancel consists of three modern lancets. Below
the sill is a moulded string-course with bosses which
runs round the south wall as far as the vestry, breaking up to form labels over a trefoiled piscina and a
single chamfered sedile, both being modern. Above
is a single trefoiled window in new stone. The
arcade to the chapel is of three bays with pointed
arches of two chamfered orders with hollow labels,
and has been reworked and in part rebuilt. The
pillars are round, with moulded capitals and bases.
In the east wall of the chapel are three 13th-century
lancets with chamfered rear arches, and in the north
wall three similar lancets, but with external rebates.
At the west end of the north wall is a small modern
porch over a doorway which has a pointed arch of
two orders with a label, the inner order having a raised
zigzag moulding. The outer order has jamb-shafts
with foliate capitals and shafts, one capital and perhaps a little of the label being late 12th-century
work, but all the rest is modern or reworked. It is
clearly not in its original position. In the west wall
of the chapel is a lancet with an external rebate like
those on the north.
There is no chancel arch. On the south side the
nave wall sets back a few inches at the east, but a few
feet down the nave regains its original 12th-century
thickness, though setting back here and on the north
side a little below the windows. Of these there
are three in the north and south walls, short and
narrow round-headed lights set high in the wall.
They date from the beginning of the 12th century,
but have been a good deal repaired. The south wall
has at the east a late 15th-century square-headed window of three trefoiled lights, inserted to light an altar,
and the south door is in modern 13th-century style.
There is a blocked round-headed west doorway showing internally only, and above it a modern three-light
window of 14th-century style.
The organ chamber on the south side of the chancel
has an arcade of one sub-divided bay. In the south
wall are two modern lancets; the vestry adjoining it
has an outer doorway, a modern lancet opening from
the chancel, and another on the external wall. The
chancel and north chapel roofs are modern, but that
of the nave is old, with canted sides, boarded, and
with simple beaded fillets, perhaps of 17th-century
date. The font at the west of the nave is modern,
in 13th-century style; and the fittings are all modern
except the altar table, which has some carving apparently of 18th-century date.
There are three bells; two bear the inscription
'William Eldridge made mee, 1674'; the third
was recast by Mears and Stainbank in 1880, but
was probably originally of the same date as the
others.
The plate consists of a silver cup, with cover paten,
a plate, and a flagon, all with the London hall-mark of
1736. They are inscribed,' The gift of the Countess
of Dongall and the Earl her son.' There is a brass
almsdish presented in 1880 by Miss M. A. Roe.
The Registers date from 1599.
At Forest Green, a common with scattered houses
about it, in this district, 3 miles to the south, formerly an outlying part of Ockley, is a small church
consisting of a nave and chancel, in brick with stone
dressings, built by Mr. Ernest Hensley, of Spratsham on the borders of Wotton and Abinger, in 1897,
in memory of his son who died by an accident.
ADVOWSONS
There is no mention in Domesday Book of a church in Abinger;
no record of it has been found until
a presentation by Adam de Gurdon at some date between
1282 and 1304. (fn. 93) In the 14th century the church
appears as the parish church of Abinger alias the
parish church of Paddington; (fn. 94) and the fact that it
served the spiritual needs of both manors probably
accounts for alternate presentation by either lord.
Accordingly, between 1305 and 1316, Thomas de
Jarpenvill presented to the church; (fn. 95) and about the
same time his son Roger occasioned grave scandal by
laying violent hands upon the rector. The next presentation was made by one Henry de Somerburie;
the living, however, once more fell vacant before
1316, and presentation was then made by Roger de
Jarpenvill. (fn. 96) It is possible that the more intricate
succession to the manor of Paddington may account
for the tenants' apparent carelessness in taking their
turn at nominating; at any rate, the next presentation was again made by a member of the Jarpenvill
family. Some time before 1366 Thomas de Syndlesham, the Paddington tenant, took advantage of his
turn, and shortly afterwards Thomas de Jarpenvill
presented. (fn. 97) About this date we find a pronouncement of the union of the two halves, (fn. 98) and from that
time the advowson, with an occasional variation,
remained in the hands of the lords of Abinger, and
is now in the gift of Mr. Evelyn. The exceptions to
be noted are a presentation by the Crown in 1638;
by one Henry Herbert in 1683; and by Joseph Offley
in 1685. (fn. 99)
CHARITY
Smith's Charity is distributed as in
other Surrey parishes.