CAMBERWELL
Camberwell, including Peckham, Peckham Rye,
Nunhead and Dulwich, consists naturally of two
portions. To the north is a perfectly flat marshy
soil, probably once often flooded at high water;
to the south is a range of hills of the London
Clay, capped generally by sand and gravel, which
extend on their northern side in a curving sweep
from near Camberwell Green to near Deptford,
and rise southwards to the various eminences
called Denmark Hill, Champion Hill, Herne Hill,
Forest Hill and (formerly) Primrose Hill. The
situation of the southern part of the parish was
agreeable and healthy, and when Brayley wrote in
the early forties of the 19th century it could still be
called a pleasant though populous village. Manning
and Bray described it as 'retired' and given up
to meadow, arable and garden ground; the hills
which were formerly well wooded had been recently
cleared to a great extent, whilst the small farms were
being gradually thrown together. Already, however,
at this date many suburban villas and larger houses had
been built. There were then five commons in
the parish—Camberwell Green, Peckham Rye of
54 acres, Goose Green, Moulsey Common and
Dowlas Common. Dulwich Common, of 130 acres,
had been inclosed under an Act of 1805. (fn. 1) There
were also then small common fields surviving.
The old villages of Camberwell and Peckham were
situated on the northern face and at the foot of the
slope of the hills, where the old road along the dry side
of the Thames Valley, after passing down Coldharbour
Lane (called in Rocque's map Camberwell Lane),
is continued as Camberwell Church Street and
Peckham Lane to meet the road from Kent at New
Cross. The Kent Road ran diagonally from southeast to north-west across the lower part of the parish
towards the Thames. Manning and Bray (fn. 2) record an
ancient causeway running north-east from the Kent
Road towards Rotherhithe. Two streams from
several sources ran north-eastwards from the hills to
the Thames. One at the crossing of the Kent Road,
by what is now Albany Terrace, made St. Thomas
Waterings—the spot where the host began to move
Chaucer's Pilgrims to begin their stories. It was
here that the Lord Mayor and Corporation came to
welcome Henry V after Agincourt, and where they
met every procession and pageant coming from Kent
to London down to the Restoration of Charles II.
This place was the Tyburn of South London, where
traitors, felons, and above all offenders against the
ecclesiastical supremacy under the Tudors were
hanged, a frequented road being chosen to advertise
the vigour of the government. The last executions
there were about 1740. The Jacobite prisoners
suffered at Kennington in 1746. Somewhere near
this spot apparently, for the accounts are confused,
the head of a Roman Terminus was dug up in
the late 17th century. On Primrose Hill, or
Ludland's Hill, in the southern part of the parish
(now crowned by houses and gardens), to the west
of the line of the Crystal Palace High Level railway,
between Honor Oak and Lordship Lane stations,
was an oblong fortification with a double ditch, traceable on one side when Manning and Bray wrote.
Part of the bank seems to be still visible behind the
houses on Overhill Road, though the building on the
ground has nearly destroyed it.
In the 14th century the assessment of Camberwell
for subsidies was rather over £5 (exclusive of
Dulwich, which was 15s.) —that is, about equal to
country parishes like Charlwood and Burstow of
rather larger area. The ship-money assessment was
£52, nearly equal to Richmond, Kew, and Guildford, which were £53 each. (fn. 3) In 1725 the population
was returned as 1,520, with several resident gentlemen. (fn. 4)
It is spoken of as a small village on the road to
Croydon in 1730, and there were then 700 houses. (fn. 5)
In 1842 it was still a village, but an unbroken series
of streets connected it with London. In the low
ground to the north, before the endless small streets
now existing were built in the latter half of the
19th century, there were market gardens in great
numbers, in which the so-called Deptford onion
seed was chiefly raised. Camberwell Green was
inclosed by rails in 1811. (fn. 6) The fair held upon the
Green on 18, 19 and 20 August was suppressed in
1823, having become a nuisance.
After having been urban for forty years Camberwell was included in the county of London by
the Local Government Act of 1888. It was made
a parliamentary borough by the Redistribution of
Seats Act of 1885 and a metropolitan borough by
the London Government Act of 1899. The borough
consists of twenty wards, and includes the districts of
Denmark Hill, Nunhead, Peckham, Peckham Rye,
Dulwich, East Dulwich, West Dulwich and part of
Herne Hill (the rest being in Lambeth).
In Peckham Road is the Wilson Grammar School,
founded by Edward Wilson, vicar of the parish, in
1615. The old building (a gabled house as shown
in early 19th-century views) was pulled down in
1845, when the school was dissolved. A scheme
having been formed by the Charity Commissioners in
1880, the present school was built and opened in
1883. It consists of an assembly hall, a luncheon
room, a head master's and governors' meeting room,
nine class rooms, a small library, chemical and
physics laboratories, two science rooms, an art room
and two manual instruction rooms. Another wellknown school is the Mary Datchelor Girls' School
and Training College in Camberwell Grove, (fn. 7) the outcome of a charity founded by Beatrice Cook in 1726,
in pursuance of the will of her sister Mary Datchelor.
The charity did not take the form of a school until
1871. The school was first established at two
houses bought for the purpose in Grove Lane in
1878, but, the endowment having been increased by
the appropriation of other charities, a new school was
built at a cost of nearly £12,000. (fn. 8) The County
Council school in Gloucester Road represents two
charity schools called the Green Coat School, founded
in 1709. There are a number of other schools in
the parish. (fn. 9) Among other modern buildings the
Camberwell Central Library was opened in 1893.
There are also district libraries at Dulwich, Old
Kent Road, Nunhead and North Camberwell. The
Minet Library was founded by Mr. W. Minet, F.S.A.,
of Hadham Hall. This was opened in 1890 and
contains a remarkable collection of books, views and
manuscripts relating to Surrey. The South London
Art Gallery (Lord Leighton Memorial) in Peckham
Road was conveyed to the Camberwell Vestry (now
the Borough Council) in 1898. New buildings
have now been erected, the cost being largely borne
by the late Mr. Passmore Edwards.
Peckham Lane, or Peckham Road as it is now
called, still contains some old houses of the 18th or
even 17th century, but these have been considerably
refaced and modernized. On the southern side,
rather east of Rye Lane, is a somewhat pretentious
house, now converted into shops. Basing Manor
House stood west of Rye Lane, where Basing Road
now leads to the tramway depot. The house, which,
judging from old views of it, was probably Elizabethan,
was turned first into a farm and then into cottages.
The last remains of it were destroyed when the
tramway depôt was made. Peckham Rye Park was
formed out of agricultural land in 1894. Peckham
Fair, once held in the common fields, later in the
village street, became like the one at Camberwell
a scene of great disorder and was abolished before
1835.
Denmark Hill is said to have been named from
the re idence of Prince George of Denmark,
husband of Queen Anne, who came here for hunting. The house traditionally occupied by him is
now divided into Nos 149, 151 and 153 Denmark
Hill, facing the Upper Triangle. The wall of the
house is very thick; part of it is stone, older than the
reign of Queen Anne. On Dog Kennel Hill near it
is said to have been the place where his hounds were
kept. 'The Fox under the Hill' is the name of a
once well-known house of entertainment, of which
some part still stands on the southern slope of Denmark
Hill. The house behind Prince George's House,
now called Westbury House, is said to have been the
original 'Fox under the Hill.' It is a converted
farm-house of about 1680 to 1700. The new King's
College Hospital is now being built on Denmark Hill.
The site was given by the Hon. W. F. D. Smith
and the foundation stone was laid by King Edward VII
in 1909.
In the reign of William III a Huguenot refugee
of the family of Crespigny, who had married an
English lady, Miss Pierrepoint, settled at Camberwell.
His house, Champion Lodge, bore the date 1717.
His descendant Claude Champion de Crespigny
entertained the Prince Regent there in 1804 and
was created a baronet the next year. Champion
Hill and De Crespigny Park retain the name of the
family estate. The park covered over 30 acres.
The house was finally demolished in 1841, but some
of the walls of the grounds remain in Love Walk.
Some distinguished men have been connected with
Camberwell and the neighbourhood. Pope stayed at
the Friern Manor House and is said to have written
much of the Essay on Man there. Robert Browning
was born in Southampton Street in 1812, in a house
which has since been demolished. He went to a
school kept by Mr. Thomas Ready which stood opposite Rye Lane. The Rt. Hon. Joseph Chamberlain
also was born at a house in Camberwell Grove. John
Ruskin was brought up as a child from 1823 in a
house on Henre Hill, and moved in 1843 to another
opposite to Ruskin Park, which commemorates his
work. He was at school at Camberwell. Lord Byron
was at school at Dr. Glennie's at Dulwich in 1799.
Oliver Goldsmith was an usher at Dr. Milner's
school in 1757. Mendelssohn visited Denmark Hill
several times and wrote the Frühlingslied there.
Sir Henry Bessemer the engineer lived at Denmark
Hill, and died there in 1898. He erected a fine
observatory in his grounds. Famous also was Grove
Hill, where Dr. John Coakley Lettsom (fn. 10) lived and
was celebrated by John Scott and other writers of the
early 19th century. The former owner had been
Charles Baldwin. The grounds were noted for their
plantations and statuary, and the view from the top
of the hill was in those days picturesque. Camberwell
Grove is named from the avenue which led up to the
house. Part of a second house on the same estate,
built by Dr. Lettsom, is still standing; also two
cottages, one still thatched, which were in his grounds.
Camberwell Place, which may have replaced the older
manor-house, stood near St. Thomas Waterings, that
is where the Kent Road crosses the Grand Surrey
Canal. Bowyer House, (fn. 11) where the Bowyer family
lived, was near the north end of Camberwell Green
on the west side of the London Road. It was of
melancholy aspect according to Evelyn, with a great
yew overhanging it and elms surrounding; it dated
from before 1657. Sir Christopher Wren is said to
have resided in it whilst rebuilding St. Paul's. It
was acquired by the Chatham and Dover railway
and pulled down in 1861. The Scotts had two
mansions, one in East Dulwich, sold to the Hallidays
and by them to one Baily, and another right across
the bottom of Camberwell Grove, which was the
private avenue at the back of their house before it
became the approach to the front of Dr. Lettsom's.
In Camberwell Grove are some picturesque old
stables, probably belonging to the Scotts' house, but
these are now disused and the buildings are for sale.
Sir Thomas Bond, who followed James II to France,
built the manor-house at Peckham in 1672 on the
left-hand side of the way from Camberwell to Greenwich. It was sacked by the mob at the time of the
Revolution in 1688.
Dulwich, now a town of some importance, practically owes its existence to DULWICH COLLEGE.
Edward Allen, the founder,
was the owner of the 'Rose'
Theatre in Southwark, and in
1604 was appointed overseer
of the king's games of bears,
bulls and dogs, which were
chiefly carried on in Paris
Garden, Southwark. Having
bought the manor of Dulwich
in 1605, Allen left Southwark,
where he had been a churchwarden of St. Saviour's and
a governor of the grammar
school, and settled at Dulwich.
He at once began building
the college, which was finished
in 1614, and in 1620 was
endowed with the manor and Hall Place. The
foundation was a double one, partly for almspeople
and partly for scholars. Very little of the old building remains. The tower fell in 1638 and not long
after the whole of one side and part of the other fell
down, and in 1703 the porch and treasury chamber
also fell. The southern range, comprising the chapel
and the chaplain's house, and the library (now disused)
appear to be the only remaining portions of the original
buildings. The chapel was enlarged by the addition of
a south aisle in the year 1823. The chaplain's house,
which now includes the dining hall and kitchen of the
college, was adapted and enlarged to receive the master
and his family in the year 1857. The western
range of buildings appears from a date carved on the
inside of the mullion of one of the windows to have
been erected in the year 1667, unless this date refers
merely to a repair. The eastern wing was rebuilt
in 1740, and again in 1831 a part of it, containing
twelve dwellings, was rebuilt from the designs of
Sir Charles Barry in the approved stucco perpendicular manner of the period; at the same time
additions in a similar style were made on the side
of the western range fronting on College Road.
Further internal alterations were made to this range
in the year 1857, to adapt it to the requirements of the school. Finally in the year 1864 the
tower and cloister were added to the chapel and the
east wing enlarged to accommodate sixteen instead of
twelve almspeople as heretofore. The almspeople
remained here after the school was removed.

Dulwich College. Argent a cheveron between three cinqfoils gules, which are the arms of Edward Allen the founder.
The original portion of the chapel measures externally 70 ft. 3 in. by 27 ft., the modern aisle is
of nearly the same length, with an internal width
of 14 ft. 1½ in. measured to the centre of the arcade.
The lower portion of the east window, which is of
three four-centred lights, is original, but has been
raised in modern times by the addition of upper
lights, the head of the original window becoming a
transom. At the extreme west of this wall is the
north doorway. In the north wall are two ranges of
three transomed two-light windows clumsily designed,
with very wide mullions and transoms. The south
arcade, constructed when the aisle was added in the
year 1823, is of five equal-sized bays with a smaller
western bay, and has four-centred arches of plastered
9-in. brickwork supported by columns masquerading
in a wooden dress as triple-clustered shafts. At the
eastern end of the aisle is a projection containing the
gallery stairs. In the east wall of the aisle are two
windows, one below and one above the gallery, the
latter of three uncusped four-centred lights, and the
former of two cinquefoiled lights with vertical tracery
within a four-centred head. It seems probable that
the lower portion of the wall is original, and may
possibly have formed the east wall of a vestry, as the
three-light window of the ground stage is almost
certainly 17th-century work. The windows in the
south wall answer to those of the north wall, and
appear to be the original windows re-erected. The
upper portions of the aisle and of the whole of the
west end of the chapel are occupied by galleries.
The nave is roofed by a modern timber roof of
moderate pitch, and the aisle has a flat plaster ceiling.
The walls are cemented externally and crowned by a
parapet, the roof being tiled. There are shallow
buttresses between the windows. The white marble
font was presented to the chapel in the year 1729.
The bowl is oval, and is supported by a baluster-formed stem, standing on a plinth of black marble.
The screen and stalls date from 1851 and are said to
have been shown at the Great Exhibition. The
present organ was originally built by G. England in
1759, and was enlarged and rebuilt in the year 1888,
and again in the years 1897 and 1909. At the east
end of the chapel is a low altar-tomb of modern date
to the memory of the founder of the college, inscribed as follows:—
Here lyeth the bodie of | Edward Alleyn Esqr | the
founder of | this church and college | who died | the
twenty-first day of novbr | A.D. 1626 | aetat 61.
The inscription has probably been copied literally
from an originally external tomb-slab. Over the
north doorway is a tablet commemorating the founding of the college.
There is a peal of five bells, hung in the modern
tower. The dates and inscriptions are as follows:
treble, 1816, the founder's name; (2) by Mears
& Stainbank, 1866; (3) in cribed: 'The gift of
Mr. Job Brocket Preacher and Fellow of the Colledge,
1705. S. K. 1739'; (4) by Mears & Stainbank,
1866; (5) inscribed: 'William Laud Made Mee,
1633.'
The communion plate consists of six pieces: a
cup, silver-gilt, of 1599, which appears to have
been made for secular use; a paten, with foot, of
1671, inscribed: 'The Gift of Ralph Alleyn, the
fourth Master of God's guift Colledge, 1672'; a
silver chalice engraved with the Alleyn shield, probably of 1758; a large silver-gilt paten of 1708,
inscribed: 'Given by George John Allen, Master,
1850'; a silver flagon of 1712 inscribed: 'Doň
Jacobi Alleyn MDCCXII' and engraved with his shield;
and a large silver-gilt alms-dish probably of 1766,
presented by George John Allen in the year 1852.
The registers previous to 1812 consist now of two
volumes only; the rest, so far as can be ascertained,
are missing. The first volume contains baptisms and
burials from 1619 to 1757. The marriages begin
with the marriage of John Alleyn to Dionysia,
daughter of 'Mr. Cold of London,' on 4 October
1634, and continue down to the year 1754. This
book is now in the library of Dulwich College.
On the opposite page to that containing the registers
throughout the volume are lists of the names of the
'Collegiates,' and on either side of this column are
columns headed 'Entrance' and 'Departure.' The
only other volume which is now in the possession of
the College contains baptisms and burials from 1808
to 1812.
The chapel occupies one half of the southern range.
The chaplain's house, which occupies the other half,
answers to it in elevation. The addition, in a most
incongruous style, of the cloister and the central
tower on the quadrangle side, deprives the façade of
the quaint 17th-century air which constituted its sole
claim to architectural consideration. No original
detail of any interest remains in the chaplain's house
or library. In the library of the new buildings of
Dulwich College is preserved the mantelpiece which
was formerly here. This is of wood, painted and
grained; the interesting features of what is otherwise a very ordinary specimen of Jacobean work are
the two painted panels over the fireplace. They
are said to have come originally from the fittings of
Sir Francis Drake's ship the Hind, and afterwards to
have been transferred to Queen Elizabeth's state
barge. When this was broken up they were purchased by Edward Alleyn and placed in this mantelpiece. The panels, about 3 ft. 6 in. in height, have
semicircular hearts and are painted with allegorical
representations of Piety and Generosity. Adjoining
the chapel on the west, and now used as the vestry,
is the original dining hall, which retains a little
17th-century panelling. The western range of
buildings has windows of the same clumsy type as the
chapel. It is two-storied, and has three shallow
gabled projections, with barge-boards of atrocious
design, probably added in 1831, when this block was
altered and added to. The interior retains no detail
of interest, having been adapted for school purposes
in 1857. The walls are cemented and the roof is
tiled. The additions fronting College Road, above
referred to, are roofed with slates. These are now
used as the offices of the estate governors. The
eastern range is of the same materials. The triangular
plot of open ground in front of the college formed by
the forking of the High Street is inclosed by modern
iron railings, with a wrought-iron entrance gate, which
is probably of 18th-century date. The piers are
modern.
The present school buildings, planned to contain
both the Upper and Lower School, which were
to stand one on each side of the great central
block containing the hall and library, were opened in
1878. The rapid growth of the school, however,
necessitated a second building for the Lower School
or Alleyne School in Townley Road, which was
opened in 1883, whilst under the scheme of the
Endowed Schools Commissioners of 1882 a third
school was founded, the James Allen's Girls' School,
representing the charitable foundation of James
Alleyn of 1741. (fn. 12) This stands in East Dulwich
Grove.
Dulwich High Street still retains the appearance
of a village street and is usually known as Dulwich
Village. Dulwich Common is now only marked by
the road bearing its name, but in 1740 it was over
a mile and a quarter in length. (fn. 13) Dulwich Wood
originally formed part of the great Northwood of the
Archbishops of Canterbury, and extended within
recent times to the corner of Lordship Lane. (fn. 14) It
is now mostly inclosed in the grounds of private
houses. Dulwich Park, opened in 1890, formed from
meadow land known as Five Fields, was presented
by the Governors of Dulwich College. It is now
under the management of the London County
Council. In College Road there is a toll-gate
belonging to Dulwich College. An old house called
Dulwich Court is marked on Rocque's map of
London in 1746 and on later maps down to 1808,
but the site has not been certainly identified. (fn. 15)
DULWICH PICTURE GALLERY
DULWICH PICTURE GALLERY originated in
the collection of Desenfans, a picture dealer, who
about the end of the 18th century was commissioned
by Stanislaus, King of Poland, to make a collection of
old masters works. These, at the downfall of the
Polish king, were left on Desenfans' hands and he
bequeathed them to Sir Francis Bourgeois. The
latter died in 1810 and left them to Margaret wife of
Noel Desenfans for life with reversion to Dulwich
College. A gallery to the south of the old college
was built for their reception under the direction of
Sir John Soane, and was opened in 1817. The
building is of stock brick with dressings of stone.
With the Desenfans collection is incorporated the
college collection of pictures bequeathed by Edward
Allen (1626) and by William Cartwright, a bookseller in Holborn (1686). (fn. 16) Adjoining the gallery
on the west is the mausoleum containing the remains
of Sir F. Bourgeois and M. and Mme. Desenfans.

Dulwich: The Toll-gate, College Road
MANORS
CAMBERWELL BUCKINGHAM, alias CAMBERWELL AND PECKHAM.
—Camberwell, which before the
Conquest had been held by Norman of King Edward,
was in 1086 held by Hamon the Sheriff. It was
assessed at 6 hides and 1 virgate as compared with
the former assessment of 12 hides. (fn. 17) With the rest of
the honour of Gloucester, Camberwell passed through
Mabel daughter of Robert Fitz Hamon, brother of
Hamon the Sheriff, to her husband Robert, natural
son of Henry I, who was created Earl of Gloucester
in 1119. The Earls of Gloucester appear to have
subinfeudated the greater part of Camberwell, (fn. 18) retaining their court there and view of frankpledge with a
few acres of land and some rents. (fn. 19) These descended
through Margaret wife of Hugh Audley, sister and
co-heiress of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester,
who died in 1314, to the Earls of Stafford and Buckingham, and escheated to the king after the attainder
of Edward Duke of Buckingham in 1521. A few
months afterwards they were granted by Henry VIII
under the name of the manor of Camberwell and
Peckham, with view of frankpledge, to John Scott
and his heirs. (fn. 20) He died in 1553, leaving a son John
Scott. The latter in the same year settled the manor
on five of his sons, Edward, William, Bartholomew,
Acton, his younger sons by his first wife, and Edgar,
his elder son by his third wife. (fn. 21) John Scott died in
1558 seised of a moiety of the manor of Camberwell,
that is Coldharbour Manor (see below), as well as
of Camberwell Manor, late the Duke of Buckingham's.
In 1571 Edward Scott, the son of John, conveyed a
fifth of Camberwell Buckingham to John Puckering
and Richard Acworth, (fn. 22) evidently for the purposes
of a settlement on his brothers successively in tail (fn. 23) ;
William thus succeeded to
two-fifths, (fn. 24) and sold his twofifths to Bartholomew. (fn. 25) When
William's son Robert died
without issue in 1593 Bartholomew held five-sixths of a
tenement called East Dulwich
and of this manor, (fn. 26) but as he
would naturally have four-fifths (Edgar having disposed
of his share) by inheritance
and acquisition, and as four-fifths regularly appears hence-forward, five-sixths may be a
confusion, owing to John Scott
having had six sons by his first wife. The four-fifths
remained in the Scott (fn. 27) family down to the time of
George I. In 1718 (fn. 28) Francis Scott and Katherine
his wife sold four-fifths of the manor of Camberwell
alias Buckingham alias Camberwell and Peckham to
Joan Cock, widow of Walter Cock. (fn. 29) Mrs. Cock
was involved in the failure of the South Sea Scheme,
and Matthew Cock her grandson levied a fine and
sold the entailed estates to William Belchier in
1769, (fn. 30) who mortgaged them to a Mr. Collins, and
himself went bankrupt. (fn. 31)

Scott of Camberwell. Argent a fesse sable with three boars' heads or thereon.
In 1776 the four-fifths of the manor were sold by
order of court. The rental was £1,301 2s. 3d.
altogether, £706 14s. 9d. in Camberwell, £531 8s. 6d.
in Peckham, and £62 19s. in Dulwich. (fn. 32) At this
time the manorial rights were extinct. There was
also a barn with 42 acres near the Grove worth £50
a year, a long room and 10 acres used for entertainments bringing in £42 8s. a year, a farm near
Peckham Rye worth £100, a cottage worth £14,
and total small rents worth £485. The buyers (fn. 33)
were Wright and Salter, who sold two-thirds to
George Daniel, John and Simon Halliday, bankers
(John Halliday was member for Taunton), and onethird to Dr. Coakley Lettsom. In 1841 the Halliday
family still had their two-thirds of the four-fifths;
but Dr. Lettsom's representatives had then sold his onethird to William Whitton, from whom it had passed
to Sir Edward Bowyer Smijth.
Edgar Scott in 1583 joined with William and
James Patching, to whom he had shortly before
conveyed his fifth, (fn. 34) in a sale to Edmund Bowyer and
Katherine his wife (fn. 35) ; and this share follows the
descent of Camberwell Freren (q.v.).
UVEDALE (formerly OVEDALE, hence Dovedale, Dowdale, and now Dowlas Lane).
—A certain
Alexander de Titsey seems to have been enfeoffed
of part of Camberwell either by Robert Fitz Roy
Earl of Gloucester or by William Earl of Gloucester, (fn. 36) his son. At the time of the Testa de
Nevill
(fn. 37) his descendant Geoffrey de Titsey held a
quarter of a fee in Camberwell of the honour of
Gloucester. The overlordship follows the descent
of Camberwell Buckingham. (fn. 38) In 1222–3 Philip
Vitdeners (fn. 39) quitclaimed to Agnes de Titsey (probably
widow of Geoffrey) and John de Titsey and his heirs
a moiety of a quarter fee, which she held in dower,
and the Titsey family for some time held this
manor and made minor grants. (fn. 40) In 1282 Thomas
de Titsey assigned his manor of Camberwell to
Henry Pyrot (fn. 41) in trust for himself and his heirs.
At his death about 25 July 1297 he was found
seised of land at Camberwell with rents and pleas
and perquisites of court, held of the Countess of
Gloucester, and of a messuage and land held of Sir
Robert de Bekewell. (fn. 42) Thomas de Titsey left three
co-heirs—John de Malevyle, who had married his
sister Margaret, Alice the wife of Gilbert Etton,
another sister, and Roger Horne, who had married
Elizabeth, the third sister. Margaret had no issue,
Alice had a daughter Isabel, who became the wife of
John de Uvedale, Elizabeth had a son John. In
1305 Gilbert and Alice with John de Westwyk and
Margery his wife conveyed the reversion of a third
of the manor, held for life by Elizabeth, wife of John
de Horton, to John de Uvedale. (fn. 43)
Thomas de Elingham and Richard de Bernham,
trustees of John de Uvedale, granted these two-thirds
to him and his heirs in 1302. (fn. 44) John left a son and
heir Peter, (fn. 45) who in 1340 gave his mother a life interest
in his lands in Camberwell, Peckham, and Dulwich
(Dylewysshe). The Uvedale family continued to hold
the lands until the reign of James I. (fn. 46) Towards
the end of the reign of Elizabeth 'Dowdales' was
demised to the Scotts (together with Dulwich), and
Edgar Scott became involved in litigation with his
brothers about it. (fn. 47)
In 1608 (fn. 48) Sir William Uvedale (1560–1616) and
Richard Uvedale conveyed Dowdales in Peckham and
Camberwell to Sir Robert Carey and Sir Richard
Norton, the trustees of his will. Sir William his
son (fn. 49) (1586–1652) had to sell his Surrey lands to
satisfy his creditors. Probably this manor was bought
by the Bowyers, as in 1808 it formed part of the
Bowyer lands, for which see Camberwell Freren; as
also in 1842, when it no longer formed a manor. It
comprised about 90 acres.
At the end of the 13th century a manor of
CAMBERWELL was held of the heir of the Earl of
Gloucester by Robert de Bekewell, who owed the
service of half a knight's fee. (fn. 50) He died seised of it
before 22 March 1307, and it descended to his son
Stephen de Bekewell. (fn. 51) The manor remained in
this family until the reign of Henry V. In 1349
Henry de Bekewell son of Stephen (fn. 52) made a settlement on himself and his wife Agnes in tail. (fn. 53) In
1352 Henry and his wife Agnes (fn. 54) assigned to John
de Worsted and John Fauconer and the heirs of the
latter one messuage, 160 acres of land and 50 of
meadow in Camberwell, which probably formed the
manor of Basings, which was held according to the
inquisition on Thomas Dolshill of 1373 (fn. 55) (see below)
of Henry Bekewell by fealty. In 1356 (fn. 56) Henry de
Bekewell granted the reversion of the life interest
then held by William de Holbeck in the manor of
Camberwell to Thomas Dolshill and Joan his wife
for life.
William Bekewell in 1402 granted to John
Langhorne a piece of land called Fynchescroffe, in
a field called Fynchesfield. (fn. 57) This William Bekewell
left two co-heiresses, (fn. 58) who inherited as from Henry
Bekewell, one of whom, Isabella, married William Scott,
the father of the William who married the co-heiress
of Bredinghurst (see below). In 1417 (fn. 59) Isabella the
widow of William Scott died owning the moiety of
the site of the manor of Camberwell with the houses
built upon it, held of Anne Countess of Stafford for
the yearly service of a pair of gilt spurs value 6d.
In 1439 (fn. 60) William Scott her son held at his death
this half of Camberwell Manor, as well as half of
the other moiety (by what title does not appear), of
Humphrey Earl of Stafford. John Scott his son and
heir was a minor, and his custody was entrusted to
James Fenys, his marriage to be approved of the king
without fee. Edward Scott the grandson of John
Scott (of 1511 (fn. 61) ) was found at his death in 1573
to hold the moiety of the manor of Camberwell.
John the father of this Edward Scott had had a son
Richard who and whose son Thomas predeceased
him, and Edward himself being childless his heir
was the next brother William. John Scott the
father of Edward had been married three times. By
his first wife Elizabeth Robins he had six sons:
John, the eldest, who died childless; Richard and
Edward and William, who have been mentioned;
Bartholomew and Acton. By another wife he had
a daughter Margaret, and by a third Edgar and
Southwell. In 1588 (fn. 62) William died, and in 1593 (fn. 63)
his son and heir Robert died seised of the capital
messuage of the manor of Camberwell, when his
brother Bartholomew became the next heir under
the settlement made by Edward (see Camberwell
Buckingham). Bartholomew died in June 1600 (fn. 64)
seised of this moiety of Camberwell, again described
as the site and capital messuage. The only survivor
of this large family was Peter Scott, the son of Acton,
the youngest son by the first wife. Henceforth the
separate history of the Scott moiety of Camberwell
Manor follows that of the share of Camberwell
Buckingham, which remained in the Scott family.
FREREN (Frieren, Friern).
—From a cartulary of
Haliwell Priory, (fn. 65) a nunnery situate by St. Leonard's,
Shoreditch, it appears that Robert Earl of Gloucester
gave Robert de Rouen 100 acres out of his forest of
Camberwell at a service of half a mark a year, and
that the latter gave them to the nunnery of Haliwell
at this rent. Subsequently the earl granted to
Reginald de Pointz part of the vill of Camberwell
with the service due on the 100 acres. (fn. 66) Reginald, in
exchange for a road to the wood, gave the priory 8 acres,
which Robert de Dunton held and for which he
rendered tithes. Reginald also gave the priory in frankalmoign 12 acres near Godebald's land; afterwards he
took the cross with King Richard and divided the rest of
his part of the vill among his four nephews. Nicholas
Pointz, one of these, gave the priory 10 acres
extending from the house belonging to the priory to
the grange of the monks of St. Saviour's (Hatcham
Barnes) for 2s. a year; and Nicholas then gave the
priory all these lands and services in frankalmoign.
When the lands of Walter de Pointz came to him on
the latter's death he sold them to the priory to hold
by the service of a quarter of three knights' fees. Other
small grants were also made to the priory. (fn. 67) In 1235
Henry III confirmed to the priory the gifts of
Nicholas Pointz, Martin of Camberwell and Solomon
of Basings. (fn. 68)
At the Dissolution these premises were valued at
£13 6s. 8d. (fn. 69) The priory (or prioress) surrendered
in 1539, (fn. 70) and in 1544 the manor was granted
under the name of Camberwell or Camberwell
Freren to Robert Draper. (fn. 71) In 1559 Matthew
Draper held it, and in that year assigned it to
William Blackwell as trustee on his marriage with
Blackwell's daughter Lence. (fn. 72) They had no issue,
and in 1577 Draper died, (fn. 73) leaving his sisters,
Benedict the wife of John Fromonds, and Elizabeth, the wife of William Forster, his co-heirs.
In 1581 (fn. 74) Benedict Formens or Fromonds conveyed
her right in the manor to Sir Edmund Bowyer, son
of her sister Elizabeth.
Sir Edmund Bowyer's will is dated 1626. He
had no children, and his heir was Edmund Bowyer,
son of his brother Benjamin, ten years old in 1623
and knighted in 1633. (fn. 75) This Edmund's eldest son
Anthony died without leaving issue in 1709, (fn. 76) and
his surviving heir was Edmund, the son of Sir
Edmund's second wife. He died unmarried in
1718, and his heir was his sister Elizabeth, who
married Sir James Ashe, second baronet. Her eldest
surviving daughter Martha, who died in 1757, in 1715
married Joseph Windham, who died in 1746, and
left two daughters, of whom Mary (1720–89)
married John Windham, (fn. 77) who seems to have assumed
the name of Bowyer. In 1761 (fn. 78) John Windham
Bowyer conveyed the manor of Camberwell Frierne
and one fifth of Camberwell Buckingham to Joseph
Cocks, probably for the purposes of a settlement.
Joseph son of John Windham had no issue, and in
1808 Sir William Smijth, bart., of Hill Hall, co.
Essex, husband of his sister Anne, (fn. 79) owned the land.
In 1842 Sir William Bowyer Smijth, his grandson,
held his share of the manor, and, at any rate up
to 1888 (after Camberwell had been incorporated
with London), the Smijths held the manor. The
land was all built over early in the 19th century.
The manor of BREDINGHURST probably formed
part originally of the manor of West Greenwich, (fn. 80)
which in 1086 was held by Gilbert Maminot, for
at the beginning of the 13th century it formed one
of the fees of the 'custodia de Maminot,' one of
the Dover castle-ward baronies. (fn. 81) A family called
'de Bredinghurst' appear in Camberwell about
the same date, and were probably then tenants of
the manor. In 1218–19 Reginald de Bredinghurst
granted Adrian son of Ralph Eswy 12 acres of land
in Peckham, (fn. 82) and other similar small grants of
Reginald's are extant. (fn. 83) In 1335 Robert de Bredinghurst died seised of 120 acres of land, 34 acres of
meadow and 6 marks rent in Camberwell and Peckham, held by service of 10s. every thirty-two weeks
to the ward of Dover Castle, and pleas and perquisites
of court worth 2s. He also held 22 acres of Isabel
de Uvedale and Joan de Malynes by service of 5s.
and suit at the court of Hugh de Audley at Camberwell. He left a son and heir Stephen. (fn. 84) His widow
Joan died the same year. (fn. 85) In 1369 Thomas Dolshill
(or Doushull) was seised of this manor, (fn. 86) and in 1373,
after his death, it was occupied by John Trope during
the minority of Edward son and heir of Thomas. (fn. 87)
Edward Dolshill died in 1382 (fn. 88) seised of the manor
of Bredinghurst. The heirs were Simon Worsted
the son of Isabel, sister of Thomas, and Agnes
the wife of John atte Pantoye the daughter of
Joan Alye, another sister of Thomas. Probably
Joan the widow of Thomas Dolshill (who lived
until 1398) married Robert Little, (fn. 89) for the
latter and Joan his wife held one-third of the
manor in dower, the reversion of which they assigned
in 1382 to John Worsted and his wife Agnes, (fn. 90)
the other two-thirds having descended to the
two co-heirs of Edward Dolshill. By 1407 all
the members of this family were dead: Joan the
widow, Joan and Alice Worsted the daughters and
co-heiresses of Simon Worsted, (fn. 91) who both had
no issue, and lastly Margaret the daughter of John
atte Pantoye, who married Sir Robert Bernard. The
heir of Margaret who re-united the manor was John
Worsted, who is described as the son of John son of
Isabel, the sister of Thomas Dolshill. (fn. 92)
At this point the history of the manor becomes
more obscure. It looks as though this John Worsted
left two daughters, each of whom inherited half of
Bredinghurst. One of these, Isabel, (fn. 93) in the reign of
Henry V was the wife of William Scott and held a
tenement called Bredinghurst. This Scott moiety
follows the descent of their manor of Camberwell
(q.v.) up to 1563, when Edward Scott conveyed (fn. 94)
half the manor of Bredinghurst to Thomas Muschamp
and Matthew Muschamp his son and heir. Thomas
Muschamp survived his son Matthew. Matthew left
no children, and the heirs were Thomas's daughters
Jane wife of Thomas Crymes, and Susan wife of
Henry Toppisfield. (fn. 95) The latter assigned his quarter
to Thomas Crymes. (fn. 96) His widow married Sir Thomas
Hunt (fn. 97) and retained one quarter for her life.
The other moiety apparently went after the death
of John Worsted to Florence, wife of Henry Appulton,
who in 1456 conveyed it to Robert Wode. (fn. 98) Later
it came into the Muschamp family, and in 1617 it was
held by Francis Muschamp, a paternal great-nephew of
Thomas Muschamp, the assignee from Edward Scott. (fn. 99)
In 1632 his son and heir Francis died, leaving a son
Edmund (fn. 100) ; he had married Frances Bowyer, widow,
sister of Henry Clerk. Edmund died childless, and
Mary wife of Edward Eversfield and Elizabeth the
wife of John Pearse, his sisters, succeeded as coheiresses. In 1661 Elizabeth Muschamp, (fn. 101) probably
widow of Thomas brother of Francis, joined in a
conveyance by Mary Eversfield and her husband to
John Herne, but by 1664 she must have died, for
Mary and her husband conveyed the manor to
Anthony Eversfield. By 1672 Mary had died, and
Edward Eversfield was remarried to one Cecily. (fn. 102) In
that year he sold the manor to Sir Thomas Bond,
bart. Sir Thomas Crymes (knighted in 1603 (fn. 103) ) had
died in 1644; his heir was Sir George, but his
moiety was apparently settled on his sister, who
married Sir Thomas Bond, and the two moieties
thus became united.
Sir Henry Bond son of Thomas in 1688 conveyed his manor of Bredinghurst to trustees (fn. 104) ; he had
in 1672 built a new manor-house (the date was on
the weather-vane). It was sold to Sir Thomas Trevor,
later Lord Trevor, who died in 1731, after which it
was sold to Mrs. Hill. (fn. 105) She left it by will to her
nephew Isaac Pacatus Shard, (fn. 106) whose son William
inherited it. He died in 1806, leaving the manor to
his mother for life, with remainder to his brother
Charles. In 1797 the mansion was pulled down and
the house and gardens let as a building estate, now
Hill Street.
In 1362 Sir Thomas Vaughan died seised of the
manor of COLD HARBOUR or COLD ABBEY,
held partly of the king as of the manor of Hatcham
Barnes and partly of the Earl of Stafford. (fn. 107) It seems
possible to trace the manor rather further back. Some
of the lands held by Roger de Rokesle in Hatcham
(see manor of Little Hatcham in Deptford St. Paul)
were probably retained by him when he conveyed
Little Hatcham to Robert Burnell, and sold (as in the
case of Foot's Cray in Ruxley Hundred in Kent) to
John Abel, (fn. 108) who also held a quarter of a knight's fee
in Camberwell of the honour of Clare. (fn. 109) Abel received
a grant of free warren in his demesne lands of
Hatcham and Camberwell in 1295, (fn. 110) and in 1322
died seised of a messuage and garden held of Roger
de Bavent (lord of Hatcham Barnes) and lands held
of various lords. (fn. 111) After his death his son Richard
probably settled these lands in default of issue on Sir
William Vaughan (as he did Foot's Cray (fn. 112) ), for in
1345 Vaughan granted £4 rent from lands in
Hatcham and Camberwell to Master Gilbert de
Bruera, canon of St. Paul's. (fn. 113) The Thomas who
died seised in 1362 (see above) was therefore presumably William's son. He left a son and heir
Hamon. In 1440 Alice Middleton, widow, and
possibly the heiress of Hamon, granted to her son
William and his heirs by Margaret Balgye her manor
of Cold Abbey in Peckham. (fn. 114) By 1493 (fn. 115) the
manor was divided into moieties, and Christopher
Middleton, who held in right of his wife Margaret,
assigned one of them to Michael Skinner, John Scott
and John Skinner for 100 marks. Margaret may have
been a daughter of William and Margaret Middleton.
The moiety of Michael Skinner must have devolved
on Richard Skinner, whose daughter Elizabeth (fn. 116)
married John Scott the elder and brought the moiety
into the Scott inheritance. (fn. 117) Edward Scott died
seised of this moiety, but in the subsequent Scott
inquisitions it does not appear; probably it was
merged in their other lands. Another daughter of
Richard Skinner, Agnes, became the wife of Roger
Legh, and on them their half manor was settled in
1506. (fn. 118) By 1559 it had come into the hands of
Christopher Tubbes, (fn. 119) who in 1570 conveyed it to John
Bowyer, (fn. 120) with whose estates it is henceforth merged.
PECKHAM (Peckeham, xi cent.; Peccheham, xii,
xiii and xiv cent.).
—In 1086 Peckham was held
by the Bishop of Lisieux of the Bishop of Bayeux.
Formerly Alfled had held it of Harold, and it had
been part of the great estate of Battersea. It was
assessed at 2 hides and was valued at 30s. (fn. 121)
Seven acres at least of Bredinghurst Manor were in
Peckham. The manor of Camberwell was called
indifferently Camberwell or Peckham, or Camberwell
and Peckham, (fn. 122) and Peckham after 1086 has no
independent history, except in one instance where it
appears as a separate manor. In 1369 Thomas
Dolshill (fn. 123) (v. Bredinghurst Manor) conjointly with
Joan his wife held a manor of Peckham of Henry
Bekewelle as of his manor of Camberwell for 5s. 10d.
a year. Part of Peckham also lay in Cold Abbey and
was held of Thomas Vaughan at 18d. a year. The
extent was of a capital messuage, 80 acres of plough-land, 15 acres of meadow, 10 of underwood.
The manor of MILKWELL was partly in Camberwell and partly in Lambeth. Up to 1305 it
belonged to St. Thomas, Southwark, and in 1291
was taxed at £1 5s. (fn. 124) In 1305 it was granted by
the Hospital to St. Mary Overy in consideration of
10s. rent from the convent. (fn. 125) At the Dissolution it
was valued at £5 2s. (fn. 126) The manor with Milkwell
Wood in Lambeth was granted in 1541 to Sir Thomas
Wyatt, (fn. 127) who was attainted in 1554. It was afterwards acquired by Richard Duke, clerk of the Court
of Augmentations, and remained for some time
in the same family. By 1609 (fn. 128) it had come to
Thomas Duke, whose property consisted of the
manor, 6 messuages, 8 cottages, 5 barns, 5 gardens,
and 400 acres in Milkwell, Camberwell and Lambeth,
besides 30 acres once parcel of the monastery of
Bermondsey. (fn. 129) Sir Edward Duke, his heir, sold them
to Robert Campbell, (fn. 130) alderman of London. By his
will Robert Campbell left his estates to his two sons
James and Thomas in tail successively, and in default
to his five daughters.
In 1672 (fn. 131) Richard Bassett suffered a recovery of
one-third of the manor of Milkwell. According to
Manning and Bray (fn. 132) it was acquired by the Bowyer
family, and passed through them to the Windhams
and Smijths (see Camberwell Freren).
BASINGS.
—
From Testa de Nevill
(fn. 133) it appears
that Henry de Wyk and his co-parceners held two
knights' fees in Camberwell of the honour of
Gloucester. In 1224–5 Richard de Wyk and
Asceline his wife were assigned from Philip Vitdeners
a quarter of a knight's fee. (fn. 134) They had a daughter
Margery, to whom in 1241 Asceline the widow
assigned half a knight's fee in Camberwell and
Peckham, herself retaining a life interest. (fn. 135) By a
fine three years later (fn. 136) Asceline Wyk reserved a rent of
£10 during her life, probably in the stead of a direct
holding. Margery married Robert de Basings, a
citizen of London, and in 1287 (fn. 137) the two acquired
from William the son of Reginald de Rokesle, evidently trustee for a settlement, a messuage, 140 acres
of land, 15 acres of meadow and rents in Camberwell.
The inquisition of 1373 on Thomas Dolshill (see
above), in whose possession Basings next appears,
states that it was held of Bekewell's manor of Camberwell, and, apparently, after the failure of the Basings
it had been re-granted by Henry de Bekewell in 1352
to John de Worsted and John Fauconer, (fn. 138) who
must have assigned it to Thomas Dolshill. The
extent was 160 acres of land and 50 of meadow. In
1373 (fn. 139) it appears among his possessions, and follows
the descent of Bredinghurst (q.v.) as late as the death
of Margaret Bernard. (fn. 140) In 1543 (fn. 141) Henry Baker
assigned to Humphrey Styll lands and tenements
called Bydinges, ground called Austyns Fylde, and a
close called Giskyns, in Camberwell, and at his
death (fn. 142) in 1557 Baker held the manor of Basings in
Peckham said to be held of Ralph Muschamp, as
of his manor of Camberwell. His son and heir
Richard Baker conveyed it in 1591 (fn. 143) to Edward
Newport, and in 1596 (fn. 144) he and Newport joined in
conveying it to Bartholomew Scott and Thomas
Sadleir. In 1631 the manor was in the hands of
Sir Thomas Gardner, (fn. 145) whose father William had
bought it of Bartholomew Scott and others. (fn. 146) His
heir was his son George. (fn. 147) In 1812 it was in the
possession of Sir William East, and in 1842 of Sir
East George Clayton East.
DULWICH (Dilewys, x cent.; Dylewish, xiv cent.).
—A part of Dulwich seems to have been included in
the manor of Bermondsey, which was ancient demesne
of the Crown, and at the beginning of the 12th
century was conferred by successive royal grants on
Bermondsey Abbey. (fn. 148) Besides these there were
apparently two knights' fees at Dulwich forming part
of the inheritance of the Earls of Gloucester, for at
the time of the Testa de Nevill these were held by
Henry de Dulwich and his co-parceners. (fn. 149) Possibly
they were also given to the monastery.
At the Dissolution the manor of Dulwich was
valued at £13 5s. 8d., lands in Camberwell at 13s. 4d.,
the rectory of Camberwell at £10, and the church at
£7 7s. (fn. 150) In 1546 (fn. 151) the reversion of the manor
and advowson of the vicarage were granted, after the
expiration of a fifty years' lease from the prior to John
Solt, to Thomas Calton, whose widow Margaret and
son conveyed them in 1570 (fn. 152) to Lord Giles Paulet,
son of William Marquess of Winchester, and William
Chyvall as trustees for a settlement on Margaret and
her son Nicholas. (fn. 153) In 1571 Margaret Calton, the
widow, died holding the manor and a mansion-house
called Hall Place and the advowson. The lands were
settled on Nicholas, a younger son, and his heirs,
with remainders to the other sons in succession. In
1575 (fn. 154) Nicholas Calton died, and in 1605 Sir
Francis Calton, kt., sold the manor, Hall Place and
the advowson to Edward Allen, the founder of
Dulwich College. (fn. 155) In 1620 Edward Allen (fn. 156) conveyed the manor to the trustees for Dulwich College.
Hall Place, the manor-house, stood in Manor
House Fields at the bottom of Croxted Road. About
1882 the land on which the house stood was let for
building purposes, and Hall Place was pulled down. (fn. 157)
KNOWLES or KNOLLES.
—Of this reputed
manor very little is known. The first mention is
in 1433, (fn. 158) when John Browe, esq., brother of
Robert Browe, released to John Winter and Nicholas
Molyneux all his right in lands once belonging to Robert Knolles, later to David Bykley, in
Camberwell, Lambeth and Streatham. In 1449 (fn. 159)
litigation arose between Nicholas Molyneux and
Thomas Coberley as to the manors of Stockwell,
Knolles and Levehurst in Lambeth and Camberwell,
lands and tenements held at the will of the Archbishop
of Canterbury and the Abbot of Bermondsey, a tenement with appurtenances in the lordship of Kennington, and a tenement called the Boreshede in
St. Mary Magdalene, Southwark. It was decided that
Molyneux was to pay William Fitz Water 64 marks
on behalf of Thomas Coberley for the manor of
Knolles. Nicholas Molyneux also was to give the
arbiter William Laken 100 marks, or the value in
plate to the use of the White Friars, Fleet Street,
they to pray for the soul of John Winter. Nicholas
Molyneux was to discontinue forging false deeds.
Thomas Coberley and his warrantor Fitz Water were
to make over to Nicholas Molyneux Knolles and all
the lands once belonging to Rauf Silkesten, Rauf
Stokes, John Brian, and Clement Bisshopps. In the
same year John Audley and William Vavasor released
to John Stanley, Nicholas Molyneux, John Basket,
and Adam Levelord all their rights in the manor by
feoffment of Roger Wynter and John Cofford. (fn. 160) Molyneux's rights seem to have been those of a trustee
or mortgagee, for they had apparently expired before
1463, when a certain Richard Cely (possibly a trustee)
released to John Browe all his lands in Peckham. (fn. 161)
This John Browe and William Wode (fn. 162) in 1467
received a grant from Stephen Godewin and John
Baker the younger of divers parcels of land at
'le Knoll' otherwise called le Worpyn, below
Asschlynhawe, in a place called le Cheker, between
St. Nicholas Forlonde and Bernesmede in Shortworth,
between the waterway and Soulstrete, and in Lyneacre
adjoining Estbroke. At the end of the 16th century
this manor belonged with Dulwich to the Caltons, (fn. 163)
and in 1620 (fn. 164) Edward Allen and his wife conveyed it
with Dulwich to William Allen and William Austen,
the trustees for Dulwich College.
CHURCHES
The parish church of ST. GILES
is a large building of stone in the
style of the 14th century, erected in
1844 and designed by Sir Gilbert Scott after the
old church had been burnt down. It has a chancel
of three bays, central tower with an octagonal stone
spire, transepts, nave of five bays, with a clearstory,
low aisles and north and south porches. The roofs
are covered with lead. It occupies a site on the
south side of Peckham Road. The churchyard is large
and contains many graves to the south and west of
the church, but none to the north between the church
and the road.
There is a ring of ten modern bells, all of 1844.
The plate consists of a silver gilt chalice of 1557
with V-shaped bowl and baluster stem; a chalice
with hall mark of 1630, and two modern ones, all
silver gilt; three silver gilt patens, dated 1630,
1635 (?) and 1665 respectively, the last being inscribed 'The guift of Theodore Cock, Merchant'; a
silver gilt plate of mid-17th-century date; two silver
flagons of 1691, inscribed 'The Gift of John Byne,
Gent. to the Church of Camberwell, A.D. 1691 ';
two glass cruets and a brass alms-basin.
The registers are in six books: (1) all entries
1556 to 1754; (2) baptisms and burials 1754 to
1802; (3), (4) and (5) marriages 1754 to 1780,
1780 to 1794, and 1794 to 1813; (6) baptisms
and burials 1802 to 1815.
The parish of ST. GEORGE was formed in 1825.
The church, which stands in Wells Street, consists of
a small apsidal chancel with a large nave at the west
of which is a hexastyle Doric portico. Above this is
a square tower in three stages, the first of which is
solid, whilst the second and third open with Doric
and Ionic columns and entablatures. The body of
the church and the apse are of stock brick, the portico
and tower being of stone. Internally and externally
the nave is divided into bays by pilasters of Greek
detail. The apse, which is of Roman Doric design,
is a much more recent addition. There is a fair-sized churchyard, now used as a small park.
The church of ST. CHRYSOSTOM, Hill Street,
Peckham, is a barn-like structure of stock brick and
cement of the quasi-Gothic of about 1830–40. The
chancel and nave are of equal width (the latter
having galleries) lighted by wide pointed single lights
and having an embattled parapet. The west front,
which is of cement, faces the road, contains three
entrances and is surmounted by a bell turret with
an octagonal lantern.
The parish of CHRIST CHURCH, Old Kent
Road, was formed in 1838. The church was built
about 1840 of brick with stone dressings in the style
of the end of the 13th century and consists of a
chancel, nave, south transept and aisle, and north
baptistery and a south-east tower.
The parish of EMMANUEL was formed in 1842.
The church, which was built in the same year,
consists of a chancel, two eastern towers, aisleless
nave with galleries and eastern vestry. It is of white
brick with stone dressings.
The parish of ST. MARY MAGDALENE,
Peckham, was formed in 1842. The church occupies
a detached oval site in St. Mary's Road, to the south
of Queen's Road, Peckham, and was built about 1840
of stock brick in the style of the end of the 12th
century. It has a shallow chancel with vestries, &c.,
a wide nave with galleries and an engaged west
tower with an octagonal brick spire and a clock.
The parish of CAMDEN was formed in 1844.
The church, which stands in Peckham Road, is built
of stock brick with stone dressings in the Renaissance
classic style of the period; it has a chancel and nave
with short transepts. The west front towards the
road contains the three principal entran es and has a
horizontal parapet.
The parish of ST. MATTHEW, Denmark Hill,
was formed in 1848. The church, which stands
within the ancient parish of Lambeth, is a stone
building in the style of the 14th century. It has an
apsidal chancel and nave, both with a clearstory, low
aisles, vestries, &c., and a north tower with a tall
thin octagonal spire enriched with crockets, &c. At
the east end towards the road is a low porch with
passages around the apse.
The parish of ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST,
East Dulwich, was formed in 1865. The church,
which stands on Goose Green, is built of rubble and
Bath stone in the style of the 13th century. It has
a chancel with a round apse and vaulted ceiling, nave
with a clearstory lighted by dormer windows, narrow
north and south aisles of five bays, porches, &c., and
a south-east transeptal tower containing a side chapel
with a gallery over, and crowned by an octagonal
tiled spire. The roofs are slated. The stone font
has a tall oak cover.
The parish of ST. ANDREW, Peckham, was
formed in 1866. The church consists of a chancel,
nave, narthex and tower. It is built of stone and is
designed in the style of the late 13th century. The
tower is surmounted by a shingled spire.
The parish of ST. STEPHEN, South Dulwich,
was formed in 1868. The church, which is in
College Road, consists of an apsidal chancel, nave and
aisles and spire. In the south wall of the chancel is
a recess containing a fresco by Sir E. J. Poynter,
P.R.A., representing the trial and martyrdom of
St. Stephen.
The parish of ALL SAINTS, Blenheim Grove,
Peckham, was formed in 1872. The church was
built about 1870 of rag and Bath stone in the
style of the 13th century. It consists of a chancel
with a round apse, nave with semi-dormer clearstory
windows, vestries, &c., north and south aisles and
the stump of a north-west porch tower with one bell.
The roofs are tiled.
The parish of ST. JAMES, Knatchbull Road,
was formed in 1874. The church is a stone
building in the style of the 14th century. It has a
chancel with an apsidal east end, nave with a clearstory of circular windows and with a west doorway,
north and south transepts off the nave, north and
south aisles and a north-west tower with corner
pinnacles and an octagonal stone spire. In the
tower is a clock. An inscribed stone records the
consecration of the building in 1870.
The parish of ST. PHILIP, Avondale Square, was
formed in 1876. The church consists of a half
octagonal chancel with north organ chamber and
south vestry, a fair-sized nave of five bays, a south
transept and north and south aisles. The whole
church is built of Kentish rag stone with dressed
details, and is designed in late 13th-century style.
The churchyard is of moderate size, and contains,
besides the church, a parish room.
The parish of ST. ANTHOLIN, Nunhead, was
formed in 1878. The church is a large rectangular
structure of red brick, built in 1877, in the style of
the first part of the 13th century. It has a nave
and chancel of equal width, the nave having a clearstory with lancet windows, north and south aisles,
transepts, porches, &c. The middle roof is gabled
and covered with slates, the aisles have lean-to roofs.
The oak reredos designed by Sir Christopher Wren
and a bell were brought from St. Antholin's, Watling
Street.
The parish of ST. LUKE was formed in 1878.
The church, which is situated in Rosemary Road,
consists of a chancel and nave with aisles in one range
and a south-west porch. It is of the simplest design
and is built of stock bricks.
The parish of ST. JUDE, Peckham, was formed
in 1880. The church in Meeting House Lane is
built of stock and red brick and stone in the style of
the 12th century. It has a chancel with organ
chamber, south chapel, nave with a clearstory, aisles
with arcades of four round-arched bays and northwest and south-west porches; a bell-cote above the
west gable contains two bells. The aisle windows
have semi-dormer gable heads. The roofs are covered
with slates. The chancel arch is spanned by a
carved oak screen, above which is a rood with
figures.
The parish of ST. MARK, Camberwell, was
formed in 1880. The church in Coburg Road
consists of a chancel and nave, and is built of brick
with a sparing use of stone and with slate roofs.
Over the nave roof is a wooden flèche, and attached
to the church are parish rooms, &c. It was designed
by Mr. Norman Shaw and is a lofty and dignified
structure.
The parish of ST. SAVIOUR, Denmark Park, was
formed in 1881. The church, which stands in
Coplestone Road, was built about 1880 of white
bricks with stone dressings in the style of the 14th
century. It consists of a chancel, nave with a clearstory lighted by dormer windows, low aisles of six
bays with round pillars and pointed arches, north
organ chamber and a south chapel. The entrance
to the chancel has an oak screen and rood.
The parish of ST. MARK, Peckham, was formed
in 1884. The church, which is in Harders Road,
is a building of red brick and stone in the style
of the 13th century erected in 1883; it has a
continuous chancel and nave, the former having an
arch on either side opening into an organ chamber
and a vestry, nave and low aisles, with arcades of
three wide bays; a bell hangs in a bell-cote above
the west gable.
The parish of ST. CLEMENT, East Dulwich,
was formed in 1886. The church in Friern Road
was built in 1883 of red brick and stone in the
style of the 13th century and consists of an apsidal
chancel, south chapel, vestry, organ chamber, &c.,
nave of six bays with stone pillars and arches and
a clearstory with lancet windows, north and south
aisles, and west baptistery flanked by porches. The
chancel has an unfinished carved oak rood screen and
loft, with a temporary cross above. The pulpit is of
carved oak, the font of carved stone. The roofs are
covered with slates.
The parish of ALL SAINTS, North Peckham,
was formed in 1892. The church consists of a
chancel with north organ chamber and vestry and
south chapel, a nave with north and south aisles,
a north porch and a west baptistery. The whole
church is well and freely designed in late 13th-century style, and is built of red brick and stone
with tile roofs. It was designed by Walter Planck,
architect, and was built in 1893.
The parish of ST. BARNABAS, Dulwich, was
formed in 1894. The church in Calton Road is
a large and well-built structure of red brick and
stone in the style of the 15th century, begun in
1892. It has a continuous chancel and nave, with
arcades of eight tall bays having octagonal pillars and
pointed arches of red and white stones set indiscriminately, high aisles with lean-to roofs of panelled
oak and traceried windows, south chapel with altar
and oak reredos and closed off with oak screens, and
an exceptionally massive plain red brick west tower,
added in 1907, containing a gallery. Provision is
made for future west porches, but these are still
unfinished. The walls are lined with oak panelling,
and such of the furniture as is permanent is of wellcarved oak. Red sandstone is used for the windows;
the roofs are covered with slates.
The cemetery at Nunhead was laid out shortly
before 1840 and was consecrated in that year. The
chapels were built in 1844. The Camberwell
Borough Cemetery is in Forest Hill Road.
Besides the churches mentioned above there are
the Cambridge Mission House, Trinity College
Mission and other centres of religious and social
work conducted by various Cambridge colleges.
There are Roman Catholic churches in Camberwell New Road, Lordship Lane and Elm Grove,
Peckham.
There are also a large number of Nonconformist
places of worship. The beginning of Nonconformity
in Peckham seems to date from the retirement of the
Rev. John Maynard from the vicarage of Camberwell
before 1658. (fn. 165) He is said to have lived and preached
in Old Meeting House Lane, off the Kent Road, but
no congregation appears in the lists under Charles II.
A meeting house, however, is said to have been built
in 1657. One was certainly built before 1717, when
Oliver Goldsmith was usher to the school kept by
its minister, John Milner. A century later, in 1817,
Hanover Chapel was built for this congregation.
From answers to the visitation of 1725 it seems that
this meeting was Congregationalist from the early
days, though some of the earlier ministers had
Presbyterian orders. It was opened by H.R.H. the
Duke of Sussex. The name dates probably from
1717, when the Hanoverian succession was specially
welcome to Nonconformists. The chapel is now
used as a place of entertainment, the congregation
having migrated to Collyer Place. Another congregation was organized at the Manor House by the
Rev. W. Smith, a Presbyterian minister, in 1780,
and one with a separate meeting house was
organized in 1799. The first chapel in the Kent
Road was opened in 1827, and a Baptist chapel
in Albany Road was purchased for the use of the
Congregationalists in 1835. The congregation in
the Camberwell New Road dates from 1853; the
congregation from the old Manor House Chapel
migrated here and a new chapel of some architectural pretensions was opened in 1856. In Dulwich
a chapel was built in 1852 and a new and larger
one in its place in 1855. A new Congregational
chapel was built at Peckham in 1859.
There were twenty Quakers in the parish in 1725.
In 1825 a Friends' Meeting House was built in
Hanover Street. In Camberwell New Road is a Welsh
church, and in Flodden Road is a New Jerusalem
church, built in 1867 for the Swedenborgian denomination. There is also a Catholic Apostolic church in
Camberwell New Road. The Wesleyan chapel, where
the Rev. Hugh Price Hughes formerly preached, is
in Barry Road.
ADVOWSONS
The church of Camberwell, mentioned in the Domesday Survey, was
granted by William Earl of Gloucester, lord of the fee, to the convent of Bermondsey. (fn. 166)
In 1248 Richard de Clare confirmed the gift. (fn. 167) Apparently the church was appropriated before 1190,
when a vicar was presented by the abbot. After the
Dissolution the advowson descended with the manor of
Dulwich until 1607, when Edward Alleyn conveyed
it to Edward Wilson, clerk, the vicar of the parish,
probably in trust for Sir Edmund Bowyer, (fn. 168) to whom
the rectory and advowson belonged in the reign of
Charles I, (fn. 169) and in whose family it descended (fn. 170) (see
Camberwell Freren). The Rev. Sir Edward Bowyer
Smijth, chaplain to George IV, was vicar as well as
patron. In 1849 the Rev. J. Williams held the
advowson, and from 1866 to 1911 the Rev. F. F.Kelly,
who also is the incumbent. (fn. 171)
The advowson of St. Philip, St. Bartholomew,
St. Luke, Peckham, St. Mark (with the United Girls'
School Mission) and St. George belongs to the
Bishop of Southwark; of All Saints, Blenheim Grove,
Camden Church, Emmanuel Church (with the South
London Welsh Mission Church), St. Saviour, Denmark Park, and Christ Church, Old Kent Road
(with Corpus Christi College Mission), to trustees
(the last to the Hyndman trustees); of St. James
the Apostle, Knatchbull Road, to Mr. W. Minet;
of St. Andrew, Peckham, to the vicar of Camden
Church; of St. Mary Magdalene, Peckham, to the
Church Patronage Society; of St. Mark, Peckham,
to trustees; of All Saints, Peckham North, to
Mrs. Gooch and Messrs. H. C. and G. P. Gooch;
of St. Chrysostom, Peckham, and St. Jude, Peckham, to the Bishop of Southwark; of St. Matthew,
Denmark Hill, to Lady de Crespigny; of St. Antholin,
Nunhead, to the Crown; of St. Silas, Nunhead
(with Cheltenham College Mission), to the Bishop
of Southwark; of St. Clement, East Dulwich, and
St. Barnabas, Dulwich, to the same; of St. John the
Evangelist, East Dulwich, to trustees; of St. Stephen,
South Dulwich, to Dulwich College; and of St. Peter,
Dulwich Common, to Mrs. Pulley.
CHARITIES
From the returns made at Bishop
Willis's visitation in 1725 it appears
that there were then 7 acres of land
for the poor, three small tenements and a rent-charge
on some others, the total value being £41 13s. 4d. a
year (see also under schools and description of parish).
Further, the Rev. Edward Wilson left £20 to the
poor in 1618. Sir Thomas Hunt in 1625 left land
for the poor producing £2 12s. 6d. a year, but the
estate came into Chancery and was lost to the parish.
Baron Hilton in 1640 left £24 a year for ninety-nine years, which expired in 1739.
Sir Edmund Bowyer gave £30 in 1674 and three
houses in 1675 for the poor. The houses had been
lost in 1786.
Antony Bowyer in 1702 gave six houses in the
hands of trustees.
Mr. Henry Ballow gave £5 in 1615; Mr. Edward
Bowyer left £50 in 1718; Sir William Bowyer gave
£21 in 1721; Sir Francis Ballow £5 in 1723; and
Mrs. Hannah Gransden left £5 in 1724.
Mr. Richard Arnott left £100 South Sea annuities
in 1753, to be divided between the poor and the
charity schools.
Mr. William Matthews left £187 Bank annuities
for bread to sixty poor communicants in 1764.
Mr. Charles Devon left £40 for the poor in 1772.
Mrs. Hannah Brown left £20 for the poor in
1777.
Mr. Thomas Roup left £40 for the poor in 1780.
Miss Laetitia Cook left ten guineas for the poor in
1783.
Smith's charity is distributed as in other Surrey
parishes.
The Licensed Victuallers' Asylum, for distressed
members or widows of members of the trade, was
opened in 1827 at Peckham. Additional buildings
were added in 1840.
At Nunhead are the Beeston Almshouses, founded
in 1834 by — Beeston. The Girdlers' Company are
trustees. They were for seven aged persons.
The Aged Pilgrims' Friend Society for the aid of
aged and infirm Evangelical poor was established in
Camberwell in 1807, chiefly by the help of Mr.
William Peacock. This asylum was built in 1837,
and Mr. Peacock was buried in the court of the
building in 1844. Near it is the Bethel Asylum,
also established by Peacock in 1838, for twelve old
women.