THE HUNDRED OF WEST OR LITTLE BARNEFIELD
LIES adjoining to that of Marden southward, and
is in the lath of Aylesford; it consists only of the remaining part of the parish of Goudhurst yet undescribed, being the southern part of it.
ALMOST in the midst of this part of Goudhurst is
situated that eminent seat, called BEDGEBURY, nearly
surrounded by a large tract of woodland, the greatest
part of which is now known by the names of Bedgebury-park and the Fryth-woods.
This seat, in times of high antiquity, afforded both
seat and surname to the possessors of it, one of them,
John de Bedgebury, as appears by an old dateless
deed, probably about the time of king Edward II.
demised lands to William de Comeden, of Comedenhouse in these parts; his seal fixed to it being a knight
on horseback, armed cap-a-peè. His descendant John
de Bedgebury, son of John de Bedgebury, who died
in 1424, and was buried in this church, dying s. p.
in the reign of Henry VI. Agnes his sister, married to
John Colepeper, became his heir, and entitled her
husband to this seat, with the appendant manors of
Bedgebury and Ford. He was the second son of Walter Colepeper, of Goudhurst, descended from those
of Bayhali, in this county, where a full account of
them may be seen. He was afterwards knighted, and
sheriff in the 7th year of king Edward IV. at which
time he resided at Bedgebury, where he died in 1480,
and was buried near his father in this church, leaving
two sons, Alexander, who was of Bedgebury, and
Walter, who was ancestor of the Colepepers, of Leedscastle, Hollingborne, and the Charter-house. (fn. 1)
Sir Alexander Colepeper, the son, was of Bedgebury, and sheriff in the 15th and 22d years of king
Henry VII. and the 6th of Henry VIII. Thomas
Colepeper, esq. his eldest son, of Bedgebury, procured
his lands to be disgavelled by the act of the 2d and 3d
year of king Edward VI. in the latter of which he was
sheriff. His grandson Anthony was of Bedgebury
likewise, and was knighted by queen Elizabeth, who
in her progress through Kent in 1573, honored this
seat with her presence; and it is said in Camden's Remains, to the reputation of this family, that there
were twelve knights and baronets alive, of this house
of Colepeper, at one time. He had twelve sons and
four daughters; of the surviving sons, Henry the
third, was of Endford, in Wiltshire, clerk, and Thomas the fifth was of St. Stephen's, near Canterbury.
Sir Alexander Colepeper, the eldest son, succeeding
his father, resided at Bedgebury in the reign of king
James I. He left an only daughter Anne, married to
Thomas Snelgrave, esq. so that after his death this
seat and estate seems to have descended, by the entail
of it, to his next brother William Colepeper, esq. who
died about the time of the restoration of Charles II.
and his son Thomas Colepeper, esq. alienated Bedgebury, with its appendant manors, to Sir James Hayes,
who married Rachel, viscountess Falkland, the daughter of Sir Anthony Hungerford, and widow of Lucius,
viscount Falkland, the renowned friend of lord Clarendon. He rebuilt this seat, at a small distance from
the antient mansion. He bore for his arms, Argent,
three escutcheous, gules.
After his death, and much litigation in the court
of chancery, Edward Stephenson, esq. who had a large
mortgage on this estate, was put in the possession of
it by that court, whose nephew Edward Stephenson,
esq. afterwards possessed it, and on his death in 1782,
it came to his cousin Capt. Edward Stephenson, who
died in the East-Indies, and devised it to Miss
Peach, and she sold it soon afterwards to John
Cartier, esq. the present possessor of these manors,
with the feat and estate of Bedgebury.
In the reign of queen Elizabeth, there was an extensive park adjoining to this seat, but it has been
disparked many years. John Cartier, esq. has for some
time resided at Bedgebury, where he kept his shrievalty in 1789, and has made great improvements to
the house and lands adjoining.
A court baron is regularly held for the manor of
Bedgebury.
TWYSDEN BOROUGH, antiently called Twysenden,
and now usually called Burrs-farm which name is a
contraction from the word borough to burgh, and thence
to Burr, was once reputed a manor, and lies in the
hundred of West Barnefield, at a small distance northward from Bedgebury; a place worthy notice, as having been the antient inheritance of the family of
Twysden, who took their name originally from it,
being at first called De Twysenden, and in Latin, De
Denna Fracta, according to the quaint language of
those times.
Adam de Twysenden, or Twysden, possessed this
estate in the reign of Edward I. as did his descendant
Roger Twysden, who in the 5th year of Henry IV.
sealed with an impression of a cockatrice, in wax, as
appears by a deed now in the hands of Sir WilliamJarvis Twysden, bart. of East Peckham, a singular
thing in those times, when crests were very unusual,
and only began to be customary, when those eminent
families, who took part in the two factions of the
houses of York and Lancaster, assumed them as marks
of distinction of the party they sided with. This
crest is still borne by the different branches of this
family. (fn. 2)
Roger Twysden, above-mentioned, married Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Thomas Chelmington,
esq. of Chelmington, in Great Chart, to which his
son Roger Twysden, esq. removed and made it his residence. He was steward of the liberty of the priory
of Christ-church, in Canterbury, in the reign of king
Henry VI. in the beginning of which reign he sold
this estate to Roger Riseden, of Riseden, in this parish, and he immediately afterwards alienated it to
Jeffry Allen, who, about the latter end of that reign,
settled it by deed on Thomas Windhill. (fn. 3) After which
it was, for several descents, possessed by the family of
Austen, in which it continued till by Elizabeth,
daughter and coheir of William Austen, gent. of
Goudhurst, it passed in marriage, about the time of
king Charles I. to Anthony Fowle, of Rotherfield,
in Sussex, a younger branch of those of Riverhall, in
that county, and he on his death devised it to his second son Simon Fowle, esq. of this place, who died
possessed of it in 1672, leaving an only daughter, and
was buried in this church. He bore for his arms,
Gules, a lion passant, guardant, between three roses, or.
Soon after which it came into the possession of Bathurst, a younger branch of those of Finchcocks, from
which it was sold to Jeffry Gilbert, baron of the exchequer, and after that to John Norris, esq. of Hemsted, in Benenden, eldest son of admiral Sir John Norris, who died in 1767, and was succeeded in it by his
son John Norris, esq. whose trustees sold it to John
Cartier, esq of Bedgebury, the present owner of it.
There has been no court held for this manor for
some time.
ADJOINING to Twysden borough is the BOROUGH
OF LILSDEN, the manor of which lately belonged to
Springet, and afterwards to Mr. John Noaks, gent.
Since which it has been conveyed to John Cartier, esq.
of Bedgebury, the present owner of it.
THE BOROUGH OF PATTENDEN, over which the
manor of East Farleigh claims, was once reputed a
manor, and is situated at the uppermost or northern
part of this hundred. It gave both seat and surname
to a family who were possessors of it, as appears by
original deeds and other records, as early as the reign
of Edward I. They continued owners of it at the
latter end of the reign of Henry VI. in the 29th year
of which, on the commission then issued out to Jervas Clifton, esq. sheriff of this county, to return all
those who bore arma antiqua, the name of Pattenden,
then possessor of this manor, was returned among
them. His descendant alienated it to Sir Maurice
Berkeley, standard-bearer to Henry VIII. king Edward VI. and queen Elizabeth. By his will in 1581,
he give his manor of Pattenden to Robert, his fourth
son, being the eldest by Elizabeth his second wife,
daughter of Sir Anthony Sondes, of Throwley, and he,
in the same reign, alienated it to Mr. William Beswicke, of Spelmonden, in Horsemonden; after which
it passed in like manner as that seat down to Hugh
Marriott, esq. who died in 1753, and his daughter
Mrs. Anne Marriott is the present owner of it. (fn. 4)
CHINGLEY, now more commonly called Shingley,
is a manor and estate, situated in this parish, at the
western side of the same hundred. It was, so early as
the beginning of the reign of king Edward I. part of
the possessions of the Cistertian abbey of Boxley, the
abbot of which, in the 33d year of Edward III. obtained a charter of free-warren for his demesne lands
in his manor of Chingele, in this parish, which continued part of the possessions of that abbey till the surrendry of it into the hands of Henry VIII. in his 29th
year, who in his 36th year granted it, with other premises in Goudhurst and Staplehurst, to Thomas Colepeper, esq. to hold in capite by knight's service. And
he, two years afterwards, alienated the manor of
Chingley, and Chingley-wood, with their appurtenances, to Thomas Darell, of Scotney, and Stephen
Darell, of Horsemonden, sons of Thomas Darell, esq.
of Scotney, the former of whom became at length
sole possessor of this manor and estate, and in the 17th
year of queen Elizabeth, sold one moiety of it to
William Campion, barrister-at-law. But the other
moiety he still kept possession of, which continued in
his name and family down to John Darell, esq. of
Scotney, who in 1774 alienated Chingley-wood to
Mr. John Hammond, and the moiety of the manor
to Mr. John Richards, and he in 1779 sold it to
Edward Hussey, esq. of Scotney, the present possessor
of it.
But the other moiety of this manor and estate, called,
for distinction sake, LITTLE CHINGLEY, or Shingley,
which was alienated to William Campion, esq. who
was of Combwell, in this parish, continues at this
time in his lineal descendant William-John Campion,
esq. son of Henry Courthope Campion, esq. of Danny, in Sussex.
The owners of each moiety of Chingley manor and
estate claim an exemption of tithes for their respective shares before-mentioned, as does the owner of
Chingley-wood.
THE MANOR OF COMBWELL lies in the same hundred, on part of which, at a place then called Henle,
Robert de Thurnham, in the reign of king Henry II.
founded A PRIORY for canons of the order of St.
Augustine, and dedicated it to St. Mary Magdalen,
and endowed it with Henle, Cumbewell, and other
possessions, in perpetual alms, which gift was confirmed
by his son Stephen de Thurnham. together with all
its possessions, in free, pure, and perpetual alms, and
by king Henry III. by inspeximus, in his 11th year,
who at the same time granted to them a fair, to be
held here on the feast and morrow of St. Mary Magdalen. In the 8th year of Richard II. the whole revenues of this priory were valued at 66l. 2s. 6d. Tanner says, this was founded an abbey, but on account
of the charge of supporting the state of so great a prelate as an abbot, was, by reason of its slender revenues, degraded to a priory. If this was the case, which
I find no where else mentioned, this change must
have happened very early; for in 1285 it was again
become a priory (fn. 5) It was subject to the see of Canterbury, the prior constantly making his profession of
obedience to the archbishop. He was installed by the
archdeacon, who, as his fees, had liberty of staying at
the priory two nights and one day, during which he
was to be found in meat and drink at the expence of
the society, but was not to take any thing further. In
the 27th year of Henry VIII. an act passed for suppressing all such religious houses, whole revenues did
not amount to the clear yearly value of two hundred
pounds. In consequence of which this priory, whose
revenues amounted to no more than 128l. 1s. 9½d. in
the whole, and 80l. 17s. 5½d. clear yearly income, was
surrendered, with all its lands and possessions, into the
king's hands, by Thomas Vincent, the prior of it, who
had a pension of ten pounds per annum for his future
maintenance.
King Henry VIII. next year, being his 29th, granted
the late priory of Combwell, otherwise called Comwell,
with the manors of Combwell, Lestherst, alias Loffherst, Hooke, and Coldred, in this county, to Thomas
Culpeper, to hold in capite by knight's service. But
he did not possess them long, for it appears by the escheat rolls that they were again in the crown, in the
34th year of that reign, in which the king granted
them to Sir John Gage, in reward for his services in
the expedition made into Scotland that year, to hold
by the like service. He was a most distinguished person, both in his military as well as civil capacity, and
became one of the most eminent men of the age he
lived in; having been, among other offices, made of
the privy council, vice chamberlain, comptroller of the
household, and chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster.
After which he was made constable of the tower of
London, and knight of the order of the garter, and lord
chamberlain of the household, from whom descended
the Gages of Firle, baronets; the present lord viscount
Gage, and the Gages, of Suffolk, baronets. He bore
for his arms, Gyrony of four, azure, and argent, a saltire, gules. (fn. 6) He seems to have exchanged the manor of
Combwell, and the scite of the priory, and other premises belonging to it in Goudhurst, with Thomas Colepeper, or Culpeper, esq. of Bedgebury, for the confirmation of which an act passed next year, being the 35th
year of the same reign. His son Sir Alexander Colepeper, in the beginning of queen Elizabeth's reign,
alienated them to William Campion, esq. descended of
a younger branch of those of Witham, in Essex, who
afterwards resided here, where he died in 1615, and
was buried in this church. His son, Sir William Campion, was of Combwell; a most valiant and loyal gentleman, who engaged early in the troubles of Charles I.
in the service of that prince. Being in Colchester with
his regiment, at the time that town was assaulted by the
rebels under General Fairfax, on June 13, 1648, in a
sally out of it he was slain, and was buried in the chancel of St. Peter's, Colchester, being aged only thirtyfour. He left a son William, esq. who was of Combwell, having married Frances, third daughter of Sir
John Glynne, serjeant at-law, by whom he had issue
two sons and six daughters. Of the former, the eldest
surviving son Henry, succeeded him in this estate,
and married the daughter and heir of Peter Courthope, esq. of Danny, in Sussex, whose grandfather,
Peter Courthope, esq. was of Cranbrooke, in the time
of king Charles I. and removed from thence to Danny,
which he purchased of the earl of Norwich, and died
in 1657, to which seat Henry Campion, esq. removed,
and soon afterwards pulled down the greatest part of
this seat of Combwell, leaving only sufficient for a farmhouse. His son and heir Wm. Campion, esq. of Danny,
possessed this estate of Combwell on his father's decease,
and died in 1778, and his grandson William John Campion, esq. (son of Henry Courthope Campion, esq. of
Danny, in Suffex) who married the eldest daughter of
Francis Mottley Austen, esq. of Sevenoke, is the present owner of it. The Campions bear for their arms,
Argent, on a chief, gules, an eagle displayed, or.
There is a court leet and court baron regularly held
for this manor, at the hamlet of Stonecrouch in this
parish, which claims over the whole of this hundred of
West, alias Little Barnefield.
Charities.
JOHN ROBERTS, of Goudhurst, by will in 1605, gave to the
poor of this parish an annuity of 10s. out of his messuage and
lands in this parish, wherein he then dwelt, with power for the
overseers to distrain, &c.
EDWARD ROBERTS, ESQ. of Goudhurst, by will in 1627,
ordered, that his son Thomas, his executor, should purchase
lands to the value of 40s. per annum, to remain for ever to the
poor of this parish, to be disposed of by the overseers.
RICHARD BISHOP, of Goudhurst, by will in 1630, bequeathed
to certain aged poor people of this parish 20s. to be paid to them
yearly for ever, out of his house and lands at Risebridge, to be
paid to the vicar and churchwardens, and their successors, for
ever, to be distributed to ten poor aged and impotent persons of
it every half year, with power of distress, &c.
JOHN HORSEMONDEN, of Goudhurst, clothier, by will in
1636, gave 10l to the churchwardens and overseers, to be laid
up for a constant stock, to provide wood and faggots for the poor
people about the town of Goudhurst, at their discretion.
RICHARD THOMAS, gent. of Goudhurst, by will in 1639,
gave to the use of the poor people of this parish for ever, all his
right and interest in the three cottages, with their appurtenances,
in Goudhurst, at the lower end of Flimwell-street, near to his
lands there, called Pound-fields. (fn. 7)
THE FOLLOWING are from a table of charities, hung up in
the church.
SIR WILLIAM CAMPION, late of Combwell, in 1618, gave
a chalice and patten.
FRANCES CAMPION, widow and relict of William Campion,
late of Combwell, deceased, in 1722, gave two silver flaggons
gilt, for the use of the sacrament; and the branch in the middle
isle.
HENRY CAMPION, esq. late of Danny, deceased, in 1753,
gave 400l. to be laid out in the purchase of lands in this parish,
or within ten miles thereof, for the benefit of the vicar for ever.
This money is now vested in the 3 per cent. consolidated Bank
Annuities, and the vicar constantly receives the interest of it.
JOHN HORSEMONDEN, esq. of this parish, by will in 1670,
gave 35l. per annum for ever, for the endowment of a Latin
school, and charged his real estate in Tenterden with the payment
thereof.
SIR HENRY FERMOR, bart. late of Sevenoke, in this county,
gave by will in 1732, one load of best wheat bread-corn, to be
delivered yearly on Oct. 10, for ever, to industrious poor people,
men and women, who do not receive alms, (which is now given
to forty of them) and charged all his estates in Hadlow and Great
Peckham with it.
THOMAS BATHURST, esq. late of Finchcocks, by will gave
5l. per annum for ever, for an English school, at Riseden, in this
parish, and 20s. to be laid out in good books, and charged his
lands in Horsemonden with the payment thereof.
THOMAS PARIS, who died in 1782, gave by will the sum of
400l. vested in the 3 per cent. East-India Annuities, the interest
to be applied to purchase forty sixpenny loaves, to be given away
to the poor on the first Sunday in every month; and he gave
likewise 100l. to be distributed among one hundred poor persons
after his death.
The poor constantly relieved are about one hundred and ten:
casually as many.
THERE ARE TWO SCHOOLS in this parish, founded
by John Horsemonden, esq. one for teaching grammar and the Latin language, the other English. The
former is under the care of the Rev. Mr. Dowthwait,
who has a salary of thirty-five pounds per annum; the
latter is under the care of a widow woman, who has a
salary of five pounds per annum, and is full of poor
children.
There is another school at Riseden, in this parish,
founded by the will of Thomas Bathurst, esq. of Finchcocks, who devised five pounds per annum for ever,
for an English school there; and twenty shillings per
annum to be laid out in good books. (fn. 8)
GOUDHURST is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry
of Sutton.
The church is dedicated to the blessed Virgin Mary.
It is a large handsome building, consisting of three isles
and three chancels. It has a large over-sized low tower
at the west end, with a small beacon tower at one corner, on which is a pointed turret, covered with lead,
with a vane on the top of it. There is a ring of eight
bells in it. There is no painted glass remaining in the
windows. In the south chancel, one half of which belongs
to the Bedgebury estate, are several monuments
and memorials of the Colepeper family; particularly a
tomb of Bethersden marble, with figures in brass, of a
man and woman, and their six children. Over it is an
arch, supposed to be for one of this family; several
gravestones, with figures in brass, on one the arms of
Colepeper, impaling three harts heads, couped; inscription gone. Against the south wall is a most sumptuous monument of sculpture, composed of many different coloured marbles, having the figures of a man
and woman (she being on the right hand, which is unusual) kneeling at two desks; behind him a youth
kneeling; underneath are five daughters, eleven sons,
and two still born infants besides, lying under the latter, on it an inscription for Thomas Colepeper, esq. of
Bedgebury, eldest son of Ould Sir Alexander Colepeper, of the same, obt. 1550; of Sir Alexander Colepeper, son of the said Thomas, obt. 1599; and one
mentioning that Sir Anthony Colepeper, son and heir
of the same Sir Alexander, made this tomb in 1608,
æt. 48, being then living. In the south isle, is a bow
window, in the recess of which is a tomb of Bethersden
marble, and on it lie, at full length, the figures of a
man and woman, most curiously carved in wood, and
as curiously habited in the ornaments and dress of their
time, having two greyhounds lying at their feet. At
the west end of the tomb are the arms of Colepeper.
These figures are perhaps the most worthy notice of
any within the kingdom; but they are, through neglect, from the wet and weather beating in upon them,
likely, in a very few years, to be entirely decayed.
Against the east wall is an historical carve-work, in
stone, with a relief in miniature, of a man and woman
kneeling at a desk; behind them six daughters, and
five sons. On the desk or altar, anno 1535, in antient
type, in the high chancel, a mural monument, with effigies kneeling, for William Campion, esq. obt. 1615.
and Rachell his wife. In the south chancel a monument
for William Campion, esq. with his bust in white marble, dressed in a remarkable large and full curled wig,
obt. 1702; one half of this chancel belongs to the
Combwell estate. In the church-yard are several tomb
stones of the Stringers, the inscriptions almost obliterated. There is a remarkable yew-tree in the churchyard, which measures twenty-seven seet in circumference.
There was formerly a tall spire on the tower of this
church, which on August 23, 1637, at eleven o'clock
at night, was set fire to, by a sudden and dreadful storm
of thunder and lightning, which at the same time broke
and melted the five great bells in it, and burnt and
consumed four lofts, and all the timber and wood work
of the steeple, and shook and rent the stone work of it
so much, that it was thought right to take it down;
and the body of the church and leads were much impaired by the fall of the timbers. In the year following a collection was made by a brief, in this and the
neigbouring counties, for the repair of this damage,
and a parish tax was made for the purpose; and the
foundation of the steeple was begun a-new, of stone,
and carried on as high as the roof of the church; but
by the dishonesty of the collectors of the money gathered for this use, and the dissentions of the parishioners, the work went no further, only the small turret
above-mentioned, was set on the top of the stone work,
and one great bell only hung in it, in which state it still
remains. It appears by the brief, that the charge of
repairing the damage was estimated 2745l. which the
parishioners were no ways able to undergo, by reason
that the number of poor people there were of late
years so much increased, the charge of them within
nine or ten years past, being but eighty pounds,
and then amounting to three hundred pounds per annum, most of the parishioners and farmers being tenants at rack rents, were totally unable to undergo the
charge, above twenty of the chief owners having of
late years left their habitations there.
Robert de Crevequer, at the time of his founding
the priory of Ledes, in the year 1119, gave to it the
advowsons of all the churches of his estates, among
which was this of Gutherste, with twenty acres of land
in this parish, together with all their customs, goods,
liberties, and privileges. This gift was confirmed by
his descendants from time to time, and by several kings,
archbishops of Canterbury, and others. (fn. 9) Daniel de
Crevequer, in his confirmation of it, adds--and all tithes
of lands, woods, meadows, marshes, mills, orchards,
and of flax, colts, calves, lambs, pigs, cheeses, fleeces,
and all other matters, of which tithes ought to be paid.
The church of Goudhurst was appropriated to the
prior and canons of Leeds in the reign of Edward I.
at the latter end of which reign a complaint was made,
before archbishop Winchelsea, by Peter, then vicar of
it, against the prior and convent, for with-holding from
him the tithes of the sheep and cows of the manor of
Gutherst; and that they had taken of him eighteenpence of annual rent, for their finding of three flaggons
of oil yearly in the church of Gutherst; and the archbishop, having heard the merits of the case, decreed,
that the said tithes, then valued at half a marc yearly,
should be restored to the vicar, to be in future received
yearly by him and his successors. Notwithstanding
which, there was no endowment of a vicarage till archbishop Stratford, by his decree, in 1341, endowed one
here; which instrument, exemplisied by archbishop
Courtney in 1391, is yet remaining. (fn. 10)
The church, and vicarage of this church, remained
part of the possessions of the above priory till the dissolution of it in the reign of king Henry VIII. when
it came, with the rest of the possessions of that house,
into the king's hands, who by his dotation charter,
under the great seal, in his 33d year, settled both parsonage and advowson on his new-erected dean and
chapter of Rochester, with whom they now remain.
The lessee of the parsonage-house, and glebe-land belonging to it, under the dean and chapter, is the Rev.
Mr. Richard Bathurst, of Finchcocks; and of the parsonage, and tithes belonging to it, John Cole, esq. of
Horsemonden. But the presentation to the vicarage
they reserve in their own hands.
In the 8th year of king Richard II. the church of
Goudhurst, appropriated to the prior and convent of
Leeds, was valued at 13l. 6s. 8d. The vicarage is valued in the king's books at 26l. 19s. 2d. and the yearly
tenths at 2l. 13s. 11d. (fn. 11) In 1640 it was valued at one
hundred pounds. Communicants nine hundred. It is
at present endowed with all manner of tithes, except
those of corn and grain. (fn. 12) There are about two acres of
glebe-land belonging to it.
The dean and chapter of Rochester possess a portion
of tithes in this parish, the lessee of which is WilliamJohn Campion, esq.
Church of Goudhurst.
|
| PATRONS, | VICARS |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| Dean and Chapter of Rochester | Richard Carter, March 23, 1592,
obt 1612. |
| Richard Milborne, S. T. P.
April 29, 1612, resigned
1613. |
| Thomas Horsemonden, S. T. B.
Oct. 7, 1613, obt. 1625. |
| Walter. Balcanqual, S. T. P.
July 16, 1625 (fn. 13) |
| Archbishop, by lapse. | Daniel Horsemonden, S. T. P.
1625, resigned 1640. (fn. 14) |
| Dean and Chapter. | James Wilcocke, A. M. Feb. 23,
1640. |
| Edward Thurman, March 18,
1661, obt. 1676. |
| James Fen, A. M. November 8,
1676, obt. 1709. |
| Samuel Pratt, S. T. P. August
15. 1709, resigned 1713. (fn. 15) |
| John Lidgould, A. M. July 13,
1713, obt. 1727. |
| The same again, presented March
1728 |
| Thomas Standen, in 1734. |
| Robert Berisford, obt. Oct. 2,
1736. |
| Isaac Finch, A. M. February 16,
1737, obt. 1756. (fn. 16) |
| John Adey, A. B. January 25,
1757, resigned 1759. |
| Robert Polhill, A. M. July 1759,
the present vicar. (fn. 17) |