STANFORD.
THE next parish south-eastward from Horton is
that of Stanford, which takes its name both from its
soil and situation, slane in Saxon signifying a stone, and
ford, a rivulet. The parish of Stanford itself lies in
the hundred of Stowring, but that of Westenhanger,
now united to it, is within the hundred of Street.
It is, the greatest part of it, a low unpleasant situation, lying at a small distance below the down hills.
The greatest part of it is pasture ground, and very wet.
The soil is very clity and poor near the hill, where the
ground lies higher, but lower down it becomes richer,
and has some good fertile meadows in it. There is
but little wood, only two small coppices in the northern part of it; the rents are about 900l. per annum.
The high road along the Stone-street way from Canterbury, and over Hampton hill, leads through this
parish towards Newinn-green, whence it continues
strait forward to Limne, the Portus Lemanis of the
Romans, and to the right and left to Ashford and
Hythe. Stanford-street is built on this road, in which
there is a neat modern-built house, belonging to Mr.
Jones, who lives in it; the church stands on a gentle
rise eastward from it. The parish is watered by the
stream which rises above Postling church, being the
head of that branch of the river called the Old Stour,
which running from thence hither, having been joined
by several smaller streams from the north-west, crosses
the high road westward below Stanford-street towards
Ashford. The bridge under which it runs here, being
broken down anno 7 Edward I. the jury found, that it
ought to be repaired by Nicholas de Criol, and not by
the adjacent hundreds. At a small distance westward
from this bridge, and not far from the stream, stands
the antient mansion of Westenhanger, having a gloomy
appearance, in a low unpleasant situation, having an extent of flat country and pasture grounds in front of it,
the above stream supplying the broad deep moat which
surrounds it.
The ruins of this mansion, though very small, shew
it to have been formerly a very large and magnificent
pile of building. The antiquity of this mansion was,
no doubt, very high, and if not originally built by one
of the family of Criol, was afterwards much enlarged
and strengthened by them. From one of the towers
still retaining the name of Rosamond's tower, where
the tradition is, that fair mistress of king Henry II. was
kept for some time, it should seem to have been built
before his reign, or perhaps even belonging to him.
Which seems the more probable from there having
been found among the ruins the left hand of a well
carved statue, with the end of a sceptre grasped in it;
a position peculiar to this prince, one of whose seals
was so made in the life time of his father. (fn. 1) The scite
of the house, moated round, had a drawbridge, a
gatehouse and portal, the arch of which was large and
strong, springing from six polygonal pillars, with a
portcullis to it. The walls were very high, and of
great thickness, the whole of them embattled, and
fortified with nine great towers, alternately square and
round, and a gallery reaching throughout the whole
from one to the other. One of these, with the gallery
adjoining to it on the north side, was called, as has
been already mentioned, Fair Rosamond's; and it is
suppoted she was kept here some time before her removal to Woodstock. The room called her prison,
was a long upper one, of 160 feet in length, which
was likewise called her gallery. Over the door of entrance into the house was carved in stone, the figure
of St. George on horseback, and under it four shields
of arms; one of which was the arms of England, and
another a key and crown, supported by two angels. On
the right hand was a slight of freestone steps, which
led into a chapel, now a stable, curiously vaulted with
stone, being erected by Sir Edward Poynings, in the
reign of king Henry VIII. At each corner of the window of this chapel was curiously carved in stone, a
canopy. There were likewise in it several pedestals for
statues, and over the window stood a statue of St. Anthony, with a pig at his feet, and a bell hanging to
one of its ears. At the west end were the statues of St.
Christopher and king Herod. The great hall was fifty
feet long, with a music gallery at one end of it, and
at the other a range of cloisters which led to the chapel, and other apartments of the house. There were
one hundred and twenty-six rooms in it, and, by report, three hundred and sixty-five windows. In the
year 1701, more than three parts of it was pulled
down, for the sake of the sale of the materials, which
were then sold for 1000l. After this Mr. Champneis,
the purchaser of it, converted the remainder into a
small neat edifice for his residence; which house,
within these few years, has been again pulled down,
and a yet smaller modern one built on the scite of it.
All that now remains therefore of this great mansion
and its extensive surrounding buildings, are the walls
and two towers on the north and east sides of it, which
being undermined by length of time, are yearly falling
in huge masses into the adjoining moat; and the remaining ruins being covered with ivy and trees, growing spontaneously on and through the sides of every
part of them, exhibit an awful scene, and a melancholy
remembrance of its antient grandeur; the under part
of the great entrance yet remains, the arch over it
having been taken down but lately; and there are
numberless fragments of carved stone-work lying scattered about. The whole was built of quarry-stone,
said to have been dug in the quarries of the adjoining
manor of Otterpoole, in Limne, ornamented with
sculptured stone brought from Caen. The park
which belonged to this mansion, extended over the
east and south parts of this parish, rather on rising
ground, formerly comprehending the whole parochial
district of Ostenhanger, at the southern boundary of
which is New-Inn-green, so called from a new inn
built there in king Henry the VIIIth's time, near
which there is a small hamlet built on the road leading from Hythe to Ashford. Near the western boundary of the parish is a small green, built round with
houses, called Gibbins brook, situated in the borough
of Gimminge, its proper name, in a very wet and
swampy country.
There was an annual fair instituted in 1758, to be
holden in Stanford-street on June 7, for all sorts of
cattle, but it was soon left off, and there has not been
any held for near twenty years past.
THE MANOR OP STANFORD was antiently part of
the possessions of the family of De Morinis, whose descendants the Derings continued afterwards to possess
it. Sir Richard Dering, of Hayton, was owner of it
anno 22 Richard II. and then quitted the possession
of it to Sir Arnald St. Leger. (fn. 2) How it passed afterwards, I have not found; but in 1659 it was the property of Richard Busbridge, of Nottinghamshire, one
of whose descendants sold it in 1699 to George Hamond, of Stanford, and he in 1733 alienated it to
Michael Lade, of Canterbury, who parted with it
again two years afterwards to Wile, of Sandwich,
from which name it came to Mr. Odiarne Coates, of
New Romney, whose heirs now possess it.
THE MANOR OF BEKEHURST, alias SHORNECOURT, lay somewhere in, or near this parish; for by
the Book of Aid, levied anno 20 Edward III. it appears, that the heirs of Walter de Shorne paid aid for
it, as the eighth part of a knight's see, which the said
Walter before held in Bokehurst of John de Criell, as
of his manor of Westenhanger. In king Henry VIII.'s
reign, this manor was in the possession of Humphry
Gay, gent. but in 1613 it was become the property
of Sir Thomas Hardres, who that year levied a fine
of it; but where it is situated, or who have possessed
it since, I have not, with all my eldeavours, been able
to discover.
HEYTON is another manor, lying at the north-west
corner of this parish, next to Horton, being frequently
mentioned in antient deeds by the name of Hayte.
It was in very early times possessed by a family which
took its surname from it, and bore for their cognizance
in antient armorials, Gules, three piles, argent. Alanus
de Heyton was owner of this manor in the reign of
king Henry II. in which reign he held by knight's
service of Gilbert de Magminot, but dying s.p. Elveva his sister, married to Deringus de Morinis, became his heir, and entitled her husband to it, and
wrote himself, as appears by several dateless deeds,
Dominus de Heyton. Their son Deringus Fitz Dering,
was the first who deserted the name of Morinis, whose
son Richard Fitz Dering, who likewise wrote himself
Dominus de Heyton, died possessed of it at the latter
end of the reign of king Henry III. and left it to his
son Peter Dering, whose grandson Sir Richard Dering appears to have possessed it in the 22d year of
king Richard II. and that year to have quitted the
possession of it to Sir Arnald Seyntleger. After which
it passed into the family of Scott, of Braborne, in
which it continued till the reign of queen Elizabeth,
when it was alienated by one of them to Mr. William
Smith, of Stanford, yeoman, in whose descendants,
resident at it, this manor continued down to Mr.
William Smith, gent, of Heyton, who dying s.p. by
will devised it to his widow Anne, daughter of Mr.
John Drake, of London, and she having in 1769 remarried with the Rev. George Lynch, he in her right
became possessed of it, and for some time resided here,
till on the death of his brother Robert Lynch, M. D.
he removed to Ripple, where he died in 1789, s.p.
and by his will devised it to his two surviving sisters,
who are the present possessors of it. (fn. 3) A court baron
is held for this manor.
WESTENHANGER is an eminent manor here, which
was once a parish of itself, though now united to
Stanford: Its antient and more proper name, as appears by the register of the monastery of St. Angustine, was Le Hangre, yet I find it called likewise in
records as high as the reign of Richard I. by the names
both of Ostenhanger and Westenhanger, which certainly arose from its having been divided, and in the
hands of separate owners, being possessed by the two
eminent families of Criol and Auberville. Bertram
de Criol, who was constable of Dover castle, lord warden of the five ports, and sheriff of Kent, for several
years in the reign of king Henry III. who from his
great possessions in this country, was usually stiled the
great lord of Kent, is written in the pipe-rolls of the
27th year of that reign, of Ostenhanger, where it is
said he rebuilt great part of the then antient mansion.
He left two sons, Nicholas and John, the former of
whom marrying with Joane, daughter and heir of Sir
William de Aubervilse, inherited in her right the
other part of this manor, called Westenhanger, as
will be further mentioned hereafter. John, the younger son, seems to have inherited his father's share of
this manor, called Ostenhanger, of which he died possessed in the 48th year of king Henry III. as did his
son Bertram de Criol in the 23d year of Edward I.
leaving two sons, John and Bertram, who both died
s.p. and a daughter Joane, who upon the death of the
latter became his heir, and carried Ostenhanger, among
the rest of her inheritance, in marriage to Sir Richard
de Rokesle, seneschal and governor of Poictu and
Montreul in Picardy, a man of eminent character in
that time, having been created a knight-banneret by
king Edward I. at the siege of Carlaverock, in Scotland. He died without issue male, leaving his two
daughters his coheirs, of whom Agnes, the eldest,
married Thomas de Poynings; and Joane, the youngest, first Hugh de Pateshall, and secondly Sir William le Baud, and upon the division of their inheritance, Ostenhanger was wholly allotted to Thomas de
Poynings, who died anno 13 Edward III. bearing for
his arms, Barry of six, or, and vert, over all a bend,
gules. He left three sons, Nicholas, Michael, and
Lucas de Poynings, all three summoned at different
times to parliament, among the barons of this realm.
The descendants of the latter being summoned as barons Poynings de St. John, which barony became
vested in the late duke of Bolton. Upon the division of their inheritance, this manor was allotted to
the second son Michael, who died anno 43 king Edward III. and left two sons, Thomas and Richard.
Thomas de Poynings, the eldest son, possessed it on
his father's death, but he died anno 49 Edward III.
s.p. having bequeathed his body to be buried in the
midst of the choir of St. Radigund's, of his own patronage, before the high altar, appointing that a fair
tomb should be placed over his grave, with the image
of a knight made thereon. Upon his death, Richard
de Poynings, his youngest brother, succeeded to it,
and died possessed of it in the IIth year of king Richard II. as did his son Robert anno 25 Henry VI.
having had two sons, Richard de Poynings, who died
in his life-time, leaving a sole daughter and heir Alianore, who married Sir Henry Percy, afterwards earl
of Northumberland, and brought him a large inheritance, together with the baronies of Poynings,
Bryan, and Fitzpain, now enjoyed by the present duke
of Northumberland; and a second son Robert, who
succeeded his father in Ostenhanger, of which he died
possessed anno 9 Edward IV. (fn. 4) who, as well as his several ancestors above-mentioned, were summoned
among the barons to parliament, and his son Sir Edward Poynings, who having purchased the other part
of this great manor, called Westenhanger, became
possessed of the whole property of it, as will be further
mentioned hereafter.
To return now to that part of this eminent manor,
distinguished from its situation by the name of Westenhanger, which was in the reign of king Richard I.
in the possession of the family of Auberville, one of
whom, Sir William de Auberville, descended from
William de Ogburville, mentioned in the survey of
Domesday, being one of those who attended the Conqueror in his expedition hither, resided in that reign
in the borough of Westenhanger, and was founder of
the abbey of West Langdon, and a benefactor to the
priory of Christ church, and as appears by his seal appendant to a deed in the Surrenden library, dated 29
Henry III. bore for his arms, Parted per dancette, two
annulets in chief, and one in base. His grandson, of the
same name, left an only daughter and heir Joane,
who marrying with Nicholas de Criol, brought him
this estate as part of her inheritance. His descendant
Sir John de Criol, in the 19th year of Edward III.
obtained a licence to found and endow a chantry in
the chapel of St. John, in Westenhanger,; and before, in the 17th year of that reign, he had a grant to
embattle and make loop-holes in his mansion-house
of Westenhanger. His descendant Sir Nicholas de
Criol, or Keriel, died possessed of it in the 3d year of
king Richard II. and from him it devolved at length
by succession to Sir Thomas Keriel, for so their name
was then in general spelt, who was slain in the second
battle of St. Albans, in the 38th year of Henry VI.
in asserting the cause of the house of York. On his
death without male issue, his two daughters became
his coheirs, (fn. 5) viz. Elizabeth, married to John Bourchier, esq. and Alice, to John Fogge, esq. of Repton,
afterwards knighted, whose second wife she was; and
on the division of their inheritance, Westenhanger
was allotted to the latter. He had by her one son,
Sir Thomas Fogge, sergeant-porter of Calais in the
reigns of king Henry VII. and VIII. who sold his interest in it to his elder brother, (by his father's first
wise Alice Haut) Sir John Fogge, of Repton, and
he, about the beginning of king Henry VIII.'s reign,
alienated it to Sir Edward Poynings, the possessor of
the other part of this manor, who thereupon became
possessed of both Ostenhanger and Westenhanger, being the entire property of the whole manor. He was a
man of much eminence of that time, and greatly in
favour both with king Henry VII. and VIII. being
governor of Dover castle, lord warden of the five
ports, and knight of the garter. He resided at Westenhanger, where he began building magnificently,
but he died before his stately mansion here was finished, anno 14 Henry VIII. having married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Scott, of Scotts-hall, by
whom he had one only child John, who died in his
life time; so that thus deceasing without legitimate
issue, and even without any collateral kindred, who
could make claim to his estates, this manor, among
the rest of them, escheated to the crown. Although
Sir Edward Poynings died without legitimate issue,
yet he left by four different concubines three sons,
Sir Thomas, who afterwards died s. p. Sir Adrian
Poynings, who died without male issue; and Edward,
slain at Bologne in the 38th year of Henry VIII.
and likewise four daughters.
This manor thus becoming vested in the crown,
was by the king's bounty soon afterwards conferred
on his eldest natural son Sir Thomas Poynings abovementioned, who was a gentleman noted for the beauty
and elegance of his person, and was of equal merit;
and being of remarkable strength and courage, greatly
signalized himself at the justs and tournaments of
those times of which the king being himself exceedingly fond, it recommended him still more to the royal
favour, and he was made K. B. and was summoned
to parliament as baron Poynings, of Ostenhanger.
But in the 32d year of the same reign, he, with dame
Catherine his wife, exchanged this manor, park, and
sundry premises belonging to it, with the king, for
other estates in Dorsetshire and Wiltshire. (fn. 6) Soon after
which, the king seems to have intended this manor
as a mansion fit for his royal residence; for he not only
expended much on the completing of the unfinished
state of it, but two years afterwards laid into the park
a large circuit of land, inclosing many mansions,
houses, and buildings of the inhabitants within the
pale of it; at which time this manor seems to have
been indiscriminately called by both the names of
Ostenhanger and Westenhanger. After which, the
manor, together with the mansion, park, and other
appurtenances belonging to it, continued in the hands
of the crown till the reign of Edward VI. when that
prince, in his first year, granted it with its appurtenances, to John Dudley, earl of Warwick, to hold
in capite by knight's service; but in the 3d year of
that reign, the earl joined with dame Joane his wife,
in the reconveyance of it to the king, in exchange for
premises in other counties. The next year after which
the king granted it, among other premises, to Edward
Fynes, lord Clinton, son of Thomas, lord Clinton,
by Mary, one of the four daughters of Sir Edward
Poynings before-mentioned, to hold in capite by
knight's service, and in the 6th year of his reign, he
made a new grant to him and Henry Herdson, his
trustee of it, together with the advowson of the rectory, to hold by the like service; and they not long
afterwards alienated the manor of Westenhanger with
its appurtenances, to Richard Sackville, esq. who died
possessed of it in the 8th year of queen Elizabeth;
but it should seem that he had it only for his life, or
perhaps might not be in possession of the mansion of
Westenhanger itself; for that queen, in the progress
which she made through this county, at the latter end
of the summer in the year 1573, is said in the course
of it to have stayed at her own house of Westenhanger, the keeper of which was then Thomas, lord Buckhurst, son of Richard Sackville, before-mentioned,
And further, for that the queen, in her 27th year,
granted the manor of Eastenhanger with its appurtenances, in see to Thomas Smith, esq. He was commonly called the Customer, from his farming the
customs of the port of London, and he having greatly
increased the beauty of this mansion, which had been
impaired and defaced by fire, with magnificent additions, resided here; and when Lambarde wrote his
Perambulation in 1570, there were here two parks,
which continued till one of the family of Smith disparked them both. He died in 1591, and was succeeded by his eldest son Sir John Smythe, who was
of Ostenhanger, where he kept his shrievalty in the
42d year of queen Elizabeth, and died in 1609. His
son Sir Thomas Smythe, K. B. resided likewise at
Westenhanger, (for by both these names this place
was yet at times differently called) and was in 1628
created viscount Strangford, of the kingdom of Ireland. His son Philip, viscount Strangford, conveyed
it to trustees, (fn. 7) and they, at the latter end of king
Charles II.'s reign, alienated this manor, with its mansion, lands, and appurtenances, to Finch, who having
in 1701 pulled down by far the greatest part of this
stately mansion, then passed it away by sale to Justinian Champneis, esq. The family of Champneis are
descended from Sir Amyan Champneis, who flourished
in king Henry the IId's reign, whose descendants
settled in Somersershire; one of whom, Robt. Champneis, of Chew, in that county, was father of Sir John
Champneis, lord mayor of London anno 26 king
Henry VIII. who was possessed of Hall-place, in Bexley, where he resided, and in which he was succeeded
by his son, the youngest and only surviving son of
seven, Justinian. One of his descendants, Walter
Champneis, son of William, appears by the parish register of Boxley to have lived in that parish in queen
Elizabeth's reign, anno 1582. After which there is
continued mention in it of them down to the burial
of Justinian Champneis, esq in 1712. Justinian
Champneis, the purchaser of this estate, bore for his
arms, Parted per pale, argent and sable, a lion rampant,
gules, within a bordure, engrailed and counterchanged, of
the field. He afterwards resided here, having built a
smaller house on the same scite, out of the ruins remaining of it. He was one of the five Kentish gentlemen, who in 1701, delivered the noted petition
from this county to the house of commons. He died
possessed of this manor and estate, far advanced in
years, in 1748, leaving three sons, Justinian, William, and Henry. On his death, by the settlement
made on his marriage, one sixth part of this estate
devolved to the two younger sons, and the rest of it
on the eldest son Justinian Champneis, esq. who dying abroad, s. p. in 1754, gave by will his interest in
it to his younger brother Henry; and the remaining
sixth part came by compromise wholly to the then
eldest surviving brother William Champneis, esq. who
resided at Vintners, in Boxley. He left by his first
wife two daughters his coheirs, Frances, now unmarried, and Harrior, who married John Burt, esq. of
Rochester, by whom she had two sons, WilliamHenry and Thomas, and a daughter Harriot, as will
be further mentioned hereafter. On his death in
1762, his sixth part of this estate came to his two
daughters and coheirs before-mentioned, the eldest of
whom, in her own right, and the two sons of John
Burt, esq. deceased, in right of the youngest, is at this
time entitled to it. The remaining part of this estate
was by Henry Champneis, esq. of Vintners, in Boxley, who died unmarried in 1781, devised to his great
nephew William-Henry Burt, the eldest son of John
Burt, esq. by his wife Harriot before-mentioned, for
whom he had in his life-time obtained a privy seal, to
take the surname and bear the arms of Champneis.
Which William-Henry Champneis, esq. is now entitled to the inheritance of it.
The parish of Ostenbanger stood, as to its ecclesiastical
jurisdiction, in the deanry of Limne and diocese of
Canterbury. The church, which was a rectory, was
formerly in the patronage of the owners of the manor,
and came to the crown on the death of Sir Edward
Poynings, in the 14th year of king Henry VIII.
whence it was granted, as appurtenant to the manor,
to Sir Thomas Poynings, who in the 34th year of
that reign, granted it to the crown in exchange; in
which year the king having laid a large circuit of land
into his park here, of which the rector had received
the yearly tithes, and having likewise inclosed and imparked in it many houses, barns, and glebe-lands belonging to the rectory, and injoined the parishioners
and inhabitants to resort to the parish to which they lay
nearest, by which means the rector was destitute of a
maintenance, granted to him for life, a yearly pension
of six pounds, to be had of his treasurer of the Augmentation-office. Thus this parish became, as to its
ecclesiastical juridiction, united to Stanford, to which
church the owners of this estate, in whom the tithes of
the whole of it are vested, pay a composition of eleven
shillings as an acknowledgment for the privilege the
inhabitants within it enjoy of the rites of the church
there.
The rectory of Eastenhanger is valued in the king's
books at 7l. 12s. 6d. and the yearly tenths at 15s. 3d.
which are paid to the crown receiver, and not to the
archbishop.
The church of Westenhanger has been entirely
pulled down, and the materials removed, several years
ago. It stood at a small distance westward of the house,
and of the drawbridge at the entrance to it, between
the latter and the great barn, which report says, was
partly built out of the ruins of it. Several skeletons
have from time to time been dug up within the scite
of it and adjoining to it; and in some of the graves,
several sculls in one grave; and some years ago a stone
coffin was dug up. The font, which was in this church,
was removed to, the church of Stanford, where it now
remains.
I find the names of only two of the rectors of this parish, viz. William Lambard, in the 34th year of king
Henry VIII. (fn. 8) and Thomas Eaton, A. M. presented by
the crown in 1636. (fn. 9)
Charities.
WILLIAM FORDRED, by will in 1550, gave to this parish,
among others, a proportion of the rents of twenty-five acres of
land in St. Mary's, in Romney Marsh; which portion to this
parish is of the annual produce of 4l. 12s. 4¼d. to be distributed
annually to the poor, and vested in certain trustees.
The poor constantly relieved are about ten, casually eight.
STANFORD is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the dioceseCanterbury, and deanry of
Elham.
The church, which is dedicated to All Saints, is but
a small mean building, and consists of one isle and one
chancel, having a low pointed turret at the west end,
in which are two bells. There are no memorials in it.
The church of Stanford has always been esteemed
as a chapel to the church of Liminge; the rector of
which is inducted to the rectory of Liminge, with the
chapels of Padlesworth and Stanford annexed, under
which parish a further account of it may be seen. In
the year 1588 here were communicants forty.
There was an acre of land in this parish, given to
maintain a light, called the paschal light, in this church;
which, on the suppression of such lights, with others
of the like sort, by the act which passed in the beginning of king Edward VI.'s reign, became vested in
the crown.