ELEHAM,
OR, as it is as frequently written, Elham, lies the
next parish south-eastward from Stelling. It was written in the time of the Saxons both Uleham and Æiham,
in Domesday, Albam. Philipott says, it was antiently
written Helham, denoting the situation of it to be a
valley among the hills, whilst others suppose, but with
little probability, that it took its name from the quantity of eels which the Nailbourn throws out when it begins to run. There are Seven boroughsin it, of Bladbean, Boyke, Canterwood, Lyminge, Eleham, Town,
Sibton, and Hurst.
Eleham is said to be the largest parish in the eastern
parts of this county, extending itself in length from
north to south, through the Nailbourn valley, about
three miles and an half; and in breadth five miles and
a half, that is, from part of Stelling-minnis, within the
bounds of it, across the valley to Eleham down and
Winteridge, and the southern part of Swinfield-minnis,
almost up to Hairn-forstal, in Uphill Folkestone. The
village, or town of Eleham, as it is usually called, is situated in the above-mentioned valley, rather on a rise,
on the side of the stream. It is both healthy and pleasant, the houses in it being mostly modern and wellbuilt, of brick and fashed. As an instance of the healthiness of this parish, there have been within these few
years several inhabitants of it buried here, of the ages
of 95, 97, and 99, and one of 105; the age of 40
years being esteemed that of a young person, in this
parish. The church, with the vicarage on the side of
the church-yard, is situated on the eastern side of it, and
the court lodge at a small distance from it. This is now
no more than a small mean cottage, thatched, of, I believe, only two rooms on a floor, and unsit for habitation. It appears to be the remains of a much larger
edifice, and is built of quarry-stone, with small arched
gothic windows and doors, the frames of which are of
ashlar stone, and seemingly very antient indeed. It is
still accounted a market-town, the market having been
obtained to it by prince Edward, afterwards king Edward I. in his father's life-time, anno 35 Henry III. to
be held on a Monday weekly, which, though disused
for a regular constancy, is held in the market-house
here once in five or six years, to keep up the claim to
the right of it; besides which there are three markets
regularly held, for the buying and selling of cattle, in
every year, on Palm, Easter, and Whit Mondays, and
one fair on Oct. 20th, by the alteration of the stile,
being formerly held on the day of St. Dionis, Oct. 9,
for toys and pedlary. The Nailbourn, as has been already mentioned before, in the description of Liminage,
runs along this valley northward, entering this parish
southward, by the hamlet of Ottinge, and running
thence by the town of Eleham, and at half a mile's distance, by the hamlet of North Eleham, where there
are several deep ponds, in which are from time to
time quantities of eels, and so on to Brompton's Pot
and Wingmere, at the northern extremity of this parish. The soil in the valley is mostly an unfertile red
earth, mixed with many flints; but the hills on each
side of it, which are very frequent and steep, extend to
a wild romantic country, with frequent woods and uninclosed downs, where the soil consists mostly of chalk,
excepting towards Stelling and Swinfield minnis's,
where it partakes of a like quality to that of the valley,
tance,by the hamlet of North Eleham, where there
only still more poor and barren. At the north-west
corner of the parish, on the hill, is Eleham park, being
a large wood, belonging to the lord of Eleham manor.
Dr. Plot says, he was informed, that there was the
custom of borough English prevailing over some copyhold lands in this parish, the general usage of which is,
that the youngest son should inherit all the lands and
tenements which his father had within the borough, &c.
but I cannot find any here subject to it. On the contrary, the custom here is, to give the whole estate to
the eldest son, who pays to the younger ones their proportions of it, as valued by the homage of the manor,
in money.
At the time of taking the survey of Domesday,
anno 1080, this place was part of the possessions of the
bishop of Baieux, under the general title of whose lands
it is thus entered in it:
In Honinberg hundred, the bishop of Baieux holds in
demesne Alham. It was taxed at six sulins. The arable
land is twenty-four carucates. In demesne there are five
carucates and forty-one villeins, with eight borderers having eighteen carucates. There is a church, and eight servants, and two mills of six shillings, and twenty eight
acres of meadow. Wood for the pannage of one hundred
hogs. In the time of king Edward the Confessor, and
afterwards, it was worth thirty pounds, now forty, and
yet it yields fifty pounds. Ederic held this manor of king
Edward.
Four years after the bishop was disgraced, and all his
possessions were consiscated to the crown, whence this
manor seems to have been granted to William de Albineto, or Albini, surnamed Pincerna, who had followed the Conqueror from Normandy in his expedition hither. He was succeeded by his son, of the same
name, who was made Earl of Arundel anno 15 king
Stephen, and Alida his daughter carried it in marriage
to John, earl of Ewe, in Normandy, whose eldest son
Henry, earl of Ewe, was slain at the siege of Ptolemais
in 1217, leaving Alice his sole daughter and heir,
who entitled her husband Ralph D'Issondon to the possession of this manor, as well as to the title of earl of
Ewe. She died in the reign of king Henry III. possessed of this manor, with the advowson of the church,
and sealed with Barry, a label of six points, as appears
by a deed in the Surrenden library; after which it appears to have come into the possession of prince Edward, the king's eldest son, who in the 35th year of it
obtained the grant of a market on a Monday, and a
fair, at this manor, (fn. 1) and afterwards, in the 41st year of
that reign, alienated it to archbishop Boniface, who,
left he should still further inflame that enmity which
this nation had conceived against him, among other
foreigners and aliens, by thus increasing his possessions
in it, passed this manor away to Roger de Leyborne,
who died possessed of it in the 56th year of that reign,
at which time it appears that there was a park here; (fn. 2)
and in his name it continued till Juliana de Leyborne,
daughter of Thomas, became the sole heir of their possessions, from the greatness of which she was usually
called the Infanta of Kent. She was thrice married,
yet she had no issue by either of her husbands, all of
whom she survived, and died in the 41st year of king
Edward III. upon which this manor, among the rest
of her estates, escheated to the crown, there being no
one who could make claim to them, by direct or even
by collateral alliance. (fn. 3) Afterwards it continued in the
crown till king Richard II. vested it in feoffees in trust,
towards the endowment of St. Stephen's chapel, in
his palace of Westminster, which he had in his 22d
year, completed and made collegiate, and had the year
before granted to the dean and canons this manor,
among others, in mortmain. (fn. 4) All which was confirmed
by king Henry IV. and VI. and by king Edward IV.
in their first years; the latter of whom, in his 9th year,
granted to them a fair in this parish yearly, on the
Monday after Palm-Sunday, and on the Wednesday
following, with all liberties, &c. In which situation it
continued till the 1st year of king Edward VI. when
this college was, with all its possessions, surrendered
into the king's hands, where this manor did not continue long; for the king in his 5th year, granted it to
Edward, lord Clinton and Saye, and he reconveyed it
to the crown the same year. After which the king demised it, for the term of eighty years, to Sir Edward
Wotton, one of his privy council, whose son Thomas
Wotton, esq. sold his interest in it to Alexander Hamon, esq. of Acrise, who died in 1613, leaving two
daughters his coheirs, the youngest of whom Catherine, married to Sir Robert Lewknor, entitled him to
it; he was at his death succeeded by his son Hamon
Lewknor, esq. but the reversion in see having been purchased of the crown some few years before the expiration of the above-mentioned term, which ended the
last year of king James I.'s reign, to Sir Charles Herbert, master of the revels. He at the latter end of
king Charles I.'s reign, alienated it to Mr. John Aelst,
merchant, of London; after which, I find by the court
rolls, that it was vested in Thomas Alderne, John
Fisher, and Roger Jackson, esqrs. who in the year
1681 conveyed it to Sir John Williams, whose daughter and sole heir Penelope carried it in marriage to
Thomas Symonds, esq. of Herefordshire, by the heirs
of whose only surviving son Thomas Symonds Powell,
esq. of Pengethley, in that county, it has been lately
sold to Sir Henry Oxenden, bart. who is now entitled
to it.
A court leet and court baron is held for this manor,
which is very extensive. There is much copyhold land
held of it. The demesnes of it are tithe-free. There
is a yearly rent charge, payable for ever out of it, of
87l. 13s. 1d. to the ironmongers company, in London.
Shottlesfield is a manor, situated at the southeast boundary of this parish, the house standing partly
in Liminge, at a small distance southward from the
street or hamlet of the same name. It was, as early as
the reign of king Edward II. the inheritance of a family called le Grubbe, some of whom had afterwards
possessions about Yalding and Eythorne. Thomas le
Grubbe was possessed of it in the 3d year of that reign,
and wrote himself of Shottlesfeld, and from him it continued down by paternal descent to John Grubbe, who
in the 2d year of king Richard III. conveyed it by
sale to Thomas Brockman, of Liminge, (fn. 5) whose grandson Henry Brockman, in the 1st year of queen Mary,
alienated it to George Fogge, esq. of Braborne, and
he, in the beginning of queen Elizabeth's reign, sold it
to Bing, who, before the end of that reign, passed it
away to Mr. John Masters, of Sandwich, from whom
it descended to Sir Edward Masters, of Canterbury,
who at his decease, soon after the death of Charles I.
gave it to his second son, then LL. D. from whose
heirs it was alienated to Hetherington, whose last surviving son the Rev. William Hetherington, of North
Cray place, died possessed of it unmarried in 1778,
and by will devised it, among his other estates, to Thomas Coventry, esq. of London, who lately died possessed of it s. p. and the trustees of his will are now entitled to it.
The manor of Bowick, now called Boyke, is
situated likewise in the eastern part of this parish, in
the borough of its own name, which was in very antient times the residence of the Lads, who in several
of their old evidences were written De Lad, by which
name there is an antient farm, once reputed a manor,
still known, as it has been for many ages before, in the
adjoining parish of Acrise, which till the reign of queen
Elizabeth, was in the tenure of this family. It is certain that they were resident here at Bowick in the beginning of king Henry VI.'s reign, and in the next of
Edward IV. as appears by the registers of their wills in
the office at Canterbury, they constantly stiled themselves of Eleham. Thomas Lade, of Bowick, died
possessed of it in 1515, as did his descendant Vincent
Lade in 1563, anno 6 Elizabeth. Soon after which it
passed by purchase into the name of Nethersole, from
whence it quickly afterwards was alienated to Aucher,
and thence again to Wroth, who at the latter end of
king Charles I.'s reign sold it to Elgar; whence, after
some intermission, it was sold to Thomas Scott, esq. of
Liminge, whose daughter and coheir Elizabeth, married to William Turner, esq. of the Friars, in Canterbury, at length, in her right, became possessed of it;
his only surviving daughter and heir Bridget married
David Papillon, esq. of Acrise, and entitled him to this
manor, and his grandson Thomas Papillon, esq. of
Acrise, is the present owner of it.
Mount and Bladbean are two manors, situated
on the hills, on the opposite sides of this parish, the
former near the eastern, and the latter near the western
boundaries of it; the latter being antiently called Bladbean, alias Jacobs-court, a name now quite forgotten.
Both these manors appear to have been in the reign of
the Conqueror, part of the possessions of Anschitillus de
Ros, who is mentioned in Domesday as holding much
land in the western part of this county, their principal
manor there being that of Horton, near Farningham.
One of this family made a grant of it to the Cosentons,
of Cosenton, in Aylesford, to hold of their barony of
Ros, as of their manor of Horton before-mentioned,
by knight's service. In the 7th year of Edward III.
Sir Stephen de Cosenton obtained a charter of freewarren for his lands here. He was the son of Sir William de Cosenton, sheriff anno 35 Edward I. and was
sometimes written of Cosenton, and sometimes of
Mount, in Eleham. At length his descendant dying in
the beginning of king Henry VIII.'s reign, without
male issue, his three daughters, married to Duke,
Wood, and Alexander Hamon, esq. became his coheirs, and shared a large inheritance between them, and
upon their division of it, the manor of Bladbean, alias
Jacobs-court, was allotted to Wood, and Mount to
Alexander Hamon.
The manor of Bladbean, alias Jacobs-court, was afterwards alienated by the heirs of Wood to Thomas
Stoughton, esq. of St. Martin's, near Canterbury,
who by will in 1591 (fn. 6) gave this manor, with its rents
and services, to Elizabeth his daughter and coheir,
married to Thomas Wilde, esq. of St. Martin's, whose
grandson Colonel Dudley Wilde, at his death in 1653,
s. p. devised it to his widow, from whom it went by
sale to Hills, and Mr. James Hills, in 1683, passed it
away to Mr. Daniel Woollet, whose children divided
this estate among them; a few years after which John
Brice became, by purchase of it at different times, possessed of the whole of it, which he in 1729 conveyed
by sale to Mr. Valentine Sayer, of Sandwich, who died
possessed of it in 1766, and the heirs of his eldest son
Mr. George Sayer, of Sandwich, are now entitled to it.
The manor of Mount, now called Mount court,
which was allotted as above-mentioned, to Alexander
Hamon, continued down to his grandson, of the same
name, who died possessed of it in 1613, leaving two
daughters his coheirs, the youngest of whom, Catherine, entitled her husband Sir Robert Lewknor, to it,
in whose descendants it continued till Robert Lewknor, esq. his grandson, in 1666, alienated it, with other
lands in this parish, to Thomas Papillon, esq. of Lubenham, in Leicestershire, whose descendant Thomas
Papillon, esq. of Acrise, is the present proprietor of it.
Ladwood is another manor in this parish, lying
at the eastern boundary of it, likewise on the hills next
to Acrise. It was written in old evidences Ladswood,
whence it may with probability be conjectured, that
before its being converted into a farm of arable land,
and the erecting of a habitation here, it was a wood
belonging to the family of Lad, resident at Bowick;
but since the latter end of king Edward III.'s reign, it
continued uninterrupted in the family of Rolse till the
reign of king Charles II. soon after which it was alienated to Williams, in which name it remained till Penelope, daughter of Sir John Williams, carried it in marriage to Thomas Symonds, esq. the heirs of whose
only surviving son Thomas Symonds Powell, esq. sold
it to David Papillon, esq. whose son Thomas Papillon,
esq. now possesses it.
The manor of Canterwood, as appears by an
old manuscript, seemingly of the time of Henry VIII.
was formerly the estate of Thomas de Garwinton, of
Welle, lying in the eastern part of the parish, and who
lived in the reigns of Edward II. and III. whose greatgrandson William Garwinton, dying s. p. Joane his
kinswoman, married to Richard Haut, was, in the 9th
year of king Henry IV. found to be his heir, not only
in this manor, but much other land in these parts, and
their son Richard Haut having an only daughter and
heir Margery, she carried this manor in marriage to
William Isaak. After which, as appears from the
court-rolls, which do not reach very high, that the family of Hales became possessed of it, in which it staid
till the end of queen Elizabeth's reign, when it went
by sale to Manwood, from which name it was alienated
to Sir Robert Lewknor, whose grandson Robert Lewknor, esq. in 1666 sold it, with other lands in this parish
already mentioned, to Thomas Papillon, esq. of Lu
benham, in Leicestershire, whose descendant Thomas
Papillon, esq. of Acrise, is the present owner of it.
Oxroad, now usually called Ostrude, is a manor,
situated a little distance eastward from North Eleham.
It had antiently owners of the same name; Andrew de
Oxroad held it of the countess of Ewe, in the reign of
king Edward I. by knight's service, as appears by the
book of them in the king's remembrancer's office. In
the 20th year of king Edward III. John, son of Simon
atte Welle, held it of the earl of Ewe by the like service. After which the Hencles became possessed of it,
from the reign of king Henry IV. to that of king
Henry VIII. when Isabel, daughter of Tho. Hencle,
marrying John Beane, entitled him to it, and in his descendants it continued till king Charles I.'s reign, when
it was alienated to Mr. Daniel Shatterden, gent. of
this parish, descended from those of Shatterden, in
Great Chart, which place they had possessed for many
generations. At length, after this manor had continued for some time in his descendants, it was sold to
Adams, in which name it remained till the heirs of
Randall Adams passed it away by sale to Papillon, in
whose family it still continues, being now the property
of Thomas Papillon, esq. of Acrise.
Hall, alias Wingmere, is a manor, situated in the
valley at the northern boundary of this parish, next to
Barham, in which some part of the demesne lands of it
lie. It is held of the manor of Eleham, and had most
probably once owners of the name of Wigmere, as it
was originally spelt, of which name there was a family
in East Kent, and in several antient evidences there is
mention made of William de Wigmere and others of
this name. However this be, the family of Brent appear to have been for several generations possessed of
this manor, and continued so till Thomas Brent, of
Wilsborough, dying in 1612,s. p. it passed into the family of Dering, of Surrenden; for in king James I.'s
reign Edward Dering, gent. of Egerton, eldest son of
John, the fourth son of John Dering, esq, of Surren
den, who had married Thomas Brent's sister, was become possessed of it; and his only son and heir Thomas Dering, gent. in 1649, alienated it to William
Codd, gent. (fn. 7) of Watringbury, who was succeeded in
it by his son James Codd, esq. of Watringbury, who
died s. p. in 1708, being then sheriff of this county,
and being possessed at his death of this manor in fee,
in gavelkind; upon which it came to the representatives of his two aunts, Jane, the wife of Boys Ore, and
Anne, of Robert Wood, and they, in 1715, by fine
levied, entitled Thomas Manley, and Elizabeth, his
wife, to the possession of this manor for their lives,
and afterwards to them in fee, in separate moieties.
He died s. p. in 1716, and by will gave his moiety to
John Pollard; on whose death s. p. it came, by the
limitation in the above will, to Joshua Monger, whose
only daughter and heir Rachael carried it in marriage
to her husband Arthur Pryor, and they in 1750 joined
in the sale of it to Mr. Richard Halford, gent. of
Canterbury. The other moiety of this manor seems to
have been devised by Elizabeth Manley above-mentioned, at her death, to her nephew Thomas Kirkby,
whose sons Thomas, John, and Manley Kirkby,
joined, in the above year, in the conveyance of it to
Mr. Richard Halford above-mentioned, who then became possessed of the whole of it. He was third son
of Richard Halford, clerk, rector of the adjoining parish of Liminge, descended from the Halfords, of
Warwickshire, as appears by his will in the Prerogative-office, Canterbury, by which he devised to his
several sons successively in tail, the estate in Warwickshire, which he was entitled to by the will of his
kinsman William Halford, gent, of that county.
They bear for their arms, Argent, a greybound passant,
sable, on a chief of the second, three fleurs de lis, or. He
died possessed of it in 1766, leaving by Mary his wife,
daughter of Mr. Christopher Creed, of Canterbury,
one son Richard Halford, gent. now of Canterbury;
and two daughters, Mary married to Mr. John Peirce,
surgeon, of Canterbury; and Sarah. In 1794, Mr.
Peirce purchased the shares of Mr. Richard and Mrs.
Sarah Halford, and he is now the present owner of
this manor. He bears for his arms, Azure field, wavy
bend, or, two unicorns heads, proper.
The manor OF Clavertigh is situated on the
hills at the north-west boundary of this parish, next to
Liminge, which antiently belonged to the abbey of
Bradsole, or St. Radigund, near Dover, and it continued among the possessions of it till the 27th year of
king Henry VIII. when by the act then passed, it was
suppressed, as not having the clear yearly revenue of
two hundred pounds, and was surrendered into the
king's hands, who in his 29th year, granted the scite
of this priory, with all its lands and possessions, among
which this manor was included, with certain exceptions, however, mentioned in it, to archbishop Cranmer, who in the 38th year of that reign, conveyed
this manor of Clavertigh, with lands called Monkenlands, late belonging to the same priory in this parish,
back again to the king, who that same year granted
all those premises to Sir James Hales, one of the justices of the common pleas, to hold in capite, (fn. 8) and he,
in the beginning of king Edward VI.'s reign, passed
them away to Peter Heyman, esq. one of the gentlemen of that prince's bedchamber who seems to have
had a new grant of them from the crown, in the 2d
year of that reign. He was succeeded by his eldest
son, Ralph Heyman, esq. of Sellindge, whose descendant Sir Peter Heyman, bart. alienated the manor
of Clavetigh to Sir Edward Honywood, of Evington,
created a baronet in 1660, in whose descendants this
manor has continued down to Sir John Honywood,
bart. of Evington, who is the present possessor of it.
Charities.
Jonas Warley, D. D. gave by will in 1722, 50l. to be put
out on good security, the produce to be given yearly in bread
on every Sunday in the year, after divine service, to six poor
widows, to each of them a two-penny loaf. The money is
now vested in the vicar and churchwardens, and the produce
of it being no more than 2l. 5s. per annum, only a three-halfpenny loaf is given to each widow.
Land in this parish, of the annual produce of 1l. was given
by a person unknown, to be disposed of to the indigent. It is
vested in the minister, churchwardens, and overseers.
Four small cottages were given to the parish, by a person unknown, and are now inhabited by poor persons. They
are vested in the churchwardens and overseers.
Sir John Williams, by will in 1725, founded A CHARITY SCHOOL in this parish for six poor boys, legal inhabitants, and born in this parish, to be taught reading, writing,
and accounts, to be cloathed once in two years; and one such
boy to be bound out apprentice, as often as money sufficient
could be raised for that use. The minister, churchwardens,
and overseers to be trustees, who have power to nominate others
to assist them in the management of it. The master has a house
to live in, and the lands given to it are let by the trustees.
The poor constantly relieved are about seventy-five, casually
fifty-five.
Eleham is within the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of
its own name.
The church, which is dedicated to St. Mary, is
large and handsome, consisting of three isles, the middle one having an upper range of windows, and one
chancel, having a tower steeple, with a spire shast on
it, at the west end, in which are eight bells, a clock,
and chimes. Within the altar-rails is a memorial for
John Somner, gent. son of the learned William Somner, of Canterbury, obt. 1695; arms, Ermine, a chevron voided. In the chancel a brass plate for Michael
Pyx, of Folkestone, mayor and once high bailisf to
Yarmouth, obt. 1601. Another for Nicholas Moore,
gent. of Bettenham, in Cranbrooke; he died at Wingmer in 1577. In the middle isle a memorial for Captain
William Symons, obt. 1674; arms, Parted per
pale, and fess, three trefoils slipt. A brass plate for
John Hill, dean and vicar of Eleham, obt. 1730. In
this church was a lamp burning, called the light of
Wyngmer, given before the year 1468, probably by
one of the owners of that manor.
The church of Eleham was given by archbishop Boniface, lord of the manor of Eleham, and patron of
this church appendant to it, at the instance of Walter
de Merton, then canon of St. Paul's, and afterwards
bishop of Rochester, to the college founded by the
latter in 1263, at Maldon, in Surry. (fn. 9) After which the
archbishop, in 1268, appropriated this church to the
college, whenever it should become vacant by the
death or cession of the rector of it, saving a reasonable
vicarage of thirty marcs, to be endowed by him in it,
to which the warden of the college should present to
him and his successors, a fit vicar, as often as it should
be vacant, to be nominated to the warden by the archbishop; otherwise the archbishop and his successors
should freely from thence dispose of the vicarage for
that turn. (fn. 10)
The year before this, Walter de Merton had begun
a house in Oxford, whither some of the scholars were
from time to time to resort for the advancement of
their studies, to which the whole society of Maldon
was, within a few years afterwards, removed, and both
societies united at Oxford, under the name of the warden and fellows of Merton college. This portion of
thirty marcs, which was a stated salary, and not tithes,
&c. to that amount, was continued by a subsequent
composition or decree of archbishop Warham, in
1532; but in 1559, the college, of their own accord,
agreed to let the vicarial tithes, &c. to Thomas Carden, then vicar, at an easy rent, upon his discharging
the college from the before-mentioned portion of
thirty marcs: and this lease, with the like condition,
has been renewed to every subsequent vicar ever
since; and as an addition to their income, the vicars
have for some time had another lease, of some wood
grounds here, from the college. (fn. 11)
The appropriation or parsonage of this church is
now held by lease from the warden and fellows, by the
Rev. John Kenward Shaw Brooke, of Town-Malling.
The archbishop nominates a clerk to the vicarage of
it, whom the warden and fellows above-mentioned
present to him for institution.
This vicarage is valued in the king's books at
twenty pounds, (being the original endowment of thirty
marcs), and the yearly tenths at two pounds, the clear
yearly certified value of it being 59l. 15s. 2d. In
1640 it was valued at one hundred pounds per annum.
Communicants six hundred. It is now of about the
yearly value of one hundred and fifty pounds.
All the lands in this parish pay tithes to the rector
or vicar, excepting Parkgate farm, Farthingsole farm,
and Eleham-park wood, all belonging to the lord of
Eleham manor, which claim a modus in lieu of tithes,
of twenty shillings yearly paid to the vicar. The
manor farm of Clavertigh, belonging to Sir John Honywood, bart and a parcel of lands called Mount Bottom, belonging to the Rev. Mr. Thomas Tournay, of
Dover, claim a like modus in lieu of tithes.
Church of Eleham.
|
| PATRONS, | VICARS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| Warden and fellows of Merton
college, Oxford. | Richard Mathew, A. M. March
20, 1589, obt. 1601. |
| Zach. Evans, A. M. May 16,
1601. resigned 1607. |
| John Fitche, S. T. P. March 19,
1607, obt. 1612. |
| James Ellye, A. M. Sept. 11,
1612, resigned 1613. |
| Thomas Allen, A. M. Feb. 18,
1613, obt. 1636. (fn. 12) |
| John Woodcock, A. M. Feb. 1,
1636, sequestered 1643. (fn. 13) |
| Hen. Hannington, obt. 1691. (fn. 14) |
| John Lipps, A. M. Nov. 17,
1691, resigned 1692. |
| William Hunt, A. M. 1692, resigned 1707. (fn. 15) |
| Robert Harrison, A. M. Oct. 1,
1707, resigned 1711. |
| John Hill, A. B. Nov. 3, 1711
obt, Feb. 1731. |
| Philip Bearcroft, S. T. P. Oct.
20, 1731, obt. 1761. (fn. 16) |
| Thomas Thompson, A. M. Dec. 1,
1761, obt. 1773. (fn. 17) |
| Edward Fulham, A. M. Dec. 13,
1773, resigned 1777. |
| William Cornwallis, A. M. Mar.
1778, the present vicar. (fn. 18) |