WALTHAM
LIES the next parish southward from Petham, taking its name from its situation among the woods. It is
written in antient records, Temple Waltham, from the
knights templars, early possessors of it. This parish is
only part of it in the hundred of Bridge and Petham;
another part, that is, so much as is in Town borough,
is in the hundred of Wye; and the residue is in the
hundred of Stowting. There are four boroughs in it,
viz. of Waltham, Town Borough, Yoklets, and Bere.
WALTHAM lies still further in the same wild and
dreary country, obscutely situated among the hills, and
interspersed with woods, having a deep valley running
through the midst of it, along which is the road from
Canterbury through Petham to Elmsted and Hastingleigh. The soil of it is very chalky, poor, and covered
with sharp slint stones; at the eastern boundaries is the
Stone-street road, and near it, among the woods, Wadnall. On the other side of the valley, on the opposite
hill, stands the church, with the village called Kakestreet, at a little distance from which is the hamlet and
green called Hanville, so called after the family of
Handville, or Handfield, whose habitation, (now belonging to Mr. Lade, of Canterbury) was close to it.
Several of them lie buried in this church; they afterwards removed to Ulcombe, Ashford, and Canterbury,
at the former a descendant of them still remains. They
bore for their arms, Argent, a lion rampant, within an
orle of nine crosses, formee, sable. (fn. 1) Southward from the
church is Grandacre, for many years the habitation of
the Proudes, alias Prudes, now belonging to the Rev.
Mr. Marsh, of Bredgar; Yoklets, now belonging to
Mr. Browning, who lives in it; and still further, at
the southern boundary of the parish, in a wild, heathy
country, is the once more noted habitation of Ashenfield, situated near the end of the ridge of hills which
extend themselves above Crundal and Eggarton. Mr.
Dodsworth is the present possessor of it.
THE MANOR OF WALTHAM, alias TEMPLE, was
once part of the possessions of the see of Canterbury,
and was given to the knights templars by archbishop
Theobald, in king Stephen's reign, as appears by the
inquisition of their lands, taken anno 1185, now in the
exchequer, at which time Hamo de Chilham held this
manor of them. Upon the dissolution of that order
anno 17 Edward II. this manor, among the rest of
their possessions, was given to the knights hospitallers
of St. John of Jerusalem, with whom it continued till
their suppression in the 32d year of Henry VIII. when
it came into the king's hands, who granted it in his
34th year, in exchange, among other premises, to the
archbishop, (fn. 2) by whom it was again exchanged with the
crown, where it lay till queen Elizabeth granted the
scite of it, in her 8th year, to Thomas Manwaring, (fn. 3)
and in the latter end of her reign, the manor itself to
his descendant John Manwaring, esq. by whose daughter and heir Hope Manwaring, it went in marriage to
Humphry Hamond, whose son Mr. Manwaring Hamond, alienated it to Mr. Robert Stapleton, his mother's second husband, (fn. 4) who owned it in 1660, and his
heirs passed it away to Sir William Honywood, bart.
of Evington, in whose descendants it has continued
down to Sir John Honywood, bart. now of Evington,
the present owner of it.
WADENHALL, or Wadnall, as it is usually called, is
a manor, situated on the eastern boundary of this parish,
next to Stelling. It was antiently parcel of the possessions of the see of Canterbury, and continued so till
archbishop Lanfranc granted it in see, to be held by
knight's service, to two of his knights, Nigell and Robert; and he afterwards gave the tithes of the demesnes
of it to the hospital of St. Gregory, in Canterbury, on
the foundation of it, as will be further mentioned hereafter. After which it came into the possession of a family of its own name, and in the inquisition taken of
knights fees in this county, anno 12 and 13 king John,
returned into the exchequer, Thomas de Wadenhale
then held it as one knight's fee. After which it became
the property of the eminent family of Haut, who held
it of the archbishop, and they frequently resided at it,
as one of their principal mansions in this part of Kent.
William de Haut, who resided here, and anno 5 king
Edward I. founded a chapel at this seat. Nicholas was
knight of the shire anno 18 Richard II. and the next
year kept his shrievalty at Wadenhall. He left two
sons, Nicholas, of Hauts-place, in the adjoining parish
of Petham, and William, who was of Bishopsborne,
and on his father's death became possessed of this manor, which continued in his descendants down to Sir
William Haut, of that place, who in Henry VIII.'s
reign, leaving two daughters his coheirs, Elizabeth, the
eldest, carried it in marriage to Thomas Colepeper,
esq. of Bedgbury, who in the 32d year of that reign,
exchanged it with the king for other premises, and the
fee of it remained in the crown till queen Elizabeth,
in her 42d year, granted it to Sir John Sotherton. baron
of the exchequer, whose heir sold it to Mr. Benjamin
Pere, of Canterbury; from which name it afterwards
passed to Richard, and from thence again to Butler, of
Sussex, in whose descendants it continued down to John
Butler, of Warminghurst-park, knight of the shire several times for that county, and he died in 1767, as did
his son James in 1785, possessed of the fee of it, which
now belongs to his heirs; but the rents and possession
of it have been for some time vested in George Gipps,
esq. M.P. of Canterbury, who has since sold them to Sir
John Honywood, bart. and he is now entitled to them.
WHITACRE is a small manor in the southern part of
this parish, which once likewise belonged to the see of
Canterbury, and was granted by archbishop Lanfranc,
with Wadenhall above-mentioned, to Nigell and Robert, his two knights, to hold in fee by knights service;
and he afterwards gave the tithes of the demesnes of it
to the hospital of St. Gregory, in Canterbury, on his
foundation of it, as may be seen further hereafter.
After which it came into the possession of owners of
the same name, one of whom, Nigellus de Whiteacre,
probably, by the similarity of the name, a descendant
of that Nigell to whom archbishop Lanfranc first
granted it, held it in like manner. After which it came
into the name of Hilles, descended from those of Ash,
near Sandwich, one of whom, William Hilles, gent.
died possessed of it in 1498, s. p. and devised it to feoffees, who, in pursuance of his will, sold the mansion
and adjacent demesnes of this manor to Simon a Courte,
who at his death in 1534, gave them to his son-in-law
John Gayler, who had married his daughter Dionise,
and they alienated them to Moyle, as he did to Proude,
in which name they continued for some time, together
with two other estates in this parish, called Upper Andesdoor and Cernells, which have been since sold off,
and now belong to Mr. Goddard, of Westenhanger,
and to Mrs. Sutton, and till they were at length alienated to alderman William Cockaine, afterwards
knighted and lord-mayor of London in 1619, descended from a family very early seated in Derbyshire,
and son of William Cockaine, citizen and skinner of
London, and bore Argent, three cocks, gules, crested and
jelloped, sable, a crescent, or, a crescent for difference. (fn. 5)
He passed them away to Sawkins, and James Sawkins,
gent. of Liminge, died possessed of them in 1628,
whose descendant sold this estate of Whitacre, since
called the WALNUT TREE FARM, to Beacon, who was
possessed of it in 1660, whose heirs afterwards conveyed
it to Sir William Honywood, bart. of Evington, whose
descendant Sir John Honywood, bart. of Evington,
now owns it.
BUT THE MANOR OF WHITACRE, alias CRANESBROOKE, as it was then stiled, with the courts, rents,
services, &c. continued in the name of Hilles some
time longer, but at length it was alienated to William
Boys, who did homage to archbishop Morton for it
anno 7 Henry VII. and his descendant Sir John Boys;
of St. Gregory's, by his will in 1612, settled it on the
warden and poor of his new founded hospital, called
Jesus hospital, in Canterbury, and they sold it lately,
(under the powers of the land-tax redemption act) to
Mr. R. Kelly, of St. Dunstan's, Canterbury, the present
possessor of it. A court baron is held for this manor.
ASHENFIELD, as it is now usually called, but more
properly Eshmerfield, is another manor, lying at the
southern boundary of this parish, in Wye hundred,
which was formerly part of the possessions of St. Augustine; accordingly it is thus entered, under the general title of their lands, in the survey of Domesday:
In Wy hundred, the abbot himself holds Esmerefel,
and Anschitil of him. It was taxed at one suling. The
arable land is one carucate, and there is in demesne. . . .
with five borderers and six acres of meadow. Wood for
the pannage of ten hogs. In the time of king Edward
the Confessor it was worth forty shillings, and afterwards
twenty shillings, now forty shillings.
Anschitil above-mentioned, appears to have held
this manor of the abbot in fee, by a certain rent in lieu
of all service, &c. as did after him Ralph Fitzbernard,
of whom it was again held by Bertram de Criol, who
gave it to his younger son John, and he died possessed
of it in the 48th year of Henry III. during whose time
Richard de Clare, earl of Gloucester, lord of Tunbridge,
and founder of the priory there, vir nobilis & omni laude
dignus, died, as it was thought, of poison, in 1262, on
a visit to him at this manor-house. (fn. 6) . His son Bertram
left two sons, John and Bertram, and a daughter Joane,
who afterwards married Sir Richard de Rokesle, and
on both her brothers deaths, s. p. became their heir,
and this manor afterwards descended to her two daugh
ters and coheirs, Agnes, wife of Thomas de Poynings,
and Joane, wife of Sir William le Baud; and upon
the division of their inheritance, Joane had this manor
allotted to her. After which it passed into the name of
Lovel, and from thence to Haut, in which it continued
till Alice, daughter of Sir William Haut, of Bishopsborne, carried it in marriage to Sir John Fogge, of
Repton, who sold it to Thomas Kempe, bishop of London, who devised it to his nephew Sir Tho. Kempe,
K. B. of Ollantigh, whose descendant, of the same
name, dying in 1607, without male issue, Mary his
daughter and coheir entitled her husband Sir Dudley
Diggs to the possession of it, and he sold it to Thomas
Twysden, esq. of Wye, the younger brother of Sir
William Twysden, bart. of Roydon-hall, whose son, of
the same name, passed it away to Sir John Ashburnham, of Ashburnham, in Sussex, who died in 1620, (fn. 7)
leaving Elizabeth his widow, daughter of Sir Thomas
Beaumont, of Leicestershire, surviving, who held this
manor in dower. She afterwards married Sir Thomas
Richardson, speaker of the house of commons, and afterwards chief justice of the king's bench, and was in
1627 created baroness Cramond, in Scotland. After
her death, her heirs, in king Charles II.'s reign, alienated it to Francis Barrell, sergeant-at-law, who died
possessed of it in 1679, as did his grandson Francis,
Barrell, esq. of London, whose third wise Frances,
daughter and coheir of William Hanbury, esq. of Herefordshire, surviving him, held it in jointure till her
death, when it came by his will to his two daughters
and coheirs, and on the division of their estates, this
manor has been allotted to the youngest, Catherine,
married to the Rev. Frederick Dodsworth, S. T. P.
and canon of Windsor, who is the present owner of it.
By the remains of the mansion-house of this manor
some years ago, it appeared to have been a castellated
mansion of some size and consequence. It is now a
modern built farm house.
The chapel of Eshmerfield was one of the four appendant to the church of Waltham, to which the tithes of
this manor were given in very early times, as will be
further taken notice of hereafter.
There are no parochial charities. The poor constantly relieved are about eighteen, casually the same.
WALTHAM is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry
of Bridge.
The church, which is dedicated to St Bartholomew,
consists of one isle and a chancel, having a low pointed
tower between them, in which there is one bell. The
church, which seems antient, has no monuments or inscriptions in it, worthy of notice. There was a chantry
in this church.
This church was antiently appendant to the manor
of Waltham, and probably continued so till archbishop
Lanfranc separated them, by giving the former, as
well as the tithes of the manors of Whitacre and Wadenhall, to his new-founded hospital of St. Gregory;
and archbishop Hubert in king Richard I.'s reign,
confirmed to it, among its other possessions, the church
of St Bartholomew, of Waltham, with the land called
Joclet, and the tithes of knights and husbandmen, with
the four chapels of Elmsted, Esmeresfield, Wadenhall, and Dene. Of these, Elmsted has been long since
a separate independent vicarage, in which the desecrated chapel of Dene is merged, being in that parish,
and the chapels of Ashenfield and Wadnall, in this
parish, long since likewise desecrated, are merged in
the church of Waltham. Soon after which, the church
of Waltham with its appendages, became appropriated
to the above priory; in which state, together with the
advowson of the vicarage, it remained till the dissolu
tion of the priory in king Henry VIII.'s reign, when
they came to the crown, where they did not stay long,
before they were granted with the scite, and other possessions of the priory in exchange to the archbishop,
part of the revenues of whose see they continue at
this time, Sir John Honywood, baronet, being the
present lessee of this parsonage; but the advowson of
the vicarage, his grace the archbishop, who has now
only the alternate presentation to it, reserves in his
own hands.
In 1698 this vicarage was united to that of Petham,
with the consent of the patrons of both, the archbishop,
as patron of this vicarage, to have one turn, and the
family of Honywood, patrons of the vicarage of Petham, the next turn, and so on in future alternately, in
which state the advowson of them still continue.
This vicarage is valued in the king's books at
7l. 15s. 5d. and the yearly tenths at 16s. 0½d. Archbishop Juxon, in 1660, augmented this vicarage with
twenty pounds per annum, to be paid out of the great
tithes. In 1588 here were one hundred and forty-six
communicants. In 1640, one hundred and twenty,
and it was valued at sixty-five pounds. (fn. 8)
Church of Waltham.
|
| PATRONS, | VICARS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| The Archbishop. | Basil Beacon, A. M. Sept. 11,
1610, obt. 1639. |
| John Cornelius, T. T. B. April
15, 1639. |
| The King. | James Burnett, A. M. June 11,
1640. |
| The Archbishop. | David Terrey, A. M. Nov. 24,
1663, obt. 1691. (fn. 9) |
| The King. | John Honywood, A. M. July 30,
1691, obt 1737. (fn. 10) |
| The Archbishop. | Thomas Randolph, S. T. P. 1737,
obt. March 24, 1783. (fn. 11) |
| Sir John Honywood, bart. | Thomas Randolph, A. M. Dec.
1783, the present vicar. (fn. 12) |