WORD.
WRITTEN formerly Worthe, is the next parish
eastward from Woodnesborough, which latter is the
original Saxon name, the letter d in that language being
stricken through, making it the same sound as th. (fn. 1)
There are three boroughs in this parish, viz. Felderland, Word-street, and Hackling; the borsholders
for the two former of which are appointed at Eastrycourt, being within the jurisdiction of that manor; for
the latter at Adisham, which manor claims over a part
of this borough.
THE PARISH OF WORD lies very flat and low, and
is very unhealthy; it is in shape very long and narrow,
being near three miles from east to west, and not more
than one mile across the other way. The village called
Word-street, containing twenty-nine houses, having
the church close to it, is situated nearly in the middle
of the parish; at the southern boundary of which, is
the hamlet of Hackling, containing five houses, the
principal estate in which, called Hackling farm, belongs to Mrs. Eleanor Dare, of Felderland. At the
western extremity of the parish is the borough and
hamlet of Felderland, or Fenderland, partly in Word,
and partly in Eastry, formerly esteemed a manor, the
property of the Manwoods, afterwards of the Harveys,
of Combe, and now belonging to the right hon. PeterLewis-Francis, earl Cowper; adjoining to which, in
the same borough, is the farm of Upton, situated about
a quarter of a mile westward of the church, the estate
of which likewise belongs to earl Cowper.
At a small distance further the marshes begin,
where there is a parcel of land called Worth, or Worde
Minnis, and belongs to the archbishop, the present
lessee being Mr. Thomas Rammel, of Eastry. Here
are two streams, called the south and north streams,
which direct their course through these marshes northwestward towards Sandwich; the latter of these was
formerly the famous water of Gestling, through which
the sea once flowed, and was noted much for being the
water in which felons were punished by drowning, their
bodies being carried by the current of it into the sea.
The marshes here are called Lydden valley, (from the
manor of Lydde-court, in this parish, below described,
called formerly Hlyden) which is under the direction
of the commissioners of sewers for the eastern parts of
Kent; and to which the north stream is the common
sewer. The marshes continue beyond this stream about
half a mile northward, where the sand downs begin.
These sand downs are a long bank of sand, covered
with green swerd of very unequal surface, and edge the
sea shore for five miles and upwards from Peppernesse,
which is the south east point of Sandwich bay, as far as
Deal. They are about a quarter of a mile broad, except
about the castle, which is, from its situation, called
Sandowne castle, where they end with the beach, but a
little way within the shore, about the middle of them is a
cut, called the Old Haven, which runs slanting from
the sea along these downs, near but not quite into the
river Stour, about three quarters of a mile eastward
below Sandwich. The castle of Sandowne is situated
about half a mile from the north end of the town of
Deal; it was built with Deal castle, and several others,
by king Henry VIII. in the year 1539, for the desence
of this coast, each being built with four round lunets of
very thick stone arched work, with many large portholes; in the middle is a great round tower, with a
large cistern for water on the top of it; underneath is
an arched cavern, bomb proof; the whole is encompassed with a fossee, over which is a draw-bridge. It
is under the government of the lord warden, who appoints the captain and other officers of it, by the act of
32d of king Henry VIII. This castle has lately had
some little repair made to it, which, however, has
made it but barely habitable.
This parish contains about fifty houses. The lands
in it are of about the annual value of 3000l. The soil
is very rich and fertile, and may properly be called the
garden of this part of Kent, and is the most productive
for wheat, of any perhaps within the county. There
are no woodlands in it. There is no fair.
THE PRINCIPAL MANOR in this parish is that of
LYDDE-COURT, written in Saxon,Hlyden, which
was given by Offa, king of Mercia, in the year 774,
to the church of Christ, in Canterbury, L. S. A. as the
charter expresses it, meaning, with the same franchises
and liberties that the manor of Adisham had before
been given to it. After which, this manor continued
with the priory of Christ-church, and king Edward I.
in his 7th year, granted to it the liberty and franchise
of wreck of the sea, apud le Lyde, which I suppose to
be this manor; and king Edward II. in his 10th year,
granted to the priory, free-warren within their demesne
lands within it; (fn. 2) and in this state this manor continued
till the dissolution of the priory in the 31st year of king
Henry VIII. when it came into the king's hands, who
settled it, among other premises, in his 33d year, on his
new erected dean and chapter of Canterbury, by whom
it was afterwards, in the 36th year of that reign, regranted to the king, who sold it that year to Stephen
Motte, and John Wylde, gent. and they alienated it
to Richard Southwell, who in the 1st year of king Edward VI. passed it away by sale to Thomas Rolfe, and
he afterwards conveyed it to William Lovelace, serjeant-at-law, who died possessed of it in 1576, and his
son Sir William Lovelace, of Bethersden, alienated it
to Thomas Smith, esq. of Westenhanger, from whom
it descended down to Philip, viscount Strangford, who
sold it to Herbert Randolph, esq. and he passed away a
part of it, called afterwards Lydde Court Ingrounds,
with the manor or royalty of Lydde-court, in Word
and Eastry, and lands belonging to it, in 1706, to Sir
Henry Furnese, bart. of Waldershare, and his grandson of the same name, dying in 1735, under age and
unmarried, his estates became vested in his three sisters,
as the three daughters and coheirs of his father Sir Robert Furnese, in equal shares, in coparcenary. After
which a partition of them having been agreed to, which
was confirmed by an act next year, this manor, with
the lands and appurtenances belonging to it, was allotted
to Selina, the third daughter, (fn. 3) who afterwards married
E. Dering, esq. and entitled him to this estate. He survived her and afterwards succeeded his father in the
title of baronet, and continued in the possession of
this estate till 1779, when he passed it away by sale to
Mr. William Walker and Mr. James Cannon, of
Deal, Who are the present owners of it.
The house, called the Downes house, is the courtlodge, but no court has been held for many years.
THE REMAINING, and by far the greatest partof this
estate, called, for distinction,
LYDDE-COURT OUTGROUNDS, was likewise in the
possession of the Smiths, of Westenhanger, and was
demised by Thomas Smith, esq. of that place, to Roger Manwood, jurat of Sandwich, for a long term of
years, at which time the outer downs were enwarrened
for hares and rabbits.
From Thomas Smythe, esq. this estate descended
down to Philip, viscount Strangford, who sold the
whole of it, with the manor, royalties, &c. as has been
mentioned before, to Herbert Randolph, esq. who
passed a way the manor and part of the lands belonging
to it, to Sir Henry Furnese, bart. and the other, being
by far the greatest part of it, since called Lydde Court
Outgrounds, to Richard Harvey, esq. of Eythorne, who
in 1720 alienated it to Sir Robert Furnese, bart. before
mentioned, in whose descendants it continued down
to Catherine, his daughter and coheir, who carried it in
marriage, first to Lewis, earl of Rockingham, and secondly to Francis, earl of Guildford, to whom on her
death in 1766, she devised this estate. He died possessed of it in 1790, and his grandson, the right hon.
George Augustus, earl of Guildford, is the present
possessor of it. This estate comprehends all that tract
of land, partly sandy, partly marshy, and the whole
nearly pasturage, lying on the south side of Sandwich
haven, bounded on the east by the sea shore, and on
the west by the ditch, along which the footway to Deal
leads, and which is the eastern boundary of Lydde court
Inngrounds.
In the year 1565, there was a suit in the star chamber, respecting a road from Sandowne gate and Sandwich, to the castle in the Downes, which was referred
to the archbishop and Sir Richard Sackville; who
awarded, that there should be a highway sixteen feet
broad over Lyd-court grounds.
SANDOWNE, so called from the sand downs over
which it principally extends, is a manor, which lies
partly in this parish, and partly in that of St. Clement's,
in Sandwich, within the jurisdiction of which corporation the latter part of it is. This manor was antiently
the estate of the Perots, who held the same, as the private deeds of this name and family shew, as high as the
reign of king Henry III. Thomas de Perot died possessed of it in the 4th year of that reign, at which time
he had those privileges and franchises, the same as other
manors of that time; Henry Perot, the last of this
name, at the beginning of king Edward III.'s reign,
was succeeded by John de Sandhurst, who left an only
daughter and heir Christian, who married William de
Langley. (fn. 4) After which it continued in his descendants
till it passed to the Peytons, and thence in like manner
as Knolton above described, by sale to the Narboroughs,
and afterwards by marriage to Sir Thomas D'Aeth,
bart whose grandson Sir Narborough D's Aeth, bart. now
of Knolton, is the present owner of it. A court baron
is held for this manor.
There are no parochial charities.The poor constantly relieved are about twenty-five, casually as many.
THIS PARISH is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanryof
Sandwich.
The church, which is dedicated to St. Peter and St.
Paul, is a small mean building, having a low pointed
wooden turret at the west end, in which are two bells.
The church consists of a nave, two isles, and a chancel,
the north isle extending only about halfway towards
the west end. In the south wall of the chancel is an
arched tomb, on which probably was once the figure
of some person, who was the founder, or at least a
good benefactor towards the building. In the south
isle are several gravestones for the Philpotts, of this
parish; and an altar monument for Mr. Ralph Philpott, obt. 1704.
In the church-yard are altar tombs to the memories
of the same family of Philpott.
The church of Word, or Worth, has ever been
esteemed as a chapel to the mother church of Eastry,
and continues so at this time, being accounted as a part
of the same appropriation, a further account of which
may be seen in the description of that church before.
The vicar of Eastry is inducted to the vicarage of the
church of Eastry, with the chapels of Shrinkling and
Word annexed to it.
It is included with the church of Eastry in the valuation of it in the king's books. In 1578 here were
communicants one hundred and forty-four, in 1644
only one hundred and fourteen.
The rectorial or great tithes of this parish, as part
of the rectory of Eastry, were demised on a beneficial
lease, to the late countess dowager of Guildford, whose
younger children are now entitled to the present interest in this lease.
The lessee of the parsonage is bound to repair the
chancel of this church.