DENHAM
Daneham (xi cent.).
The parish of Denham contains 3,939 acres. Of
this, 1,308 acres consist of arable land, 1,747 of
permanent grass and 583 of woods and plantations. (fn. 1)
The country here is very level and in no part exceeds
200 ft. above the ordnance datum. The soil is a
mixture of loam and gravel, the subsoil being chalk.
The chief crops are cereals. The parish contains
several gravel-pits. It is well-wooded, some of the
chief woods being Juniper Wood, Great Haling's
Wood and Broadspring Wood. The last two are
mentioned in 1762. (fn. 2)

The Village, Denham
The village, which lies on a lane just off the Oxford
Road and has a station on the Great Western and
Great Central Joint railways, must at one time have
been of much greater importance than at the present
day. During the ownership of Westminster Abbey
there is constant reference from the early 13th to
the 15th century of land in the burgo of Denham,
and in the late 13th and 14th centuries the expression
burgagium is used as in a charter dealing with lands
extra burgagium villae. The charters in which these
expressions occur are included in the Harleian collection at the British Museum, and are given in many
cases in extenso and also translated in the Rev. R. H.
Lathbury's History of Denham. Mr. Lathbury has
also had access to the numerous deeds preserved at
Westminster dealing with Denham, and from these,
court rolls, ministers' accounts and other early documents, which he transcribes in full, has written a
valuable history of the parish, giving full details of
the descent of the various properties from the earliest
known dates.
The village contains a number of houses and cottages of 16th and 17th-century origin, mostly of
timber with brick filling and tiled roofs. Among
them may be mentioned Hill House, a late 17thcentury brick building with a triple-gabled front, the
central gable being stepped, while the flanking gables
are curvilinear; the post office, which is of the same
period and retains its original oak staircase, and a
group of timber and brick cottages of the 16th century
and later north-west of the church. Most of these
houses have been a good deal altered and restored.
The church stands in a large churchyard which is
planted with fine trees, notably yews. The old
school, a picturesque building on the north side of
the churchyard, bears an inscription recording its
foundation by Sir William Bowyer in 1721, but it
is now used as a private residence. From here an
avenue of lime trees leads to Denham Court, the seat
of Mr. H. W. Swithinbank. It is an old house surrounded by beautiful grounds sloping down to the
River Colne, which forms the eastern side of the
moat. The mid-17th-century west wing is all that
remains of the original house, the rest having been
built or rebuilt in the 18th and 19th centuries. The
ancient fish-ponds still exist, and there is a large
fishery in the Colne. The Misbourn, a tributary of
this river, and the Grand Junction Canal pass through
Denham. Denham Court Farm, to the south-east of
the village, dates in part from the first half of the
17th century, but the north-west portion seems to have
been built early in the succeeding century.
The Savoy, also on the banks of the Colne, but
nearly a mile further north, has a moat which is
partly natural and fed by the river. The building
is remarkable as incorporating remains of the aisled
hall of a 14th-century house, which may have been
built by Thomas Durdent, lord of the manor of
Denham Durdent in this parish (q.v.). The solar
wing on the south seems to be of a later date in the
same century, while the eastern extension, now the
entrance hall, must have been added about 1500.
The western portion of the south wing, including
the kitchen and offices, has been rebuilt, but the
remaining part, now occupied by the study, is of late
14th or early 15th-century date. At some period in
the 16th century the floor and central chimney-stack
were inserted in the hall, and the north wing appears
to have been altered at the same time, the staircase
on this side of the house being of the same period.
The principal staircase at the south-east of the hall
was added early in the succeeding century. The
exterior, though retaining a good many original
features, has been considerably restored. The interior
still retains a large portion of the original timber
construction, two posts, with an arch of the arcade,
remaining in the east wall of the curtailed hall;
another post also remains in the west wall, and the
original open-timber roof can be seen in the southern
of the two rooms on the inserted upper floor. There
are numerous and well-preserved remains of mural
paintings, including some biblical subjects dated
1606.

THE SAVOY DENHAM
Plan of the Savoy, Denham
Reproduced from the Inventory of the Historical Monuments of South Buckinghamshire with the permission of the Royal Commission and the consent of the Controller of H.M. Stationery Office.
Denham Place, a fine late 17th-century house
standing on the site of an earlier building, is the seat
of Col. Way. It is built of brick with rubbed brick
dressings and quoins, the walls being crowned by a
wood modillion cornice with an enriched bed-mould.
The plan consists of a central block with two wings,
the north wing containing the chapel, ante-chapel,
drawing room and a room now used as a billiard
room, and the south wing the library and offices.
On the ground floor of the central portion of the
house are the hall, the principal and subsidiary staircases and the dining room. The chapel contains much
interesting early 16th-century woodwork, painted and
gilded, brought, as it is said, from Somerset. The walls
have linen-pattern panelling with a moulded cornice
and carved frieze, and the seats have elaborate ends,
each with a head surmounted by an eagle holding a
sprig of foliage. The pulpit
bears the arms of Hill, which are
also carved on two of the seatends. The chapel is divided from
the ante-chapel, which has panelling of the same type, by an
elaborate screen of six bays. The
gallery front above is carved in
the Grinling Gibbons manner.
In the east window of the chapel
are twenty-four shields, principally of Hill and their alliances;
some 17th-century heraldic glass
also remains in the east window
of the ante-chapel. Much fine
plaster work remains and the
tapestries are particularly interesting. The billiard room has an
interesting coved plaster frieze
with a painted design of houses
and landscapes in relief and on the
walls are tapestries. The stables
and the boundary walls of the
garden are of the 17th century.
Mrs. Goodlake, who owns the
estate formerly of St. Thomas's Hospital, resides at
the Fisheries.
Denham Marsh Farm, about 1½ miles north-west
of the village, was probably built in the 16th century,
but was added to late in the 17th century and has
been subsequently much altered and restored.
Southlands Farm, in the south of the parish, has a
moat which is fed by the Alderbourne. It is a
timber-framed house of the 16th century, but is
considerably restored and altered. There are three
17th-century barns close to the house.
The following place-names occur in Denham:
Durley Mead and Checkers Meade (xvi cent.) (fn. 3) ;
Great and Little Burgage, Snellsmore and Huntwicks (fn. 4) (xviii cent.).
MANORS
The manor of DENHAM, afterwards
DENHAM COURT, assessed at 10 hides
in 1086, was granted to the abbey of
Westminster by Ulstan, a thegn, during the reign of
Edward the Confessor. (fn. 5) The manor was held in
chief by the abbey, (fn. 6) who subinfeudated it as early as 1171 (fn. 7)
for a rent which then was
£6 15s. for half a year. (fn. 8) In
1231 the rent, then £15, was
increased to £18 a year on
condition that the manor
should be freed from the
yearly visitation of the abbot. (fn. 9)

Westminister Abbey. Gules St. Peter's keys crossed and St. Edward's ring in the chief all or.
The title of Martin de
Capella, the tenant of the
abbey in 1171, (fn. 10) and probably
successor of the Robert who
held in Buckinghamshire as
early as 1158, (fn. 11) was confirmed
some time after 1176. (fn. 12) Martin
was still in possession in 1197, (fn. 13) but was succeeded
before 1227 by Henry de Capella. (fn. 14) On his death,
about 1248, Denham passed
to his son Bartholomew, (fn. 15) who
acquired a virgate of land
here from Philip de Covele
in 1251 (fn. 16) and died about
1258. (fn. 17) His daughter and
heir Joan married John de
Bohun of Midhurst, (fn. 18) who in
1275 recovered from Master
John de Fileby the manor of
Denham of which John de
Bohun had enfeoffed him for
life. (fn. 19) In 1281, however,
the manor was conveyed to
Fileby (fn. 20) and his heirs, and
by him it was leased in 1284
to Robert de Fileby for life. (fn. 21)
Robert appears in 1286 to
have transferred his rights to
the aforesaid Joan de Bohun, (fn. 22)
but his rent to Westminster
Abbey was said to be 10
marks in arrears in the next
year. (fn. 23) Denham was shortly
afterwards granted to Queen
Eleanor in fee, and she obtained deeds from the abbot
relinquishing his rights during her lifetime. (fn. 24) After
her death in 1290 it was bestowed in 1292 on Westminster Abbey in free alms. (fn. 25) By this grant the abbey
of Westminster was bound every week (sic) on the
eve of the anniversary of the death of Queen Eleanor
to sing placebo and dirige with the nine lessons for the
soul of the said queen, with solemn tolling of bells,
and on the day of said anniversary every week to
sing a mass with tolling of bells and to provide 1d.
each for food for 140 poor men, each of whom, before
and after the receipt of the money, was to say the
Lord's Prayer, the Apostles' Creed and the Ave
Maria. (fn. 26)

The Savoy, Denham: West Front
In consequence of this grant the abbey was often
excused from all taxation of its lands at Denham
during the 13th and 14th centuries. (fn. 27) Towards the
end of the reign of Edward I Joan, the widow of
John de Bohun, attempted to recover the manor, (fn. 28)
and the case was still before the courts in 1325. (fn. 29)
Her son John de Bohun (fn. 30) continued the action in
1338, (fn. 31) but the abbey retained possession of Denham
until the Dissolution. (fn. 32) In 1540 Henry VIII granted
Denham Manor to Edmund afterwards Sir Edmund
Peckham, (fn. 33) who already owned an estate in Denham
called Southlands, (fn. 34) which henceforward descends
with Denham. The Peckhams had been resident in
Buckinghamshire for some time, (fn. 35) and Sir Edmund
was both justice of the peace and member of Parliament for the county. (fn. 36) He had some difficulty in
obtaining possession of Denham owing to a lease
made by the Abbot of Westminster about 1538 to
Francis Clerk. (fn. 37) The latter in 1561 transferred his
rights to Edmund Bedell, but the deeds having come
into the possession of Bartholomew Garraway, both
Bedell and Sir Edmund Peckham brought an action
against him in 1562. (fn. 38) On Sir Edmund's death in
1564 his son Sir Robert inherited Denham. (fn. 39) As a
Roman Catholic he enjoyed the favour of Queen
Mary, and, like his father, represented the county in
Parliament. (fn. 40) He died childless at Rome in 1569,
and his heart, inclosed in lead, was sent to his
brother and heir George to be buried at Denham. (fn. 41)
Sir George Peckham in 1578 settled Southlands and
part of the manor on his son and heir Sir Edmund
and the latter's wife Dorothy and their heirs male, (fn. 42)
but as Sir Edmund died in 1586 his son George, a boy
of seven, became heir to his grandfather. (fn. 43) Sir George
Peckham was a merchant adventurer, and in 1583
bore the chief part in an expedition with Sir Humphrey Gilbert and Sir Richard Grenville. (fn. 44) But
fortune did not favour him, and his estates were
seized by the Crown for debt and granted in 1596 to
William Bowyer to hold until the debt was settled. (fn. 45)
In the grant the manor of Denham Court and the
capital messuage called Denham House or Place
are particularly enumerated. (fn. 46) Three months later
Bowyer obtained the site of the manor of Denham
Court, (fn. 47) which, as the capital messuage or farm called
'Denham Court,' is mentioned in 1578. (fn. 48) In 1602
William Bowyer obtained a renunciation of a claim
from George Peckham, junior, and Dorothy his wife, (fn. 49)
but the Peckhams evidently
hoped to regain their lands,
for on the death of Sir George
Peckham in 1608 Denham was
mentioned among his possessions, though it was said to be
in the Crown for debt. (fn. 50) His
descendants, however, never
redeemed it and it remained
with the Bowyers. William
Bowyer, who was knighted in
1609, (fn. 51) died in 1616, when
Denham passed to William
Bowyer, aged four, son of his
son Henry. (fn. 52) This William, who came of age in
1633, (fn. 53) was Sheriff of Buckinghamshire in 1647 (fn. 54) and
also represented the county in Parliament. (fn. 55) He was
created a baronet in 1660, (fn. 56) and in 1670 he sold the
manor of Denham and the chief messuage of Denham
Place to Sir Roger Hill. (fn. 57) Hill's daughter Hester, who
had married Henry Probert in 1700, (fn. 58) succeeded her
father as a widow in 1729. (fn. 59) She held the manor
till her death in 1742, (fn. 60) when her rights passed to
her younger sister Abigail widow of Edward Lockey
and then wife of Charles Edwin. (fn. 61) Abigail Edwin
died in 1757 and her only child by Edward Lockey,
Abigail, having predeceased her, the latter's husband
Lewis Way entered into possession. (fn. 62) Lewis Way,
who was a director of the
South Sea Company, died in
1771, (fn. 63) and his son Benjamin
succeeded. (fn. 64) Benjamin Way,
who was sheriff for the county
in 1777, (fn. 65) had already taken
steps in 1762 to bar the
entail. (fn. 66) His son Benjamin,
who succeeded in 1808, was
also sheriff in 1822 (fn. 67) and
died in 1834, (fn. 68) leaving a son
Benjamin. The latter was
succeeded in 1859 by his son,
another Benjamin, upon whose
death in 1891 the Denham
property was left to his widow,
Mrs. Eleanor Way. She died in 1913 and her son
Col. Way, is the present owner.

Bowyer, baronet. Or a bend vair cotised gules.

Way of Denham. Azure three luces rising argent quartered with sable two bars bendy argent and gules.
When Sir William Bowyer sold Denham Manor
and Denham Place he retained Denham Court,
which passed on his death in 1679 to his son Sir
William. (fn. 69) The latter was succeeded in 1722 by his
grandson Sir William, who died in 1767. (fn. 70) His
eldest son Sir William dying without issue in 1799, (fn. 71)
the latter's brother Admiral Sir George Bowyer
inherited Denham, and, dying the same year, (fn. 72) left
it to his son, another Sir George. (fn. 73) He sold Denham
Court about 1813 to Thomas Hamlet, after whose
bankruptcy in 1840 it was bought by Nathaniel
George Lambert. (fn. 74) About 1885 it was acquired by
the present owner, Mr. H. W. Swithinbank.
In 1254–5 the overlord of Denham Manor had
suit of court, view of frankpledge and exemption
from hidage. (fn. 75) In 1275–6 he had return of writs,
pleas of distraint and assize of bread and ale. (fn. 76) Ten
years later he laid claim both to the above and also
to chattels of felons and fugitives. His claim was
contested on the ground that he merely received a
rent for the manor. (fn. 77) In 1292 these rights were
enumerated in detail in the grant of the manor in
free alms to the abbey. (fn. 78)
A Monday market and a fair on the vigil, feast and
morrow of the Nativity of the Virgin were granted to
Henry de Capella in 1227. (fn. 79) The fair continued to
be held on 13 May until abolished in 1873. (fn. 80) In
1231 a grant of free warren was obtained and no one
was to chase the fox or hare there without Henry's
leave. (fn. 81)
The right to hold courts baron and leet and view
of frankpledge was expressly reserved to the Crown in
the grant of Denham to William Bowyer in 1596, (fn. 82)
but the right had been acquired by 1679 (fn. 83) and is
included in the manorial privileges in 1762. (fn. 84) Free
fishing in the waters of the Colne at Denham was
attached to the manor in the 17th and 18th
centuries. (fn. 85)
DENHAM DURDENTS MANOR
DENHAM DURDENTS MANOR probably originated in land held in the 12th century as half a
fee of the Abbot of Westminster. (fn. 86) His successors
retained rights in this estate (fn. 87) which were represented
in 1535 by a rent of 10s. (fn. 88)
The manor took its distinctive name from the
Durdents, of whom Angodus Durdent was the
tenant in 1166. (fn. 89) Another member of the family,
Walter Durdent, was in 1225
appointed a justice of the
assize (fn. 90) and in 1232 collector
of the fortieths in Buckinghamshire. (fn. 91) He acquired additional lands in Denham in
1242 (fn. 92) and was still alive in
1254. (fn. 93) The next holder,
Philip Durdent, was in possession in 1256, (fn. 94) and put forward a claim in 1276 to the
assize of bread and ale, view
of frankpledge and other
rights. (fn. 95) He is mentioned
again in 1286, (fn. 96) but by 1318
the estate had passed to George
Durdent. (fn. 97) In 1324 occurs
the name of Thomas Durdent, (fn. 98) and he in 1327 settled
the manor of Denham Durdent, so called for the first
time, on himself for life with
remainder to his son John and
Mabel, John's wife. (fn. 99) Philip
Durdent with Amy his wife is
mentioned as holding lands in
Denham in 1335–6 (fn. 100) and
again in 1343. (fn. 101) In 1356 he settled the manor on
himself with reversion to his son Philip and Margery
de Eccleshall and their issue, (fn. 102) but he was succeeded by
his son and heir Edward, who held in 1367. (fn. 103) Some
interest in the manor appears to have been held by
John Durdent, whose widow Margaret had married
William de Naffreton by 1370, (fn. 104)
but Edward Durdent above
mentioned was in possession
in 1371. (fn. 105) He was knight of
the shire in 1389–90 and in
1394–5, (fn. 106) and was succeeded
by Thomas Durdent, whose
son and heir Walter had inherited Denham by 1438. (fn. 107)
The latter died in 1494, (fn. 108)
leaving a son Thomas, (fn. 109) who
with his son, another Thomas,
fled from Denham in 1511 on
a charge of murder, forfeiting
his property. (fn. 110) Denham
Durdent was granted to the trustees for the Savoy
Hospital, (fn. 111) who obtained a renunciation of rights
from Thomas Durdent. (fn. 112) The manor, which in
1535 was assessed at £22 with rents of assize valued
at 114s. 1d. among the possessions of the Savoy, (fn. 113)
henceforward descended with the Marsworth Manor
owned by the hospital (q.v.). Several additions were
made to the property, chiefly during the 18th century, by the purchase of adjoining lands. (fn. 114) In 1874
St. Thomas's Hospital sold the manor to the late
General Goodlake, and it is at present held by
Mrs. Goodlake. (fn. 115)

Durdent. Gules an indented chief or with a pile ? sable over all.

Denham Court
Two water-mills worth 10s. were appurtenant to
Denham Manor in 1086 (fn. 116) and descended with it. (fn. 117)
In 1535 one of these mills was leased for £8 13s. 4d., (fn. 118)
and in 1540 they had acquired the name of Abbot's
Mills. (fn. 119) When granted to William Bowyer in 1596
they were differentiated as a water-mill in Denham
worth £13 6s. 8d. and another one called Denham
Mill, worth £4. (fn. 120) In 1616 they appear as the
Town Mill and Denham Mill. (fn. 121) The Bowyers
continued to hold them (fn. 122) and retained them with
Denham Court in 1679, for in 1705 they were the
property of Cecil Bowyer, son and heir-apparent of
the second baronet. (fn. 123) There are two water-mills in
Denham at the present day.
There were two other mills in Denham said to be
held in chief in 1335 (fn. 124) and in 1337, (fn. 125) but in 1355 (fn. 126)
and in the 15th century (fn. 127) they were held of the
Abbot of Westminster. In 1454 the overlord was
declared to be unknown. (fn. 128) In 1330 these mills
were held by Eubold le Strange, Lord Strange de
Knockin, and remained in his family and in that of
his descendants the Earls of Derby, (fn. 129) except for
certain life interests, till they passed by the marriage
of Anne daughter of Anne Lady Strange to the
Chandos family in the 17th century, (fn. 130) but there is
no trace of them after the Civil Wars. (fn. 131)
CHURCH
The church of ST. MARY consists
of a chancel 33 ft. by 19 ft. 6 in., north
vestry, nave 37 ft. 6 in. by 20 ft., north
aisle 11 ft. 6 in. wide, south aisle 10 ft. wide and
west tower 15 ft. 6 in. by 15 ft. These dimensions
are all internal.
There was a church here in the 12th century, (fn. 132)
but the present chancel is not earlier than the
beginning of the 14th century, while the nave was
rebuilt about the middle of the 15th century, when
the aisles and tower were added. The fabric has been
restored at a modern period, all the window tracery
being renewed and the vestry added. The walling
is of flint with stone dressings.
The axis of the chancel has a southward inclination. In the east wall there is a traceried window of
three lights, the rear arch and internal shafted jambs
of which are original. At the west end of each of
the north and south walls is an early 14th-century
low-side window of two lancet lights, and in the
south wall is a modern window of the same design.
The chancel arch is modern. The north and south
arcades of the nave date from the middle of the 15th
century and are each of three bays with moulded
arches springing from piers composed of four attached
shafts divided by hollow chamfers and having moulded
capitals and bases. The nave has a clearstory, but all
its windows are modern.
The north and south aisles have each three
traceried windows of three lights with original inner
jambs and rear arches. At the east end of the north
aisle are the remains of the doorway to the former
rood-loft stair, and in the south wall of the south
aisle is a 15th-century doorway with jambs and head
of two moulded orders, the outer being square and
the inner order pointed with quatrefoiled spandrels.
Over this doorway is part of a contemporary painting
representing a Doom.
The west tower is of two stages with an embattled
parapet. The pointed tower arch is moulded continuously with the responds and has moulded bases;
the 15th-century west doorway has a pointed external
head under a square containing order. The west
window, which retains its original inner jambs and
rear arch, is now occupied by the clock face, and on
each side of the bell-chamber is a two-light window,
modern externally, but of 17th-century brickwork
internally, flanked by rough round-headed openings.
The roofs, according to an inscription formerly in
the church, were erected by — Micklow, husband
of Elizabeth widow of Edmund Peckham and esquire
to Henry VIII. Those of the chancel and nave have
moulded timbers, the tie-beams being supported by
arched struts on stone corbels, mostly with carved
heads. The aisle roofs are moulded and panelled.
The font dates from the early 13th century; it
has an octagonal tapering bowl of Purbeck marble,
on each side of which are two panels. The bowl
rests on a round central stem and eight small shafts,
two of which have been renewed. On the east
jamb of the south-east window of the chancel is a
palimpsest brass in a hinged frame; on one side is
the figure and an inscription to Amphillis daughter
of Sir Edward Peckham, who died in 1545, and a
shield charged with a cheveron between three crosslets
fitchy quartering a fesse between three molets; on
the reverse side is a figure of a friar and an inscription
to John Pyke. The reverse of the shield is charged
with a birch-rod and staff crossed saltirewise between
the initials J M/S P., said to mean 'John Pyke, Magister
Scolarum.' In the nave are fine brasses to Walter
Durdent, who died in 1494, and Agnes and Margaret
his wives, with figures of the man in plate armour,
his two wives, three sons and four daughters of one
wife, nine sons and ten daughters of the other wife,
and four shields of his arms (one is missing), and his
shield, with mantled helm crested with a man's leg,
above his head; an inscription to Thomas Bedell
'fermer of Denh[am] Courte,' d. 1528, and Margaret
and Joan his wives, with figures of three sons and
one daughter, and matrices for those of himself and
his two wives; and to Agnes Jordan, last abbess of
the monastery of Sion, in her habit, who died in
1544. Space had been allowed in the inscription for
the actual date of her death, which was filled in at
a subsequent period. There is also a figure of a
priest in surplice and scarf, perhaps commemorating
Leonard Hurst, who died in 1560. The inscription
is lost and the figure is placed over an inscription to
Richard Thornhill of Tuxford, sometime parson of
Denham, d. January 1612–13. In the north-east
corner of the chancel, moved from elsewhere, is an
altar tomb with the recumbent effigies of Sir Edmund
Peckham, kt., who died in 1564, and his wife, who
died in 1570. The knight is in plate armour and
his wife in robe, cape and ruff; the hands of both
are broken off. The base is enriched with Doric
columns. In the south-east corner of the chancel is
another altar tomb, of Purbeck marble, the covering
slab of which has the indent of an inscription, while
on the base are indents of two shields in quatrefoiled
panels with that of a large plate between them. On
the south wall is a slab with an incised kneeling figure
commemorating Philip Edelen, who died in 1656,
'a constant preacher of the truth in the most difficult
times wherein he lived, continuing unmoved in the
principles he had first laid down,' and there is also a
tablet with an achievement of arms, and an inscription to Sir Robert Peckham, privy councillor to Queen
Mary, who died in Rome in 1569, his heart only being
buried in this church. On the north wall of the nave
is a monument to John Sowthen, who died in 1631,
and in the north aisle are monuments to Mary Coggs,
who died in 1694, Martha Coggs, 1696, John Coggs,
1710, and Daniel Coggs, 1722. On the south wall
of the south aisle is a marble monument to Sir William Bowyer, who died in 1616, his son Sir Henry
Bowyer, 1613, Sir William Bowyer, kt. and bart.,
son of Sir Henry, 1679, and Margaret his wife, 1678.
The monument was erected by their son Sir William
Bowyer, bart., of Denham Court, in 1682.
There is a ring of eight bells: the treble and
second by C. & G. Mears, 1846; the third by Pack
& Chapman, 1772; the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh
by James Bartlet, 1683; and the tenor recast by John
Warner & Sons, 1875.
The communion plate includes a cup of 1673,
dated 1675.
The registers begin in 1653.
ADVOWSON
The church of Denham, which is
mentioned in a charter bearing date
1114–40, (fn. 133) has always been appurtenant to the manor, (fn. 134) and the patronage is now
vested in Col. Way. The church was assessed at
£16 in 1291 (fn. 135) and at £20 in 1535. (fn. 136)
CHARITIES
The public elementary schools,
founded by Sir William Bowyer and
others, are now regulated by a scheme
of the Board of Education 11 August 1905. (fn. 137)
John Biddle, by deed 24 September 1642, granted
& yearly rent-charge of £6 out of a close called
Mason's, 10s. to be paid to the rector for preaching
a sermon of an hour long on Lady Day, and the
residue for the poor.
In 1729, as appeared from an inscription on a
table in the church, John Stanley gave to the poorest
housekeepers £4 yearly. The parish is in possession
of 2 a. 1 r. of land in South Mead, producing £6
yearly in respect of this charity.
The two charities are administered together, £1
being paid to the rector for a sermon and £11 being
distributed to forty-four persons in sums of 5s. each.
The table of benefactions stated that the Church
House was given to this parish by Sir George
Peckham, kt., in 1580, for the use of the parish,
which would appear to have become merged into the
Yew Tree Cottage Trust, otherwise the Bell and
Church Charity. The property comprised in a deed,
30 January 1727, was sold in 1864 for £200, which
was invested in £219 9s. 7d. consols, producing
£5 9s. 8d. yearly, which under a scheme of the
Charity Commissioners 3 June 1862 is applied in
the payment of £1 10s. to bell-ringers and the
residue towards the repairs of the church and church
expenses.
In 1861 John Lovett, by will proved at London
11 April, bequeathed a legacy now represented by
£48 8s. 2d. consols, the dividends, amounting to
£1 4s., to be applied in the payment of 5s. annually
to the sexton for keeping in order the testator's
and certain other graves and the residue to poor
widows.
In 1897 William James, by his will proved at
London 18 December, bequeathed £500, the interest to be applied for the benefit of aged poor. The
legacy was invested in £447 18s. 6d. consols, producing £11 3s. 8d. yearly, which is distributed at
Christmas to about forty-five recipients.
The several sums of stock are held by the official
trustees.