CARSHALTON
Aultone, xi cent.; Kersauton, Cresalton, Creshauton and many other forms are found until the
18th century, when the country pronunciation Casehorton began invariably to be spelt Carshalton.
Carshalton is a parish on the north side of the
Chalk Downs, in extreme width not much above a
mile at any point, but over 4½ miles from north to
south. It contains 2,926 acres of land and 22 acres
of water. (fn. 1) It extends from the chalk, across the
Woolwich and Thanet Beds, on to the London Clay.
There are several strong springs in the parish, which
form one branch, the larger branch, of the Wandle,
and, after a short distance, join the stream from
Croydon. The united waters form the eastern
boundary of the parish for some distance, and the
houses of Hackbridge (Pons Aquae) on the stream are
partly in Carshalton parish. In the village itself the
water forms large clear ponds which give a peculiar
and picturesque appearance to the place. The
London, Brighton and South Coast railway lines
from Mitcham and from West Croydon respectively
to Sutton pass through the parish, and Carshalton
station, opened in 1868, is on the former branch.
A good deal of market gardening, some lavender
growing and ordinary agricultural work are carried
on in the parish. The common fields, inclosed with
those of Wallington under an Award made 10 March
1853, (fn. 2) were upon the Chalk Down south of the
village.
Though the number of recorded prehistoric
remains found in Carshalton itself is not large, it is
likely that the abundant water made it early a place
of habitation. Nearly a mile and a half south of Carshalton Church, on the Downs near the Woodmansterne border, is rising ground known as Stag Field,
from a figure of a stag placed there by the Earl of
Derby when he held the Oaks in Woodmansterne
parish (q.v.) close at hand. Drainage works carried on
here in connexion with the Metropolitan Asylums
Board Hospital in 1905 revealed a prehistoric settlement. Traces were found, though slight and defaced
by ploughing, of a banked and ditched inclosure containing hearths from which charred grain, perforated
tiles, corn-crushers and pottery were taken. Some
human bones were also found. The remains seemed
to range from the Neolithic to the Iron Age, and
included a cake of copper, a bronze buckle, an amber
bead and a fragmentary vessel of the type found by
Dr. Arthur Evans at Aylesford, and believed to be an
importation from Italy. The discovery has been
recorded. (fn. 3)
The village of Carshalton lies on the road between
Croydon and Sutton, about a mile east of the latter
town. The old village, situated at the foot of the
Chalk, runs east and west along this road, but larger
modern settlements of a suburban character have
grown up and are rapidly developing both to the
north and south of the original settlement, while on
the west the village is now connected with Sutton by
Sutton New Town, and on the east with Wallington
by a line of modern residences. In the centre of
the village, on the north side of the High Street, is
one of the large ponds mentioned above, across which
runs the road to Wimbledon. The church stands
in a churchyard above the roadway and on the south
side of the High Street, immediately opposite the
pond. Many of the older cottages are of timber.
Adjoining the churchyard on the east is an 18th-century butcher's shop, two stories high, built of brick
with a tile roof and lower story projecting considerably
in front of the first floor. In front of it are two
ancient lime trees, between which is an 18th-century
hanging beam with hooks and a small pent roof.
On the south side of the High Street, some 100 yards
to the east of the church, is a row of 18th-century
red brick cottages, two stories high, with dormer
windows lighting the attics in the tile roof. At the
wall head is a moulded wooden cornice. The
'King's Arms,' an 18th-century inn, is incorporated
in the west end of this block. Opposite the
'King's Arms' is another red brick building with a
tile roof of the same date. It is two stories high,
stands on a basement and has attics in the roof. To
the front doorway is a hood, and at the wall head is
a moulded wooden cornice.
A public hall in the village was built in 1874.
A school board was elected in 1873. A parish school
had been built in 1853, which was apparently superseded by Camden Road School, built in 1877 and
enlarged in 1895. Camden Road (infants) was built
in 1882; an infants' school (National) was founded in
1825. St. Mary's is a Roman Catholic school. (fn. 4)
Leicester House, where the hospital for incurables
(now at Putney) was first started, is used as a boys'
school.
The town is now governed by an urban district
council of nine members, established under the Local
Government Act of 1894. In 1883 the vestry was
superseded by a local board.
Carshalton House stands in wooded grounds at the
west end of the old village. It was the property of
Dr. Radcliffe, physician and M.P. (for whom see
below), and after his death was bought by Sir
John Fellowes, a director of the South Sea Company. It was confiscated after the South Sea catastrophe in 1721, although Fellowes still continued to
reside in Carshalton. It subsequently came into the
possession of Lord Chancellor Hardwick, (fn. 5) was afterwards used as a military college, and from 1859 to 1893
as a private school, kept by Mr. Bath and Dr. Barrett,
who added a wing containing a dormitory. In
1893 it was taken over by the Daughters of the
Cross, a Roman Catholic body founded in Liége in
1833. They built further additions to the west of the
old building, and now carry on the educational work
of the convent of St. Philomena, the name by which
the house is known. In spite of its many different
occupants the house itself has been little disturbed
and stands to-day in practically the same condition as
when erected.
The main house, which is rectangular in plan, is
three stories high, and stands on a basement and faces the
south, while against its west wall was a conservatory.
It is built of stock bricks with gauged brick dressings,
and has at the level of the top floor an elaborate
wooden cornice. The house is symmetrically designed
both in plan and elevation, and had its principal
entrance in the centre of the south front and another
on the east. The principal entrance opened into a
large panelled hall—now used as the library—having
some good carving over the doors in the respective
north ends of the east and west walls. From the
north-east corner a smaller hall is entered, which
opens into the garden on the east. This room is
also panelled in oak, and the doorway has Ionic
columns supporting an entablature with a triangular
pediment over, while in the north wall is a marble
fireplace, surmounted by a large oak panel carved on
either side with fruit and foliage. Above the panel
is a shield carved with the arms of Fellowes quarterly :
(1) and (4) a fesse dancetty between three lions'
heads razed and murally crowned, and (2) and (3)
two dolphins face to face, with the badge of Ulster;
above the shield is a mantled helm with the crest,
a lion's head murally crowned. The oak cornice
running round this room is enriched with delicate
carving, as are also the door architraves, and the
plaster ceiling is of a beautiful French design. The
room in the north-east corner is panelled with woodwork covered with paintings of diverse subjects. To
the south-west of the library is a most elaborately
ornamented room, with an Ionic arcading round its
walls having an entablature with a carved frieze.
Behind is another hall, off which opens the conservatory. The hall has a plaster vaulting carried on
columns of the Ionic order, while the floor is of
black and white marble. The main staircase opens
off the hall, and is a fine piece of woodwork, being
of oak with a moulded handrail and carved balusters,
supported on carved spandrel brackets. The conservatory, now forming the principal entrance, has on
its south front a colonnade of the Doric order, surmounted by an entablature, but the space between
the columns has now been filled in and another story
added. On the first floor the bedrooms, most of
which are panelled, are entered from a large panelled
gallery, and appear to have been little altered, many
still retaining their 18th-century grates.
The elevations are refined and dignified. The
entrance in the centre of the south front is approached
by a short flight of stone steps having a simple wroughtiron balustrade, and stands between wooden columns
of the Corinthian order supporting an entablature
and triangular pediment. The east entrance doorway has carved architraves and brackets and a
curved pediment and, as with the front entrance
doorway, is approached up a flight of stone steps,
having a light iron balustrade. To the west of the
house fronting on to West Street—the road to
Wimbledon—is a brick building of a little later date,
the original purpose of which is not quite apparent.
It is now used as a preparatory school. Above the
middle of this building rises a square tower having
long semicircular-headed openings in each wall and
pairs of right-angle buttresses at the corners, which
stop at the springing of the arched openings and
support stone vases, while it is crowned by a parapet
of fanciful design having stone pinnacles at the
angles.

Carshalton House from the South-east
Between the building and the house is a large pond
with a stone garden-house at its south end.
The wrought-iron entrance gates to the grounds
are of good 18th-century design and stand between
stone piers supporting the crest of the Fellowes.
Worked into a monogram in the upper part of the
gates are the initials J. F., though the gates are now
surmounted by a modern cross.
Formerly Carshalton was described as being famous
for walnuts and trout. (fn. 6) In the 16th century the
Gainsfords had a swannery in their waters belonging
to their mill in a place called ' the moore 'or 'moores'
in Carshalton. The river has given Carshalton some
industrial importance and from early times there have
been mills in the parish. There was one in 1086,
mentioned in the Domesday Survey of the manor.
There is also record of a mill at Carshalton early
in the reign of John. Robert de Beseville at that
date appears to have held half of 3 carucates of land
and a mill there, and William de Flanders and Maud
de Colville (Couel) his wife held the other moiety
with the capital messuage of the same. (fn. 7) In the
reign of Henry III William de Coleville granted
72 acres and a capital messuage to William de
Beseville, while the mill and the rest of the land
which William de Beseville had formerly held remained to William de Coleville. (fn. 8) However, it
appears that half a mill in Carshalton descended from
Robert de Beseville to his granddaughter Joan, who
became the wife of William Ambesas. (fn. 9) This moiety
William Ambesas and Joan granted to the priory of
St. Mary Overy (of whom it was held) in 1289. (fn. 10)
After the dissolution of the priory Henry VIII leased
a fulling mill in Carshalton in 1541 to Anthony
Silver, citizen and leatherseller of London. (fn. 11) The
tithes of this mill were held by Merton Priory.
They amounted to 6s. 8d. yearly and were held in
farm by Walter Lambard. (fn. 12) Merton apparently held
tithes from two mills in Carshalton (worth 9s. altogether), which after the priory's dissolution were
granted by Henry VIII to the Dean and Chapter of
Canterbury. (fn. 13) Richard Clere in 1372 had granted a
mill and some land in Carshalton to Merton, but the
priory evidently parted with the mill before the
Dissolution, retaining tithes only. Of a mill granted
by William and Joan Ambesas to Bartholomew,
Abbot of Chertsey, in 1279 nothing further is known. (fn. 14)
In 1364 Cecily Beauchamp died seised of a fulling
mill in Carshalton held of Bartholomew Burghersh, her
heirs being John Murvet and John de Beauchamp. (fn. 15)
In 1569 Thomas Lambert granted a fulling mill
to Anthony Wood, who died in 1581 and left his
'Brassell' or ' fullynge 'mill in which he dwelt and
his waters and fishing rights to Margaret his wife,
with remainder to his son Thomas. (fn. 16) Thomas Wood
died in 1584. His heir was his brother Epaphroditus,
who died in 1592 and whose son John Wood was
born the February following his death. (fn. 17) John Wood
in 1623 sold three water mills and land and free
fishery in Carshalton, Beddington and Wallington
to Dr. William Burton, (fn. 18) whose family was already
in possession of a mill called Burton's Mill. (fn. 19) In
1686 Edward Burrish was in possession of these
premises (fn. 20) and levied a fine of them in 1693 to
Richard Cock and Luke Hodges. (fn. 21) By an inquisition taken in 1713 a certain Edward Carleton
was shown to have been owner of a capital
messuage, five fish ponds and lands in Carshalton,
including Styles meadow, Hedges land and Three-cornersfield, and a copper mill, which by reason
of Carleton's being in debt to the Crown were
taken by the sheriff and granted by George I to
John Fellowes of London. (fn. 22) This last owner, Sir
John Fellowes, purchased the house of the celebrated Dr. Radcliffe (see above), founder of the
Radcliffe Library and Observatory at Oxford, who
during his residence at Carshalton made himself
exceedingly unpopular with many patients by his
candid speeches about their disorders. He had
been physician to the Princess Anne but had been
dismissed for this reason. He refused to stir
from Carshalton, where he was suffering from an
attack of gout, when recalled to attend her during
her last illness, and was violently attacked by the
Tory and Jacobite parties, to whom the prolongation of her life was extremely important. He
was himself a Tory M.P. It is said that threatening letters that he received after the queen's death,
on account of this, helped to hasten his own
end. (fn. 23)
There were also powder mills at Carshalton in
the 17th century owned by a Mr. Jarvis. (fn. 24) In
1842 there were ten mills, (fn. 25) of which some still
exist, situated partly in Hackbridge on the stream
which divides the parishes.
MANORS
Carshalton was held in the time of
King Edward the Confessor by five freemen as five manors. In 1086 it was
held as one manor by Geoffrey de Mandeville, (fn. 26) who
gave 6 hides from it as the marriage portion of his
daughter, wife of Geoffrey son of Eustace Count of
Boulogne. (fn. 27) These at the time of the Domesday
Survey were held of Geoffrey Fitz Eustace by a certain
Wesman. The greater part of this estate formed the
manor of CARSHALTON, of which the overlordship
descended to the Mandevilles Earls of Essex and the
Bohuns Earls of Hereford and Essex. Eleanor
daughter and co-heir of Humphrey de Bohun married
Thomas of Woodstock, son of Edward III. (fn. 28) Their son
Humphrey died without issue in 1399, after which
the overlordship seems to have lapsed to the Crown.

Garden House and Pond, Carshalton House.
Geoffrey de Boulogne, the undertenant of 1086,
was grandfather of Faramus de Boulogne, whose
daughter Sibyl married Ingelram de Fiennes. (fn. 29)
Thus, at the beginning of the 13th century,
according to the Testa de Nevill, William de Fiennes
held a knight's fee or a knight's fee and a half
in Carshalton (fn. 30) and likewise, also, Ingram de
Fiennes, son of William, is said to have held half a
knight's fee there. (fn. 31) In 1279 William de Fiennes,
grandson of the first William, claimed to have in the
vill of Carshalton assize of bread and ale, tumbril,
pillory, gallows, view of frankpledge, infangentheof
and utfangentheof, which had descended to him from
his ancestors. (fn. 32) He died in 1302, having previously
granted the manor to Sir William de Ambesas to
hold for a fee-farm rent of 20 marks. (fn. 33) This rent he
granted to William de Medeburn and it was confirmed by his son John de Fiennes. (fn. 34) The rent with
the service of the lord of the manor then descended to
Richard son of William Fitz Stephen de Medeburn,
nephew of William de Medeburn, and by him was
granted about 1319 to William Cosyn, citizen of
London, (fn. 35) who granted it to Richard de Chissebech
and Henry de Creton in 1319–20. (fn. 36) Sir William de
Ambesas was returned as lord of the vill of Carshalton
in 1316, (fn. 37) and in 1318 he and his wife Joan granted
two messuages, 144 acres of land and 8s. rent in
Carshalton to William de Bekenesfeld for life. (fn. 38) In
1324 Joan Ambesas, then a widow, granted the
manor itself to William de Bekenesfeld and Christine
his wife and Richard son of John de Kimberle for life,
with remainder to Andrew, the son of William de
Bekenesfeld, and Joan his wife, who was daughter of
Richard de Kimberle. (fn. 39) By 1331 William de
Bekenesfeld was dead and the manor was then held
by Andrew son of William de Bekenesfeld and Joan
his wife and by Richard de Kimberle and Christine
de Bekenesfeld. (fn. 40) John de Mickleham, who was son
of Maud daughter of Sir William de Ambesas, laid
claim to half the manor, (fn. 41) but in 1332 released his
right to Richard de Kimberle. (fn. 42) In 1362 Joan
daughter of Richard de Kimberle and widow of
Andrew de Bekenesfeld was holding the manor with
reversionary interest to Henry Mot of Malden in
right of his wife Alice, who was probably a sister and
co-heir of Andrew de Bekenesfeld, (fn. 43) and Henry Mot
in this year granted his interest to Thomas Cook. (fn. 44)
Before 1372 Joan with Richard Claypole her second
husband granted her life interest to Nicholas Carew, (fn. 45)
and in 1373 Thomas Cook released his right in the
reversion to him, (fn. 46) Henry Mot and Alice following
suit in the next year. (fn. 47)

Mandeville. Quarterly or and gules.

Bonun, Azure a bend argent cotised or between six lions or.
Nicholas Carew received a grant of free warren in
Carshalton in 1375 (fn. 48) ; he died in 1390, leaving as
heir his son Nicholas. (fn. 49) Nicholas died in 1432,
after which the manor was claimed by the daughters
of his second son Thomas, viz. Mercy wife of
Richard Forde and Joan wife of William Saunder. (fn. 50)
However, the manor had been settled by Nicholas
(the father) upon Nicholas elder brother of Thomas
(with remainder in default to Thomas), (fn. 51) and
therefore descended to his (Nicholas') issue, he
having a son Nicholas, (fn. 52) who was father of another
Nicholas, (fn. 53) who died childless. On the death of
this last Nicholas his uncle James Carew took his
estates held in tail-male, but his sister Senchia, (fn. 54) who
had married Sir John Iwarby, must have had Carshalton
Manor, as it was settled upon Sir John Iwarby in
1514 with remainder to Joan the daughter and
heiress of Senchia and her (Joan's) second husband
Nicholas Saunder and to the heirs of Joan. (fn. 55) This
Joan Saunder had first married John St. John, and
her son by her first marriage, John St. John, was her
heir. (fn. 56) In 1549 Joan St. John, widow, suffered a
recovery, the uses of which were to her for life,
with remainder to her son John St. John. (fn. 57)
John St. John (who was of Lydiard Tregoze, co.
Wilts.) died in 1576, leaving issue by his wife
Margaret, daughter of Sir Richard Carew, a son
Nicholas, aged fifty. (fn. 58) Nicholas sold a moiety in
1580 to Richard Burton, and must have died before
1590, when John, apparently his brother, confirmed
this to Henry son of Richard Burton and conveyed
the other moiety to Walter Cole. (fn. 59) Walter Cole and
William his son sold their moiety of the manor in 1620
to Sir Thomas Penruddock, Sir George Stoughton
and George Duncombe, (fn. 60) who were trustees for Anne
Countess of Arundel. (fn. 61) From the countess the moiety
descended to her grandson Henry Earl of Arundel,
from whose trustees Sir Edmund Hoskins purchased
it in 1655. (fn. 62) At his death Sir Edmund left eight
sons, six of whom died in the lifetime of their mother,
who survived her husband and died in 1688. The
moiety then descended to his eldest surviving son
John Hoskins. (fn. 63) In 1696 it was purchased by Sir
William Scawen. (fn. 64)
As to the other moiety Richard Burton died
possessed of it in 1589, when it passed to his son
Henry Burton, then aged twelve years. (fn. 65) He was
made a knight of the Bath in 1603. (fn. 66) In 1642
he mortgaged it to Dixie Long of Lincoln's Inn. (fn. 67)
Charles Burton, younger brother of Sir Henry, in
1647 also released all claim to Dixie Long, who
died in 1664. (fn. 68) He left it to his wife Theodosia
for life, for, according to the words of his will, 'all
this and more is due unto her inasmuch as when shee
was young and beautifull and of an honourable family
and had a plentiful fortune she took me to be her
husband without any condition of any provision of
maintenance or joynture whatsoever.' (fn. 69) The reversion
of the property was left to his nephew George Long
on condition that he should live at Carshalton and
should settle £100 a year on another nephew Robert
Cutt. (fn. 70) From Long the moiety descended to Joseph
Short, who, according to Manning and Bray, married
Hannah the heir of George Long, (fn. 71) and they in 1688
mortgaged it to John Hoskins, owner of the other
moiety, for £2,000 at 5 per cent.; this money becoming due to Hoskins' successor Sir Willam Scawen
in 1711, Joseph Short with his son George conveyed
the half manor with other property to trustees in
order to raise by sale or mortgage the sum of £2,000
and more, after which settlement was to be made on
Joseph Short in tail. (fn. 72) The moiety was eventually
conveyed to Sir William
Scawen in 1713, who thus
became possessed of the whole
manor. (fn. 73)
Sir William Scawen was a
great merchant who ventured
almost all his property in the
cause of William III. He had
no children and died in 1722,
leaving his property to his
nephew Thomas Scawen. (fn. 74) In
1759 Thomas Scawen and his
son James suffered a recovery
of this manor, (fn. 75) and in 1781
this James, his only son, conveyed all his estates in Surrey
to Earl Bathurst, Robert Drummond and Charles
Bragge as trustees to sell the same. In the same year
the manor and park were sold to George Taylor, (fn. 76)
who died in 1834, and was succeeded by his nephew
John Taylor. Mr. John F. W. B. Taylor, J.P., is
now lord of the manor.

Scawen. Argent a cheveron gules between three griffons' heads razed sable, the two in the chief face to face.
Mascalls (q.v.) was at one time used as the manorhouse of Carshalton. Thomas Scawen, who succeeded
in 1722, projected the building of a large house in
Carshalton Park. The design was published in the
Architecture of Leo Baptista Alberti in 1742. An
inclosing wall two miles in length was built round the
park, and the great gates of hammered iron, bearing the initials of Thomas Scawen, were very fine.
They have now been removed. The figures of
Diana and Actaeon on the gate-posts may have been
originally brought from Nonsuch, where similar
figures existed. The property is now in the hands
of a building company. The house designed by
Alberti was never built.
Another part of the Domesday fee of Geoffrey de
Mandeville was held at the end of the 12th century
and later by the family of Colville. (fn. 77) According to
the Testa de Nevill this property was one knight's fee
held by John de Gatesden by reason of his wardship
of Gilbert de Coleville. (fn. 78) In 1259 the ward brought
a charge against the guardian of having disseised him
of a carucate of land, a messuage and a water mill,
which had been held by his grandfather and father,
both named William. He being a minor at his
father's death had been in wardship, first of his grandfather and then of John de Gatesden, to whom his
uncle Ralph de Coleville had conveyed the premises
in question. The jury, however, decided against
Gilbert on the grounds that as Ralph de Coleville had
conveyed half of his nephew's lands to John de
Gatesden (the other half Gatesden had annexed),
the disseisin had been made by Ralph and not by
John de Gatesden. (fn. 79) A second assize showed that
William de Coleville the grandfather had held a messuage, 80 acres of land, 2 acres of wood, 2 acres of
meadow, one mill and 5 marks rent in Carshalton,
which had descended to Gilbert, and as he was able
to show a charter in proof, and as John de Gatesden
could not show his supposed charter of feoffment,
which, so he said, a messenger of his had lost somewhere by Winchester, the jury this time returned a
verdict for Gilbert. (fn. 80) In the same year (1259) a
grant of a weekly market on Tuesday and an
annual fair on the vigil, feast and morrow of the
Nativity of the Virgin was made to Gilbert de
Coleville. (fn. 81) The further history of this property is
obscure, but possibly it may be represented by STONE
COURT (q.v.), which Bartholomew de Burghersh held
in Carshalton. (fn. 82) Bartholomew
de Burghersh was granted free
warren in his lands in Carshalton in 1344. (fn. 83) In 1349
Edward Botiller of Wem,
clerk, granted to him all his
land in the town of Carshalton
which had descended to him
from his brother William
Botiller. (fn. 84) Bartholomew de
Burghersh died in 1355 possessed of a messuage and 60
acres of land in Carshalton
which were held of Walter Vaughan, and he left a
son Sir Bartholomew de Burghersh. (fn. 85) In 1372
Margaret Lady Burghersh, granddaughter of Sir
Bartholomew, junior, is called lady of the manor of
Stone Court. (fn. 86) She married Robert Lord Ferrers
and had a daughter Philippa, afterwards married to
Sir Thomas Grene, (fn. 87) who in 1428 is returned as
holding three parts of a knight's fee in Carshalton,
'formerly the property of Bartholomew de Burgherssh.' (fn. 88) His daughter Isabel Grene in 1454
released her right in the manor of Carshalton (fn. 89) to
William Holt, citizen and mercer of London, and a
certain Thomas Grene and Matilda his wife did likewise. (fn. 90) The manor soon afterwards passed to Nicholas
Gainsford, who was Sheriff of Surrey under Henry VI
and charged with treason in the reign of Edward IV.
His confiscated estates were still in the hands of the king
in 1484 when Richard III
commanded John Kendale
to take possession for the
Crown of the manor of 'Burghersshe alias Kersalton,' which
formerly belonged to the rebel
and traitor Nicholas Gainsford. (fn. 91) He was pardoned in
the following year, (fn. 92) and before he died in 1497 he must
have regained some or all of
his Carshalton property, for
he left his lands in Carshalton
to his wife Margaret for life
and then to his son Robert. (fn. 93)
He had been sheriff both under Richard III and
Henry VII and had been high in favour with the
latter king. (fn. 94) He was buried as he desired in
the church of All Hallows at Carshalton, where
a handsome brass preserves his memory. Henry
Gainsford son of Robert left some property in
Carshalton which descended to his son Robert, (fn. 95)
but he had before his death alienated a great
part of his land in Carshalton to Sir Roger Copley
and his wife Elizabeth (fn. 96) and leased the site of
the manor of Stone Court and lands to Walter
Lambert for ninety-nine years. (fn. 97) Robert Gainsford
owned a water mill in Carshalton and in 1555
leased his swannery belonging to it to Nicholas
Burton. (fn. 98) This mill was sold by his son John
Gainsford to Humphrey Rogers, who died seised
of it and certain land pertaining in 1593. (fn. 99) Lambert built a handsome house on the site of the
manor, (fn. 100) which Thomas Lambert his son sold to his
brother-in-law Christopher Muschamp, who died in
1579 seised of a capital messuage called 'Tallesworthe'
and lands in Carshalton, Beddington, Sutton and
Wallington. He left a son Henry. (fn. 101)

Burghersh. Gules a lion or with a forked tail.

Gainsford. Argent a cheveron gules between three running greyhounds sable.
The property later was owned by Sir Henry
Burton and afterwards by Joseph Cater, who sold it
in 1729 to Thomas Scawen (fn. 102) Thomas Scawen and
his son James both held the manor of Stone Court or
Gainsford's Place. (fn. 103) The trustees of the latter sold it
in 1781 to William Andrews. (fn. 104) The house, which
was called Gainsford's Place, was pulled down in
1800.
As for the other moiety of Henry Gainsford's property, Elizabeth Copley died in 1559 seised of a
messuage called Cockes in Carshalton and 200 acres
of land, 200 acres of pasture and 10 acres meadow
in Carshalton and Wallington, which comprised
meadows named Byggyn, Shope House Close, Annot
Lande, Pytclose, Sparkmore Meade, and Newcloses
and lands in 'the Southfeilde' of Carshalton. (fn. 105) Her
son Sir Thomas Copley died owner of the same in
1584 and left a son William, (fn. 106) who died in 1643.
His eldest son William had predeceased him, leaving
two daughters, Mary married to John Weston of
Sutton and Anne married to Sir Nathaniel Minshull,
between whom his property was divided.
The manor of KYNNERSLEY derives its name
from the family of that name who held land in
Carshalton. John and Walter de Kynardele occur
in the reign of Henry III, (fn. 107) and in 1391 Thomas
Kennardesle by his will desired to be buried in the
churchyard of All Saints' Church, Carshalton, for the
fabric of which church he bequeathed thirty sheep. (fn. 108)
The property appears in 1507 when Edward Burton,
owner in right of his wife Isabel, granted the 'manor
of Kenersley' in Carshalton to John Scott. (fn. 109) John
Scott died in 1532, leaving a son John, (fn. 110) who died in
1558 and left Kynnersley to his five sons—Edward,
William, Bartholomew, Acton and Edgar Scott. (fn. 111) It
appears that Edward Scott, who had no issue, settled
his fifth part of the manor on his brothers in tailmale. (fn. 112) At his death his widow Dorothy held it,
with reversion to his brother William, who died in
1588. (fn. 113) As Robert Scott, the only son of William,
died at the age of fifteen some five years later, (fn. 114)
Edward Scott's fifth then descended to his brother
Bartholomew, who died in 1600 and whose heir was
Peter son of Acton Scott. (fn. 115) Peter Scott therefore
held two fifths of the manor, the original fifth of his
uncle Edward and the fifth of his uncle Bartholomew. (fn. 116) In 1616 Peter Scott sold his two fifths to
William Hatteclyffe and Robert Ducke. (fn. 117) The latter
held these parts of the manor, and in 1638 levied a
fine thereof to Robert Tucler and Marmaduke Scott. (fn. 118)
Later, according to Manning and Bray, Cecilia Sollers,
widow, only sister and heir of Henry son of Robert
Ducke, claimed two fifth parts. (fn. 119)
Meanwhile in 1583 Acton, Edgar and William
Scott had sold their several fifths to John Huntley. (fn. 120)
In 1607 John Huntley suffered a recovery of three
fifths of Kynnersley, (fn. 121) which in 1631 were sold by
Margaret Huntley, widow, to William Huntley. (fn. 122)
By 1665 the three fifths seem to have been in possession of Thomas Saunders in right of his wife Anne, (fn. 123)
for at that time they sold them to Francis Hildesley and
Thomas Justice, from whom by descent or purchase
the three fifths passed to Allen Avery, who made
settlement on himself and his heirs in 1683. (fn. 124)
In 1497 Thomas Ellingbridge (son-in-law of
Nicholas Gainsford) by his will bequeathed certain
land in Nutfield to Carshalton Church for an obit
and for alms. (fn. 125) His sister was Joan wife of Henry
Burton, (fn. 126) who died in 1524. In 1543 Henry
Burton died seised of a mansion called MASCALLS
and some land belonging to it in Carshalton. (fn. 127) This
messuage was held of the Hospital of St. John of
Jerusalem as of the manor of Clerkenwell, but it is
not known how that order obtained property in Carshalton. (fn. 128) Henry's son Nicholas Burton, who died
at the beginning of Elizabeth's reign, left the property to his wife Ellen with reversion to his son
Richard. (fn. 129) Mary Burton his daughter complained that
her mother, who remarried with Ralph Hurlston, had
not paid her the legacy to which she was entitled under
her father's will. (fn. 130) Richard Burton made settlement
of Mascalls on himself and his wife Anne daughter of
Barnard Hampton He died in 1589. (fn. 131) Of his son
Sir Henry Burton or of one of his successors Mascalls
was purchased by Sir Edmund Hoskins, by whose
family in 1696 it was sold to Sir William Scawen,
who left it to his nephew Thomas. (fn. 132) The house
called Mascalls in Carshalton Park has been mentioned
under that manor.

Carshalton Church from the South-west
CHURCH
The church of ALL SAINTS originally consisted of a chancel, central
tower, nave, north and south aisles, and
a porch on the south side of the tower. (fn. 133) In 1893
the church was enlarged by the addition of a new
chancel, vestries, nave and north aisle on the north
side of the old building, the former north aisle having
been removed to make way for the new nave. The
original church has thus become a subordinate part
of the enlarged church, its chancel, nave and south
aisle now forming a south chapel and double south
aisle. In the following account the parts are referred
to under their original names.
The church was apparently erected early in the
12th century and consisted of a chancel, a central
tower and a nave. To the building was added
circa 1180 a north aisle (now demolished), while
about the year 1200 the chancel and the east arch
of the crossing were rebuilt. Early in the 13th
century the building was enlarged by the addition of
a south aisle and later in the same century the
western arch of the crossing was widened. Nothing
remains to show if any further structural alterations
were effected previous to the 18th century, when
the south aisle was heightened and the tower raised,
but to what extent these 18th-century alterations
were carried cannot be stated through the recent
pulling down of so much of the old building.
The east window of the chancel, a 15th-century
insertion, is of three cinquefoiled lights under a twocentred segmental head. The opening in the north
wall into the new chancel is modern, as are also the
two windows lighting the chancel at either end of the
south wall. Between these two windows are the
jambs of two blocked-up lancets. These are visible
both externally and internally, though externally the
heads of both lights have gone. In the east end of
the south wall is a curious original piscina having
two square and deeply cut drains contained under
one trefoiled head, while in the back of the recess
are two small two-centred niches. There appears
to have been a projecting sill in front of this piscina,
but it is now cut away. The walls of the chancel
are faced with flint with stone quoins and dressings
to the windows, and are internally plastered.
The east arch of the tower is pointed and of two
continuous chamfered orders. The west arch is also
pointed and of two chamfered orders, the outer
one stopping on the north and south walls and the
inner one carried on semi-octagonal responds with
moulded capitals, a late 14th-century insertion.
There is a chamfered hood mould on the nave face.
The tower as seen from the outside is divided
horizontally into three stages, the two lower of flint
with cement quoins; the uppermost stage was added
in the 18th century and is faced with Reigate stone
now much decayed. In each wall is a round-headed
window with flat architraves and slightly projecting
sills. The tower is crowned by a small cornice,
above which rises a copper-covered spire topped by a
weather-vane.
The original north arcade was pulled down when
the building was enlarged, but the capitals and bases
of the piers and responds are preserved in the west
end of the south aisle. These were circular and of
massive section and had richly carved capitals with
moulded abaci and moulded bases of late 12th-century
workmanship.
The south arcade is of three bays with pointed
arches of two chamfered orders carried on octagonal
piers and semi-octagonal responds with unusually
good foliated capitals and moulded abaci and bases.
Both the capitals and bases have been considerably
restored, the bases in particular, some of which
appear to be quite modern. The arches have chamfered labels on both faces.
With the exception of four much-restored twostage buttresses no original detail remains in the
south wall of the south aisle. These buttresses all stop
under the 18th-century heightening and are of
stone; the two end ones are set diagonally. There
are traces of an original window opening in the
west bay and of a south doorway in the middle bay.
The aisle is lighted from the south by ten semicircular-headed windows, five in the old wall and
five in the heightening, but although they are not set
immediately over each other they are all of 18th-century date. The lower part of the wall is externally cemented, but the upper part is of red
brick. The windows in the western bays of this
portion have gauged brick arches with slightly projecting keys and moulded imposts. That in the
easternmost bay has a flat stone architrave with a
plain key and imposts. The windows in the lower
part of this bay are of the same design, but those in
the other bays are in the form of lunettes. The
lines of the buttresses of the lower portion of the
wall are continued upwards by red brick pilasters, and
a flat coping surmounts the whole. Between the
pilasters of the east bay of the south aisle above the
windows in both south and east walls is a moulded
brick cornice returning on itself.
The trussed-rafter roof of the chancel is of 14th-century date. It is divided into three bays by
tie-beams carrying king posts which support a longitudinal purlin on which the collars rest. The
longitudinal is strutted from the king posts and the
tie-beams are strengthened by curved braces. The
two easternmost stone corbels taking the feet of the
braces to the east tie-beam are original, the one on
the south being carved with a beast's head with a
small crowning moulding, while the one on the
opposite wall is carved with a man's face.
The roof of the nave is modern; over the south
aisle is a flat 18th-century ceiling.
The painted oak reredos is of 18th-century workmanship and is of three bays in a classical design, the
cornice being carried across in a carved pediment.
In each of the side bays are two panels, one above
the other, and in the centre bay four. On the upper
panels of the centre bay, which are semicircular-headed, are painted the Commandments. The
wrought-iron communion rail is of the same date as
the reredos. The hexagonal oak pulpit is also of
18th-century work.
Set in a Purbeck slab in the floor of the south chapel
are the remains of an elaborate late 15th-century
brass. Of the inscription only a fragment remains,
but the brass is that of Thomas Ellingbridge and
Elizabeth his wife, daughter of Nicholas Gainsford,
who died in 1497. (fn. 134) In the centre of the slab were
the figures of a man and woman each under a cinquefoiled, crocketed and finialled gable with buttresses on
either side surmounted by crocketed pinnacles, below
which were shields, while the gables are separated
by a buttress carried on a corbel and surmounted by a
figure of the Virgin supporting the body of our
Lord. (fn. 135) Along the bottom of the slab connecting
together the feet of the side buttresses was an inscription, above which were two groups of small figures,
evidently the children of the man and woman in
whose memory the brass was laid, while on the feet of
the buttresses were two more shields. Only the upper
part of the brass remains in anything like a complete state, but from this the sinister shields, the
finial of the sinister gable and part of the sinister
buttress are gone, while the lower part of the side
buttresses, the figure of the woman and the groups of
children are missing. The inscription is entirely
gone with the exception of a small portion giving
disconnected portions of words from several lines in
black letter.
On the lower part of the dexter buttress is
the checkered shield of Ellingbridge impaling a
cheveron between three greyhounds passant with
an annulet on the cheveron for difference, for
Gainsford, while the lower shield of the sinister
buttress has the arms of Ellingbridge. The upper
part of the figure of the man remains. In a quatrefoil in the tracery of the gable over the man are the
initials IHS., and in a corresponding position in the
sinister gable M[ER]CY.
Against the north wall of the south chapel, within
the sanctuary, is the altar tomb of Nicholas Gainsford,
the father of the Elizabeth of the preceding brass,
and his wife Margaret daughter of William Sidney.
A slab of Purbeck marble forms the top. In the west
side is inserted an enamelled brass shield, Or a pheon
azure, for Sidney, and on the south three shields,
the westernmost Three roses gules impaling—a lion
gules; the centre one Gainsford with a crescent, impaling Sidney; and the easternmost, a cross vert
impaling Sidney. The enamel in these shields is
well preserved. The edge of the slab covering the
tomb is moulded and sunk. On the wall immediately
above the tomb is a slab of Purbeck marble in which
are set kneeling figures in thin English brass of the
knight and his lady, with four boys behind the knight;
behind the lady only the indents of four girls remain.
The knight is in plate armour and the lady in a
rich red dress in well-preserved enamel, and her face
and head-dress are gilt. Above the figures are three
shields, the westernmost with the arms of Gainsford, the centre one Gainsford impaling Sidney, and
the third Sidney. Below the figures is a long black
letter inscription with uncompleted dates. (fn. 136)
In the floor of the chapel to the north of the large brass
is a fragmentary figure of a late 15th-century priest in
eucharistic vestments and holding the Host in his hands.
In the floor of the modern nave is a slab in which
is set the brass figure of a lady in the costume of the
early 16th century with a scroll over her dexter
shoulder inscribed 'O blyssyd lady of pite pry for me
yt my soul savyd may be.' Below the figure is the
following black letter inscription : 'Pray for the
Soule of Joha[nna] Barton the wyf of henry Barton
Esquyer and /dought' to John Ellyngbrege Esquyer ye
whych Joha[nna] deceised the XXIIIJ day of / decemb'
ye yer . of our lord MtVcXXIIIJ on whose Soule Jhũ
have mercy amen.' In the bottom of the slab is the
matrix for a shield.
On the south wall of the original chancel is a small
mural tablet inscribed :—
'M.S.
Under the middle stone that guards ye ashes of
A certayne Fryer some times Vicar of this place is
Raked up ye duste of William Quelche B:D.: who
Ministered in ye same. Since ye reformat[io]n.
His lott was Through Gods mercy to burne
Incence here about 30 yrs and ended his course
April the 10 Ano D[omin]i 1654 being aged 64 yrs.'
Below this inscription are six lines in Latin and
their translation in English. On the north wall of the
chancel is a mural tablet to Dixie Long of Lincoln's
Inn, son of George Long of Clerkenwell. He died in
1664. On the south wall of the south aisle is a black and
white marble monument to Edmund Hoskins, second
son of Sir Thomas Hoskins of Oxted. He died in
1664. On the east end of the north wall of the original
chancel is a small mural monument to Dorothy wife
of George Barrish and daughter of Joseph Jackson of
Bromfield in the parish of Edmonton. She died in
October 1685, aged seventy-three years. On the east
end of the south wall is a carved marble cartouche to
Elizabeth Byne, wife of Henry Byne and daughter
of Henry and Alice Herringman. She died in
childbed in 1687 in the nineteenth year of her age.
On the south wall of the chancel is a marble
tablet to Thomas Bradley, who died in 1689, and
his wife Elizabeth. He was vicar of Carshalton
and rector of Walton. The inscription states that
' He quitted his Livings to preserve His Conscience.'
He was a nonjuror.
On the south wall towards the west end of the
chancel is a carved mural monument to Henry and
Alice Herringman. They were married in 1650
and died within six weeks and two days of each other
in 1703, both aged seventy-six.
Occupying the entire east end of the southernmost
aisle is an elaborate marble monument to Sir William
Scawen, kt., and his wife Mary, eldest daughter of
Sir William Maynard, bart., of Walthamstow in
Essex. The mural tablet of Lady Scawen, who died
on 30 August 1700, aged thirty-three, appears to
have been erected first and is placed well up in the
centre of the wall, while the larger one to Sir
William was erected later, incorporating in its design
the smaller monument to his wife. The recumbent
effigy of Sir William, having been thrice M.P. for
the county and governor of the Bank of England,
who died in 1722, reclines on a rectangular inscribed
base; on either side are Corinthian columns supporting entablatures and vases. In front of the monument
is an 18th-century wrought-iron railing of good
design.
On the west wall of the southernmost aisle is a
large monument to Sir John Fellowes, who died
26 July 1724, aged fifty-four.
There is a peal of eight bells. The treble and
second are by C. Oliver, 1845, and the others by
Thomas Mears, 1804.
The plate consists of a silver cup, probably of 1569,
with cover paten of same date; a silver chalice of 1634
inscribed ' The Gift of Sr Henry : Burton : Kt : of :
the : Bath. To God : and : the : Church : of Carshalton : in : Surrey.' On the foot is ' Anno Domini
1634'; a cover paten of the same date inscribed
'Anno Domini 1634'; a large silver flagon of 1640
inscribed 'The Co[mmu]union fflagon of the parish
Church of Carshalton. The Guift of Henry Byne.
Gent. 1673'; a silver almsdish of 1681 inscribed
' The guift of Henry Herringman 1682'; a large
silver dish of 1710 inscribed 'The Gift of Mr.
John Herringman '; a set of two silver cups with
cover patens and a flagon, all of 1727, and inscribed 'This Cup and Cover (Flaggon) was Given
by Sr Tho: Scawen Knt and Alderman of London
and Dame Martha his Wife to the Parish Church
of Carshalton Anno 1727'; a modern silver paten
and chalice, and a modern ciborium, presented
in 1910 by the late rector, the Rev. Lord Victor
Seymour.
The registers previous to 1813 are in four volumes:
(i) baptisms 1538 to 1644 and 1650 to 1705,
marriages 1538 to 1645 and 1651 to 1704, burials
1538 to 1645 and 1652 to 1704; (ii) baptisms
1705 to 1795, marriages 1705 to 1762, burials 1703
to 1795; (iii) baptisms and burials 1796 to 1812;
(iv) marriages 1754 to 1812.
Outside the east gateway of the churchyard are the
live stumps of two trysting elms, with a butcher's
beam fixed between them.
Emmanuel Church, Park Lane, is a Reformed
Episcopal church. There is a United Methodist
chapel in North Street, and an undenominational
chapel, West Street Hall, West Street.
ADVOWSON
In the reign of Henry II the
priory of Merton received a grant of
the advowson of Carshalton from
Faramus de Bologne. (fn. 137) The church was appropriated
by the convent, which retained the rectory and
advowson until its dissolution in 1540. Edward VI
in 1552 granted the rectory, church and advowson
of the vicarage to Sir William Gorynge, (fn. 138) who died in
seisin of the same in 1554. (fn. 139) His son Henry Gorynge
almost immediately sold the parsonage and advowson
of the vicarage to Elizabeth Draper and Elizabeth
Wade. (fn. 140) By them in 1556 the reversion of the
advowson and rectory after three years was settled on
John Fromond and his wife Benedict. (fn. 141) In 1587
Nicholas Fromond died possessed of the rectory and
advowson of the vicarage. (fn. 142) His brother John was
his heir, and he, when he died, left three sisters as his
heirs. Of these Sanchia married James Byne;
Elizabeth, one Palmer; and Dorothy, the third
sister, Thomas Mowne. (fn. 143)
In 1597 Thomas and Dorothy Mowne levied a
fine of the third of the rectory and advowson to
Richard Goodman. (fn. 144)
The third part of Elizabeth Palmer descended to
her daughter Katherine, who married William Forster.
William and Katherine Forster levied three fines:
one in 1615 of the third of the rectory and advowson
to Thomas Skynner, (fn. 145) another in 1616 of the third
of the rectory to James Byne and Thomas Mowne, (fn. 146)
and a third fine in 1620 of the advowson of the
vicarage to Sir Henry Burton. (fn. 147) According to
Manning and Bray (fn. 148) the advowson had in 1618 been
also conveyed to Sir Henry Burton by Thomas Mowne.
Both Sir Henry Burton and Charles Burton dealt
with the moiety of the rectory and land and a messuage in Carshalton, (fn. 149) but in 1657 the rectory appears
to have been owned by Richard Osborne in right of
his wife Elizabeth. (fn. 150)
As for the share that Sanchia Fromond brought
to the Bynes, it remained with that family, various
members of which presented to the vicarage in 1661,
1674, 1690, 1703 and 1738. (fn. 151) Henry Byne appears
as holding half the rectory in 1686, (fn. 152) but Charles Byne,
his brother, was returned as patron in 1725, and the
Byne family held the whole of the rectory as well as the
advowson before 1794. (fn. 153) In 1797 Henry Byne sold
the advowson of the vicarage and the parsonage-house
and tithes to John Cator, (fn. 154) who presented in 1829, (fn. 155)
and the advowson is still in the hands of his family.
CHARITIES
The charities include Smith's
charity, and £200 left by Christopher
Muschamp in 1660 for placing and
apprenticing two boys every year. But besides this
in 1690 Harry Byne had left land by will by providing coals for the poor. In 1726 Sir John Fellowes,
by deed, gave £10 a year for apprenticing boys.
John Walford left land for the repair of highways,
formerly by a decree in Chancery of 1750 divided
between Carshalton, Sutton, Mitcham and Streatham.
— Shepley left £6 a year for coals, and—Hoare
17s. 9d. a year for the same.