TROTTESCLIVE.
NORTH-WESTWARD from Addington lies
Trottesclive, vulgarly called Trosley; so named, as I
imagine, from its situation, quasi Trodes-clif, i e. the
hilly tract, this place being close at the foot of the
great chalk hills, which extend themselves across the
county.
THE PARISH of Trottesclive is of no great extent,
containing not more than one thousand acres of land,
and thirty-two houses and cottages. The situation
of it is, though healthy, far from being pleasant or
even desireable; the soil is but poor and hungry.
The great ridge of chalks hills cross it, near the foot
of which, though yet on high ground, is the village,
having the church and antient palace in another part
of it, about a quarter of a mile distance eastward.
The high road from Dartford by Longfield, Hartley
bottom, and Berry's Maple, leads through it towards
Ofham and Malling; below the village the soil is a
sand, and above it chalk. Above the hills it reaches
for more than a mile along a dreary country, but
thinly inhabited, and much covered with coppice
woods, the soil of which is a heavy tillage land, consisting of an unfertile red earth, mixed with a quantity
of flint stones, which make the narrow roads through
it most disagreeable to travel through.
The parish ought antiently to have contributed to
the third pier of Rochester bridge.
In the year 788, Offa, king of the Mercians, gave
a part of his land, containing six plough-lands, called
Trottesclive, to the church of St. Andrew, and the
bishopric of the castle, which was called Hrofesester,
to hold for ever, together with all rights and appurtenances belonging to it. The bounds of it were on
the east and south, Boerlingas; on the west, Wroteham; and on the north, Meapaham, and there belonged to it in different places, pannage of hogs, in the
Wealdberies, as in the grant are particularly mentioned.
The church of Rochester did not continue long in
the possession of this estate; for it was wrested from
it in the time of the Danish wars, which quickly
followed, and continued so till archbishop Lanfranc
recovered it, in the solemn assembly of the whole
county held at Pinenden-heath in 1076; and he immediately restored it to bishop Gundulph and the
church of St. Andrew. (fn. 1)
In the general survey of Domesday, taken about
the year 1080, this place is thus described, under the
title of the bishop of Rochester's lands:
The same bishop (of Rochester) holds Trotesclive. In
the time of king Edward the Confessor, it was taxed at
three sulings, and now at one suling. The arable land
is three carucates. In demesne there is one suling, and
one carucate there, and ten villeins with two carucates.
There is a church, and one servant, and two acres of meadow, and wood for the pannage of ten hogs. In the
time of king Edward the Confessor, and afterwards, it
was worth sixty shillings, and now seven pounds.
Gundulph, bishop of Rochester, who was elected
to that see in the year 1077, divided the revenues of
his church between himself and his monks, and in
that division, the manor of Trottesclive was allotted
to the bishop, and was by him appropriated to the
support of his table, or ad victum Episcopi, as it was
then stiled.
Soon after which there was an episcopal palace
erected at this place, the buildings of which were
grown so ruinous when bishop Gilbert de Glanvill
came to the see in 1185, that he was forced to rebuild them, which he did in a much more convenient
manner.
On a taxation of the bishop of Rochester's manors
in 1255, it appeared, that this manor had within it
two hundred acres of arable land, each of which was
estimated at four pence, and the pasture of the meadows and the out-woods at twenty shillings, that the
annual rent amounted to the sum of seventy-three
shillings and nine-pence farthing; the sum total of
the whole manor being 8l. 0s. 5¼d. and that the
buildings required for the necessary repair of them
thirty shillings yearly.
And again at the latter end of that reign, on a
valuation of the manors appropriated to the bishop's
table, of this manor it appeared that the rents of it,
as well in money as in hens, eggs, and ploughshares,
were yearly 4l. 0s. 7d. that there were in it two
ploughs, and yet there were not in reality two plough
lands, each of which, according to the custom of the
country, ought to contain one hundred and eighty
acres of arable land, which there were not within the
manor; that the yearly value of the same, together
with the pasture, was seventy-six shillings and eightpence, and that there was one mill only here, which
paid ten shillings per annum. The sum total of the
value 8l. 7s. 3d. per annum.
In the 21st year of king Edward I. anno 1292, the
bishop of Rochester was summoned to answer the
king, before John de Berewyke and others, justices
itinerants, at Canterbury, in a plea of quo warranto,
by what right he claimed to hold pleas of withernam,
and to have return of the king's writs, and assise of
bread and ale, in this manor, and the bishop appeared, and claimed the above liberties in it, and
view of frank-pledge within it; and as to the return
of writs, &c. he said, that this manor was within the
precinct of the liberty of the archbishop, and that the
bishop's bailiffs received such returns by the hands of
the archbishop's bailiffs; therefore he prayed judgment, &c. And as to the other liberties, that he and
his predecessors, beyond the memory of man, had
used them without interruption; on which it was
found for the bishop, and the record of these pleas
was, at the request of John de Shepey, bishop of Rochester, exemplified by inspeximus under the great
seal, in the 30th year of Edward III. anno 1355.
Hamo de Hethe, bishop of Rochester, having resided during the Lent of 1322, at Halling, came from
thence to Trottesclive, where he celebrated the feast
of Easter; (fn. 2) and caused some additions to be made to
the buildings of this palace, and six years afterwards,
coming hither a few days after the Purification, he
resided here the whole year, during which he surrounded his court with high walls, and made a new
chamber for the bishop, and another for his clerks,
and a new kitchen; the whole of which expence
amounted to one hundred marcs.
The bishops of Rochester continued to reside occasionally at this palace, till some years after the reformation; about which time this, as well as the rest
of their antient manors and mansion houses in this
county, excepting Bromley, were leased out by them
for lives or years to different tenants; in which state
the manor and mansion-house of Trottesclive continue
at this time. The family of Whitaker have for some
generations been lessees of it, under the bishop of Rochester, and have resided in the manor-house, during
which time they have acquired the rank of gentlemen,
bearing for their arms, Sable, a tess between three
muscles argent. Thomas Whitaker, esq. of this place,
was sheriff in 1743, as was his eldest son Thomas
Whitaker, esq. in 1748, and both kept their shrievalties at this place, and his son of the same name now
resides here.
THERE WAS AN ESTATE in this parish, which was
antiently accounted a manor, and was likewise called
THE MANOR OF TROTTESCLIVE. It was held of the
bishop of Rochester in the 12th and 13th years of
king John, as appears by the inquisitions then taken
by Roger de Cressi, as half a knight's fee. (fn. 3) His descendant Stephen de Cressi, in the same reign, possessed
this manor, and likewise a park here called Cressy
park, and le west Park, and was soon afterwards succeeded in it by Roger de Leyborne, but this estate
seems about this time to have been vested in the
crown; for king Henry III. in his 48th year, granted
the manor of Trottesclive to his niece Isabel, the illegitimate daughter of Richard, earl of Cornwall, a
younger son of king John, who afterwards married
Maurice, lord Berkeley. (fn. 4) If so, it could remain in
the crown, or in Isabel above-mentioned, but a very
few years before it passed to Roger de Leyborne, who
having some claim to the manor of Ledes against
Robert de Crevequer, it was settled by the interposition of friends, in consequence of which, Roger de
Leyborne, in the 52d year of that reign, granted his
manors of Trottesclive and Flete wholly to Robert,
son of Hamon de Crevequer, junior, and Yseude his
wife, they performing to him the free service of one
knight's fee, and to the bishop of Rochester all other
services due and accustomed, in consideration of
which, Robert had granted to him, by way of exchange, his manor of Ledes, with all its appurtenances, together with a moiety of all his fees, and as
the above manors of Trottesclive and Flete were not
of equal value to the manor of Ledes, he granted to
them one hundred shillings rent in Redleghe.
Robert de Crevequer, anno 6th Edward I. released
to John, bishop of Rochester, all his right in this
manor of Trottesclive, with its appurtenances in
Malling, Wroteham, and elsewhere, to hold to him
as in right of his church for ever. In consideration
of which, the bishop had given him fifty marcs, and
one palfrey, as a fine. (fn. 5) This estate which is now
called West-court, alias Wrotham-water, and lies in the
parishes of Trottesclive and Wrotham, still continues
part of the possessions of the bishop of Rochester, the
present lessee of it under the bishop, being Mr.
Whitaker.
CHARITIES.
THE REV. PAUL BARISTOX and MARY GODWIN gave by
will in 1711, for the purpose of a charity school, land vested in
trustees, and now of the annual produce of 9l.
TROTTESCLIVE is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Rochester and deanry of
Malling.
The church is dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul.
The church of Trottesclive has always been accounted an appendage to the manor, and as such is at
this time in the patronage of the right reverend the
lord bishop of Rochester.
It is valued in the king's books at 10l. 2s. 11d. and
the yearly tenths at 1l. 0s. 3½d. (fn. 6)
CHURCH OF TROTTESCLIVE.
|
| PATRONS, Or by whom presented. | Rectors. |
| Bishops of Rochester, lords of the manor. | John, in the reign of Henry
IId. (fn. 7) |
| James, in the reign of Henry
III. (fn. 8) |
| Nicholas de Rokelunde, in the
same reign. (fn. 9) |
| John de Denyngtone, and 12th Edward III. (fn. 10) |
| Bishohs of Rochester, lords of the manor. | Thomas Rither, clerk, in 1589. (fn. 11) |
| Edmund Jackson, S. T. P. in
1630. (fn. 12) |
| John Warren, about 1692. (fn. 13) |
| Wooldridge. |
| Thomas Cockman, A. M. inst.
July 28, 1704. (fn. 14) |
| Charles Lambe, in 1723. |
| Hugh Pugh, in 1724. |
| James Webb, A. M. obt. 1759. (fn. 15) |
| Francis Lloyd, A. M. in 1759,
refig. 1779. |
| Francis Taynton, A. M. 1779,
obt. 1794. (fn. 16) |
| Crawford, 1794, the present rector. |