BARCOMBE
Bercham (xii cent.); Bercompe, Bercampe (xiii and
xiv cent.); Berkham, Berecompe (xv cent.).
Situated on the River Ouse, which forms its eastern
boundary, the parish of Barcombe covers an area of
4,997 acres of land and 34 of water. It includes the
hamlet of Spithurst. The land in the village and on
the east by the river valley lies at an average level of
50 ft., but rises to 200 ft. in the west. The soil is
mixed loam and the subsoil clay. The main crops are
wheat, oats, and beans. The village stands 4 miles
north of Lewes, 5 miles south-west of Uckfield, and
47 from London. It has two railway stations, one at
Barcombe Cross, the other at Barcombe Mills in the
extreme east.
Court Lodge Farm (now Court House) was a hall
house of the 15th century. The main structure is rectangular in plan with four bays, of which the two central
formed a hall; the end bays contained two floors from the
first, the uppermost projecting west. About 1565 (fn. 1) an
external chimney-stack was added on the south end, and
this is visible in the later brick extension, now a garage.
At the same time a two-storied block was added on the
south-east angle, with wide lintelled fire-places, (fn. 2) and
a floor was inserted into the hall. The exterior shows
Georgian and modern work alone; the projecting
upper stories were underpinned by a brick wall, which
formed a straight west front. In the attics the central
king-post can be seen, with chamfered shaft and capital;
the other tie-beams have plain strutted posts. The
great central braces are visible on the first floor, and
beneath this the chamfered beams of the 16th-century
insertion. Original north-south beams are exposed in
the end bays, the southern of which is divided from the
hall by a 16th-century partition.
A large weather-boarded barn, west of the house,
is of 16th- or 17th-century date, with tie-beams, curved
struts, and wind-braces. There are other farm buildings
to the north, some with a moulded plinth, possibly
stone-work from Lewes Priory.
Balneath Manor, in the north-west part of the
parish, contains interior features of c. 1500. The
dining-room has a moulded beam and wide lintelled
fire-place. Other rooms have contemporary fire-places,
and there is a blocked window to the south with wooden
bars diagonally set. The servants' quarters show timber
framework with wide panels, some with thin bricknogging; one plastered panel has the date 1788 scratched
on it.
Camois Court, on the west side of the road between
Barcombe and Barcombe Cross, has 17th-century stopchamfered beams, a contemporary door, and curious
twisted columnar newels, two supporting an arch in the
hall and a larger one in the staircase. There are others
at the Anchor, and Ewhurst, Spithurst. These all appear
to have been ship furniture introduced by Sir William
Grantham when he reconditioned these houses about
the beginning of this century.
Gipps Farm, on the northern boundary of the parish,
is a late-16th-century house of L-shaped plan, timberframed with square panels, partly filled with later brick.
There is a central chimney, apparently rebuilt, serving
wide double fire-places.
Conyboro' Park, formerly the seat of the Raynes
and Medleys, is now owned by Lady Monk Bretton,
the present lady of the manor. The late-17th-century
house (fn. 3) was destroyed about 1816. The modern mansion, built in the Italian style, stands in a park of about
60 acres, in the west of the parish. A mission hall in
the village and a reading-room were erected about
1898 and 1902 by the late Sir William Grantham.
There is also an undenominational mission room and
a Calvinistic Chapel just off the Hamsey road. The
population in 1931 was 1,248. By the East Sussex
Review Order of 1934 a detached part of Newick
was added to Barcombe in exchange for a similar part
of Barcombe. (fn. 4)
Manors
Before the Conquest Azor held BARCOMBE of Earl Godwin for 13 hides: in
1086 William de Watevile held it of Earl
Warenne for 10½ hides, the rest lying in the Count of
Mortain's rape. (fn. 5) The overlordship of the 14 fees of
which the manor of Barcombe formed part descended
with the rape, but as 7 fees went in 1439 to Edmund
Lenthall and 7 to the Duke of Norfolk, (fn. 6) the overlordship of the manor is uncertain from that time until 1536,
when the king took it into his own hands after the
attainder of Nicholas Carew. (fn. 7)
William de Watevile's lands appear to have escheated
to his overlord and to have been granted to Rainald de
Warenne, illegitimate son of William, Earl Warenne II. (fn. 8) A manor of Barcombe (fn. 9) then descended with
Plumpton (q.v.) in the family of Bardolf, descendants
of Beatrice, grand-daughter of Rainald de Warenne,
who married Doun Bardolf. William Bardolf obtained
a grant of free warren here in 1254. (fn. 10) In 1304 the
manor was held as ¼ fee by his grandson Hugh, Lord
Bardolf. (fn. 11)
The manor continued to be held with Plumpton (fn. 12)
until the attainder of Nicholas Carew in 1536 and the
subsequent grant by the king to Elizabeth widow of
Nicholas for life, with remainder to her son Francis. (fn. 13)
In the next year the site and demesnes of the manor
of Barcombe, with fishery in the brook, were leased to
Henry Coke for 21 years, (fn. 14) but in 1555 Francis Carew
was dealing with the manor. (fn. 15) In 1572 he conveyed it
to George Goring, (fn. 16) in whose family it remained (fn. 17)
until the death of a later George Goring, who by his
will, dated 28 Dec. 1727, ordered that it should be
sold. (fn. 18) Edward Medley bought
the manor in 1743 for £3,060, (fn. 19)
and from him it descended to
Julia Shuckburgh-Evelyn, who
died in 1814. Her husband
Charles Cecil Cope Jenkinson,
Earl of Liverpool, was holding
the property in 1835. (fn. 20) He died
in 1851, leaving three daughters
as co-heirs, and Barcombe was
subsequently sold to Sir John
Dodson, who held his first court
of the manor in 1856. (fn. 21) In 1937
the manor was vested in the
trustees of his great-grandson,
the 3rd Baron Monk Bretton,
who succeeded to the title, as a minor, in 1933. (fn. 22)

Dodson, Lord Monk Bretton. Argent a ragged fesse plain cotised between six fleurs de lis gules with a sword argent its hilt and pommel or upon the fesse.
The manor of CAMOYS COURT alias BARKHAM CAMOYS, lying partly in Barcombe, but also
in Ditchling and Newick, was probably represented
about 1198 by land held by Maud de Bercamp. (fn. 23)
The overlordship descended with the rape. In the
division of the barony in 1439 the 1½ knight's fees
formerly held by John de Gadesden, in which this
land was included, were divided. Half a fee in Ditchling was assigned to Elizabeth, Lady Bergavenny; (fn. 24) one
fee in Bevendean and Barcombe went to the Duke of
Norfolk. (fn. 25) In 1543, however, Camoys Court was held
of the joint owners of the barony, (fn. 26) and it still owed
suit at the court of Lewes (fn. 27) down to 1835 at least. (fn. 28)
From Maud de Bercamp the holding passed to her
son Ralph de Pierpoint; (fn. 29) but William de Pierpoint,
who held demesne in Barcombe in 1235, (fn. 30) had sold
his land there by 1242 to John de Gadesden or Gatesden (fn. 31) who was then holding 3 knights' fees in 'Bercompe'. (fn. 32) John married Hawise Savage, widow of
John de Nevill, in about 1246 (fn. 33) and died in 1262. (fn. 34)
Hawise died about 1269. (fn. 35) The marriage of John's
grand-daughter and heiress Margaret was granted to
Robert Waleraund. (fn. 36) In or about 1279 Margaret
married Sir John de Camoys (fn. 37) but deserted him for
William Paynel, whom she married after Sir John's
death in 1298. (fn. 38) Margaret died about January 1311
and her son Ralph de Camoys was holding land in the
vill of Barcombe in 1316. (fn. 39) On his death in 1336 (fn. 40)
his lands passed to his son Thomas, who died without
issue in 1372 holding the reversion of the manor, after
the death of William de Mallynge, jointly with his
wife Margaret. (fn. 41) She was still holding them in 1386. (fn. 42)
Sir Thomas de Camoys, his nephew, succeeded him. (fn. 43)
In 1412 his lands in Barcombe were worth £5 a year (fn. 44)
and in 1428 were assessed as ¼ knight's fee. (fn. 45) He died
in 1421, (fn. 46) and was succeeded by his grandson Hugh,
then aged seven, on whose death in 1426 the Camoys
property descended to his sisters, Margaret, wife of
Ralph Radmylde, and Eleanor, wife of Roger Lewknor
of Trotton. (fn. 47) Ralph Radmylde survived Margaret
and died in 1443, when her half of the manor passed
to their son Robert, then aged 18. (fn. 48) Robert was succeeded in 1457 by a son William, a child of 6, (fn. 49) but
this part of the manor appears soon to have passed to
Roger Lewknor, in whose family the whole manor
descended. At this date the manor was still known as
Barcombe, but later it acquired the name Camoys
Court. From Roger it passed to his son Sir Thomas
Lewknor of Trotton in 1478, and in 1484 to his
grandson Sir Roger, when the male line died out in
1543. (fn. 50) The manor then descended for a time in
the same way as Warningore (fn. 51) (q.v), being divided
among Roger's three infant daughters—Katherine,
who married first John Mill, and secondly, William
Morgan; Mabel, wife of Anthony Stapley; and Constance, wife first of Thomas Foster and then of Edward
Glemham. By 1587 Katherine's third had descended
to Lewknor Mill, her grandson by her first husband. (fn. 52)
Mabel and her husband had evidently died without
issue, for thereafter the manor descended in two portions, one half in the Mill family and the other in the
Fosters, descendants of Constance by her first husband.
The first half remained with Sir John Mill, bart. (son
of Lewknor), and his descendants until 1666, when it
was sold to William Lane, whose daughter Elizabeth
married John Smith of Hamsey. (fn. 53) In 1709 the children
of John Smith, William, Ann, and Abigail Smith sold
it to Thomas Medley of Conyborough in Barcombe. (fn. 54)
This portion included the 'piece of arable land whereupon the ancient seat or mansion house called Camois
Court formerly stood'. It remained in the Medley
family and descended with the main manor of Barcombe until, at least, 1835. (fn. 55)

Camoys. Argent a chief gules with three roundels argent therein.

Lewknor. Azure three cheverons argent.
The other half, held in 1635 by Anthony Foster,
son of Constance Lewknor, (fn. 56) became subdivided after
his death among his six co-heirs, Morgan and Izan
Jefferyes; David and Margaret Jefferyes; Robert Rochester; Anthony and Beatrice Browning; Walter and
Helen Buckland; and Henry Watkinson. (fn. 57) By 1706
the whole moiety had come into the hands of John
Lucas of Barcombe, (fn. 58) who settled it on his three sons
John, Francis, and Edward. (fn. 59) John Lucas, who died
in 1769, left the estate to his youngest daughters Ann
and Lucy, with remainder to the elder daughters
Sarah and Mary. (fn. 60) Ann survived her sisters, and at
her death, in 1809, bequeathed
the property to her nephew
William, son of Mary Lucas and
William Shadwell, with the request that he should assume the
name of Lucas before that of
Shadwell. William Lucas Shadwell, in 1836, sold the 'Manor or
Lordship or reputed Manor of
Camoys Court' to Thomas Richardson, retaining for himself a
portion including Camoys Court
Farm. This portion Shadwell
bequeathed at his death in 1844
to William Drew Stent, who took
the name of Lucas Shadwell, but
sold the property in the following year to George Grantham of Barcombe Place, who, in 1866, acquired the
manor from Thomas Richardson. Camoys Court passed
to his youngest son Sir William Grantham, K.C., the
well-known Judge, and at his death in 1911 came to
his son Major William Wilson Grantham, V.D., K.C.,
J.P., the present owner.

PARISH CHURCH of ST. MARY BARCOMBE

Grantham. Ermine a griffon gules holding in his claws a scutcheon or charged with a crosslet sable and two crosslets gules in the chief.
In 1086 there were 3½ mills in Barcombe yielding
20s. (fn. 61) At the beginning of the 16th century Thomas
Erith and his wife Denise held a fulling mill ('now
called a corn mill') of William, Lord Beaumont, as
copyhold, together with 'a reasonable way to the same
mill from Cokys Brygge'. (fn. 62) In 1572 there were two
watermills in Barcombe and at the beginning of the
17th century the 'little mill of Barcombe alias Bardolfes
mill' pertained to the demesne of the manor. (fn. 63) The
mills were a feature of the parish well known to artists
until they were destroyed by fire in March 1939.
Church
The church of ST. MARY is built of
flint with sandstone dressings; the roofs
are tiled. The nave was built in c. 1100
and of this date the north wall remains. In the 13th
century a west tower was added, a north lancet inserted
in the nave, and the chancel rebuilt approximately the
width of the nave; a south transeptal chapel was also
added, of which the north arch remains. The south
arcade dates from about 1400 and soon after larger
windows were inserted in the north wall. The present
south aisle and vestry were built 1879–80, when the
church underwent extensive restoration. The south
porch is also modern. Memorial slabs dating from the
17th century have been inserted in the external walls.
The chancel (31 ft. 9 in. × 19 ft. 2 in.) has a rebuilt
or refaced east wall with angle buttresses and a threelight window. The north wall is refaced 13th-century
work, and contains two much restored lancets; there
is a chamfered plinth but no sign of the pointed doorway, shown between the lancets in Lambert's drawing
of 1780. (fn. 64) The south wall had, according to Sharpe
(1805 drawing), (fn. 65) a lancet and a 15th-century threelight window where is now the organ arch; but this
wall was probably rebuilt in 1879–80, when the vestry
was added; east of the modern doorway to the latter
is a trefoil-headed piscina. There is no chancel arch,
but the roofs of nave and chancel are at different levels.
The nave (50 ft. 4 in. × 17 ft. 8 in.) has no original
features, but the north wall is 2 ft. 10 in. in thickness,
with a batter. There is a slight deviation from the
chancel line; and at the junction is a buttress. (fn. 66) Just
west of it is a 13th-century lancet similar to those in
the chancel but less restored. West again are two
15th-century windows, of which the east is of four
cinquefoiled lights with hollow-chamfered jambs and
mullions, while the label is chamfered, also the flat reararch; the other has two steeper cinquefoiled lights and
a similar label and rear-arch. The north doorway is
contemporary with the south arcade; it has an equilateral arch and a hood with rounded upper edge and
returned ends; the outer order is hollow-chamfered,
the inner wave-moulded; the rear-arch is chamfered
segmental-pointed. West of this is a modern copy of
the two-light window. The south arcade is of two
dates. The east bay has a two-centred arch of two
continuous chamfered orders, probably the opening
to a 13th-century transeptal chapel, now replaced by
the south aisle continuation; the two west bays have
obtuse-pointed arches of two chamfered orders supported on an octagonal pier and responds. These date
to c. 1400, having scroll-moulded abaci and astragals,
and bases of roll and bell-shaped profile. The south
aisle is modern, replacing a narrower aisle with dormer
windows. (fn. 67) It is of four bays with pseudo-15th-century
windows, and partly overlaps the chancel; east of it is
a vestry of similar date. The north porch is wooden,
of modern build; its predecessor was in bad repair in
1724.
The west tower (12 ft. 3 in. × 11 ft. 6 in.) was
added in the early 13th century. It is of two stories,
undivided externally, and has at the west angles restored coupled buttresses of two stages and chamfered
plinth. The walls have no plinth, but a slight batter.
There is a shingled broach spire, with modern louvre
openings. The obtuse-pointed tower arch was rebuilt
with the south arcade, and has similar responds. The
west doorway is similar to the north doorway; the
hood is restored. Above is a modern cinquefoiled twolight window.
The roofs are modern throughout, but chestnut
tie-beams dated 1682 existed in 1880. The floors are
of modern tile and wood. There is one step to the
chancel and one to the altar.
The font is of 14th-century date, having a square
bowl with traceried sides, and square pedestal with
attached shafts. In the 15th-century two-light window
of the nave there is glass dated 1657, to the Grantham
family, brought in 1889 from Goltho Church, Lincolnshire. A 15th-century image bracket occurs on the
north wall of the nave. There are six bells, of which
three date from the 17th century (fn. 68) and the others
from 1912. The plate includes two cups (1710 and
1739 hall-marks), and two patens on a foot (1710 and
1899 hall-marks). (fn. 69) The registers date from 1580. The
site of a large yew, blown down recently, is now
occupied by the 1914–18 War Memorial.
There is a church of ST. BARTHOLOMEW at
Spithurst in the north of the parish, built of flint in
the style of the 13th century. It was erected in 1880.
Advowson
The church of Barcombe with tithes
was granted to Lewes Priory by Ralph
de Chesney and confirmed to them
by William II de Warenne. (fn. 70) After the Dissolution
the rectory and advowson were granted to Thomas
Cromwell in 1538 with other possessions of the priory. (fn. 71)
After his fall the rectory was granted, in 1541, to Anne
of Cleves, (fn. 72) but the advowson appears to have remained with the Crown and the living is now in the
gift of the Lord Chancellor.