WEST HOATHLY
Hadlega, Hodlega (xi cent.); Hodlegh (xiv cent.);
Hothelegh (xvi cent.).
This parish has an area of 5,263 acres. The railway
line from Haywards Heath to East Grinstead crosses
the southern tip of the parish and, joining that from
Lewes, skirts the eastern side, penetrating the ridge
by a tunnel. The village is in the centre of the parish,
on a high ridge reaching a level of 600 ft. just north of it,
and along which runs a road from Turners Hill to
Wych Cross. The station is about ¾ mile east of the
village, just north of the tunnel, on the line from Lewes
to East Grinstead. About a mile and a half west of the
village are Stonelands and Rockhurst (or Chiddingly),
a little south of which is an outcrop of sandstone cliffs
with the rock 'Great upon Little'. The ridge on which
the village of West Hoathly stands is followed by the
road north-west to Selsfield Common, where a height
of 602 ft. is reached, and here the road joins the main
one from Lindfield to Caterham. North of the village
the ground slopes down to Gravetye Manor, and to the
south the land falls again, in two long narrow ridges,
on one of which is Hook Farm, and on the other a road
leading to the village of Highbrook, in the south of the
parish, a separate ecclesiastical parish since 1882, with
All Saints Church, at a level of about 400 ft.
A Countess of Huntingdon chapel was built in West
Hoathly in 1826.
The soil is clay, with a subsoil of sand, and the land is
mainly pasture.
The oldest part of the village lies in the street running
approximately north and south, west of the church.
The Manor House is on the west side of the street
opposite the church. It was built as a dower house in
1627 by the Infields of Gravetye. (fn. 1) Certain features
suggest alterations at different periods, but from the
records it seems that Mrs. Infield was in the habit of
changing her mind during the erection of the building.
The original plan was obviously to be of the normal
half-H form with well-projected wings in front and
possibly a middle porch. The middle part, however,
normally the hall in an earlier house, was pinched in
length to less than two-thirds of the breadth of either
of the gabled wings, and the principal room or parlour
was allocated the whole of the north wing. Mrs.
Infield's alterations are apparent first in having the front
of the middle part brought out so that the wings projected merely a foot or so, and in the disposition of the
interior of the middle part: this was provided with a
north passage 6 ft. 9 in. wide from the front entrance
next to the parlour. As this left, south of the passage,
only a small chamber, its south wall was moved a few
feet to encroach on the south wing, so that the elevation
of this wing gives a false idea of the size of the rooms
behind it. The main staircase is set behind the front face
of this wing—a most unusual position.
The walls are of ashlar, with stone-mullioned windows: in the east front of the north wing they are of
six lights to the ground floor—the great parlour—, four
to the first floor, and three to the second. In the south
wing they are similar, except that the ground-floor
window is only of four lights. The upper windows
have labels: a string-course along the whole front forms
the drip-stone to the ground-floor windows: this stringcourse is continued inside, on the south side of the north
wing, evidently being in position before the narrow
entrance hall was built between the wings.
The middle part contains the entrance doorway,
next the north wing, with a four-centred and square
head, and next to it are two windows of three lights.
Above is a window of nine lights. All these windows
have moulded mullions. There are similar windows
in the other walls; one on the south side, of six lights,
was altered to form a garden doorway in the 17th century. There are projecting chimney-stacks on both
north and south sides and one at the back, with plain
shafts of 17th-century bricks. The roofs are covered
with Horsham slabs. The forecourt to the house is
closed by a 17th-century brick wall in which is a roundarched gateway of stone.
The inner doorway in the entrance hall has been set
inside out: it has a four-centred head and above it are
the remains of a two-light window of stone. Next south
is a borrowed light and an oak post to support the wall
above. These openings are in the original intended
east front. The long room in the north wing has a wide
fire-place with a wood lintel; the other rooms have
moulded stone arched and square-headed fire-places.
The parlour in the south wing has early-17th-century
panelling and a chimney-piece with pilasters and arched
bays to the overmantel. At the east end of the long north
room is a dais, two steps up, with a balustrade. This and
the main staircase in the south wing have heavy turned
balusters, newels or posts with moulded and acorn
heads, and moulded handrails. Several of the upper
rooms are lined with 17th-century panelling of different
periods. There is no distinctive roof construction visible
in the attics.
A house a little farther north on the same side, now
two tenements, is of about 1550. The lower story of
the east front is of modern bricks above a stone plinth,
the upper story tile-hung. The southernmost bay projects slightly and is gabled: the upper story was originally
jettied but is now underbuilt. On the south side is a
fine chimney-stack, 10½ ft. wide, of stone with gatheredin sides and a brick upper part with two square shafts;
and at the back is another, also of stone, with a square
shaft of thin bricks. Both have wide fire-places and the
ceilings are open-timbered: one staircase up to the attics
is of solid oak balks.
The Cat Inn, north of the church, is of the early
16th century, with a later inserted central chimneystack having a wide fire-place. The walls are of brick
and tile-hung facing, but the ancient framing is visible
inside: one lower room has an original moulded beam,
and another very wide flat joists, while highly cambered
tie-beams are to be seen in the upper rooms.
'The Priest House', at the south end of the street on
the west side, is a 15th-century house facing approximately east. The rectangular plan is of five bays, the
two northernmost being the original solar wing,
the next two the great hall, and the southernmost the
buttery. The original pointed doorway to the screens,
next to the buttery, is now blocked and another doorway made next north of it. As in other small houses
of this period, the roof was continued from end to end
with an unbroken ridge line; it retains three of the
ancient trusses; one, the middle truss of the hall, had
arched braces below the tie-beam; one brace still re
mains: the next to the north was the closed framing of
the end of the hall and has a king-post strutted from the
tie-beam; and the third, the middle truss of the solar,
is similar. In the 16th century an upper floor was
inserted in the hall and the central chimney-stack built
in the south bay of the hall, right against the middle
truss, but as it did not fill the whole bay the framing of
the south end-wall was removed and the space thrown
into the buttery wing. It has fire-places 8¼ ft. and 6¼ ft.
wide in the lower story with stone jambs and wood
bressummers, and one on the first floor, in the north
side, has moulded stone jambs and four-centred arch in
a square head. The buttery has original wide flat
ceiling-beams: those in the middle bay are stopchamfered, and those in the solar wing are rougher and
probably later repairs. The remains of one original
window with diamond-shaped mullions are left in the
back wall of the buttery, and there are others of the
16th or 17th century. The house, once two tenements,
has a staircase at each end. The walls are of framing
with plaster infilling and in part covered with weatherboarding. The roof is tiled. The building was reconditioned by Mr. J. Godwin King, who presented it to
the Sussex Archaeological Trust in 1935.
Of the buildings on the other (east) side of the street,
two at least date from the 17th century, on the evidence
of their chimney-stacks, of thin bricks and cross-shaped
plan.
Duckyls Holt, about ½ mile north-north-west of the
church, is a 15th-century house retaining remains of the
usual king-post and central purlin roof-construction, but
has been much renovated. All the rooms have opentimbered ceilings and the central chimney-stack, inserted
c. 1600, has wide fire-places. Timber-framing shows
in the external walls of the upper story and the roof is
tiled.
Stonelands is largely modern, but it incorporates, at
its south end, a stone-built wing, with gabled east and
west ends, of c. 1580, and south of that a still earlier
wing of timber-framing, the present kitchen, of c. 1500,
the two parts forming a T-shaped plan with the kitchen
as the stem: in the angle of its west side with the stone
wing is a square winding staircase, and this is faced on
its outer (west) front with a gabled stone wall contemporary with the larger gable-end. Old timberframing is seen inside and the ceiling is open-timbered.
The kitchen has a 9-ft.-wide fire-place with a lintel, but
in front of the chimney-breast on both floors are crossbeams with mortices, indicating the position of the early
Tudor open fire and flue over, preceding the Elizabethan chimney-stack. The room in the 1580 wing has
a fire-place, backing the kitchen fire-place, with stone
jambs and oak lintel; in it is one of the fire-backs with the
'Anne Forster' epitaph. (fn. 2) The room has 17th-century
panelling and an open-timbered ceiling, and the room
above has an arched stone fire-place. The stairs in the
lower part have been altered, but are ancient from the
first floor to the attics and have a central newel with a
pear-shaped head. There is a very heavy door to the
stairs, on the first floor, hung with strap-hinges: it is
perhaps the original front door refixed; there are also
several other ancient battened doors. The east and west
ends of the 1580 wing have stone mullioned windows;
there are also cellar windows in the chamfered plinth.
The gable-heads have pinnacles on the kneelers and at
the apices, and the staircase gable has a two-light window. Next south of the stair was the former front
entrance to the present kitchen-wing, now altered to
a window. The roofs are tiled and the chimney-stack,
of fairly large bricks, is of cross-shaped plan.
Gravetye Manor House is a three-storied building
of local stone erected about 1600 by Richard Infield,
an iron founder. It faces south and appears to have
been built in two parallel ranges of unequal length, the
southern of four bays and the northern of three; the bay
lacking at the east end is now occupied by the modern
staircase. The south porch was added a little later and
bears the initials of Henry Faulconer, the husband of
Richard's daughter Agnes: her gravestone in the church
is dated 1635. Mr. William Robinson added a long
wing to the east of the older part extending to the north.
He also renovated the ancient part: the upper ceilings
appear to have been lowered to give height to the top
rooms and now encroach on the heads of the windows
of the second story. The south front has the normal
Elizabethan stone windows of four lights to the first
and second stories, with moulded mullions, transoms
and labels, and three lights to the third story: there are
also four basement windows. The eaves-cornice is
heavily moulded and broken up by four detached gables
to the third story: these have corbelled kneelers and
pinnacles. The porch has a round-arched entrance and
a similar gable in which is a panel with the initials H F.
Between the two middle windows of the second story
are traces of a panel with a pedimental head. The
west elevation has two similar but wider gable-heads
and like windows. In the middle of the ground floor
is a four-centred and square-headed doorway with
spandrels carved with the initials R I and K I. (fn. 3) About
this opening are traces of 18th-century pilasters and
pedimented hood, now removed for a modern porch.
The north elevation is a repetition of the south front
without the doorway, except that the easternmost bay is
cemented, and, instead of the heavy eaves-cornice, there
is merely a narrow half-round string-course below the
eaves gutters. The roofs are covered with modern
Colley Weston slates and in the valley between the two
ranges is a range of chimney-stacks of varying types,
some of which are probably modern. The easternmost
has two star-shaped shafts, the middle has a square shaft
between two detached diagonal shafts (this group is
probably the oldest), the westernmost has conjoined
diagonal shafts. There is also a modern chimney-stack
over the east part of the north range.
Internally the chimney-pieces are the most interesting features. The western three-fourths of the south
range forms a large hall or parlour with an original dais
at the west end. It has a north fire-place with moulded
stone jambs: the modern overmantel incorporates two
carved panels of the early 17th century. The room is
lined with modern panelling. The eastern smaller
chamber has a similar north fire-place with spandrels
carved with rosettes and foliage and an overmantel of
six panels in two tiers carved with arabesque ornament
and bearing the date 1603. The room is lined with
early-17th-century panelling with a fluted frieze. The
doorway now opening from the stair hall has moulded
stone jambs, and above it is a two-light window, presumably once external. The western room in the north
range also has an overmantel of three panels of arabesque
ornament dated 1603 and a moulded cornice. The
chamber above this has a moulded stone fire-place with
the initials R I and K I carved in the spandrels. It is
flanked by Ionic fluted pilasters and has a fluted mantel
frieze and shelf. The overmantel is of two bays divided
and flanked by fluted pilasters and containing roundheaded panels carved in low relief with half-length
portraits of Richard Infield and his wife in Elizabethan
costume. The room is lined with late-16th-century
panelling. Above the hall are two chambers entered
by a moulded stone doorway with an arched and square
head: it has a plain heavy oak door hung with straphinges. Inside (south of) it is a small lobby with doors
fixed askew to open into the two rooms, and meeting
the partition that divides them. This partition is of
early-17th-century panelling divided on both faces into
three bays by fluted pilasters: the doors are of similar
panelling and their hinges are partly of original cock'shead type. The western room has similar panelling
on the other walls and the stone fire-place has moulded
jambs and four-centred arch in a square head with a
fluted frieze dated ANo DO. 1598. The eastern room
also has some old panelling on the south wall. The carved
overmantel, apparently re-set, is of three early-17thcentury panels with a fluted frieze. The easternmost
room is entered by a moulded stone arched door-way
from the stair hall, but it has a two-light window
over it like that to the room below. The door is a heavy
one of battens, nail-studded. The ceiling of the stairhall encroaches on the head of the window, but inside
the room a half-round rear-arch is raised above the
general ceiling-level to clear the head. The room has
a stone fire-place like the others and an early-17thcentury overmantel of three panels carved with plants
or flowers in low relief within half-round arches and
divided by Ionic pilasters; a frieze below the panels is
carved with dragons and arabesque ornament. Several
of the fire-places have 17th-century iron fire-backs.
The main staircase is modern. There are no noticeable
ancient features in the third story.
The house is set on a plateau which is terraced
and has a steep incline south of it. There is an old
disused sunken road leading up to the west of the site
from the south, which local legend connects with
smuggling expeditions. West of this road and about
200 yards south-west of the great house is the earlier
manor house, now known as Little Gravetye. This
is a timber-framed house facing south-east and of
rectangular plan in three bays and a chimney-bay. The
middle bay and the south-west bay, with the narrower
chimney-bay between them, date probably from about
1500. The south-west bay retains heavy ceiling beams
and wide joists of that period: the middle bay has stopchamfered beams and lighter chamfered joists and
appears to have been an open hall with a chimney space
at its south-west end, into which the stone-built
chimney-stack was inserted when the hall was converted
into two stories later in the 16th century. The northeast bay was probably built at this time; it is obviously
an addition, as it has separate story-posts and open
framing close against the older closed north-east end.
The roof framing is of the usual early Tudor type with
wind-braced side-purlins and wide flat rafters; over the
north-east bay are heavy collar-beams. The central
chimney-stack has a wide fire-place with stone jambs
and oak bressummer in its east face. An original beam
crosses the front of the chimney-breast on this face, another on the west face is partly sunk in the masonry.
The house has been renovated: some of the main posts
in the front have had their lower ends cut away; the
south-west gabled end has been refaced with stone and
a modern porch has been added.
Tickeridge, a farm-house standing on a mound
above the road, close to Kingscote Station, is a late-14thcentury house facing approximately east and west. It
differs in several ways from the 15th-century houses in
the district. It had a great hall of two 13-ft. bays: it
was 15 ft. wide and had, in addition, side-aisles 4½ ft.
deep, the roof of the main body being continued down
over them. At the north end is the solar wing of two
stories, its roof-ridge being lower than that of the hall
and at right-angles to it: the east and west ends of the
lower story are in line with the aisle-walls, but the upper
story is jettied at both ends and has half-gables. The
buttery at the south end was treated as a continuation
of the hall, but probably in two stories, the braced sideframing or quasi-arcade to the aisles being also continued in the upper story to assist the roof-construction. (fn. 4)
The central chimney-stack was inserted in the 16th
century in the south bay of the hall, right against the
middle truss: it is 8 ft. thick and has a great stone fireplace towards the north bay, 11 ft. wide and 4 ft. 8 in.
deep, with a chamfered oak bressummer. On the west
side of it was an oven, now removed. The usual upper
floor was inserted at the same time in the hall; it has a
chamfered cross-beam against the chimney-breast and
chamfered longitudinal joists. In the north wall of the
hall is seen the 14th-century moulded wall-beam,
1 ft. 5 in. in height, and flanking it are doorways from
the aisles into the two rooms of the solar wing: the
eastern—the better-preserved—has a stop-chamfered
square-headed frame and shows no traces of an arch:
in it is a 16th-century door of four vertical panels with
moulded muntins. The post at the west end of the
moulded beam, next the door, has been supplemented
by another post on which is carved F. H. 1748. In the
upper story of the north bay is seen the side-framing of
the 15-ft. main body of the hall dividing it from the
aisles: each side has a purlin supported by vertical
curved braces forming almost an arch. Except for a
recessed dormer-window on the east side, they are
filled in, so that the continued roofs over the aisles are
not visible; a wider joist in the ceiling below indicates
the position of each. The north end-wall, in which the
moulded beam is set, had similar curved braces, but
only the eastern remains in place: the wall is otherwise
of square framing. None of the roof-construction above
the present ceiling can be seen. The middle truss of the
hall is also buried in the facing of the chimney-breast,
but on the south side, in the spaces next to the chimneystack—that is, on the site of the upper parts of the aisles—the ends of the trusses are partly exposed. To the east
is seen a 14-inch tie-beam, or collar-beam, a heavy
principal rafter, and a curved brace under their junction.
To the west it is similar, but the curved brace has been
removed, probably for a former doorway. In the
eastern upper room of the former buttery there is sideframing similar to that in the sides of the hall for the
aisles, but here in skeleton form. The partition which
formed the south end-wall of the hall has shaped storyposts and curved braces in this story, as at the north end
of the hall, but in the lower story most of the framing
has been removed. This part had no fire-places until
recent years. In order to fit it as a separate tenement, a
thin chimney-stack has been built-in parallel with the
back of the ancient chimney-stack, but with a narrow
straight staircase between the two. Most of the partition
has been cleared away to create recesses in front of the
new fire-places, leaving a few studs in position to support the superstructure. The ceilings of the rooms are
plastered, but stop-chamfered posts and wall-beams are
exposed in the outer walls. The north solar wing has
very heavy flat joists (exposed in the ceiling of the
western lower room) and they appear below the overhang outside. The upper rooms have chamfered
ceiling-joists of the 17th century and the roof-construction is concealed.
Externally, the hall and buttery have square framing
without any brace-timbers, but the lower parts have
been largely replaced by 18th-century brick-work. The
west end of the solar wing has five curved brackets under
the overhang, four of which have been renewed. Both
stories have curved braces, turned inwards from the
outer angle-posts; the half-gable head has an old
moulded barge-board. The wall is built on stone
foundations and has an old plain doorway. The east
end of the wing shows similar curved braces in the
lower story, but the projecting upper story is covered
with weather-boarding. The north side is covered
entirely with similar boarding above modern brick
foundations. The wing has higher eaves and a lower
ridge than those of the hall.
A doorway in the west front opens into a lobby next
to the chimney-stacks; the door is a plain one, but is
hung with a pair of ornamental strap-hinges, with
branches, the ends of which have stamped rosette
patterns: they are probably of the 14th or 15th century.
In the hall is an ancient table 12 ft. 3 in. long by 2 ft.
9 in. wide, and the bressummer of the great fire-place
still has affixed to it the winding apparatus for the 16thor 17th-century turnspit: one long spit also survives.
The roofs are tiled. Dormer windows with hipped
roofs in the east side light the upper story of the former
hall and buttery. The central chimney-stack is of 17th or 18th-century bricks above the roof, with a modern
top.
East of the house is a 16th-century barn of five bays
with braced tie-beams; the original roof-timbers above
the tie-beams have been removed.
Chiddingly Farm, west of the village, has the remains
of a two-bay hall of the 15th century, about 24 ft. by
18 ft. wide and facing east, with a late-16th-century
wing behind it, equalling in width the length of the
hall. The roof-trusses are of the usual king-post and
central purlin type, the middle truss having large curved
braces below a highly cambered tie-beam. The lower
halves of the trusses are exposed in the upper bedrooms:
the upper halves, with the wide flat rafters, &c., above the
ceilings, are smoke-blackened. At the south end of
the hall, on the ground floor, is a moulded wall-beam
which has mortices and peg-holes for studs other than
those now in the partition below it. These, although
ancient in appearance, are said to have been placed in
position in modern times, and therefore it is possible
the beam also was brought from elsewhere. On the
west side of the hall is a wide fire-place with stone jambs,
probably ante-dating the late-16th-century back wing,
which has a wider fire-place backing it. The later wing
has a lower floor, with steps down to it from the hall,
and the ceiling has moulded cross-beams, and wall-beams which are carried round the recesses flanking the
chimney-stack. On the first floor the beams are chamfered and the chimney-stack has an arched and square
stone fire-place. The older walls are covered with tilehanging, except the north side of the Elizabethan wing,
which is of ashlar stone-work, perhaps of later repair.
Windows in both north and west walls of the wing are
original and have moulded mullions and transoms. The
roof of the wing is modern and now shows two gables
over the west wall. The chimney-stack of the old part
is of cross-shaped plan.
There is also a 16th-century barn of four bays with
original trusses.
Philpots, south-west of the church, mentioned in
1721 under the name of 'Barleylands', appears to be
of 15th-century origin but rebuilt about 1600 with the
re-use of some mutilated 15th-century timbers. It was
of rectangular plan, with a dairy at the east end, and in
the 19th century wings were added to both the east
and west ends. The principal room in the old part has a
ceiling-beam against its east wall with a wide chamfer,
and below it is a deep straight coving of plaster sloping
back to the partition, which is also of old framing of the
16th or 17th century. At the south end of this beam is
an ancient heavy post, now hacked back below the top,
and south of it, in line with the beam but set rather
askew, is a chamfered and cambered lintel of a doorway
with peg-holes showing that it originally had an arch
below it. The lintel comes against the south wall of the
room and there are no indications that the recess which
it spans was ever used as a doorway. The room has a
12-in. longitudinal ceiling-beam with foliage stops to
the chamfers, and on the west side is a wide fire-place.
The room next east has a 6-ft.-wide fire-place on its
east side: below the chamber is a cellar cut out of the
living rock and above it old framing with blocked
windows is visible in the front wall. A modern staircase has been built out north of it, but from the first
floor to the attic is an ancient winding stair with a
central newel. The roofs show no old features. The
walls are mostly tile-hung or brick, the modern parts
of stone.
Hook Farm, ¾ mile south-south-west of the church,
is a stone-fronted building, apparently of the end of the
16th century, rectangular in plan, with a stone fireplace 8 ft. wide at its north end, where is a modern
cross-wing. The room with the wide fire-place has a
stop-chamfered ceiling-beam, and an unusual feature is
a rounded alcove in the south wall with an 18th-century
dresser: some of the upper rooms also have open-timbered ceilings. Most of the windows, &c., are modern,
but in the gabled south end, which is partly of stone, is
a blocked window to the upper floor with chamfered
jambs, &c., probably of the 16th century.
Pickeridge is an Elizabethan building with timberframed walls covered with tile-hanging and weatherboarding. The plan is L-shaped; the gabled cross-wing
at the east end has a projecting chimney-stack of stone
on its east side with a brick shaft, which has a moulded
base and a V-shaped pilaster on the outer face. Inside
is a Tudor moulded stone fire-place with a mutilated
four-centred arch in a square head. The main body
has a central chimney-stack of plain square form above
the tiled roof, with a wide fire-place towards the middle
room. The ceilings are plastered and some of the main
beams encased: others, to the middle room and to the
upper rooms in the wing, are chamfered, with moulded
stops. The upper part of the wall between the main
part and the wing shows ancient framing, including a
heavy and highly cambered tie-beam on shaped posts,
but above this the timbers appear to be later. In the
north-east corner of the east wing is an original semiwinding staircase from ground floor to attic, with a
central oak newel. There is also a cellar below the wing
with heavy ceiling joists.
The farm buildings include a 16th-century barn of
five bays: it has queen-post trusses with curved braces
under the tie-beams, similar curved braces in the side
walls, and curved wind-braces to the roof-purlins. A
cottage just east of the farm is probably a converted
outbuilding of the 16th or 17th century: it has weatherboarded walls and steeply pitched tiled roof, formerly
thatched.
Highbrook is a hamlet 1½ miles south of West
Hoathly village. The modern church of All Saints is
built in the late-13th-century style and consists of a
chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch, and a tower
north of the chancel with a shingled oak spire.
Among the buildings near the church, at least four
are of the 17th century or earlier. Highbrook House,
about 200 yards south of the church, retains vestiges
of a 15th-century great hall of two 13 ft. bays, with
the usual wings north and south of it, probably all
under one continuous roof. In the upper story can
be seen the shaped story-posts and highly cambered
tie-beam of the middle truss of the hall, all with
mortices and peg-holes for a former arch below the
tie-beam. The framing of the north end wall is also
exposed, with one remaining curved brace. A floor
was inserted in the 16th century and a chimneystack built in the south bay, with an 8-ft. fire-place of
stone having an oak lintel cut in the form of a fourcentred arch with sunk spandrels: there is also carved
in the centre of the face of it a circle containing a sixpointed star. Apart from chamfered ceiling-beams and
some old ceiling-joists in an upper room, the interior is
modernized. Some external framing is exposed in the
back (east) wall. The old part is sandwiched between
a long parallel addition of brick in front (west) and a
shorter parallel addition at the back.
Three houses opposite Highbrook House have brick
and tile-hung walls and tiled roofs with 17th-century
central chimney-stacks of thin bricks and of the usual
rebated type. One, 'Willards Cottage', shows some
traces inside of a 15th- or early-16th-century origin, but
has been reconditioned and many of the ancient timbers
removed. Sheriffs Cottages and Sheriffs Farm, farther
south, are buildings of similar kind and date, with
rebated central chimney-stacks, wide fire-places, and
open-timbered ceilings.
The White Hart Inn on the Ardingly road, is
probably a 17th-century building, showing timberframing in all walls. The central chimney-stack is of
18th-century bricks. 'Hoathly Hill', nearly ¼ mile east
of the church, is largely modern but has on its west side
a 16th- or early-17th-century projecting chimney-stack
of stone with a shaft of thin bricks.
Manors
There was no manor of West Hoathly,
but part of the parish belonged to the
manor of Ditchling, in Streat Hundred
(q.v.). Another portion (sometimes called a manor)
belonged to the manor of Plumpton, also in Streat
Hundred (q.v.), being held by the Bardolfs and their
successors. (fn. 5)
The manor of GRAVETYE was held in the early
17th century of the manor of Streat. (fn. 6) A family of that
name was living in West Hoathly in the 13th and 14th
centuries. Michael and Bartholomew de Gravetye
were holding land in this district in 1296, (fn. 7) and a
Bartholomew occurs between 1327 (fn. 8) and 1332, (fn. 9) but
nothing further is known of the family.
Gravetye first appears as a manor in 1571, when
Richard Infield died seised of it, leaving an infant son
Richard. (fn. 10) The second Richard died in 1619, (fn. 11) and
his eldest son, a third Richard, in 1625, when it passed
by will to his brother James Infield, (fn. 12) who died without
issue in 1633. (fn. 13) Gravetye then passed to his widow
Mary, who subsequently married the Rev. John
Killingworth, (fn. 14) and with him, in 1635, settled the
manor on three of James Infield's sisters and their
husbands, namely Agnes and Henry Faulconer, Cordell
and John Watson, and Bridget Infield, (fn. 15) who afterwards married John Saunders. They were still holding
the manor in 1647, (fn. 16) but in 1651 it is said to have been
conveyed by Henry Faulconer (presumably the surviving heir) to Edward Payne. (fn. 17) The latter died in
1660 and Gravetye passed to his second son Richard,
and in turn to his son and grandson, both Richard,
and in 1732 to the last Richard's brother Thomas. (fn. 18)
Thomas Payne died in 1763 and his son Thomas
Holles Payne sold the manor in 1791 to William
Clifford, timber merchant; (fn. 19) a Mr. Reynolds, a minor,
was holding it in 1835, (fn. 20) and in 1870 it was in the
possession of F. Cayley, (fn. 21) who died in 1874. (fn. 22) Before
the end of the 19th century it was purchased by William
Robinson the horticulturist, who died in 1935 and
left the estate to the nation to be used for the study of
forestry under the Board of Agriculture.

Infield. Gules a scutcheon in an orle of martlets or.

Payne. Party fessewise sable and argent two lions passant counterchanged.
The reputed manor of CHITTINGLY (now called
Chiddingly) is said to have been given to the College
of South Malling by Aldwulf, King of the South
Saxons. (fn. 23)
Land in West Hoathly was held from early times by
a family of the name. William de Chytyngele occurs in
1296 and 1310, (fn. 24) and Richard in the latter year and in
1327. (fn. 25) Beatrice, probably his widow, was in possession
in 1332. (fn. 26) A John de Chytynglegh is mentioned in
1387, (fn. 27) and his widow Margaret seems to have conveyed the property before 1409
to John Pope and his wife Joan, (fn. 28)
perhaps her daughter. In the
Pope family Chittingly evidently
descended for more than a century, for in 1536 John Pope son
of John Pope of Woodhache
conveyed it (then first called a
manor) to Thomas Michell. (fn. 29)
Another Thomas Michell sold it
in 1577 to Robert Mills, (fn. 30) and
his son, another Robert Mills,
conveyed it in 1622 to Edward
Payne. (fn. 31) Chittingly remained in the Payne family for
some time, descending from Edward to his second son
Richard in 1660. (fn. 32) Eventually it passed to Richard's
great-nephew Charles Payne, who died in 1734, (fn. 33)
leaving the manor to his daughter Anna wife of Gibbs
Crawfurd. (fn. 34) Their son Charles Payne Crawfurd held
it, (fn. 35) but his son Robert probably sold it with his other
Sussex lands. (fn. 36) The estate now belongs to the Earl of
Limerick, but the manorial rights have lapsed.

Pope. Or two cheverons gules and a quarter sable with a molet or therein.
The manor attached to the impropriate RECTORY
of West Hoathly belonged to the Priory of St. Pancras
at Lewes and descended with the advowson until after
the death of Anne of Cleves, and in 1559 was granted
to Thomas Reeves. (fn. 37) Next year Thomas Browne son
of John Browne, who was farming the rectory from the
priory in 1524, bought it, (fn. 38) and John Browne died
seised of it in 1608, leaving a son John. He held it of
the king as of his manor of East Greenwich. (fn. 39) The
younger John's son, another John, (fn. 40) in 1695 conveyed
the manor to Sir John and Francis Gyles, (fn. 41) as trustees
for the marriage settlement of their cousin Anne
Hooper, whose second husband Robert Hooper was
Attorney-General in Barbadoes. (fn. 42) At her death in
1715 her nephew John Tidcombe was instructed to
sell the manor, (fn. 43) and it was bought in 1731 by Robert
Bostock of Otford, Kent. (fn. 44) Ellis Bostock held it in
1786; (fn. 45) in 1790 it was owned by Robert Bostock; (fn. 46)
and in 1822 it was held by Robert John Stileman and
James Bethune Bostock. (fn. 47) Subsequently it was sold,
in 1879 to John Cotton Powell and in 1908 to J.
Godwin King, by whom it was given in 1918 to his
daughter Ursula Ridley, the present lady of the manor. (fn. 48)
Church
The parish church of ST. MARGARET
consists of a chancel, nave, south chapel,
south aisle, south porch, and west tower
with a modern vestry south of it. The walls are of local
sandstone, the roofs covered partly with Horsham slabs
and partly red tiles. The nave dates from c. 1090; it
had a small square chancel, of which the north wall
remains. A narrow south aisle with an arcade of two
bays was added c. 1175. About the middle of the 13th
century the chancel was lengthened so that it exceeded
the length of the nave. The second addition was the
south chapel, c. 1270, with an arcade of two bays: an
original 12th-century doorway and a 13th-century
lancet window were removed from the chancel wall to
the new south wall at the same time. This work was
followed by the widening of the south aisle, c. 1330, to
exceed slightly the width of the chapel. The west
tower was the final medieval enlargement, c. 1400, and
the loss of the west window of the nave necessitated the
insertion of a larger window in the north wall, somewhat later in the century. Other windows had already
been inserted in the chancel, one of c. 1330 in the north
wall near the west end, and one of late-14th-century
date at the east end of the south wall in place of the
13th-century window there. There is no evidence as to
when the ancient chancel arch was destroyed, but it
probably occurred when the rood was placed in position
in the 15th century: certainly alterations were made
then to the east respond of the nave arcade, and the
upper doorway was cut through the wall. The south
porch is modern, probably replacing an earlier porch.
The church was restored in 1870.
The chancel (c. 37 ft. by 18½ ft.) has an east window
of three lancets under a pointed head. The original
window had been remodelled in the 17th century, but
the lower parts of the 13th-century jambs were retained.
These are of two chamfered orders outside, and the
inner splays have undercut angle-shafts with moulded
bases. The upper part of the window is a modern
restoration based on the design of the old east window
of the south chapel. The gable-head above is modern
and contains a sexfoil bulls-eye window. In the eastern
half of the north wall are two mid-13th-century windows close together, the eastern a single lancet and the
western of two lancet-lights under a pointed main head
with a quatrefoil piercing in the spandrel. The jambs
are like those of the east window, the inner angle-shafts
having moulded bell-capitals and bases. The reararches are also moulded and have conjoined labels
without carved stops. Farther west is a small blocked
lancet window, referred to below, not visible inside,
and west of this a 14th-century window of two trefoiled ogee-heads and a quatrefoil in a two-centred
main head. In the south wall were two 13th-century
windows like those in the north wall, but the western
was almost all destroyed for the south arcade and the
eastern replaced late in the 14th century by the existing
window, which is of two trefoiled lights under a square
head. Of the western window, only the east splay and
part of its rear-arch and hood-mould remain. The south
arcade is of two bays with an octagonal middle pillar
and responds to match. The moulded capitals differ
little in contour from those in the 13th-century windows. The arches are two-centred and of two chamfered orders.
The walls are of rubble. There is about 14 ft. of
coursed rubble in the north wall similar to that of the
north wall of the nave and probably of the same date. (fn. 49)
In this stretch of wall is the small lancet window of the
early 13th century, now blocked. This was probably
an enlargement of a tiny light of the earliest period some
of the jamb-stones of which remain in its west jamb.
The courses of the east jamb of the lancet are larger
and more finely jointed than those in the west, and the
head is in one piece. East of this stretch is about 3½ ft.
of rough masonry, indicating the position of the original
east wall removed when the chancel was lengthened.
A moulded string-course to the added part stops at this
scar, and there is no attempt at coursing in the rubblework. At the angles are square buttresses, original but
partly restored, and the string-course is repeated in the
east and south walls. The roof, of hammer-beam type,
is entirely modern.

PARISH CHURCH of ST. MARGARET WEST HOATHLY
In the south wall are a piscina and sedilia of the 13th
century. The piscina has a fairly large recess with
moulded jambs, having moulded base-stops and a trefoiled pointed head; it has a plain half-round basin
and a stone credence-shelf. The sedilia have shafted
jambs like those of the windows, and intermediate partitions with attached shafts; the segmental-pointed heads
are trefoiled.
The south chapel (about 25 ft. by 15½ ft.) has an
east window like that of the chancel but mostly ancient,
obviously a copy of the original window of the chancel,
made 20 or 30 years later. In the south wall are two
windows also influenced by the side windows of the
chancel, but an advance in design. They are each of two
trefoiled lights under a two-centred head with a quatrefoil in the tympanum. The rest of the tracery is indicated externally by sinkings in the masonry: internally
it is merely a quatrefoil piercing or plate tracery as in
the chancel. West of them is a third window, a lancet
with rebated jambs and head, probably used as a lowside window in the chancel wall and moved to its present
position for the same purpose when the chapel was
built. The sill and the lower courses of the jambs are
of comparatively modern restoration. Between the
lancet and the next window is a re-set 12th-century
doorway with a round head of two stones, probably
also from the chancel. In it is an ancient plain battened
door repaired at the foot; it is hung with strap-hinges
with foiled ends.
In the south wall is a trefoiled pointed piscina: it had
a hood-mould, now cut away. The basin is circular and
has a fluted surface.
The masonry of the east and south walls is a very
irregular rubble with much ironstone and some cement
facing.
The west arch of the chapel is of two chamfered
orders dying on to the side walls. The roof is of trussed
type and has two moulded tie-beams of the 15th
century.
The nave (about 32½ ft. by 18½ ft.) has one north
window of the 15th century; it is of three cinquefoiled
lights under a segmental-pointed head with an external
hood-mould. Farther east is a tiny window of the late
11th century with a round head: it is now blocked and
recessed outside. Under the 15th-century window is a
blocked doorway of the 13th century: it is pointed and
has a head of two stones. The walling is of coursed
rubble with wide joints and much mortar. There are
dressings at the east and west angles also with wide
joints and tooled diagonally.
The south arcade, of c. 1175, is of two bays: it has a
massive round middle pillar with a plain capital and
chamfered abacus, and a plain round mould to the base,
which stands on a square sub-base. It is matched in the
west respond but the east respond is a later alteration
with a rather shallow semi-octagonal shaft in one stone
and a crudely moulded capital and chamfered abacus,
both extended to the outer order. The outer angles are
stop-chamfered.
The arches are two-centred and of two chamfered
orders, the inner order being small compared with the
thickness (4 ft.) of the wall. There is some irregularity
in the curve of the eastern arch, caused by the reconstruction of the east respond. The voussoirs are of
medium size. East of the arcade, high up, is a 15thcentury rood-loft doorway with a segmental-pointed
arch. The roof is of the usual 15th-century type: it is
of two bays with a middle truss consisting of a moulded
tie-beam and a tall octagonal king-post with a moulded
capital and base. The common rafters are trussed with
braces and collar-beams, the latter supported by a
central purlin having longitudinal braces below it from
the king-post and end walls.
The south aisle (c. 16 ft. wide) has two south windows: the eastern of two lights is a further advance in
design on those in the south chapel: the lights have trefoiled ogee-heads and a quatrefoil in a two-centred head
with a chamfered pointed rear-arch. The western is a
single light with a trefoiled ogee head: both are of c.
1330. The south doorway between the windows has
hollow-chamfered jambs and two-centred head. In it
is a battened oak door with sloping back-rails, hung
with a pair of strap-hinges with flowered ends: the door is
nail-studded, set at the top to show the date march 31
1626. Several holes in the face of the door are said to
be bullet-holes. East of the doorway inside are the
remains of a holy-water stoup in a pointed recess: half
the basin is cut away. In the west wall, above the vestry,
is a modern quatrefoil light. The walls of the chapel
and aisle are of rubble. Both east and west angles have
a pair of square buttresses and there is another at the
west end of the chapel. The roof of the aisle is similar
to that of the chapel but is modern.
The south porch is modern: it is of timber on dwarf
stone walls, and has six lights in each side: many of the
quarries in the glazing contain ancient pitted glass. The
weather-course on the aisle wall indicates that there was
a previous porch here.
The west tower (12 ft. square) is a heavy low one
built of rubble partly squared. Above the bell-chamber
is a plain weather-course or string-course above which
are three courses of squared rough ashlar to carry the
spire. At the west angles are diagonal buttresses of
four stages, the lowest and tallest having a weathercourse marking the first-floor level. The archway from
the nave is two-centred and of two chamfered orders to
the east and one to the west, the latter scored by bell
ropes. The jambs have moulded base-stops. The west
doorway has hollow-chamfered jambs and pointed head
with a hood-mould. The west window has two trefoiled pointed lights and uncusped tracery in a square
head, with a moulded label: the label and part of the
head are of modern repair. The second story has, in
the west wall, a trefoiled ogee-headed light, and the
bell-chamber a similar small window in each wall except
the eastern. East of each of the north and south windows an additional round-headed light has been inserted, probably in the 16th century, for the better
emission of sound. In the east wall is a modern opening,
a cross in a circle, with foiled quarters.
The octagonal spire is comparatively tall and is
splayed out to the square at the base. On it is a copper
ball and arrow vane.
The font is of the end of the 12th century and has a
repaired square bowl of Petworth marble, on a cylindrical stem which is surrounded by four modern shafts
of Purbeck marble.
There are two ancient chests. One in the south aisle
is an early 'dug-out' of unusual length—8 ft.; the
other in the vestry is a plain framed chest of hutch type
of the 16th or early 17th century: the lid is modern.
Also in the vestry is a scrap of oak tracery from a 15thcentury screen.
Three cast-iron grave-slabs are affixed to the wall
in the vestry: one to Richard Infeld, died 11 September
1619, aged 51; another to his son Richard Infeld, 11
March 1624, both of Gravetye; and the third containing a brass plate to Agnes daughter of the earlier
Richard and wife of Henry Faulconer, 22 September
1635.
The memorial for those who died in the War 1914–18 is a brass plate with enamelled shields of arms in
mimic heraldry.
The oak communion rails are of the 18th century.
In the splayed jambs of the 13th-century windows in
the north and south walls of the chancel are contemporary paintings of conventional scrolled foliage. On
the south window of the south aisle are cut two sundials: one on the west the ordinary 'mass-dial' with
radial lines, the other on the east a 4-in. ring of small
holes around a central hole.
There are five bells. The second, inscribed in blackletter 'Sancta Maria ora pro nobis', has the foundry
mark of Thomas Bullisdon, of London, early 16th
century; the fourth and fifth (tenor) are by Joseph
Carter, 1581, and the first (treble) and third by Richard
Phelps, 1712. (fn. 50)
The communion plate consists of a silver cup of 1716,
presented in 1728, a paten of 1860, and a flagon of
uncertain date. (fn. 51)
The registers date from 1645.
Advowson
The church of 'Hodlegh' was given
to the Priory of St. Pancras at Lewes
by Ralph de Cheyney, for the soul of
Ralph his father, and confirmed to them by William de
Warenne between 1091 and 1098. (fn. 52)
In 1346 licence was given for the Prior of Lewes to
assign the advowsons of West Hoathly, Ditchling, and
Clayton to the Bishop of Chichester, for the foundation
of a prebend. (fn. 53) This, however, was cancelled in 1353,
and the churches remained with the prior, the rectory
of West Hoathly being appropriated and a vicar instituted between 1362 and 1398. (fn. 54)
After the Dissolution the rectory and advowson were
granted in 1538 to Thomas Cromwell, (fn. 55) and after
his attainder to Anne of Cleves, for life, in 1541. (fn. 56)
After her death in 1557 the advowson of the vicarage reverted to the Crown and has so remained (fn. 57)
ever since, being now in the gift of the Lord Chancellor.
In 1550 yearly rents of 13s. 4d. payable by John
Bryan and Thomas Willyard for an obit for the soul
of William Bryan during the next three years (fn. 58) in the
church of West Hoathly were granted to William
Fountayne and Richard Mayne. (fn. 59)
In 1882 the ecclesiastical parish of Highbrook was
formed from West Hoathly. The church of All Saints
is a vicarage in the gift of the Bishop of Chichester.
Charities
Mrs. J. M. Cohen's Recreation
Ground: by a deed dated 2 May 1916,
land was conveyed to the parish council
upon trust to use as a recreation ground for the inhabitants, especially the children of the hamlet of
Sharpthorne, and the grantor by the same deed gave
£100 4½ War Stock to the council for the maintenance
of the Recreation Ground. The income amounts to
£4 10s. a year.
Subsequently, by indenture dated 25 Aug. 1921,
additional land was conveyed to the parish council
for a recreation ground or any other kindred purpose,
for the benefit of the inhabitants of West Hoathly.
John Smith's Charity. Under the terms of an
indenture dated 6 March 1871, this parish receives a
sum representing two twenty-second parts of the net
income of this charity, to be applied by the vicar and
churchwardens in coals to poor inhabitants. In 1934
£10 was so distributed.
The Clockfield Charity. By a deed of grant dated
28 Jan. 1627, land at Worth known as Stone Croft or
Hothly Field was conveyed to the churchwardens of
West Hoathly, the rents to be applied towards the
repair of the church of West Hoathly. The land was
sold in 1919 under the authority of an Order of the
Charity Commissioners and the proceeds invested,
producing an income of £16 15s. 6d. a year, which is
paid towards Church expenses.
Stephenson Clarke, by will proved 9 June 1891, bequeathed to trustees £500 for the erection and maintenance of two stained glass windows in West Hoathly
Church and directed that any balance should be
distributed to the poor. By a declaration of trust dated
2 July 1892 it is recited that after the erection of the
windows the trustees were possessed of a sum of
£349 11s. upon trust to apply the income as directed
in the will. This sum now produces £10 4s. 10d.
annually and is applied to the repair of the windows
and to poor widows.
Stephenson Clarke also bequeathed to the minister
and churchwardens of Highbrook, West Hoathly,
£2,000, the interest to be applied towards the repair
of the church clock and the peal of bells and the
maintenance of the churchyard. The endowment
produces £63 13s. 6d. annually.