TWINEHAM
Tuynhe, Twyne (xiii cent.); Twynym (xv cent.).
Twineham is a small parish of 1,937 acres, level and
low-lying in the valley of the Adur, south of Bolney.
The whole parish is below the 100-ft. level, except for
a small piece by Twineham Court on the western side,
and the soil is clay. The village and church are in the
centre of the parish, at an elevation of about 50 ft., on
the road running north from High Cross to Bolney.
Farther up this road is Twineham Green, and between
the two a road branches east leading to the hamlet of
Hickstead and the house of that name, where it is
crossed by the main road from Brighton to London,
which passes through the eastern side of the parish.
From the south end of the village of Twineham a lane
leads west to Twineham Place, and from Twineham
Green a road branches west, leading to Twineham
Grange and Twineham Court, and joins the road
going north to Warninglid, which forms the western
boundary of the rape.
Hickstead Place, connected with the Order of St.
John of Jerusalem as part of their manor of Saddlescombe, dates from the end of the 15th century and
was originally of L-shaped plan. The main range had
an upper hall approached by a small projecting staircase on its north side. Early in the 17th century an
east range was added, parallel with the west wing,
making the plan of half-H shape, and the filling-in
between the two south wings late in the 17th century
brought the plan to its present rectangular form. The
insertion of the second floor in the hall may have been
done in the 17th or 18th century. Most of the windows
are modern.
The external elevations are generally of brick and
tile-hanging. The west side has its upper story jettied
about 2 ft. beyond the lower wall and retains four
moulded and curved brackets, two marking the width
of the original north range, which has a gabled end,
and two are in the side of the south wing. The great
chimney-stack at the south end of the west wing seems
to have work of two periods. The lower part, of brick
with stone angle-dressings and plinth, is of the early
16th century. The upper part is of more even brickwork with a regular diaper of blue headers: the sides
are crow-stepped and the two square brick shafts set
diagonally: this part is about mid-16th-century date
and has a stone fire-place inside. The actual end of the
wing behind the stack also has a crow-stepped gable.
The remainder of the south elevation is of the 17th
century. The entrance has a moulded oak frame and
square head: the posts are carved at the bases with a
shallow marigold flower above a fluted stop. In it is
an ancient door of twenty panels with moulded and
nail-studded rails and muntins, formerly in the south
wall of the old north range. The north side has several
later outbuildings against it but retains the small
staircase projection already mentioned: it has a gabled
head with a late-15th-century moulded barge-board.
The main wall west of the projection has a 17th-century projecting chimney-stack of brick with a crossshaped shaft. The ground-floor wall farther east is of
brick, but contains a 16th-century narrow window of
three lights with moulded oak mullions, below which
a deeper window was inserted in the 17th century.
The chief interest of the interior lies in the construction of the original north and west ranges. The north
range had an upper hall of about 26 ft., open to the
roof, and retains the original roof-trusses in the attic,
their positions being defined by the story-posts in the
ground and first floors. They are spaced apart 7 ft.,
9 ft., and 9 ft. from west to east, then there is a
narrow 4-ft. bay, evidently a screens passage, and east
of this a further 7-ft. bay, for a buttery or pantry. The
trusses are unusual in construction: they have tie-beams
on each of which are four posts carrying a pair of highly
cambered lintels below the normal cambered collarbeam. The lintels meet in the middle, and between
the middle posts their soffits are cut to form a fourcentred arch like a wide doorway; they are tenoned
into the collar-beams. The tie-beams are concealed
in the later second floor, but under their ends against
the story-posts are moulded curved brackets: the mouldings probably ran along the whole soffit originally
between the brackets. The bays have side-purlins,
supported, except in the narrow bay, by curved windbraces. The trusses above both sides of the narrow bay
were closed partitions of closely set studs, but when the
attic chamber was created their collar-beams were cut
through and fitted with door-posts for access to the
chamber. On the ground floor the bay retains its west
partition (the east wall of the dining-room) and has in
its south end an original moulded doorway: there is
also a three-light window in its south wall, now looking
into the late-17th-century entrance hall. On the first
floor most of the west partition has been removed for
a bath-room, but in its east partition there is a similar
doorway at the north end, and at the south end, now
blocked and concealed in a cupboard, was another
moulded doorway. In the north wall of the 9-ft. bay
of the hall next west, now in the bath-room, is the
doorway from the former stair; this has moulded posts
and four-centred arch with foliage spandrels in a square
head. The dining-room, below the hall, has an opentimbered ceiling with stop-chamfered main beams
running both ways.
In the south wing the ground-floor room reveals no
ancient features. The upper room of the wing has a
coved ceiling of plaster springing from the east and
west walls. The ceiling is divided into two bays (of
11 ft. south and 8 ft. north, corresponding with the
positions of the moulded brackets under the overhang
outside) by a moulded wood rib which started from the
floor and formed an arch; but only the curves at the
springing remain. The roof above has wind-braced
purlins, as in the other range, but the two bays are
divided by a 'scissors' truss above the vault. The truss
has a piece packed in below it, tenoned and dovetailed
into it, to carry the longitudinal beam which takes the
backing-joists of the vault. The south fire-place in this
chamber is of the 16th century and has moulded stone
jambs and a four-centred arch in a square head with
foiled spandrels. The roof above the 17th-century
east range has been reconstructed but includes a re-used
beam which was the head of a very long early window
with diamond-shaped sockets for the mullions. A
similar beam is also re-used above the attic stair. There
is a great deal of modern wood-carving in the house.
Some of the fittings include woodwork of the 16th and
17th centuries to the fire-places, &c., and, in the southeast room, linen-fold panelling. The middle entrance
hall has wall panelling of bolection-moulded type,
c. 1700. The main staircase on its south side is still later
and on its north side a partition to a former passage has
been replaced by an open-arched screen of three bays:
in the head of this are set five early-16th-century carved
frieze panels, of Tudor and De La Warr badges. The
panels are said to be indigenous, and two others, one
with the De La Warr crampet badge, are worked into
a bedstead upstairs. Among the articles of furniture
may be mentioned an Elizabethan hall table with
carved bulbous legs, and a cradle of Henry VIII's
time; also a mid-17th-century hall- or kitchen-table now
in the 'Castle', with other pieces of ancient woodwork.
The walls of the staircase, now open, in the lower part,
to the entrance hall, are covered with monochromes on
canvas of hunting scenes, done about 1800: the decorated plastered ceiling is of the same date.
The 'Castle' is a detached building standing to the
south of the west side of the house. Its purpose is not
apparent. Its plan is square and it has a porch-wing on
the east side containing a staircase of solid oak balks
rising straight through it to the upper floor. It is now
of two stories, the ground floor having been lowered in
modern times, but two arches in the west wall just
above the plinth may have been windows to a basement. The walls are of brick with crow-stepped gables
to the north and south sides. The north doorway is
modern, but traces of its former higher position remain,
and above this is a segmental-pointed arch in the brickwork, indicating perhaps a former small window. A
similar arch exists in the front of the porch-wing. The
present windows are all modern, but there are tiny
ancient loops in the side of the porch-wing. The most
curious feature is the large number of huge bricks
which are incorporated with the normal brick-work of
the walls. They are arranged in various patterns, mostly
as double crosses, but also as single crosses, stepped
crosses, lozenge-shaped rings, straight courses, or as
checkers with the ordinary bricks. Most of them are
glazed; some appear to be 20 in. by 9 in. by 7in.
bricks, set facewise or endwise according to the requirements of the pattern, others are 14 in. by 7 in. by 5 in.,
and others about 12 in. square on the exposed faces. (fn. 1)
The main roof is of two bays and has three trusses with
chamfered tie-beams, sloping struts or queen-posts and
collar-beams, and side-purlins with wind-braces, as in
the house. There are similar wind-braced purlins above
the staircase. The roofs are covered with Horsham
slabs.
The ground between the house and 'castle' had a
boundary wall, at least on the west side, some fragments
of which still exist, and on the same side is a tall yew
hedge with openings cut through it. East of this space
there was formerly a bowling-green.
Westovers, close to Hickstead Place, was also a part
of the Hospitallers' estate. The house dates from about
1460 and had a great hall of two 10-ft. bays and solar
and buttery wings of about 12 ft., all facing approximately east and west. Late in the 16th century the
central chimney-stack was built in, filling the whole of
the northern bay of the hall, with a lobby to the east
of it, and the upper floor was inserted in the hall; the
house was also lengthened to the north by two further
bays. In the 19th century a wing was added at the
south end, with a porch in the angle. Built in the front
of the porch is a 15th-century moulded beam, said to
have come from Bolney Church. The old walls are
of timber-framing, with story-posts dividing the length
into six bays. Three of them in the east front retain
the upper curved braces. The two later northernmost
bays are of plain rectangular framing. In the back wall
of the north (buttery) wing is an upper window of three
lights with moulded mullions of the 16th century, now
blocked, and in the same wall of the northernmost bay
is a former four-light window with diamond-shaped
mullions: another, similar, of six lights, all blocked but
one, exists in the half-gable head of the north wall.
The roof is covered with Horsham slabs and the central chimney-stack is long and narrow, extending along
the ridge; its southern fire-place is 9 ft. 9 in. wide, with
stone jambs and oak bressummer. The roof of the
original part extends over hall and wings in four bays
with five strutted king-posts carrying a central purlin
below the collar-beams; the mortices for longitudinal
braces from king-posts to purlin remain. An interesting
relic is a fine moulded beam of early-14th-century
section which has been re-used upside-down as a sillpiece for the northern wall of the 15th-century part of
the building.
Twineham Place is a fairly large house of c. 1620.
The plan is rectangular, with a lean-to addition along
the back: both are of timber-framing, but the main
block has mostly brick and tile-hung walls. The middle
room on the ground floor has a very heavy middle
ceiling-beam, 17 in. by 12 in., stop-chamfered, and
exposed joists.
Park Farm, 3/8 mile south-east of the church, is a
house of c. 1600 of L-shaped plan, the lower walls of
18th-century brick, the upper tile-hung on framing.
The north half of the main block is narrower, and lower
than the south half, and where they meet is a great
chimney-stack 10 ft. thick, with a wide fire-place. An
unusual feature is a door at the foot of the attic stair
with a shuttered peep-hole.
Slipe, ¼ mile east of the church, is a timber-framed
building of about mid-15th-century date, facing north
and south. (fn. 2) It had a great hall of two bays, and west
solar and east buttery wings, of two stories, under one
continuous roof. Later in the 15th century a wing, of
two bays (half since removed) extending northwards
from the solar wing, made the plan L-shaped; and the
buttery wing was extended by one short bay and by
the addition of a lean-to against the eastern half of
the south side. In the late 16th century the central
chimney-stack was inserted and the upper floor in the
hall was added. The external timber-framing shows
the curved braces of the period in the upper story;
parts of the walls of the lower story have been replaced
with brick. The north-west wing shows on the west
face a story-post built close against the earlier anglepost of the solar, and this wing, as well as the eastern
extension and the lean-to addition, retains some closeset studding that is not found in the original walls of
the hall and its wings. The roofs are covered with
Horsham slabs. The chimney-stack fills the width of
the eastern bay of the former hall and has an east fireplace 10 ft. wide with a 15-in. bressummer, and a west
fire-place 8 ft. wide. Behind the eastern is a small
round oven. The lobby north of the chimney is entered
by an original pointed doorway. The original middle
truss of the hall crosses the east front of the chimneystack and has a cambered tie-beam supported by two
heavy braces forming a pointed arch. Above the
ceiling is a strutted king-post with the usual braces
below a central purlin. The hall-truss has never been
pierced for a doorway, so that in the upper story there
is no direct communication between the east and west
halves of the house. The closed ends of the hall also
show the 15th-century framing. The lower part of the
west wall has a lining of moulded posts and boards
which may be a part of the later fitting. The roof is
continued over the solar and buttery wings. The
ceiling of the lower story of the west solar wing shows
the original heavy wide flat rafters, but that over the
buttery wing, as well as that of the room west of the
chimney-stack, has late-16th-century stop-chamfered
main beams and joists. In the solar wing and in the
east extension are ancient winding staircases with
central newels. The north extension was always of two
stories: the lower story has huge ceiling-joists. The
upper storey shows the original strutted king-posts and
central purlins with longitudinal braces: they are carried on framing at the south end close to, but separate
from, that of the earlier solar wing, and at the north
end on a cambered tie-beam of which the braces form
a four-centred arch. This was originally the middle
truss of the wing: the outside wall to the upper story
is now of square timber-framing against the truss and
has a tile-hung gable. Against the west side of the wing
is a modern projecting chimney-stack.
Hookers Farm is mainly of modern brick, but the
west end of the building shows original early-17thcentury framing in the upper story and in the north
gable-head, which projects on a chamfered bressummer, supported by moulded brackets; the barge-board
is moulded and has a pendant at the apex. A cottage
½ mile farther north also shows 17th-century timberframing in its east front and has a rebated chimneystack near the south end. The roof is tiled.
Great Wapses Farm, about ¾ mile south-west of the
church, is an early-17th-century building to which a
parallel addition was built c. 1720. The older part,
facing south, has some of the timber-framing exposed,
and the eastern half-gable head has herring-bone brick
nogging. There is also a 16th-century timber-framed
barn of three bays, with a south aisle open to it by
arched bays.
Mercers, farther west, is probably of 15th-century
origin. The oldest part was of rectangular plan, facing
east and west. It has a central chimney-stack built in in
the 16th century with a cross-shaped shaft of thin
bricks and a wide fire-place with stone jambs and oak
lintel. The framing of the walls and ceilings is exposed,
but the roof-construction is more or less concealed. To
this building was added late in the 16th century a
taller wing projecting west, making the plan L-shaped:
it has on its south side a projecting chimney-stack with
a tall shaft of thin bricks with a moulded base. In the
west wall of the earlier part are Elizabethan windows
with moulded mullions, but a more interesting feature
is a large dormer window inserted at the same period
in the east front, flush with the wall below, of timberframing and having a gable with a moulded bargeboard and a pendant at the apex. A farmhouse, next
north, now several tenements, has some 17th-century
timber-framing exposed in the middle part of the south
front. The roof is tiled and above it is a plain square
chimney-shaft. Inside is a wide fire-place and opentimbered ceilings. Farther north, on the east side of the
road, are two cottages with mid- to late-17th-century
chimney-stacks.
Manors
The manor of TWINEHAM was held
in the 14th century of the barony of Lewes
in free socage, by the service of a pair of
gilt spurs at Christmas, or 6d. (fn. 3) In 1260 Earl John
de Warenne gave the manor to John de Ferles and
Maud his wife. (fn. 4) Luke de Poynings was holding
land in Twineham, and probably the manor, in
1280. (fn. 5) He died in 1294 and was succeeded by his son
Michael. (fn. 6) Thomas son of Michael, created Lord
Poynings in 1337, was slain in the battle of Sluys in
1339, leaving a son Michael. (fn. 7) There was then a park
worth 3s. 9d. attached to the manor. Twineham
then descended with the manor of Poynings (q.v.), until
the death of Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland,
at Towton in 1461. His son Henry was restored to his
father's honours about 1470 and inherited Twineham at his mother Eleanor's death in 1484. (fn. 8) His son
Henry Algernon held it from 1489 to 1527, but Henry,
the next Earl of Northumberland, (fn. 9) sold the manor in
1531 to Sir Thomas Nevill. (fn. 10) The latter settled it in
1536 on his daughter Margaret and her husband
Sir Robert Southwell, (fn. 11) who in 1542 sold it to Richard
Stapley. (fn. 12) In the Stapley family
Twineham Manor descended
from father to son for more than
two hundred years. Richard's son
John succeeded in 1546, (fn. 13) and
Williamson of the latter in 1568. (fn. 14)
Two Johns followed, in 1602 and
1606 respectively, (fn. 15) and Anthony
son of the second John in 1639. (fn. 16)
He died in 1667 (fn. 17) and his son
Anthony in 1733, from whom the
manor passed to his son John, and
in 1737 to his grandson Richard,
the last of the Stapleys, (fn. 18) who died
in 1762, leaving the manor to his elder daughter
Martha, who four years later married James Wood. (fn. 19)
The latter died in 1806, and the property passed to
their son James, at whose death without issue in 1831
Twineham passed to his nephew John son of John
Wood, of Ockley in Keymer. His daughter Charlotte,
who died before her father, married William Davidson
of Muir House, Midlothian, and to him the manor
came in 1877. At his death in 1916 Twineham passed
to his daughter Miss Blanche Davidson, the present
owner. (fn. 20)

Stapley. Argent a fesse engrailed erminees between three roundels sable with two dragons' head razed or on the fesse.
The manor of TWINEHAM BENFIELD [Benefelle (xi cent.); Benetfeld (xiii cent.)] was held before
the Conquest by Cola, of King Edward the Confessor,
and Turgod held it of him, for two hides. In 1086
Scolland held it of William de Warenne, and it
apparently did not pay geld, but its value had doubled.
Another hide in Benfield, which had been held by
Lewin before the Conquest, was held in 1086 by
Alfred foster-father of Earl Warenne. (fn. 21)
Benfield formed two of the 7½ knight's fees attached
to the manor of Shere in Surrey, held of de Warenne as
of Reigate Castle. This manor was held in 1242 by
Roger de Clere, who next year conveyed it to John
fitz Geoffrey, (fn. 22) including the service of Walter Weps
for his tenement in Benfield, and that of William son
of William de Benefeld, for his tenement in the same
place. (fn. 23) When John's son John died in 1274 one
knight's fee was held by Walter le Weps, and another
by Richard de Benetfeld; (fn. 24) and on the death of this
John's brother and heir Richard fitz John in 1296
Roger le Weps and John de Benefeld each held a carucate in Benfield as one fee. (fn. 25) Shere was then divided
between the sisters of Richard fitz John, and the
Benfield fees (held by 'Henry' de Benefeld and 'John'
Weps) fell to Joan Butler, (fn. 26) and John Benfield died
in 1325, holding a capital messuage, about 150 acres of
land, and rents in Benfield as one fee of Edmund le
Botiller's manor of Shere Vachery. (fn. 27) There is, however, no later reference to this mesne lordship.
Nothing is known of the Weps fee before 1242 or
after 1296. A John de Beningefeld or Benetfeld occurs
in 1187, (fn. 28) and about the same time is called a knight of
Hawise wife of Roger de Clere. (fn. 29) William de Benefeld,
who held land in Twineham of the Prior of Lewes in
1226, (fn. 30) may be the father of the William mentioned
in 1242. The latter's widow Agnes is mentioned in
1247 (fn. 31) and their son Richard in 1275. (fn. 32) He was probably the father of the John who died in 1325, when
his heir was his grandson James son of Walter. Besides
the knight's fee already mentioned, his possessions in
Benfield included 20 acres of land and a windmill
held of the Prior of Lewes by service of 10s. yearly at
the feast of St. Pancras, 'on which day he ought to
come to Lewes with twelve others on horseback and
spend the day at the cost of the prior, who shall give
him on leaving a cheese price 15d.; which land and
mill are not sufficient to pay that rent.' (fn. 33) A John Benfeld is mentioned in 1378, (fn. 34) and (probably another)
John in 1412 (fn. 35) and 1434–5. (fn. 36) He was the last of the
male line and the manor passed to his daughter Joan
the wife of John Chauncy, and subsequently to their
daughter Margaret, who married Thomas Austyn and
in 1471 released her estates in Twineham to Sir Walter
Pawnefold. (fn. 37) Sir Walter must have immediately transferred the manor to William Covert, as the latter held
his first court there in the same year. (fn. 38) Twineham
Benfield then remained in the Covert family for more
than two hundred years. John Covert son of William
succeeded his father in 1494 but died without male
issue in 1503, when the manor was placed in the hands
of feoffees to the use of his first cousin and heir
Richard Covert. (fn. 39) From Richard the manor passed in
1547 to his son John, who died in 1558 or 1559 and
was succeeded by his son Richard. (fn. 40) Richard's son Sir
Walter Covert, who held the manor from 1579 to
Jan. 1632, died childless, and after the death of his
widow Jane in 1666 (fn. 41) Benfield passed to the sons of
their niece Anne (fn. 42) and her husband Sir Walter Covert
of Maidstone. (fn. 43) Anne's son Thomas died in 1643,
leaving an only daughter, and Benfield passed to his
brother Sir John Covert, who lived until 1679. (fn. 44) Sir
John's son Walter died seven years before his father, so
that the property devolved upon his three surviving
daughters, Walter's sisters, of whom the second, Mary,
received Twineham Benfield as a marriage portion in
1676, in which year she and her husband Henry
Goring held their first court there. (fn. 45) In 1689 Mary
Goring, then a widow, was presented at her own court
for not keeping up the pound or providing a dinner for
her tenants. (fn. 46) She subsequently married Nicholas
Best, and survived him, living until 1729. (fn. 47) Her son
Sir Harry Goring only survived her for two years,
when the manor passed to his son Sir Charles Matthew
Goring. (fn. 48) Twineham Benfield remained in the Goring
family until after 1870, (fn. 49) after which it was acquired
by Mr. Huth. Colonel Stephenson R. Clarke, C.B.,
J.P., subsequently acquired Twineham Place, which
he gave to his son Mr. Edmund S. Clarke, who still
holds it. All manorial rights have lapsed.
The reputed manor of GROVELAND appears in the
latter half of the 16th century, (fn. 50) in the possession of
John Brodbridge, who held it of the manor of Camoys
Court in Barcombe (q.v.) by rent of 1lb. of pepper. (fn. 51)
John Brodbridge died in 1574 and the estate passed to
his brother Henry. (fn. 52) Groveland appears in the following century in the hands of George Luxford, of Ockley
in Keymer (q.v.), (fn. 53) who died seised of it in 1631,
leaving it to his younger son Richard. (fn. 54) It passed to
Richard's son George, who was holding it in 1671 (fn. 55)
and died in 1679 or 1680, leaving a son William, aged
12; (fn. 56) but in 1700 the estate was conveyed by Richard
Knowles and Frances, and Edward Benson and Mary,
to Henry Lintott. (fn. 57) Subsequently it was divided up,
for in 1759 a quarter of the manor was held by John
Smith and Frances, James West and Anne, and Richard
Turner and Mary; (fn. 58) in 1762 the whole property was
in the possession of Richard Turner and Mary, Jane
Steele, widow, Mary Ewitt, widow, Thomas Ewitt
and Sarah, and Richard Dungate and Mary. (fn. 59) Ten
years later it had evidently devolved upon the Dungates, for it was then conveyed by Richard Dungate
and Thomas Huett Dungate to John Ellis, (fn. 60) after
which it is lost sight of.
HICKSTEAD [Hecstede, Hecgstede (xiv cent.);
Hokstede (xvi cent.)] was a freehold of the manor of
Saddlescombe (q.v.). (fn. 61) Matthew de la Cumbe, who
held Hickstead in the 13th century, gave it to his
brother Richard. (fn. 62) Richard was succeeded by his son
Matthew de la Cumbe, (fn. 63) who was living about 1260
and had a son Richard. (fn. 64) The family was still holding
land in the district in 1327 and 1332. (fn. 65) Eventually,
probably towards the end of the 16th century, Hickstead was acquired by the Stapleys of Twineham
Manor, for William Stapley died seised of it in 1602, (fn. 66)
and his son John in 1608, when it is described as a
capital messuage with 93 acres of land. (fn. 67) Thereafter
it descended with Twineham Manor (q.v.), to which
it became the mansion house.
Church
The church of ST. PETER is a small
structure consisting of a chancel with a
modern north organ-chamber, nave, south
porch, and west tower, with a shingled oak spire. The
walls are of brick, with remains of original plastering
outside; the roofs are covered with Horsham stone slabs.
The church was built in the first or second decade
of the 16th century, probably on the site of an earlier
building. (fn. 68)
The chancel (c. 17½ ft. by 13 ft. inside) has an east
window of two elliptical-headed lights; the jambs, heads,
and mullion are of stone; it has wide splays inside and
a segmental-pointed rear-arch. In the north wall is a
modern archway to the organ-chamber. In the south
wall are two single-light windows with brick jambs
and four-centred heads, the western set lower than the
eastern.
The roof, of trussed rafter and collar-beam type,
has a cambered tie-beam that originally had arched
braces below it. Another against the west wall also
has mortices for former brackets. The chancel-arch has
plain plastered chamfered jambs and head. In the
south wall below the eastern window is a recess for a
piscina: it has a triangular head: there is no basin. By it
is a small framed oak chest of the early 17th century,
with three locks. The Communion-rails are of mid17th-century date and have a moulded rail and 2-in.
turned balusters.
The nave (35 ft. by 18 ft.) has a north window of
two four-centred lights in brick: it is set low in the wall.
East of it is a modern 'pulpit-window' at a higher level.
There appears to have been a gallery-window close
under the eaves in the western half, now walled up with
modern brick. In the south wall is a similar original
two-light window placed rather higher in the wall than
the north window. Both have wide splays inside and
four-centred chamfered rear-arches. Near the west end
is an old single light. The south doorway has
original brick jambs and four-centred arch of
two chamfered orders. The walls of the nave
differ from those of the chancel in having
chamfered plinths. The gabled roof, of original trussed-rafter and collar-beam type, has
two plain chamfered tie-beams which may
be later additions. Another tie-beam is buried
in the east wall inside, and the framing of
the other timbers is seen on the outer face
above the chancel.
The west tower is low, with diagonal buttresses of two stages to the west angles. The
walls have chamfered plinths like those of the
nave. A plain four-centred archway of the
full width of the tower opens from the nave.
The west doorway has chamfered jambs and
a depressed three-centred arch in a square
head. The reveals have sockets for a drawbar. The window above is of two four-centred
lights, restored, excepting the north jambs, with new
bricks. The bell-chamber has north, south, and west
windows of one four-centred light. The east face has
stepped drop-courses above the nave-roof. The short
spire is octagonal with splayed base-stops. Above it is
a vane and weather-cock.
The south porch is of 16th-century timber-framing
with brick infilling: the front gable has a moulded
barge-board. The posts to the entrance are modern, but
the door is of ancient oak battens. The roof, of two
bays, has two trusses with collar-beams, and the northern
with a tie-beam. The side-purlins are strengthened by
straight wind-braces: the rafters are laid flatwise
The font is octagonal with hollow chamfers to the
underside of the bowl and to the base: it is probably of
the 14th century. The pulpit, of hexagonal plan, has
four sides of early-17th-century panels: each side has a
round-arched bay with jewelled imposts between
fluted angle-posts, and, above them, frieze-panels
carved with foliage-scroll work; the cornice, to the
book-rest, is enriched with foliage and gadroon ornament. A square pew in the south-east corner is made up
of panelling of c. 1600 with carved ornament on two
sides. The other pews are modern, except the 18thcentury front to the north block, which is painted with
the lettering: east hookers iohn spence west hookers
painsland: above John Spence is added the word park.
The glazing is modern except one quarry in the
south-east window of the nave: this incorporates a
rectangular piece 3 in. by 2½ in. painted with the arms
of De La Warr, gules crusily fitchy a lion argent, about
which are scraps of black-letter: late-15th-century.
The modern reredos incorporates four carved panels,
perhaps from a 14th-century chest of foreign workmanship. They are of window-tracery designs, three
with crocketed arches; the middle panel is carved with
a Paschal Lamb, two others have crowned shields with
the sacred monograms [IHS] and [the Chi Rho symbol]. Above the chancel
arch is an oil painting of the Holy Family which is
thought to be the original of an engraving (also hanging
in the church) of 1797 made from a painting by
Camillo Procaccini, then in the Imperial Gallery,
Dusseldorf.

PARISH CHURCH of ST PETER TWINEHAM
There are five bells: the treble, second, and tenor
(re-cast) date from 1912: the third and fourth are preReformation by John Tonne; the third is inscribed
+ In + multis + Annis + nomen + baptiste + Iohannis;
the fourth, + hoc + michi + iam + retro + nomen + de
+ Simone + Petro.
The communion plate comprises a cup of 1667,
of which the stem and foot are possibly Elizabethan;
a paten-cover, probably of 1667; a silver-gilt paten;
a flagon and two alms-plates, silver, of 1722. There
is also a gilt copper chalice, with modern bowl but
early stem, presented in 1894. (fn. 69)
Advowson
The advowson of the church and
rectory of Twineham has always belonged to the lords of the manor of
Twineham Benfield. In 1336 and 1339, when it is
referred to as the chapel of Twineham, presentation
was made by the Crown, owing to the minority of the
heir of John de Benfeld. (fn. 70) The advowson descended
with the manor in the Covert family (fn. 71) and passed with
it to the Gorings. (fn. 72) Sir Charles Goring presented
until 1887, (fn. 73) when it was acquired by Mr. Edward
Huth from the four daughters of Sir H. D. Goring, (fn. 74)
and it was subsequently given by him to Exeter College,
Oxford, who are the present holders.