HARRIETSHAM.
LIES the next parish south-westward from Lenham. The manor of Hollingborne claims over a part
of this parish.
IT lies mostly at the foot of the great ridge of
chalk hills, being near three miles across each way.
It is, though healthy, rather unpleasantly situated,
from the nature of its soil, for above the hill, where
it extends but a small way till it joins Frinsted, it becomes where the chalk leaves it, a red earth, covered
with flints, a heavy tillage and unfertile land. On the
summit of the hill here called Stede hill, is Harrietsham-place, having a beautiful and extensive prospect over the country southward. At a small distance
below the foot of the hill stands the church, with the
parsonage close to it, and about a quarter of a mile
farther, where the chalky soil continues over an open
unshaded country, is Harrietsham-street, near which
there is a pleasure ground, belonging to Harrietshamplace, in which there is a summer-house, shrubbery,
and plantation, with a large sheet of water, and several
cascades, containing in the whole six acres. Through
the above street the high road leads from Lenham,
through the hamlet of Holmemill-green, and thence
by Leeds park towards Maidstone, and here the soil
becomes a sand, and as it extends southward, mixes
with the quarry or rock stone; through this part of
the parish the Lenham rivulet flows on westward towards the Medway at Maidstone, receiving here into
it several smaller streams, which rise at the bottom of
the chalk hills, though at some distance from each
other, the rivulet turning in its way Holmemill;
about half a mile southward from which is Farborne
and the heath of that name, beyond which it extends into the eastern part of Kingswood, where it
joins to Ulcomb. There is a fair here, held yearly
on the 5th of July, in the old-accustomed fair field,
at the court lodge, for horses, cattle, and pedlary.
THIS PLACE was given immediately after the fatal
battle of Hastings, among other great possessions, by
William the Conqueror, to his half brother Odo, bishop of Baieux and earl of Kent, under the general
title of whose lands it is thus entered in the general
survey of Domesday:
In Aihorde hundred, Hugh, the grandson of Herbert.
holds of the bishop (of Baieux) Hariardesham. It was
taxed at two sulings. The arable land is six carucates,
In demesne . . . . eighteen villeins, with ten borderers
having four carucates. There is a church, and eleven
servants, and two mills of eleven shillings and six-pence,
and seven acres of meadow. Wood for the pannage of
fifteen hogs. In the time of king Edward the Confessor,
it was worth ten pounds, when he received it eight pounds,
now ten pounds. Osuuard held it of king Edward.
The same Hugh holds of the bishop, Fereburne. It
was taxed at one suling. The arable land is two carucates. In demesne . . . . four villeins, with one carucate
and an half, and two mills of forty pence. In the time
of king Edward the Confessor, it was worth four pounds,
afterwards, and now, three pounds. Aluuin held it of
earl Godwin.
The same Hugh holds of the bishop one yoke of free
land in Selesburne, and there he has half a carucate, with
one borderer, and five servants, and one acre of meadow
and an half. It is and was worth, separately, twenty
shillings. Aluuin held it of earl Godwin.
The above-described estates, comprehended the
manor of Harrietsham, and were, about four years after
taking the above survey, on the disgrace of the bishop
of Baieux, confiscated to the crown.
After which this manor became part of the possessions of the family of Crescie, or Cressi; one of whom,
Roger de Cressi, appears to have held it in the beginning of king Henry III's reign, of the honor of
Peverell, as one knight's fee, it being then valued at
twenty pounds.
He was succeeded in it by his son, Hugh de Cressi,
who died in the 47th year of that reign, leaving Stephen de Cressi his next heir. After which it seems
to have been in the hands of the crown; for king
Henry III. in his 48th year, directed his writ to the
sheriff of Kent, to deliver this manor to his niece Isabel, the illegitimate daughter of Richard, earl of
Cornwall, a younger son of king John, and then the
wife of Maurice, lord Berkeley, for her support, her
husband at that time having forfeited his estates, by
associating with the rebellious barons, and she being
at that time in great distress and poverty. This appears to have happened during the minority of Stephen de Cressi, above-mentioned, who died possessed
of it in the 52d year of that reign, holding it in capite
by knight's service.
Soon after which, this manor seems to have been
divided; that part of it which still retained the name
of the manor of Harrietsham, came into the possession
of the family of Northwood, of Northwood, in
Milton.
Roger de Northwood died anno 14 Edward I. possessed of this manor, held of the king in capite, by the
service of half a knight's fee, and the yearly rent of
nineteen shillings, from thence to the prior and convent of Christ-church, Canterbury. His son, Sir John
de Northwood, changed the tenure of his lands from
gavelkind to knight's service, and in the 21st year of
that reign claimed free-warren and other privileges
of a manor here, before the justices itinerant, and afterwards, together with his grandson, accompanied
king Edward in his victorious expedition into Scotland, and was sheriff of this county several times.
Having been summoned to parliament among the
barons of this realm, he died in the 13th year of king
Edward II.
By the inquisition then taken, he was found to hold
two parts of this manor in capite, by the service of two
parts of one knight's fee, and suit to the court of the
manor of Ospringe, as of the honor of Peverel. He
was succeeded by his grandson Roger de Northwood,
who in the 20th year of king Edward III. jointly with
William de Clynton, earl of Huntingdon, who possessed the other part of this manor in right of Juliana
de Leyborne, his wife, then paid aid for it, as one
knight's fee, in Harrietsham and Est Ferbourne; at
length his descendant, John Northwood, esq. dying
anno 4 Henry V. and leaving no issue male, his two
sisters became his coheirs, who afterwards carried their
respective shares of his part of this manor in marriage,
the former to John Barley, of Hertfordshire, and the
other to Sir John Norton, of this county. John
Barley soon afterwards conveyed his moiety of it to
John Adam, who was possessed of considerable estates
in Essex, and bore for his arms, Vert, a plain cross, or.
His descendant, Stephen Adam, was of Harrietiham,
and died s. p. leaving his sister Eve his heir, then the
widow of John Levet, esq. who carried this moiety of
the manor in marriage, at the latter end of the reign
of Philip and Mary, to Laurence Ashburnham, gent.
of Sussex, (fn. 1) who, before the 17th of the next reign of
queen Elizabeth, alienated it to William Stede, esq.
who that year levied a fine of this moiety of the manor of Harrietsham.
THE OTHER MOIETY of this manor, which came
into the possession of Sir John Norton, in right of his
wife as before-mentioned, passed from his name into
that of Peckham, in which it remained till Reginald
Peckham, esq. of Yaldham, in the 15th year of king
Henry VIII.'s reign, conveyed it to Edward Scott,
esq. and he not long afterwards transmitted it in like
manner, to John Hales, esq. of the Dungeon, in
Canterbury, one of the barons of the exchequer, whose
descendant, William Hales, anno 4 Elizabeth, by a
fine then levied, passed this moiety away by sale to Sir
Warham St. Leger, of Ulcombe, sheriff in the 2d
year of that reign, and chief governor of the province
of Munster, in Ireland, and he, in the 21st year of it,
alienated this moiety of the manor of Harrietsham to
William Stede, esq. who having before purchased the
other moiety of it, of Laurence Ashburnham, esq.
became now possessed of the entire fee of them both.
The Stedes were of some note in this parish for more
than a century before this; for John Stede, senior,
was resident here in 1460, when by his will he devised
his principal mansion at Stede-street, in this parish to
William his son. They bore for their arms, Argent,
a chevron between three bears heads couped sable, muzzled, or. William Stede, esq. the possessor of this
manor as above-mentioned, resided at Harrietsham,
and dying in 1574, lies buried in this church, under
an altar tomb. His son, Sir William Stede, resided
likewise at Harrietsham, and was sheriff anno 11
James I. (fn. 2) whose eldest son, Sir John Stede, becoming
possessed of this manor, built a handsome seat on it,
naming it from himself and the situation of it, Stedehill, in which he afterwards resided, and in his descendants, who most of them lie buried in this church,
this estate continued down to Edwyn Stede, esq. who
succeeded to it on his father's death in 1735, and resided here. He married Elizabeth, daughter of William Hamilton, esq. of Chilston, who survived him,
and died s. p. Soon after he became possessed of this
estate, he sold it to William Horsemonden Turner,
esq. of Maidstone, of which town he was recorder,
and twice represented it in parliament. He was the
son of Anthony Horsmonden, of Maidstone, by his
second wife Jane, daughter of Sir William Turner,
of Richmond, and grandson of Daniel Horsmonden,
D. D. rector of Ulcomb, by Ursula, daughter of Sir
Warham St. Leger.
He changed the name of this seat to Harrietshamplace, by which it has ever since been called, and dying s. p. in 1753, was buried at Maidstone, bearing
for his arms, first those of Turner, which he assumed
on his uncle John Turner's death, being, On a bend,
three fer de molins, quartered with those of Horsmonden, Gules, a saltier argent, surmounted by a fess, azure,
charged with leopards heads of the first. He married
Elizabeth Read, of Gravesend, who survived him,
and by his will possessed this manor and seat among
his other estates, she resided here, and dying in 1782,
was buried beside her husband, upon which it came by
the limitation of her husband's will, to Charles Booth,
esq. of the Temple, London, who resided here, where
he kept his shrievalty in 1781, in which year he was
knighted. Sir Charles Booth married Mrs. Sheppard,
and died s. p. in London in 1795, upon which it
came by the further entail, and limitations in Mr.
Turner's will, with his other estates in this county, to
William Baldwin, esq. who is the present owner of
this manor and seat, and now resides at Harrietshamplace. A court leet and court baron is held for this
manor.
THE OTHER PART of the manor of Harrietsham,
lying in East Farborne, in this parish, has already been
taken notice of in the above-description of that manor, in which mention has been made of its having
belonged to the bishop of Baieux, by gift from his
half-brother the Conqueror, and the description of it
in the survey of Domesday has been likewise given.
After the bishop's disgrace, it passed, as part of
the manor of Harrietsham, into the possession of the
family of Cressi, and continued in it till the death of
Stephen de Cressi in the 52d year of king Henry III.
about which time the manor of Harrietsham seems to
have been divided; two-thirds of it passed into the
possession of the family of Northwood, as has been
already mentioned, and the remainder into that of
Leyborne.
Roger de Leyborne died possessed of this estate,
then stiled the manor of Harrietsham in East Farborne,
in the 56th year of that reign, and his son William de
Leyborne succeeded to it, in the 2d year of king
Edward I.
Juliana, his grand daughter, who from her great
possessions, was usually stiled the Infanta of Kent, became his heir, whose last husband, Sir William de
Clinton, afterwards created earl of Huntingdon, held
this estate in her right in the 20th year of Edward III.
when he, jointly with Roger de Northwood, paid aid
for one knight's fee in Harrietesham and Est Ferbourne, which John de Northwood and William de
Leyborne before held there of the king, as of the honor of Peverel.
Juliana de Leyborne had no issue by either of her
husbands, whom she survived, and died possessed of
this estate in the 41st year of that reign. On which it
escheated to the crown, there being then no one found
who could make claim to her estates, either by direct
or even collateral alliance. (fn. 3)
After which, this part of the manor of Harrietsham, then stiled the manor of Harietesham,
in Est Farborne, continued in the crown, till king
Richard II. in his 11th year, gave it to the priory of
canons, alias Chiltern Langley, in Hertfordshire,
where it remained till the dissolution of it in the 30th
year of king Henry VIII. when it was surrendered
into the king's hands, who next year granted it to
Richard, suffragan bishop of Dover, together with
the scite of the before-mentioned monastery, and
other lands and possessions belonging to it, to hold
during his life, or until he should be promoted to one
or more ecclesiastical benefices, of the yearly value of
one hundred pounds, in which case this grant should
be void. This certainly happened before the 36th
yeas of that reign; for the king, that year, granted
this manor to Sir Thomas Moile, to hold in capite,
who gave it in marriage with his youngest daughter
and coheir Amy, to Sir Thomas Kempe, of Wye,
who passed it away in the reign of queen Elizabeth,
to Thomas Wotton, esq. of Boughton Malherb,
whose son Sir Edward Wotton, was in the 1st year of
king James I. created lord Wotton, baron of Marley,
in this parish. After which it continued by the name
of the manor of East Farborne, in the like succession
of ownership as the manor of Boughton Malherb
heretofore described, down to Philip Dormer Stanhope, earl of Chesterfield, who in 1750 alienated it,
with the rest of the Wotton estates in this county, to
Galfridus Mann, esq. who died possessed of it in 1756,
and his only son Sir Horace Mann, knight and baronet, is the present possessor of this manor of East
Farborne. (fn. 4)
WEST FARBORN is a manor in this parish, so
called from its situation in respect to that of East
Farborne, already described, which was part of the
possessions likewise of Odo, bishop of Baieux, accordingly it is thus entered in the book of Domesday, under the general title of that prelate's lands:
Ralph Curbespine holds of the bishop (of Baieux) Fereburne. It was taxed at one suling. The arable land is
. . . . . In demesne there is one carucate, and two villeins,
with one borderer, and two servants, and one acre and an
half of meadow. Wood for the pannage of six hogs. In
the time of king Edward the Confessor, and afterwards,
and now, it was and is worth thirty shillings. Shern Biga
held it of king Edward.
After the bishop's disgrace, about the year 1084,
and the confiscation of all his possessions to the crown,
this estate was granted to the family of Magmipot
and Say successively; of which last it was held in
king Henry III.'s reign, as chief lords of the fee, by
Sir William de Pevington, of Pevington, in Pluckley,
as one knight's fee. His descendants John and William Pevington, two brothers, both dying s.p. Amabilia, their sister, became their heir, and carried this
manor in marriage to John Gobyon, esq. of Essex.
She survived him, and dying anno 7 Henry IV. by
her deed, vested this manor in feoffees, for the discharge of her debts and legacies. They passed it away
to Hedd, whose descendant William Hedd died possessed of it in the 5th year of Henry VIII, it being
then held of the king, as of his honor of Saye, and
paying ward to Dover castle.
From this name it passed into that of Love, and
thence again to St. Leger, and Sir Warham St Leger,
of Ulcomb, about the middle of queen Elizabeth's
reign, conveyed it to Mr. Benedict Barnham, alderman of London, and sheriff of that city, anno 1592.
He died possessed of it in 1598, and on the division
of his estates among his four surviving daughters and
coheirs, this manor of West Farborne fell to the share
of Dorothy, the third daughter, who entitled her husband Sir John Constable, to the fee of it; from whose
descendant it passed by sale to Sir Thomas Colepeper,
of Hollingborne, in whose family it remained till
Thomas, lord Colepeper, leaving an only daughter and
heir Catherine, she carried it, with Leeds castle and
other possessions in this neighbourhood, in marriage
to Thomas, lord Fairfax, whose brother Robert, lord
Fairfax, dying s.p. in 1793, it became the property
of his nephew the Rev. Denny Martin Fairfax, D.D.
now of Leeds castle, who is the present possessor of it.
HARBILTON is another manor in this parish,
written in antient deeds Herbreton, which is now so
far blended with that of Harrietsham, by having had
the same owners, as to be but little known by name, was
part of those estates in this parish given by William the
Conqueror to his half-brother Odo, bishop of Baieux,
under the general title of whose lands it is thus entered in the survey of Domesday:
Robert Latin holds to ferme Herbretiton. Adelold
held it of the bishop (of Baieux). It was taxed at one suling. The arable land is . . . . In demesne there is one carucate, and two villeins, with one borderer, having two
head of cattle, and there are four acres of meadow. In
the time of king Edward the Confessor, and afterwards,
and now, it was and is worth sixty shillings, and yet it
is let to serme for four pounds. Aluric held it of earl
Godwin.
After the bishop of Baieux's disgrace, which happened about four years after the above survey was
taken, his possessions became confiscated to the crown.
In the reign of king Henry III. the family of Malmains were possessed of this manor; one of whom
paid aid for it, in the 20th year of that reign, as three
quarters of a knight's fee, held of the earl of Ewe, as
of his honor of Hagenet.
They were, soon after the above period, succeeded
here by the family of Mareys; William de Mareys
possessed it in the reigns of king Henry V. and VI. to
the former of whom he was esquire of the body, and in
the latter reign sheriff of this county in the 20th year
of it, and likewise esquire to Henry Chichele, cardinal and archbishop of Canterbury. He died anno
1459, and lies buried in Preston church, near Faversham. Soon after which, this manor became vested in
Walter Moile, who was justice of the peace for this
county, in the reigns both of Henry VI. and Edward IV. He was succeeded in it by his heir John
Moile, esq. whose son Robert Moile, about the beginning of king Henry VIII.'s reign, alienated it to
Ralph St. Leger, esq of Ulcomb, whose grandson Sir
Warham St. Leger, of Ulcomb, alienated this manor
in the reign of queen Elizabeth, one part of it to
Francis Colepeper, and the other to Henry Brockhull,
esq. of Aldington, soon after which I find William
Stede, esq. possessed of it, in whose descendants it
continued down to Edwyn Stede, esq. who soon after
the year 1735 alienated it, together with the manor
of Harrietsham, and the rest of his estates in this parish, to William Horsmonden Turner, esq. Since
which it has passed with them, through the same succession of ownership, down to William Baldwin, esq. of
Harrietsham-place, esq. the present owner of it.
THERE ARE TWO MANORS in this parish, called
MARLEY, alias Merley-court, and HOLME-MILL,
alias BENTLEY; the former of which is recorded in
the book of Domesday, as having been an appendage
to the manor of Bewley or Bouley, in Boughton Malherb, and part of those possessions given by William
the Conqueror to his half-brother Odo, bishop of
Baieux, under the general title of whose lands it is
thus entered in it:
Of this manor (of Bogelei) one Homager (homo) Adam
has one suling, and it is called Murlea, and there he has
one carucate and four villeins, with one carucate, and a
church, and two servants, and wood for the pannage of
four hogs . . . . . The whole manor, in the reign of king
Edward the Confessor, was worth six pounds, and afterwards
as much, now seven pounds. Turgis held it of
king Edward.
After the bishop of Baieux's disgrace, and the confiscation of his estates to the crown, the manor of
Merley continued in the possession of Adam abovementioned, who gave the tithes of it to Anschetil,
archdeacon of Canterbury. He was succeeded in it
by his brother Eudo Dapifer, that is, the king's
steward, who gave the tithes of it, with the consent
of Anschetill, to the priory of St. Andrew, in Rochester, as will be further mentioned hereafter.
Robert Fitzhamon, a potent Norman lord, afterwards appears to have held it, whose daughter Mabel
carried it in marriage to Robert, earl of Gloucester,
natural son to Henry I. (fn. 5)
After which, the family of Cressi, possessors likewise of Harrietsham manor, became lords of the see,
of whom it was held by a family, which took their
name from it.
In the reign of king Henry III. the heir of Robert
de Merlee held it, as half a knight's fee, of Roger de
Cressi, and he of the king, as of the honor of Peverel;
but they were extinct here before the 20th of king
Edward III. when John de Somerye paid aid for it,
as half a knight's fee. How it passed afterwards, I
do not find, but at the beginning of Edward IV.'s
reign, it was in the possession of Thomas Kemp, bishop of London, who died possessed of it in 1489,
and was buried in the chapel of the Trinity, on the
north side of the body of St. Paul's church, founded
by himself, in which, by his will, he founded a perpetual chantry, and endowed it with this manor of
Murley-court, as it is stiled in his will, then of the
yearly value, beyond reprises, of 3l.4s. 8d. In which
state this manor continued till the first year of king
Edward VI. when the chantry was suppressed, among
others of the like sort, and was vested in the king and
his heirs, by an act passed that year specially for that
purpose. At which time it appears, by the survey
taken of it, to have been let to William Pratts, gent.
at four pounds per annum, and that it paid a quitrent to Sir Anthony St. Leger, lord of the manor of
Lenham, and that it was given by the will of Thomas
Kemp, bishop of London, for the purposes abovementioned,
Soon after which, the king granted this manor of
Merley to Sir Edward Wotton, one of his privy
counsel, who was then likewise possessed of the manor
of Holmemill, alias Bentley, in this parish, which, if I
mistake not, had belonged to the priory of Leeds,
and had come into the hands of king Henry VIII. at
the suppression of it, by the act passed in the 31st year
of that reign. He died possessed of both these manors
in the 6th year of king Edward VI. then holding
them of the king in capite by knight's service. After
which they passed in like manner as that of East Farborne before-mentioned down to Philip-Dormer
Stanhope, earl of Chesterfield, who, in 1750, sold
them, with the rest of the Wotton estates in this part
of the county, to Galfridus Mann, esq. who died
possessed of them in 1756, and his only son Sir Horace Mann, is the present possessor of these manors.
THE WHOLE TITHES of the manor of Merley-court
were given, by Adam the possessor of it, in the time
of the Conqueror, to Anschetill, archdeacon of Canterbury, who, together with Eudo Dapifer, brother
and successor of Adam, in the possession of this manor,
granted them to the priory of St. Andrew, in Rochester. (fn. 6)
Robert, natural son of king Henry I. afterwards
possessor of this manor, granted to the above priory
the lands, customs and exemptions, which Robert
Fitzhamon had granted in alms to them in Merley.
This portion of tithes remained with the priory
till the dissolution of it, in the 32d year of king
Henry VIII. when it was, among the rest of the possessions of the monastery, surrendered into the king's
hands. After which, the king, in his 33d year, settled it by letters patent, by his dotation-charter, on
his new-erected dean and chapter of Rochester, part
of whose possessions it remains at this time. William
Baldwin, esq. of Harrietsham-place, is the present
lessee of it, under the dean and chapter.
On the intended dissolution of deans and chapters,
soon after the death of king Charles I. this portion was
surveyed, by order of the state, in 1649; when it was
returned, that it consisted of all the tithes, both great
and small, arising out of the lands and fields of the
manor of Merley-court, in Harrietsham, or within
the precincts of it, amounting to one hundred and
eighty-four acres, which were of the improved value
of 10l. 10s. and were let by the dean and chapter,
anno 15 Charles I. for twenty one years, to Christopher Clarke, at the yearly rent of five shillings, so
there remained clear only 10l. 5s. lady Stanhope being
then immediate tenant of them.
Charities.
MR. MARC QUESTED, citizen and fishmonger of London,
by his will in 1642, founded twelve alms-houses in this parish,
which he endowed out of his manor of Pen-court, in Hollingborne; six of them for as many poor inhabitants of this parish, and the other six for as many of the poor of that company,
whom he had made his trustees. Each poor person, besides the
above, receives in money about 6l.
SIR WILLIAM STEDE gave by deed 10l. per annum in land,
in the parish of Sandhurst, for the binding out yearly apprentices two poor children of this parish, Milton and Tong, vested
in William Baldwin, esq.
In 1604, A PERSON UNKNOWN gave a large silver cup and
cover, for the use of the sacrament.
WILLIAM STEDE, LL. D. in 1637, gave a large silver flaggon and a salver, for the like use.
THREE PIECES of land near Runham, in Lenham, of the
value of five guineas per annum, were given by a person now unknown; the profits of them to be equally divided between the
poor of this parish and Hollingborne, vested in the churchwardens and overseers of both parishes.
THREE PIECES OF LAND near Stubble-hill, in Lenham, of
the yearly value of 2l. 11s. were given by a person now unknown,
to the use of the poor of this parish.
A PIECE OF LAND, called Parish-crost, containing half an
acre, let at 7s. per annum, was given by a person now unknown,
in 1684, to the like use, now vested in the churchwardens and
overseers.
A PERSON UNKNOWN gave half an acre of land, in Weststreet, on which two houses have been erected for the reception of the poor, vested in like manner. (fn. 7)
The poor relieved constantly are about twenty-five; casually
about twenty.
HARRIETSHAM is within the ECCLESIASTICAL
JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and
deanry of Sutton.
The church, which is a handsome building, consisting of three isles and three chancels, with a square
tower at the west end, is dedicated to St. John Baptist. In it are some handsome monuments, and several memorials of the family of Stede, there was once
a fraternity in this church of the blessed Virgin Mary,
to which Robert Waryn, of this place, by will in
1471, gave land called Bonyers, in this parish.
The church seems once to have belonged to the
priory of Leeds, for king Richard II. in his 19th year
granted his licence to the prior and canons of it, to
appropriate it to their own uses. How it happened
that this appropriation never took place, or that the
priory were divested of the possession of it, I do not
find; but in the reign of king Henry VI. it was in
the hands of the crown, for that king, in his 27th
year, granted the patronage and advowson of it, to
the warden and fellows of All Souls college, in Oxford, who still continue in the possession of it.
It is valued in the king's books at 11l. 10s. and
the yearly tenths at 1l. 3s.
In 1640, it was valued at one hundred and sixty
pounds. Communicants 192. The glebe land consists of sixty acres and upwards.
Church of Harrietsham.
|
| PATRONS, | RECTORS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| The Queen, by lapse. | George Havenden, 1625. |
| All Souls college. | Richard Steward, LL. D. Jan.
11, 1625. |
| John Lynch, A. M. 1637, sequestered about 1642. |
| Samuel mith, intruded, 1643. (fn. 5) |
| John Barton. (fn. 9) |
| John Lynch, restored in 1660. (fn. 9) |
| John Clerke, esq. A.M. 1680,
obt 1689 (fn. 10) |
| Thomas Baker, A.M. 1689. (fn. 11) |
| Cellere, 1713. |
| Daniel Pratt, A.M. 1718, ob.
July. 30, 1723. (fn. 12) |
| Miles West, A.M. 1723, obt.
Aug 27. 1743. (fn. 13) |
| Edward Smith, LL. D. Nov.
1743, obt. 1773. |
| James R. Hayward, April 1773,
the present rector. (fn. 14) |