HOLLINGBORNE.
THE next parish north-westward from Harrietsham is Hollingborne, called in Domesday, Hoilingeborde, and in later records, Holingburnan and Holingeburne. It probably took its name from the spring
which rises in the vale underneath the hill, in this
parish.
THE PARISH of Hollingborne is situated much the
same as that of Harrietsham last described, close to
the great ridge of chalk hills, at the foot of which is
the village called Hollingborne-street, in which at
the south end of it stands the church and vicarage,
and near them a well-looking brick mansion, of the
time of queen Elizabeth, which by its appearance
must have had owners of good condition in former
times, but what is remarkable the rector of Hollingborne claims some rooms in this house in right of his
rectory at this time. The road through Newnhambottom from Ospringe and Canterbury passes through
Hollingborne-street, and thence through Eyhorne,
commonly called Iron-street, in this parish, where
there are two good houses, one belonging to Robert
Salmon, esq. who resides in it, and the other built
not many years since by Mr. John Weeks, who died
possessed of it in 1785. Hence the road leads on, and
joins the Ashford high road through Bersted to Maidstone. The southern part of this parish consists
mostly of a deep sand, the whole of it below the hill
is well watered by some small streams, which running
southward join the Lenham rivulet in its way to
Maidstone. Nearer the street the soil becomes a
chalk, which continues to the summit of the hill, at
the edge of which stands Mr. Duppa's house, whence
the remaining part of this parish northward, situated
on high ground, and exposed to the cold bleak winds,
is but a wild and dreary country, with thick hedgerows, and frequent coppices of wood, mostly of hazel
and oak, and small unthriving trees of the latter dispersed among them; the soil a deep tillage land, wet
and very poor, being a red cludgy earth, covered with
quantities of flint stones. On Eyhorne green, or as
it is commonly called Broad-street, in this parish, in
October yearly, two constables are chosen, one for
the upper, the other for the lower half hundred of
Eyhorne, each of which district consists of the twelve
adjoining parishes, the borsholders in which, and the
several boroughs in them, except such as are chosen
at the different court leets, are chosen here likewise.
This parish, with the manor of Elnothington in it,
together with the rest of the hundred of Eyhorne,
was antiently bound to contribute to the repair of
the sixth pier of Rochester bridge.
ÆTHELSTAN ETHELING, son of Ethelred II. gave
by his will in 1015, to Christ-church, in Canterbury,
his lands at Hollingborne, with their appurtenances,
excepting one plough-land, which he had given to
Siserth. In the MSS. in Bennet college library, Cambridge, of the evidences of Christ-church, Canterbury,
intitled Thorn, printed in Decim. Script. f. 2221,
this gift is said to have been made in 980; a very improbable circumstance, the king, his elder brother, at
that time being but fourteen years of age.
These lands he had bought of his father, and gave
them, with his consent, to Christ-church, L. S. A.
that is, free from all secular service, excepting the
trinoda necessitas, in like manner as Adisham had been
given to it.
The manor of Hollingborne remained part of the
possessions of the church of Canterbury at the time
of the conquest, when the revenues of it were enjoyed as one common estate by the archbishop and
his convent; but archbishop Lanfranc, after the example
of foreign churches, separating them, in the
partition Hollingborne fell to the share of the monks,
and was allotted for their subsistence, (or ad Cibum,
as it was usually termed) and it is accordingly thus
entered in the book of Domesday, under the general
title of Terra Monachorum Archiepi, i. e. the land of
the monks of the archbishop.
The archbishop himself holds Hoilingeborde. It was
taxed at six sulings. The arable land is twenty-four carucates. In demesne there are two, and sixty-one villeins, with sixteen borderers, having twenty-three carucates. There is a church, twelve servants, and two mills,
and eight acres of meadow. Wood for the pannage of
forty hogs. In the whole, in the time of king Edward
the Confessor, and afterwards, it was worth twenty
pounds, and now it is worth thirty pounds. To this manor there adjoins half a suling, which never paid scot,
this the bishop of Baieux rents of the archbishop.
At this time, the whole of the above premises
seems to have been valued at thirty pounds.
King Henry II. granted to the monks of Christchurch a charter for their lands at Hollingborne upon
the Hills. In the 10th year of king Edward II. the
prior obtained a charter of free-warren for his manor
of Hollingborne, among others; about which time
it was, with its appurtenances, valued at 46l. 9s. 8d.
King Henry VI. by his letters patent, in his 25th and
26th year, granted to the prior a market, to be held
at this place weekly on a Wednesday, and a fair yearly
on the feast of St. Anne. (fn. 1)
William Selling, who was elected prior in the next
reign of king Edward IV. anno 1472, during the time
of his holding that dignity, greatly improved the
prior's apartments here. After which, it seems to
have undergone no material alteration till the dissolution
of the priory, which was surrendered into the
hands of king Henry VIII. in the 31st year of his
reign.
The manor of Hollingborne did not remain long
in the hands of the crown; for the king settled it, by
his dotation charter, in his 33d year, on his newerected dean and chapter of Canterbury, part of whose
possessions it now remains.
There is a court-leet and court baron regularly held
by the dean and chapter for this manor, which extends likewise into the adjoining parishes of Hucking,
Bredhurst, and Harrietsham, the quit-rents of it
called Beadle-rents, being about forty-two pounds
per annum.
BUT THE DEMESNE LANDS of this manor have
been from time to time leased out by the dean and
chapter at a reserved rent of 10l. 9s. The year after
the grant of it to them, they demised them by lease
to I. Reynolde, as they did anno 19 Elizabeth to
William Puresoy, in whose family they remained till
the beginning of king James I.'s reign. After which
the Fludds held them in lease, and continued so to
do, till their interest in them was passed away to W.
Alabaster, D. D. After which these premises were
held in succession by Bargrave, Boys, Farewell, and
Gookin, till the year 1684, when Sir Thomas Culpeper, had a lease of them, in whose family they continued till John Spencer Colepeper, of the Charterhouse, passed away his interest in them to the Hon.
Robert Fairfax, who held them in 1758, and then
alienated his lease to Francis Child, esq. banker in
London, whose brother Robert Child, esq. of London,
banker, dying in 1782, the trustees of his will, Robert
Dent and John Keysel, esqrs. are now in the possession
of his interest in the lease of these demesnes, under
the dean and chapter, besides which the dean and
chapter have several other lands and woods here leased
out by them to different persons.
ELNOTHINGTON is a manor of eminent account
in this parish and Bersted, which appears by the book
of Domesday to have been 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 that record, under
the name of Alnoitone.
Hugo de Port holds Alnoitone. It was taxed at three
sulings. The arable land is eight carucates. In demesne
there are two carucates, and eighteen villeins, with six
borderers, having six carucates. There is a church and
eight servants, and two mills and an half, of seventeen
shillings. There are five acres of meadow. Wood for
the pannage of forty bogs. In the time of king Edward
the Confessor, it was worth nine pounds, and as much
when be received it, now ten pounds, and yet it pays
twelve pounds.
To this manor there belong three mansions of land in
Rochester, and they pay five shillings per annum. Osuuard
held it of king Edward.
About four years after the above survey, the bishop
of Baieux fell into disgrace, and this, among the rest
of his estates, became confiscated to the crown.
In the reign of king Edward I. this manor of Elnothington was held by William de Port, as half a
knight's see, of Robert de St. John; after which it
came into the possession of a family, which assumed
their surname from it, and in a deed of Adam de
Twisden, which bears date in the 21st year of that
reign, William de Elnothington is one of the witnesses to it.
In the reign of king Edward III. Sir Arnold de St.
Leger, of Ulcomb, was in possession of it; in the 42d
year of which reign, he made a composition with several of his tenants for the lands they held of this
manor. From him it passed in an uninterrupted descent down to Sir Warham St. Leger, of Ulcomb,
sheriff in the 2d year of queen Elizabeth, and afterwards
chief governor of Munster, in Ireland, in which
province he was unfortunately slain in 1599. However, some years before his death, he alienated it, with
Greenway-court, in this parish, to Francis Culpeper,
esq. second son of William Culpeper, esq. of Losenham and Wigsell, who afterwards resided at Greenway-court, under which a more ample account of him
may be seen. His son Sir Thomas Culpeper, of
Greenway-court, succeeded him in this manor, of
which he died possessed in 1661; since which this
manor has passed in like manner as that estate down
to Rob. Child, esq. of London, banker, the trustees of
whose will, Robert Dent and John Keysall, esqrs. are
now in the possession of it.
GREENWAY-COURT was formerly esteemed a manor, the mansion of which was a seat of good account
in this parish. It is situated close at the foot of the
chalk hill, near a mile eastward from Hollingborne
church, and was possessed antiently by a family, who
took their surname from their habitation at it; one of
whom, William, son of Gilbert de Greenwaye, was
owner of it, and resided here in the year 1236, as appears by a register of Christ-church, in Canterbury.
How long they continued possessors of this estate, I
do not find; but it next became the property of the
family of Arte-leze. Sampson atte Leze, of Sheldwich, was owner of it in the 26th year of king Edward III. as was his descendant, Marcellus atte Lese,
afterwards, who left two daughters his coheirs; to
one of whom, Cecilie, and her husband, Valentine
Barrett, esq. of Perry-court, he by his deed, anno 15
Richard II. gave all his lands and tenements in Hollingborne, and elsewhere in the hundred of Eyhorne.
They, by deed and fine levied anno 22 Richard II.
passed this estate away to Thomas Wottone, for one
hundred marcs of silver.
In the 22d year of king Henry VI. William Wotton, son and heir of Thomas Wotton, conveyed
to Walter Langle, esq the manor or messuage of
Grenewey. From this name this estate passed in the
reign of king Edward IV. to Ralph St. Leger, esq. of
Ulcomb, sheriff of this county in the 8th year of it,
in whose descendants it continued down to Sir Warham St. Leger, of Ulcomb, chief governor of Munster, in Ireland, in queen Elizabeth's reign, and he
alienated it with the manor of Elnothington above
described, to Francis Culpeper, esq. who was the son
of William Culpeper, esq. of Losenham, in this county,
and of Wigsell, in Sussex, being the son of Walter, by
Anne his wife, only daughter and heir of Henry Aucher, esq. of Losenham, in Newenden, which Walter
was son of Sir John Colepeper, of Bedgbury, in
Goudhurst, living in the reign of king Edward IV.
under which parish a further account of him may be
seen. William Culpeper before-mentioned, had by
Cicelie, daughter of Edward Barrett, seven sons, of
whom Sir John, of Wigsell, in the reign of James I.
was ancestor of the lords Colepeper, the heir of
which family married Thomas, lord Fairfax, possessor
of Leeds-castle in her right; Francis, the second son,
purchased Greenway-court, as before-mentioned;
Thomas was the the third son, and ancestor of the
Culpepers, of St. Stephen's, near Canterbury; Dr.
Martin Culpeper, the fourth son, lies buried in Kingsnorth church; and Walter, the fifth son, settled at
Hunburne, in Oxfordshire, and left an only daughter
and heir. Francis Culpeper, esq. afterwards resided
at Greenway-court, where he died in 1591, and was
buried in this church, leaving an only son, Sir Thomas Culpeper, who likewise resided at Greenwaycourt, though he had purchased Leeds castle. He
died at the former in 1661, and was buried in Hollingborne church, having had by Elizabeth his wife,
daughter of John Cheney, esq. of Guestling, in Sussex, three sons and eight daughters. Of the former,
Sir Cheney, the eldest, inherited Leeds-castle, where a
further account of him may be seen; Francis, the second son, died young; and Sir Thomas Culpeper, the
third son, became possessed of Greenway-court, where
he resided.
His grandson, John Spencer Colepeper, esq. was
of the Charter-house, and alienated Greenway-court
to the hon. Robert Fairfax, of Leeds-castle, who afterwards parted with it to Francis Child, esq. of London, banker, on whose death in 1763, it came to his
brother and heir-at-law Robert Child, of London,
banker, who died in 1782, and the trustees of his
will, Robert Dent and John Keysall, esqrs. are now
in the possession of it.
RIPPLE is a reputed manor and seat in this parish,
which had owners of that name, for in the 30th year
of Edward I. Richard de Ripple held at his decease
this and other lands in the parish of Hollingborne, in
lease of the prior and convent of Christ-church, in
Canterbury; but it did not continue long afterwards in
his name, for before the latter end of Edward III.'s
reign, it was become the property of the family of
Septvans; one of whom, Sir William Septvans, died
possessed of it in the 25th year of that reign, and was
succeeded in it by his son William Septvans, who not
long afterwards conveyed it to John Gower, who died
possessed of it in the 39th year of that reign, and from
thence, not many years afterwards, it was alienated to
Sir John Brockhull, whose descendants resided at Aldington, in the adjoining parish of Thurnham. In
them this manor continued down to Henry Brockhull, esq. of Aldington, who died in 1596 possessed of
the manor of Ripple, leaving two daughters his coheirs;
of whom Anne, by marrying Mr. John Taylor, gent.
entitled him to this estate, which he alienated to Sir
Martin Barnham. He was son of Francis Barnham,
esq. sheriff of London anno 1570, the eldest son of
Stephen Barnham, of Southwick, in Hampshire, of
the privy chamber to king Henry VIII. whose son I
take to have been Nicholas Barnham, serjeant-at-law
in the very beginning of queen Elizabeth's reign.
Francis Barnham bore for his arms, Sable, a cross engrailed, between four crescents, argent; and had four
sons; of whom Martin, before-mentioned, was the
eldest, and Benedict the fourth, was alderman and
sheriff of London in 1592, and dying in 1598, left
his five daughters his coheirs.
Sir F. Barnham, the purchaser of this manor, afterwards resided at Hollingborne-hill, and was sheriff in
the 40th year of Q. Elizabeth. He died in 1610, and
lies buried in this church, being succeeded in the
manor of Ripple by his eldest son (by his second wife,
daughter of Sir Martin Calthorpe, of London) Sir F.
Barnham, who was of Hollingborne, (fn. 2) and married
Elizabeth, daughter of Sampson Lennard, esq. of
Chevening, sister of Henry, lord Dacre, by whom he
had fifteen children, ten of whom, six sons and four
daughters, survived her. Of the sons, Dacre was the
eldest, and Robert, the second, was seated at Boughton Monchensie, and afterwards created a baronet,
under which parish a further account of him and his
descendants may be seen. In his descendants this manor remained till it was at length sold to Duckesbery,
in which name it continued down to Mr. John
Duckesbury, of Bersted, who dying some years ago,
left Mary his widow in the possession of it, and she
having since remarried with Mr. Hodsoll Sale, of
Bersted, he is now in her right, entitled to it.
MURSTON is another manor in this parish, which
in antient deeds and court rolls was usually written
Moston, and in the reign of Edward I. was the property of a family who assumed their name from it;
but they were extinct here before the begining of
Richard II.'s reign, when it was become the estate of
Wood, in whose descendants, several of whom lie buried in the church-yard of this parish, as appears by
their wills in the Prerogative-office, in Canterbury, it
continued for several centuries, for it remained the
property of one of them at the restoration of king
Charles II. Soon after which it was passed away to
Chaloner, in which name it continued till Reynolds
Chaloner, gent. who bore for his arms, Three mascles,
on a chevron a cinquesoil, alienated this manor, with
other premises in this parish, to Christopher Vane,
lord Barnard, who died in 1723, having by his will
given this manor, with Snagsbrook, Claypitts, and
other lands in this parish, as well as all his other
estates here and elsewhere in this county, to his second
son William, vilcount Vane, who afterwards resided
at Fairlawn, near Wrotham.
His only son and heir William, viscount Vane, dying s. p. in 1788, by will devised this manor, with
his other estates in this county and elsewhere, to David Papillon, esq. of Acrise, who sold this manor,
with the rest of his estates in this parish, in 1791, to
Lewis Cage, esq. of Bersted, who settled them on his
eldest son of the same name, and he is the present
possessor of them.
PEN-COURT is a manor and seat in Hollingborne,
which was formerly more properly called Pende-court,
from a family who were antiently owners of it, and resided at it; but before the end of king Edward III.'s
reign, this name was extinct here, for John Donnett,
of Silham, in Rainham, died possessed of it in the
36th year of that reign; his descendant James Donnett, left an only daughter and heir Margerie, who
carried this seat in marriage to John St. Leger, of
Ulcomb, sheriff of this county anno 9 Henry VI. and
in his descendants it continued down to Sir Warham
St. Leger, of Ulcomb, sheriff in the 2d year of queen
Elizabeth, and he alienated it, with Elnothington,
Greenway-court, and other estates in this parish, to
Francis Culpeper, esq. afterwards of Greenway-court,
who died possessed of it in 1598, and his son, Sir
Thomas Culpeper, alienated it to Mr. Marc Quested,
of London, who upon his death settled it for ever on
the warden and commonalty of the Company of Fishmongers in London, as trustees of his alms-houses,
founded in the adjoining parish of Harrietsham, the
endowment of which he directed to be paid out of the
yearly profits of this manor, as has been already mentioned, and as such the company are now entitled to
the inheritance of it.
HOLLINGBORNE HILL is a seat and estate in this
parish, so called from its situation on the summit of
the chalk-hill above Hollingborne-street. It was formerly called Eyotts, and in 1609 was in the possession
of Sir Martin Barnham, who that year built a new
mansion on the scite of it, in which he resided, as did
his eldest son Sir Francis Barnham, but he afterwards
parted with it to Gabriel Levesey, esq. on whose death
it came to his son and heir Sir Michael Levesey, and
he conveyed all his interest in it, in the year 1623, to
Sir John Hayward, second son of Sir Rowland Hayward, alderman of London, and twice lord-mayor,
(by his second wife Catherine, daughter of Customer
Smith). Sir John Hayward, during his residence at
this seat, was sheriff in the last year of James I. and
bore for his arms, Or, a bull's head, caboshed, between
three mullets, sable. (fn. 3) He died in 1636, without issue,
having by his last will bequeathed his manor of Minster, in the Isle of Shepey, to charitable uses, before
which, in 1632, he conveyed it to Cheney Culpeper,
esq. of Greenway-court, and he in 1652 passed it away
to Henry Pelham, esq. who by his will in 1658, devised it to his nephew George Pelham, who dying s.p.
in 1686, it came by his will, as well as the entail
made in that of his uncle, to his brother Charles Pelham,
esq. who left a son Charles, then an insant, to
whom by his will in 1688, he gave the fee of it, and
enjoined him to sell it as soon as he came of age,
which he did in 1705, (a fine being levied that year
for this purpose) to Baldwin Duppa, esq. descended
of the same family as was Brian Duppa, bishop of
Winchester, who died in 1662, and Sir Thomas
Duppa, gentleman usher of the black rod to king
Charles II. but their consanguinity I cannot learn.
He bore for his arms, Azure, a lion's gamb erased in
sess, between two chains barways, or. In the year 1707
he settled this estate on his only son, Baldwin Duppa,
esq, though he lived many years after this, and dying
in 1737, was buried in this church, where there is a
monument erected to his memory. Baldwin Duppa,
esq. the son, in 1717, rebuilt this seat on the scite of
the old one, and came to reside at it in 1722, and in
1735 served the office of sheriff, and dying unmarried
in 1764, was buried in this church, having by his will
bequeathed it, with all his other estates, to his kinsman, the Rev. Mr. Richard Hancorn, (whose grandmother was Mr. Duppa's father's eldest sister) with
an injunction for him to take the name and arms of
Duppa, for which an act passed anno 5 George III.
He afterwards quitted the clerical prossession, and
took the addition of esquire. He resided here, and
died in 1789, having married Miss Baas, of Hackney,
by whom he had no issue.
Upon his death this, with his other estates, came to
his brother Baldwin Hancorn, who took the name
of Duppa, as did his son, Baldwin Duppa Duppa,
esq. the present possessor of this seat of Hollingbornehill, where he now resides. (fn. 4)
Charities.
THREE PIECES of land near Runham, in Lenham, in the
occupation of John Butler, of Harrietsham, at the rent of
5l. 5s. per annum, were given, one half to the poor of Hollingborne, having no relief. The donor of them unknown,
vested in the minister and churchwardens, now of the annual
produce of 2l. 8s. 3d.
MRS. ELIZABETH CAYSER, of Hollingborne, widow, by
her will in 1612, left 20l. to purchase a piece of land in seesimple, out of the rent of which she directed, that every year
for ever, upon the day after her death, (Sept. 22, 1615,) 10s.
should be distributed amongst twenty of the poorest people of
Hollingborne, and 5s. amongst ten of Leeds, and 5s. amongst
ten of Bromfield, by the minister, churchwardens, and overseers of the respective parishes, and that the residue of the rents
and profits should be yearly distributed by them amongst the
poor of Hollingborne, upon the said 22d of September. The
piece of land that was purchased in consequence of the abovementioned devise, in 1720, lies north-west of Broad-street, in
Hollingborne, and is called Little Dane. It contains seven
acres, and is in the occupation of John Featherstone, at the
yearly rent of 2l. 5s.
DAME FRANCES NORTON, widow, sister of Judith, wife of
Robert Austen the elder, esq. of Heronden, gave an estate, purchased in 1719, by deed enrolled, of 35l. per annum, in Hollingborne, for the joint benefit, in equal moieties, of the parishes of Tenterden and Holling borne. By which she directed,
that the profits of the estate to each parish, should be divided
into seven divisions; four parts thereof to be applied in putting
out apprentices the children of parents having no parochial relief. The three other parts to be distributed to the ministers of
those parishes, each 20s. a piece for two annual sermons, to be
preached in their respective parishes on the 1st of November,
or All Saints, and on the 1st of January. And the residue of
the three parts, to ten poor widows or housekeepers, one year in
money, and the second year in black and white stuff or cloth
gowns, and so alternately for ever; such persons having no
parochial relief, and hearing the said two sermons in their own
respective parish churches.
This charity was vested in twenty trustees; but the donation
and disposition of the profits of the estate, was to be made at
the choice of the late Robert Austin, esq. of Heronden, her
nephew, deceased, and of his heirs for ever, with the approbation of the churchwardens and overseers of the poor.
This charity, by a commission of charitable uses, was settled in
1748, and the deed enrolled was confirmed, and the estate vested
in twenty new trustees jointly, to be renewed when reduced to
five, and also, that the monies unapplied should be laid out in
another purchase, (after the charge of fixing the charity should
be satisfied) which was made accordingly, in a farm of 15l. a
year in Hollingborne and Hucking, and settled as directed by a
deed enrolled. And the trestees, or any four or more of them,
are empowered from time to time, to direct the churchwardens
or overseers, and their successors for ever, in the due and regular annual performance, execution, and preservation of this
charity.
JOHR SNOTHE, of Hollingborne, by his will in 1529, devised a piece of land, called Potokks, at Greenstreet, in this
parish, the yearly rent of it to be employed to keep an obit
yearly in this church on the nativity of the Virgin Mary, viz.
to the curate for so doing, 6d. and the remainder to be distributed yearly in meat and drink to the poor in this church,
yearly on that day for ever.
HOLLINGBORNE is within the ECCLESIASTICAL
JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deaury
of Sutton; and is exempt from the jurisdiction of the
archdeacon.
The church, which is dedicated to All Saints, is a
handsome building, consisting of three large isles,
with a chancel at the end of the middle one, and a
square tower at the west end. The chancel is much
enriched with the monuments of the family of Culpeper, of Greenway-court, and for two of the lords
Culpeper, one of them by Rysbrack; on the north
side is one for Sir Martin Barnham and his two wives,
in 1610, their three figures kneeling at a desk, and
underneath their children. At the east end of the
north isle there is a small neat chapel, raised up several steps to give room for a vault underneath, in
which lie the remains of all this branch of the Culpeper family. The sides of the chapel are filled with
black escutcheons, and square tablets of black marble
alternately, only two of these among the numbers of
them are filled up, and those with younger branches
of the family settled elsewhere, a proof of the disappointment of the vain endeavours of the builder to
transmit the memory of his descendants to posterity.
On the middle of the pavement is a beautiful raised
monument of white marble, and the figure of a lady,
lying at full length, in the habit of the times, of exceeding good sculpture, in memory of Elizabeth, lady
of Sir Thomas Culpeper, daughter of John Cheney,
esq. of Sussex, obt. 1638. In the isle a monument
for Nich. Chaloner, esq. obt. 1706. Against the
north wall of the north isle for two of the family of
Duppa, and at the lower end of the church, for the
Plummers, Collins's and Dykes. In the middle isle
a stone, on which have been the figures of a man and
woman in brass, but two shields of arms remain, being quarterly, first and fourth, A chevron, engrailed on
a chief, three sleurs de lis; second and third, Three
fishes, wavy, sessways, in pale.
There is belonging to this church, a most superb
altar-cloth, and a pulpit-cloth and cushion, of purple
velvet, ornamented with different figures of fruits of
pomegranets and grapes, wrought in gold, the needlework of the daughters of Sir John Colepeper, afterwards created lord Colepeper, who employed themselves for almost the space of twelve years in the working of them, during their father's absence abroad
with king Charles II.
The communion plate is very handsome, and an
swerable to the above-mentioned furniture, being
mostly the gift of the family of Colepeper, and some
of it of Baldwin Duppa, esq.
John Eweyn, by his will proved in 1527, gave a
table of alabaster, to stand upon the altar of St. John
the Baptist in this church; and money to the repair
of St. John's chapel in it. John Aleff, parson of Hollingborne, as appears by his will in 1537, was buried
in the way beside the porch-door, on the right hand,
and that there was set in the wall, nigh his grave, a
stone with a plate of sculpture, mentioning where and
when he was buried. He had before been vicar of
Little Chart, and of St. Laurence Wolton, as he was
then of St. John's Sherburne, in Hampshire.
The church of Hollingborne, to which the chapels
of Hucking and Bredhurst were antiently annexed,
is a sinecure rectory, with a vicarage endowed. The
rector of Hollingborne is at this time patron of the
perpetual curacy of the chapel of Bredhurst. The
archbishop is patron both of the rectory and of the
vicarage of Hollingborne, the vicar of which is collated to this vicarage, with the chapel of Hucking
annexed.
The vicarage was endowed before the year 1407,
in which year Arthur Sentleger, the rector, granted to
William Maunby, vicar of this church, a messuage,
with its appurtenances in this parish, for the habitation of himself and his successors for ever. (fn. 5) In archbishop Chichele's register, at Lambeth, there is an
unauthenticated writing of a composition, made about
the year 1441, for it is without date, between William Lyeff, then rector here, and John Fsylde, vicar,
upon the assignation of a proper portion for the endowment of this vicarage in future times.
The rectory of Hollingborne is valued in the king's
books at 28l. 15s. 5d. and the tenths at 2l. 17s. 6 1/7d.
The vicarage is valued in them at 7l. 6s. 8d. and the
yearly tenths at 14s. 8d. The vicarage in 1640 was
valued at eighty-six pounds, and the communicants
were then 271. It is now of the yearly certified value
of 70l. 16s. 8d.
The vicarage was augmented twenty pounds per
annum, by lease between Ralph Staunton, rector, and
Sir Thomas Culpeper, of this parish.
The name of Culpeper, or Colepeper, is so variously spelt in different deeds and records, that it is
impossible to keep with any rule to either spelling;
on all the monuments, and in the parish register,
(excepting in two instances in the last) it is spelt
Culpeper.
Church of Hollingborne, with the Chapel of
Hucking annexed.
|
| PATRONS, | RECTORS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| Archbishop of Canterbury. | Gauselinus Cardenalis, in 1316. (fn. 6) |
| John Joscelin, obt. 1603. (fn. 7) |
| John Boys, S.T.B. ind. Feb.
1604. |
| John Warner, S.T.P. resigned
1637. (fn. 8) |
| Samuel Bernard, S.T.P. Jan,
15, 1637. (fn. 9) |
| Anthony Saunders, A.M. ind.
Dec. 1669, resig. 1677. |
| Ralph Staunton, A.M. inducted
Oct. 1677. |
| Mathew Brailsford, S.T.P. ob.
1733. (fn. 10) |
| Edmund Bateman, S.T.P. Feb.
1734, obt. 1751. |
| John S. Hill, S.T.P. 1751, ob.
1757. |
| Francis Dodsworth, A.M. November 1757, resigned April
20, 1774. (fn. 11) |
| John Cautley, A.M. July 1774,
obt. March 1, 1797. (fn. 12) |
| VICARS. |
| White, obt. 1623. |
| William Cragge, ind. 1623-4,
obt. 1637. |
| George Bonham, 1637 to 1647. |
| Phineas Cosby, 1641, ob. 1652. |
| PATRONS, &c. | VICARS. |
| Archbishop of Canterbury. | Thomas Yardley, 1652 to 1660. |
| John Shrawley, about 1660. |
| William Thomas, 1661, obt.
1681. |
| Thomas Gregorie, 1681, ob. June
17, 1696. |
| Edward Waterman, 1696, obt.
1725. |
| Thomas Taylor, 1725, obt. 1726. |
| Thomas Saul Hancock, presented
March, 1727, obt. Aug. 16, 1714. (fn. 13) |
| Benjamin Waterhouse, 1741, resigned 1770. (fn. 14) |
| Joseph Todd, A. B. Dec. 1770,
obt. June, 1773. |
| William Hassell, B.A. October
1773, obt. Dec. 1790. |
| Edward Hasted, A.B. collated
July, 1790, the present
vicar. |