SELLING.
ADJOINING to Boughton southward lies the parish of Selling, on the south or opposite side of the
London road to Graveney, last described.
It is written in Domesday, Selinge, and Sellinges, and
in some antient records, Sellinge subtus Bleane. (fn. 1) A small
part of it, that is, so much as is within the borough of
Rode, is within the hundred of Faversham.
Besides the manor of Selling, those of Rhodes-court,
Shillingheld, and Tenham, claim over different parts
of this parish.
The archbishop's paramount manor of Boughton
claims over so much of this parish as is within that hundred, to the court leet of which the occupiers of the
houses and lands in this, as well as the other parishes
above-mentioned, within it, are amenable, by reason of
their resciancy; notwithstanding which, the lands and
houses themselves, throughout them, hold of other
manors, which claim over them, by heriot, relief, rent,
&c. which is the general case, where there is a manor
paramount, and inferior manors under it, the one
claiming a civil, the other a military jurisdiction over
the same district of country.
SELLING is situated about two miles southward of
the high London road, and the 49th mile-stone on it.
It lies on rising ground towards the south, in a dry and
healthy country. It is not a large parish, the rents in
it are about 1900l. per annum, and the houses about
sixty-two. The middle part of it, in which is the
church and village, is far from being unpleasant, the
soil inclining about the church to gravel, and the hill
and dale very gentle. The branch of the turnpike
road from Faversham over Old Wives lees to Chilham, where it joins the Ashford road, runs along the
northern part of the parish; on this road, about a mile
eastward of the church, is a neat villa, built by Collet
Manhood, esq. who resided for some time in it, since
which it has been usually inhabited by persons in a genteel line of life, it is now the property of Mr. Mapleton, who resides in it; on the same road, still more
eastward, is the borough of Rhode, almost adjoining
to the Boughton woods.
At a small distance westward of the church is the
court-lodge, now a farm-house, near which in the vale,
is an old mansion, but lately modernized, called Marshes,
which was at the latter end of the last century the property of the Chambers's, several of whom lie buried in
this church, who bore for their arms, Sable, a chevron,
between three cinquefoils, or. From an elder son was
descended the late Abraham Chambers, esq. of Tunstall, and by a daughter and coheir of a younger son,
this estate came partly by marriage, and partly by
sale, to Mr. Robert Hilton, gent. of this parish, whose
son Mr. Thomas Gibbs Hilton now resides in it; further westward from hence is the hamlet of Hanvillegreen, with the estates of Harefield, in a poor rough
hilly country, the soil chalky, and covered with flints.
In the southern part of the parish is a very high and
conspicuous hill, called Shottenton hill, commanding
on all sides of it as extensive a prospect as any in this
county; the North Foreland cliff, the county of Essex,
and an uninterrupted view into the north sea are seen
towards the east and north-east, and the channel again
overan extensive view of the county, towards the southeast. The top is a flat, which seems levelled by art,
and is near a furlong in length; the lower and middle
parts of the hill, excepting the southern, are covered
with rich coppice wood, and the upper and southern
parts with broom, heath, and low beach, straggling
thinly over it. The soil is gravel on the surface, and
under it sand, the pits in which, by the digging of it,
reach near a quarter of a mile under-ground.
Upon the level of it, upon which the windmill stands,
are the plain remains of an antient camp, the intrenchments of which inclose about an acre and three-quarters of ground, more than half of which seems to lie on
the declivity towards the south-east.
The form of the intrenchments vary according to the
rounding of the hill; the north-east, north-west, and
south-east angles are pretty near right angles, but that
to the south-west is rounding. There are two ports,
the principal one of which is very fair towards the
south, the other eastward. This has been thought by
some, to have been a Roman camp, whilst others have
conjectured it to be Danish. But from the very large
remains of strong fortification and entrenchments
thrown up in Shellingham wood, about two miles
south eastward from hence, which seems to have been
one of the castra stativa of the Romans, for by that
name they called their more lasting encampments, according to Vegetius, I conjecture this on Shottentonhill, from its nearness to that, to have been one of the
castra æstiva, or smaller summer encampments, as well
as an exploratory fort for the use of that larger one.
This certainly was an excellent situation for their purpose; for, besides the command of the country from
it on all sides, it is well supplied with water, there being
numbers of pits or wells of water in places over disserent parts of this hill, which are supplied plentifully,
frequently overflowing, but never dry; many of them
are of a mineral quality, as appears by the ochreous
substance in them. They seem mostly to have been
formed by nature.
About half a mile north from Shottenton-hill is a
very large barrow, or tumulus, on which is now planted
a toll of beech trees.
There is a fair now held in the village of Selling on
Whit Tuesday, which, by report, was formerly held of
old custom in November.
This parish has the reputation of having been the
birth-place of William Tylle, alias Selling, a man as
noted as any of his time, for learning and wisdom, prior
of Christ-church, in Canterbury, where he died in 1494;
but it appears by several wills of his family, in the Prerogative-office, Canterbury, (contrary to the uncontradicted opinion from that of Leland down to the present time) that he was born at Sellinge, by Hythe, in
the description of which parish a further account of him
will be given.
MR. JACOB has observed several scarce plants in this
parish, inserted in his Plantæ Favershamienses, to which
the reader is referred.
SELLING was given, about the year 1045, to St.
Augustine's monastery, in Canterbury, and it is accordingly thus entered in the general survey of Domesday, taken about the year 1080, under the title of the
lands of that abbey.
In Boltone hundred, the abbot himself holds Sellinges
manor, without a court (or halimote) which was taxed at
six sulings. The arable land is eleven carucates. There
is nothing in demesne. There are thirty villeins, having
ten carucates. There is a church. In the time of king
Edward the Confessor, it was worth fifteen pounds, when
be received it eight pounds, now thirteen pounds and five
shillings.
In the latter end of king Henry I.'s reign, about
the year 1130, this manor, together with the rectory,
was assigned by the abbot of St. Augustine's, to the
cloathing of the monks there.
The manor, with the rectory, remained part of the
possessions of the monastery till its final dissolution, in
the 30th year of Henry VIII. when this great abbey,
with all its revenues, was surrendered into the king's
hands, where both manor and rectory remained till the
36th year of that reign, when the king granted it to
Sir Anthony St. Leger, in tail male, to hold in capite
by knight's service, and he obtained a new grant of
them anno 4 king Edward VI. to him and his heirs,
by the like tenure, at the yearly rent of 16l. 5s. 5½d. (fn. 2)
His son Sir Warham St. Leger passed it away by sale to
Sir Michael Sondes, of Throwley, who died in 1617,
and his descendant Sir George Sondes, earl of Faversham, leaving only two daughters his coheirs, Mary,
married to Lewis, lord Daras, afterwards earl of Faversham, and Katherine to Lewis Watson, earl of
Rockingham, each of them successively, in right of
their wives, became possessed of this manor and rectory; and the latter of them died possessed of them in
1724, and his grandsons, Lewis and Thomas, both
successively dying s.p. the latter devised them among
his other estates, to the hon. Lewis Monson, who afterwards took the name of Watson, and in 1766 was
created Lord Sondes, whose son the right hon. LewisThomas, lord Sondes, is the present possessor of them.
A court baron is held for this manor.
PERRYWOOD and HARESFIELD are two manors in
the south-west part of this parish, the former of which
is called Perie in the general survey of Domesday, being then part of the possessions of Odo, bishop or
Baieux, under the general description of whose lands
it is entered in it; but as there are two estates called
by this name described in it, which of them belongs in
particular to this above-mentioned, cannot now be ascertained. (fn. 3)
After the consiscation of the bishop's estates, in
1084, this estate seems to have come into the possession
of owners, who assumed their surname from it. One of
these, Randal de Pirie, held this manor in the reign of
king John, as did his descendant William de Pirie in
that of king Edward II. but in the 20th year of king
Edward III. this family was extinct here, and it seems
then to have been in the hands of different coparceners.
The Darells afterwards held it, and after them the
Finch's, and the Martyn's of Graveney. John Martyn, judge of the common pleas, died possessed of it in
1436, leaving his widow possessed of it, who afterwards
married Thomas Burgeys, esq. whom she likewise survived, and died possessed of it in 1458, having by her
will given the manor of Perrywode to her second son
Robert Martyn, who was afterwards of Perrywood.
How long it continued in that name I do not know;
but both that and Haresfield afterwards became part
of the possessions of Corpus Christi college, in Oxford,
where they remain at this time, the present lessee of
them being the right honorable Lewis-Thomas, lord
Sondes.
OVENS-COURT is a manor in this parish, though it
has lost the reputation of having been so for many years.
It is corruptly so called for Owens court, having been
in antient time the seat and estate of the family of Owen,
extracted from those of the principality of Wales.
They were possessors of it in the reign of Henry III.
as appeared by old rentals and other evidences. After
them the Drylands, of Cooksditch, in Faversham, became owners of it, and continued so till the beginning
of king Edward IV.'s reign, when it was sold by one
of them to Sir John Fogge, of Repton, comptroller of
the houshold and privy counsellor, on whose attainder
anno I Richard III. this manor came to the crown,
and by another act, passed the same year, the king being enabled to make grants of the possessions of persons
attainted, this manor of Olde Oven, alias Owene, with
other lands in this county, was given to Gloucester Herald, to hold by knight's service, who however, held it
but a short time, for an act having passed in the 1st year
of Henry VII. for the restitution of several persons attainted by king Richard III. this manor came again
into the hands of its former owner, Sir John Fogge,
who died in the 6th year of that reign, and by his will
gave this manor to his second son Thomas Fogge, esq.
one of whose descendants passed it away in the beginning of queen Elizabeth's reign to Crouch, and Giles
Crouch alienated it in 1588 to Michael Sondes, esq.
afterwards of Throwley, whose son Sir Richard Sondes,
about the beginning of the reign of king Charles I
conveyed it by sale to Franklyn, from which name it
was sold to Lambe; in later time, after some intermediate owners, it came by marriage, about the 2d
year of king George I. to Henry Cartwright, from
whence it was sold to Tempest, of Durham, whose descendant John Tempest, esq. of Wynyard, in the said
county, some few years ago passed it away by sale to
Thomas Hawkins, esq. of Nash, who sold it to the
right hon. Lewis Thomas Lord Sondes, the present
possessor of it.
RHODES-COURT is a manor situated in the south-east
extremity of this parish, in the borough of the same
name, which borough, though within the parish of Selling, is yet within the hundred of Faversham, the court
leet of which claims over it. It was antiently written
Rode, and la Rode, and was part of the possessions of
the wealthy family of Badlesmere, one of whom, Bartholomew
de Badlesmere, in the 9th year of king Edward II. obtained a grant of free-warren for all his
demesne lands within this manor. His son Giles de
Badlesmere dying in the 12th year of Edward III. s.p.
leaving his four sisters his coheirs, (fn. 4) upon the division of
their inheritance, this manor was, among others, allotted to Margaret, whose husband Sir John Tibetot,
or Tiptost, as the name was usually called, became
possessed of it in her right; his son Robert died without male issue, and this manor went into the colateral
branch of that family, in which it continued down to
John Tiptost, earl of Worcester, who, for his adherence
to the house of York, was attained and beheaded in
1471, anno 10 Edward, IV. king Henry being then
restored to the crown, through the successful services
of Richard, earl of Warwick. He left by his second
wife only one son Edward, then an infant, who, though
he was afterwards restored in blood by Edward IV. I
do not find that he was ever reinstated in the possession
of this manor, which seems to have remained in the
crown till the reign of Henry VIII. In the 26th year
of which, anno 1534, Thomas Bealde, of Godmersham, died possessed of it, leaving two daughters, to
whom he devised this manor.
After this it came into the possession of Christopher
Tilghman, gent of this parish, who owned it in 1621,
and he sold it to Thomas Carter, of Crundal, in whose
family it remained till it was alienated by Thomas Carter. esq. of Crundal, in 1714, to Mr. George Smith,
of Faversham, who died in 1763, and his son, of the
same name, within these few years, sold it to John Sawbridge, esq. of Ollantigh, whose son Samuel-Elias
Sawbridge, esq. is the present possessor of it.
THE TITHES of this borough were formerly accounted as part of the rectory of Faversham, to which
they were accordingly paid; and in the year 1274 an
inquisition was made in the church of Selling, concerning the payment of one hundred sheaves of corn, due
to that church from this land of Rode, for the burial
of the tenants of it, and it was decreed by the official
of the archdeacon, that the tenants should in future pay
the same to the church of Sellyng from their own corn,
and not from the tenth belonging to the church of Faversham; and that they should make sufficient recompence to the church of Sellyng for all arrears then due
on account of the same.
The great tithes of this borough now belong to the
right hon. lord Sondes, as part of his rectory of Selling, as do the above-mentioned one hundred sheaves
in part of the same rectory. But the small tithes of such
part of this borough as is within the parish of Boughton, are claimed by the vicar of that parish, and are
accordingly paid to him.
SOUTHOUSE is an estate in this parish, which had
owners of that name in very early times. Valentine
Southouse was possessed of lands in Selling in 1449,
and his eldest son William gave the south window in
this church. Of this branch was Thomas Southouse,
esq. author of the Monasticon Favershamiense, and other
tracts, who died in 1676, and was buried there, whose
second son Filmer Southouse, was a man of learning,
and studious in his father's line of knowledge. (fn. 5) They
bore for their arms, Argent, on a bend cotized, three
martlets, gules. Other branches of it were settled in
this neighbourhood, in Sheldwich, and in Faversham;
but though they continued in this parish till the beginning of the present century, yet this estate in particular,
for there were others belonging to them, called likewise by their name, which were at times alienated to
different persons, which had been the antient inheritance of this family, was alienated from them before the
reign of queen Elizabeth, when Robert Dodde was
possessed of it, and conveyed it in separate parcels, anno
4 Elizabeth, back again to John, George, and Thomas
Southouse. That part of it, which consisted of the
house, with the land adjoining to it, was in Charles II.'s
reign, become the property of Mr. Richard Southouse,
who by his will in 1675 devised it to his sister Elizabeth, and the next year conveyed it to James Hardres,
esq. whose descendant John Hardres, in 1702, conveyed it to Isaac Denew, esq. who in 1719 passed it
away by sale to John Wotton, of Sturry, whose descendant John Wotton, in 1777, conveyed is to Lewis,
lord Sondes, whose son the right hon. Lewis-Thomas,
lord Sondes, is the present owner of it.
Charities.
AN ALMS-HOUSE in this parish was given to it by Mr. Abraham Chambers of Marsnes, for the benefit of two poor persons
of this parish, to be nominated by his heirs, on condition, that
the parish from time to time should repair it.
The poor constantly relieved are about forty; casually 95.
SELLING is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of
Ospringe
The church, which is dedicated to St. Mary, consists of three isles, at the upper end of the outer ones
are two chancels, of which the southern is the largest,
and with the rest of the church seemingly forms a cross;
in the middle between these stands the steeple, which
is a tower, in which are six bells. Above this is the
high chancel, with another on each side of it, and one
more small one on the north side, the entrance of which
is entirely stopped up. In the east window of the high
chancel are remains of good painted glass, being figures
of several saints and warriors; under them are several
coats of arms. In the high chancel is a memorial for
William Norwood, S. T. B. rector of St. Dunstan's in
the East, London, and late fellow of All Souls college,
Oxford, obt. 1596. Under the upper south chancel is
a vault, made by Mr. Thomas Gibbs Hilton, for his
family. The chancel below that above-mentioned, belonged to the family of Gate, owners of Luton, in this
parish, now Sir Harry Oxenden's, to whom this chancel now belongs. Several of the Gates lie interred in
it. In the south isle several of the Gyles's, and in the
middle isle several of the Greenstreet's, of this parish,
lie interred. In the window at the upper side of the
north isle, is a fine head of a saint, and these arms,
A lion rampant, guardant, double tailed, ermine, over all,
a fess.
The church of Selling was in very early times, together with the manor, part of the possessions of the monastery of St. Augustine, as has been already mentioned
before, and so early as the latter end of king Henry I.'s
reign, about 1130, was assigned by the abbot of it, to
the cloathing of the monks there, the appropriation of
it being confirmed by pope Urban III. about 1185,
and by pope Alexander IV. in 1255, with the four privileges annexed to it. (fn. 6) Notwithstanding which, there
was no endowment of a vicarage here till the time of
archbishop Peckham, when Thomas de Fyndone, then
abbot of St. Augustine, about the year 1284, on the
petition of J. de Bedele, then vicar, granted that he
should receive, as a perpetual augmentation of his portion, being the oblations and obventions commonly belonging to the altars, the five acres of land, with the
garden and all other its appurtenances, lying in this
parish, in the place where the parsonage was sometime
situated; and he confirmed for him and his successors
for ever, the appropriation of the tenement where the
vicar then dwelt, near the church. And the granted,
that the vicar and his successors should receive of him
and his church yearly, by the hand of their chamberlain, ten shillings sterling at Michaelmas and Lady-day,
and one seam of peas on Christmas-day; so that being
content with the oblations and obventions aforesaid,
(not corn or sheaves, unless planted or dug with the
foot) belonging in common to the altars, and to these
his augmentations, —he should exact nothing, in the
name of tithe of gardens, beasts, tillage, or any other
matters existing within the bounds of the manor of
their chamber, nor should receive any thing of mills,
or nutriments of cattle, belonging to the chamber,
but that the same should remain there, safe, free, and
quiet to it, without any tithing or exaction as aforesaid, free and exempt as they were elsewhere in their
demesnes. But yet, if the premises were let to ferme
to others, then the vicar should have of the farmer of
them his just tithe; but that the vicar and his successors, should pay to the ordinarie the procurations, by
reason of any visitation, and should be liable to all
other ordinary burthens of the church for ever: and
that, when the above benefit was granted to the vicar,
it was so accepted by him, for himself and his successors. The cyrograph of which grant and endowment
was confirmed by archbishop Peckham, at the request
both of the vicar and the abbot, under his seal at the
same time.
The rectory or parsonage, together with the advowson of the vicarage appendant to it, continued
part of the possessions of the monastery till its dissolution, anno 30 Henry VIII. when they were, together with the manor, a few years afterwards, passed by
grant from the crown to Sir Anthony St. Leger, as
has been already fully related before, and from him
through the several intermediate owners there mentioned, down to the right hon. Lewis-Thomas, lord
Sondes, the present owner of them.
In 1578 here were communicants 133. In 1640,
communicants 186. Value sixty pounds. It is now
a discharged living, of the clear yearly certified value
of thirty-seven pounds, the yearly tenths being 13s. 4d.
Church of Selling.
|
| PATRONS, | VICARS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| Richard Sondes, esq. | William Daud, A. M. May 8,
1598, obt. 1639. |
| The King. | William Annand, A. M. Nov.
16, 1639. (fn. 7) |
| Sir G. Sondes, K. B. | Onesephorus Paul, Nov. 18, 1669,
resigned 1671. |
| James Kay, A. M. May 9, 1671,
obt. 1677. |
| Dame Mary Sondes, countess of
Faversham. | John Sidway, A. M. Dec. 13,
1677, deprived 1680. |
| Lewis Watson, esq. | Edward Fisher, clerk, Aug. 1,
1680, obt. 1710. |
| Edward Watson, esq. | Thomas Nicholls, A. M. Oct. 7,
1710, resigned 1714. (fn. 8) |
| Hon. Edward Watson. | George Sykes, A. B. May 5,
1714, resigned 1715. (fn. 9) |
| James Bernard. A. M. Feb. 6,
1715, resigned 1726. (fn. 8) |
| Lewis, earl of Rockingham. | John Burton. A. M. Feb. 28,
1726, obt. Dec. 1735. |
| John Arnald, A. B. Dec. 20,
1735, resigned 1762. |
| Lewis, lord Sonaes. | William Gurney, A. M. Feb. 2,
1763, resigned 1763. (fn. 8) |
| Henry Thomson, A. B. June 15,
1763, resigned 1784. (fn. 8) |
| Richard Halke, A. M. 1784, the
present vicar. (fn. 10) |