BRABORNE
LIES the next parish to Bircholt north-eastward,
being written in Domesday both Breburne and Bradeburne, and taking its name from its situation on the
broad bourne or rivulet which rises in it.
THE PARISH is situated at the foot of the upper
range of the chalk or down-hills, which reach from
hence to the sea shore at Folkestone, and here take the
name of Braborne downs; it is an unfrequented place,
and from the soils of it not a pleasant one, for near the
downs it is mostly chalk; the middle part, though
there are various soils in it, consists mostly of a stiff,
though not unfertile clay, and the southern part is a
deep red sand. It is about two miles across from north
to south, and somewhat more from east to west, stretching itself along a narrow slip beyond Hampton, almost
as far as the village of Brooke, and on the other part
within a very little of Stowting court-lodge. The village of Braborne, having the church and court-lodge
in it, lies at the foot of the Down-hill, on the side of a
wide valley, which extends below it southward. At
the foot of the hills westward are Combe, Bedlestone,
the hamlet of West Braborne-street and Hampton.
The parish is well watered by several rivulets, one of
them, which rises in and near Braborne-street, runs
southward into that branch of the Stour below Scottshall, and so on by Sevington to Ashford; and there
are others, which from the foot of the hills, more towards the west, which join the stream which runs by
Swatfield bridge towards Ashford likewise.
In the southern part of the parish is the heath called
Braborne-lees, one half of which only is within the
bounds of it; across these lees the high road goes from
Ashford towards Hythe. Here is a noted warren for
rabbits, belonging to the Scotts-hall estate, they are of
a remarkable fine flavor, from which Canterbury, and
all the neighbouring towns are plentifully supplied with
them. A fair is held in the village on the last day of
May, for pedlary and toys.
That part of it which is within the borough of
Cocklescombe, is in the hundred, and within the liberty
of the royal manor of Wye.
THE MANOR OF BRABORNE, soon after the dissolution of the Saxon heptarchy, was, according to a very
antient record, the inheritance of a lady called Salburga, who is stiled in it Domina de Brabourne, and by
her will, in the year 864, ordered that the future possessors of it should give yearly to the monastery of St.
Augustine, a quantity of provisions, on condition of
their performing certain religious services for the health
of her soul; which provisions were forty measures of
malt, fifteen rams, twenty loaves of bread, one measure
of butter, one measure of cheese, four cart loads of
wood, and twenty hens. Who were the possessors of
this manor afterwards till the time of the Norman conquest, does not appear; but at the time of taking the
survey of Domesday, it was become part of the pos
sessions of Hugo de Montfort, on whom that prince
had bestowed likewise more than thirty other manors
and estates in the neighbourhood of it. Accordingly
he is numbered in that record as one of the thirteen,
(for there are no more) who held lands in this county
at that time, and under the general title of his lands
this manor is thus entered in it.
In Wivart lath, in Berisout hundred, Hugo himself holds
Breburne, Godric de Burnes held it of king Edward, and
it was taxed at seven sulings, and now for five sulings
and an half and half a yoke, because another part of it is
without the division of Hugo, and that the bishop of Baieux
holds. The arable land is fifteen carucates. In demesne
there are two, and thirty-one villeins, with ten borderers
having ten carucates. There is a church, and eight servants, and two mills of seven shillings, and twenty acres
of meadow. Wood for the pannage of twenty-five bags.
In the time of king Edward the Confessor it was worth
twenty pounds, and afterwards eight pounds, now sixteen
pounds.
That part mentioned above, as without the division
of Hugo de Montfort, is likewise noticed in the same
book, in the description of the adjoining manors of
Hastingligh and Aldelows, belonging to the bishop of
Baieux, as may be seen hereafter, in the account of
them.
On the voluntary exile of Robert de Montfort,
grandson of Hugh above-mentioned, in the reign of
king Henry I. this manor, among the rest of his possessions, came into the king's hands, whence it was soon
afterwards granted to Robert, son of Bernard de Ver,
constable of England, who had married Adeliza, daughter of Hugh de Montfort, and was the founder of the
priory of Horton, in the next adjoining parish. (fn. 1) After
which it appears to have come into the possession of
Henry de Essex, who was constable likewise of Eng
land, from his succession to which, as well as from
other circumstances, it should seem that he became
entitled to this manor by inheritance Henry de Essex, before-mentioned, was baron of Raleigh, in Essex, his chief seat, and hereditary standard-bearer of
England; but by his misbehaviour in a battle against
the Welsh, in the 10th year of that reign, he forfeited
all his possessions to the crown. (fn. 2) Before which he had
confirmed to the priory of Horton all the former
grants of his ancestors. And by another charter he
granted to it, in free and perpetual alms, the pasture
of twelve oxen in his park of Braborne, with his own
oxen, for so long as they should be at feed, whether
within his park or without; and all tithe of his hay,
to be taken wholly and fully with his carriages to the
barns of the monks. After which this manor appears
to have been held by Baldwin de Betun, earl of Albermarle, who, in the 5th year of king John, granted
it to William Mareschal, earl of Pembroke, with Alice
his daughter in frank marriage, to hold to them and
their heirs. William, earl of Pembroke, in the 10th
year of king Henry III. his first wife being deceased,
married Alianore, the king's sister, and in the 14th
year of that reign had a confirmation of this manor, on
condition that Alianore his wife, if she survived him,
should enjoy it for life. He died in the 15th year of
that reign, and she became possessed of it, and afterwards remarried Simon, earl of Leicester, who was
slain fighting on the part of the discontented barons at
the battle of Evesham. After which the countess and
her children were forced to forsake the realm, and she
died abroad in great poverty. In the mean time the
four brothers of William, earl of Pembroke, successively earls of Pembroke, being dead s. p. their inheritance became divided between their five sisters and
their heirs, and upon the division of it, the manor of
Braborne, among others, was allotted to Joane, the
second sister, then the widow of Warine de Montchensie, by whom she had one son William, and a
daughter Joane, married to William de Valence, the
king's half brother, who afterwards, through the king's
favour, on William de Montchensie's taking part with
the discontented barons, and his estates being confiscated, became possessed of this manor, of which he died
possessed in the 23d year of king Edward I. leaving
Joane his widow surviving, who had it assigned to her
as part of her dower. She died in the 1st year of king
Edward II. holding it in capite by knight's service, as
of the king's marechalsy, and leaving one son Adomar
or Aymer de Valence, earl of Pembroke, and three
daughters; Anne, married to Maurice Fitzgerald, secondly to Hugh Baliol, and lastly to John de Avennes; Isabel, to John de Hastings, of Bergavenny;
and Joane, to John Comyn, of Badenagh. (fn. 3) Aymer
de Valence, earl of Pembroke, on her death, succeeded
to this manor, and in the 6th year of that reign, obtained a charter of privileges for it, among which were
those of a market, fair, and free-warren. He was a
nobleman greatly favoured by king Edward I. and II.
but in the 17th year of the latter reign, attending the
queen into France, he was murdered there that year.
He died possessed of this manor, and without issue;
so that John de Hastings, son of Isabel, one of the
earl's sisters, and John Comyn, of Badenagh, in Scotland, son of Joane, another of the earl's sisters, were
found to be his coheirs and next of kin; and the latter
of them, on the division of their inheritance, had this
manor, in his mother's right, allotted to him. He
died s. p. in the 19th year of king Edward II. leaving
his two sisters his coheirs, of whom the eldest, Joane,
married to David de Strabolgie, earl of Athol, possessed this manor as part of his wife's inheritance, and
died next year. His descendant David de Strabolgie,
earl of Athol, died in the 49th year of that reign, possessed of this manor, (fn. 4) leaving by Elizabeth his wife,
daughter of Henry, lord Ferrers, who died the same
year, anno 1375, and was buried in the high chancel
of Ashford church, two daughters his coheirs, the
youngest of whom Philippa, married to John Halsham,
of Halsham, in Sussex, by her father's will, became
entitled to this manor. The Halshams bore for their
arms, Argent, a chevron engrailed, between three leopards heads, gules. Their grandson Sir Hugh Halsham, died anno 21 Henry VI. leaving Joane, his only
daughter and heir, who entitled her husband John
Lewknor, esq. of Sussex, to the possession of it; in
whose descendants it continued till the latter end of king
Henry VII.'s reign, when Sybilla, daughter of Sir
Thomas Lewknor, carried it in marriage to Sir William Scott, K. B. and in his descendants, resident at
Scotts-hall, this manor, with the rents, services, courtlodge, and demesne lands, remained, till at length
George Scott, esq. about the year 1700, sold the manor-house, called Braborne court-lodge, with the demesne
lands belonging to it, being enabled so to do by an act
passed anno 10 and 11 William III. to Tho. Denne,
of Patricksborne, whose grandsons Daniel and Thomas
Denne, of Sittingborne, in 1768, conveyed this estate
to William Deedes, esq. of St. Stephen's, (who was
before possessed of an estate in this parish, which had
been purchased of George Scott, esq. by his grandfather William Deedes, M. D. of Canterbury) and his
eldest son of the same name, now of Hythe, esq. is the
present owner of it.
BUT THE MANOR RENTS AND SERVICES remained
in the family of Scott for some time afterwards, and
till Edward Scott, esq. some few years ago, alienated
the quit-rents of this manor, together with the Park
and Pound farms, in this parish, to Thomas Whorwood, esq. of Denton, who by will devised them for
life to Mrs. Cecilia Scott, of Canterbury, daughter of
George Scott, esq. before-mentioned, on whose death
in 1785 the property of them became vested in lady
Markham, widow of Sir James Markham, bart. of
Lincolnshire, who was Mr. Whorwood's heir-at-law,
and she sold them in 1787 to Sir Edward Knatchbull,
bart. the present owner of them.
BUT THE MANOR OF BRABORNE ITSELF, with the
court baron and other manerial rights belonging to it,
remained in the descendants of George Scott, esq.
down to Francis Talbot Scott, esq. whose trustees,
about the year 1784, conveyed it, with his other estates
in this neighbourhood, to Sir John Honywood, bart.
of Evington, who is the present proprietor of it.
HEMINGE is a manor, lying at the south-east corner
of this parish, next to Horton, which in antient time
gave both surname and residence to a family so called,
as the deeds without date belonging to it plainly shew.
At length, after this manor had been in the possession
of this name, as might be traced out fully by these evidences for almost three hundred years, it was conveyed
by William Heminge, in the 2d year of Edward VI.'s
reign, to Peter Nott, in whose descendants it continued
till the 16th year of Charles II. when one of them
alienated it to Avery Hills, by whose daughter and
heir it went in marriage to Hobday, whose descendant
sold it, in the year 1713, to Mr. John Nethersole, who
left three sons surviving, John, who was of Barham;
Stephen, who was of Wimlinswold; and William, who
was of Canterbury, in whose three daughters, or their
representatives, this manor at length became vested.
They agreed on a partition of their inheritance, on
which the whole of this manor was allotted to Jacob
Sharpe, esq. of Canterbury, the surviving son of Mr.
Jacob Sharpe, by Elizabeth, the eldest of the three
daughters, who in 1796 sold it to Mr. Thomas Ken
nett, of Brabourn, who is the present possessor of it.
A court baron is held for this manor.
COMBE is another manor, in the northern part of
this parish, close at the foot of the downs, which name
it had from its situation, cumbe signifying in the Saxon
a bottom or valley, and to distinguish it from other
manors of the same name in this neighbourhood, it
was called Braborne Combe. About the year 990, one
Edward de Cumbe, whose son Leofard was a monk in
St. Augustine's monastery, by his will bequeatned the
land of Cumbe to that monastery. Whether the abbot
and convent ever gained the possession of it, or if they
did, how long it staid with them, I do not find; but at
the time of taking the survey of Domesday, in the
Conqueror's reign, it was parcel of the possessions of
the bishop of Baieux, under the general title of whose
lands it is entered in it as follows:
The same Wadard holds of the bishop, Cumbe. It was
taxed at one suling. The arable land is two carucates.
In demesne there is one, and nine villeins, with five borderers having one carucate and an half. There are fourteen acres of meadow. Wood for the pannage of five
hogs. In the time of king Edward the Confessor it was
worth sixty shillings, and afterwards fifty shillings, now
four pounds, and the service of one knight. Leuret de
rochinge held it of king Edward.
After this, on the bishop of Baieux's disgrace, this
manor was held of the crown, by a family who took
their name from their residence at it; of whom Richard de Combe, and Simon his son, served the office
of sheriff, as assistants to Sir John de Northwood, in
the 20th year of king Edward I. and bore for their
arms, Sable, three lions passant-guar dant, in pale, gules.
At length by a female heir of this name, it went by
marriage, in the reign of king Richard II. to John
Scott, who afterwards resided at it, as did his descendants till Sir William Scott removed to Scotts-hall at
the latter end of king Henry IV.'s reign; and in his
descendants, of Scotts-hall, this manor continued down
to George Scott, esq. of Scotts-hall, who procured an
act anno 10 and 11 king William, to vest this manor,
among his other estates, in trustees, to be sold for payment of his debts, in pursuance of which it was soon
afterwards sold to Brook Bridges, esq. of Goodnestone,
afterwards created a baronet, whose great-grandson
Sir Brook Bridges, bart. of Goodnestone, is the present possessor of it.
HAMPTON is the last manor to be described in this
parish, being situated in the north-west corner of it,
adjoining to Brooke. It has the name in antient deeds
of Hampton Cocklescombe, and sometimes is described
by the name of the manor of Cocklescombe only, being so called from its situation in the borough of that
name, and within the hundred of Wye. This manor
was given by Robert de Ver, constable of England,
and lord of Braborne, to Osbert his marshal, and Emeline his wife, who gave it again to the priory in the
adjoining parish of Horton, by the description of the
land of Hanetone; which gift was confirmed to the
priory by the same Robert de Ver, and Adeliza de
Montfort his wife, and afterwards by Henry de Essex, (fn. 5)
as appears by the register of it; of the priory of Horton this manor was afterwards again held, at the rent
of forty shillings in perpetual fee farm, by a family
who took their name of Hampton from their residence
at it, as appears not only by the above register, but by
antient deeds and court-rolls, and that they remained
here till the reign of king Henry VI. when John Hampton pasted it away to one of the name of Shelley, by
whose heir general it became the property of John
May, of Bibroke, in Kennington, whose son of the
same name leaving an only daughter Alice, the carried
it in marriage to John Edolph, of Brenset, and his
daughter Elizabeth entitled her husband William Wil
cocks, esq. of New Romney, to it, who died possessed
of this manor in the 16th year of queen Elizabeth,
holding it in free socage. His widow survived him,
and afterwards married Ralph Radcliffe, esq. of Hitchin,
in Hertfordshire, who survived her. She died in the
39th year of that reign, and by her last will devised
this manor to her only son by her first husband, John
Wilcocks, who dying s. p. his two sisters became his
coheirs, of whom Martha married Sir Edward Radcliffe, of Sevington, in this county, and physician to
king James I. and Elizabeth married William Andrews;
and on the partition of their inheritance, Sir Edward
Radcliffe became entitled to the sole possession of it, in
whose descendants it continued down to John Radcliffe,
esq. of Hitchin priory, who dying in 1783, s. p. this
manor, among his other estates, came to Sir Charles
Farnaby, bart. of Sevenoke, in right of his wife Penelope, sister and heir-at-law of the above mentioned
John Radcliffe. Sir Charles Farnaby afterwards took
the name of Radcliffe, (fn. 6) and removed to Hitchin, where
he died in 1798, and his heirs are now entitled to it.
Charities.
WILLIAM FORDRED, by will in 1550, gave to this parish,
among others, a proportion of the rents of 25 acres of land in
St. Mary's parish, in Romney Marsh; which portion to this parish is of the annual produce of 4l. 12s. 4¾d. to be distributed
annually to the poor, and vested in trustees.
MR. KNOTT gave for the use of the poor, a sum of money,
vested in Robert Goddard, of Mersham, now of the annual produce of 8s.
The poor constantly relieved are about fifty-five, casually
twenty-five.
BRABORNE is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of
Elham.
The church, which is dedicated to St. Mary, is a
large handsome building, consisting of two isles and two
chancels, having a square tower steeple at the west end,
in which are five bells. The northern isle is much lostier than the other, having an upper story, choir-like,
with the three upper windows to the south; below
which is the roof of the north isle. Both chancels are
full of the interments of the Scott family; but the
brasses and inscriptions are almost all gone. Against
the north wall is a tomb, with an arch and recess over
it; against the back have been two figures, with inscriptions, and two shields of brass, now gone; on the
side of the tomb are two shields carved in stone, one
Pympe, the other Scott. Against the opposite wall is a
kind of altar, the form of which is given before, P. I.
At the east end, within the rails, is a large altar-tomb
against the wall, of Bethersden marble; on it the marks
of a figure, the brass gone; on the front five shields,
with the arms of Scott, and their several impalements.
Over the tomb is a kind of altar-piece, ornamented
with stone carve-work, and three shields of arms; I.
Scott impaling oblit. over it the date 1290; 2, being
the middle shield, Scott and the following quarterings,
Beaufitz, Pympe, Pashley, Normanville, Warren, Sergeaux, Gower, and Cogan In which arms of Scott
it is noted, all the bordures are plain. In the south chancel belonging likewise to the Scott family, the brasses
on the gravestones, with which the pavement is covered, are all gone. In the south wall is a very antient
tomb with an arch over it; underneath this tomb the
late Edward Scott, esq. was buried. Against this wall
is a monument for Arthur Scott, commissioner of the
navy, third son of Geo. Scott, of Scotts-hall. Against
the north wall a monument for lieutenant-colonel Cholmeley Scott, esq. youngest son of George Scott, esq. of
Scotts-hall. Weever mentions several memorials of
this family in the body of the church remaining in his
time, all which have been long since obliterated, and
their brasses destoryed. In the south isle is a stone, with
the figure of a man in brass, habited in armour, with
sword and spurs on, the latter having the rowels much
like the figure of a catherine wheel; a greyhound under his feet; the inscription gone, excepting the words
of Brabourne, armigr. and anno Dni mil. Against the
north wall, a monument for William Richards, put up
by Gabriel Richards, gent. of Rowling, in 1672; arms,
Sable, a chevron between three fleurs de lis, argent; a
crescent for difference. Another for John Richards, vicar, obt. 1727. In the south scite of the body of the
church, is a memorial for Dionisia, daughter of Vincent Fynche, alias Harbert, esq. obt. 1458; arms,
Finch impaling Cralle; and in the same isle is a stone,
robbed of the figure on it, but the brass inscription remains, for Joane, daughter of Sir Gervas Cliston, married to John Diggs; arms, Clifton impaling Fineh, and
Diggs impaling Clifton. The tower at the west end is
of a large size, but flat at top, and only of equal height
with the roof of the north isle.
Mr. Evelyn, in his Discourse on Forest Trees, mentions a superannuated yew-tree growing in this churchyard, which being 58 feet 11 inches in circumference,
bore near 20 feet diameter; and besides which there
were goodly planks, and other considerable pieces of
square and clear timber, which he observed to lie about
it, which had been hewed and sawn out of some of the
arms only, torn from it by impetuous winds. This tree
has been many years since gone, and a fine stately
young one now flourishes in the room of it.
The church was formerly appendant to the manor,
and continued so till it was given, in the beginning of
king Henry II.'s reign, by Robert de Ver, lord of the
manor of Braborne, to the priory of Horton, at his
first foundation of it; and it was appropriated to the
priory before the 8th year of king Richard II. the
priory being bound to pay the tenth of the vicarage.
But there does not seem to have been any endowment
made till anno 1445, when there was one assigned by
the prior to Thomas de Banstede, the vicar of it. (fn. 7) In
which state this church, with the advowson of the vicarage, continued till the dissolution of the priory in
the reign of king Henry VIII. when it came into the
king's hands, and remained there till it was granted in
exchange to the archbishop, where it still continues,
the parsonage being at this time parcel of the see of
Canterbury, and his grace the archbishop the present
parton of the vicarage.
The parsonage is a very handsome brick house,
standing at a small distance from the church-yard, to
which the vicarage adjoins likewise, being a neat small
brick building. The family of Kennet have been lessees for many years, Mr. Claude Kennet being the
present lessee of it, who resides at it.
The vicarage of Braborne is valued in the king's
books at 11l. 12s. 6d. and the yearly tenths at 1l. 3s. 3d.
And there is annually, by the endowment of it, paid
out of the parsonage to the vicar, one seam or quarter
of wheat, and the like of barley; and archbishop Juxon,
anno 15 Charles II. augmented it sixteen pounds per
annum, to be paid by the lessee of the parsonage. In
1640 this vicarage was valued at sixty-four pounds,
communicants one hundred and six. In 1733 it was
valued at one hundred pounds. There is one acre of
glebe land belonging to it.
This vicarage was consolidated in the year 1776,
with the rectory of Horton Monks adjoining.
Church of Braborne.
|
| PATRONS, | VICARS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| The Archishop. | John Cadman, March 28, 1594,
obt. 1616. |
| Alexander Lumsden, Feb. 7, 1616,
obt. 1625. |
| John Rosse, A. M. July 25,
1625. |
| William Johnson, A. B, July 14,
1664, obt. 1675. |
| John Richards, inducted March
8, 1675, obt. November 28,
1727. (fn. 8) |
| John Francis, A. M. Jan. 23,
1728, resigned 1733. (fn. 9) |
| Charles Norris, LL. B. Aug. II,
1733, obt. 1767. (fn. 10) |
| Joseph Price, B. D. March 5,
1767, resigned 1786. (fn. 11) |
| A. Purshouse, 1786, the present
vicar. |