WAREHORNE,
LIES the next parish south-westward. So much of
it as is in the hundred of Ham, in which the church
stands, is within the eastern division of the county, and
lath of Shipway. So much as is in the borough of
Great Kenardington, or Old Herlackenden, is in the
hundred of Blackborne, western division of the county,
and lath of Scray. That part which is in the hundred
of Ham, below the foot of the clay-hill southward, is
in the level of Romney Marsh, and in the liberty and
jurisdiction of the justices of it. The rest of it is within
the respective jurisdiction of the justices of the county,
and within the district of the Weald.
THIS PARISH lies upon the clay-hills, near the western boundaries of them, an unhealthy, as well as unpleasant situation, partaking of the gross atmosphere of
the Marsh, and the soil of it in general a deep miry
clay. The village is built round a large green, called
the Lecon, or more properly, the Lecton, on which
is a handsome house, the property of Mr. Thomas
Hodges, who lives in it, as his ancestors have for some
generations past, bearing for their arms, Or, three crescents, sable, on a canton, argent, two bars wavy, azure,
over all an anchor in pale, sable. At a small distance
from the Lecon is Warehorne-green, and round it several houses, one of which is the parsonage, and another
Tinton-house, Mr. Howland's, who lives in it. The
church stands on the edge of the hill, overlooking the
Marsh, which is at the foot of it. About a mile northeast from the church, over which the country is hill
and dale, is the hamlet of Ham-street, close at the edge
of the Marsh; part of which only is in this parish, and
about a mile further in the Marsh, another small hamlet, called Hammill-green, through which is the usual
high road, an execrable bad one, from this part of the
Marsh to the upland country. This parish extends
northward by a narrow slip between Shadoxhurst and
Orlestone, as far as Sugar-loaf and Bromley-green,
which is partly in it, all which is for the greatest part
covered with coppice wood; and it extends again in
like manner into the Marsh southward to Brookland,
and joins Snave. All of it, above the Marsh, is within
the Weald.
There are two fairs, one kept on Ham-street-green,
on the 14th of May, for toys, and the other on the 2d
and 3d of October, on Warehorne-green, the profits
of which belong to the earl of Thanet, being a very
large one for cattle.
The FIRST MENTION made of Warehorne is in a
charter of king Egbert, who with king Ethelwulf his
son, in 820, gave to one Godwine, two plough-lands,
in a place called by the English, Werehornas, situated
among the marshes, and it was bought for one hundred
shillings in money, and, as the boundaries are expressed
extended on the east part southward over the river Limen, unto the South Saxon limits. In the year 1010,
archbishop Alphage was become possessed of this manor, which he gave that year to Christ-church, in Canterbury, towards the cloathing of the monks there, and
he endowed it with the same liberties and privileges as
their manor of Middleton was endowed with. After
which this manor continued with the religious till the
time of taking the survey of Domesday, in which record it is entered, under the general title of Terra Monachorum Archiepi, i. e. lands belonging to the monks
of the archbishop, as follows:
In Hame hundred, the archbishop himself holds Werehorne. It was taxed at one suling. The arable land is
two carucates. In demesne there is one carucate, and six
villeins, with three borderers having one carucate. There
are twelve acres of meadow, and wood for the pannage
of six bogs. In the time of king Edward the Confessor,
and afterwards, it was worth twenty shillings, and now
sixty shillings,
Not long after which, the monks appear to have been
dispossessed of this manor, which was held of the archbishop by knight's service, by Ansfrid de Dene, in the
reign of king John. But this name was extinct here in
the next reign of king Henry III. when Richard de
Bedeford was become owner of it, and held it in like
manner, and in the 52d year of that reign obtained the
grant of a market to be held at it weekly on a Tuesday,
and a fair for three days continuance at the feast of St.
Matthew, which was renewed and confirmed to him
in the 8th year of king Edward I. at which time he
had a grant of free-warrenwithin his demesne lands
here. He died possessed of it in the 17th year of king
Edward I. After which it did not continue long in
this name, for in the next reign of king Edward II.
Hugh de Windlesore, or Windsor, was become possessed of it, from which name it was alienated, in the
beginning of king Edward III.'s reign, to William de
Moraunt, of Moraunt's-court, in Chevening, who was
sheriff in the 12th and 13th years of that reign, to whom
the king issued his precept, that there should be but
one bell rung in any steeple near the sea coast. His
son Sir Thomas Moraunt left an only daughter and heir
Lora, who carried this estate first in marriage to Sir
Thomas Cawne, of Ightham, and secondly to James
Peckham, of Yaldham, in Wrotham, (fn. 1) in which name
it continued till it was alienated to Haut, whose descendant Sir William Haut, of Bishopsborne, leaving two
daughters his coheirs, Jane, the youngest, entitled her
husband Sir Thomas Wyatt, of Allington, to it, as part
of her inheritance, and he, in the 33d year of king
Henry VIII. an act having passed for that purpose, exchanged it with the king for other premises, and it remained in the crown till queen Elizabeth granted it to
Ellis, from which name it passed by sale to Thomas
Paget and Thomas Twisden, and they not long afterwards alienated it to Sir John Tuston, knight and baronet, whose son Nicholas was created Earl of Thanet,
and in his descendants, earls of Thanet, this manor has
continued down to the right hon. Sackville, earl of
Thanet, the present possessor of it. There is no house
or court lodge on it.
TINTON, antiently called Tintenton, is a considerable
manor, in the southern part of this parish, which,
though the house of it is near the church, yet it lies for
the most part within the level of Romney Marsh. This
manor, after the Norman conquest, was given by the
Conqueror to Hugo de Montsort. Accordingly it is
thus entered in Domesday, under the general title of
his lands, at which time it was reputed to lie in Blackborne hundred.
In Blacheburne hundred, Hugo himself holds Tintentone. Ulnod held it of king Edward, and then it was
taxed for one suling, now for half, because it is without
the division. The arable land is five carucates. In de
mesne there are twenty eight carucates, and twenty-one
villeins, with six borderers having seven carucates.
There is a church, and nine servants, and three fisheries
of five shillings, and thirty-eight acres of meadow. Wood
for the pannage of forty bogs. In the time of king Edward the Confessor it was worth twelve pounds, and afterwards six pounds, now seven pounds. The same Hugo
holds half a yoke, which five sochmen held and now hold,
having one carucate there, with four borderers. It is and
was worth always five shillings.
And in another place, under the title of the bishop
of Baieux's lands,
In Adilovtesbrige hundred, the same Robert (de Romenel) holds of the bishop half a denne of the manor of
Titentone, which Hugo de Montfort holds, and there he
has land to the quantity of half a carucate, and one villein,
with three borderers and half a carucate, and two fisheries
of five shillings. The whole of this is and was worth fifteen shillings. This land is without the division of Hugo.
On the voluntary exile of Robert de Montfort,
grandson of Hugh above-mentioned, in king Henry I.'s
reign, his possessions came into the king's hands, who
soon afterwards granted this manor of Titendenne, for
so it was written, to Rob. de Ver, constable of England,
and Adeliza his wife, daughter of Hugh de Montfort,
and they jointly, in the early part of king Henry II.'s
reign, having founded the priory of Horton, gave this
manor to it. (fn. 2) This gift was afterwards confirmed
by Henry de Essex, constable of England, and by king
Stephen and pope Lucius afterwards; and in the 20th
year of king Edward III. the prior of Horton appears
to have held it of Dover castle, that is, of the king in
capite, as of the Constabularie there. In which state it
continued till the dissolution of it in consequence of the
act of the 27th of king Henry VIII. when it came,
with the rest of the possessions of it, into the king's
hands, whence they were together granted, two years
afterwards, to archbishop Cranmer, and they continued
parcel of the Archbishop's possessions till the reign of
queen Elizabeth, when they were by act again vested
in the crown, where this manor staid only till the beginning of the next reign of king James I. when it was
granted to Sir William Sidley, bart. of the Friars, in
Aylesford, (fn. 3) in which name and family it continued down
to Sir Charles Sedley, bart. of Nuthall, in Nottinghamshire, who some years ago alienated this manor to Mr.
Jeremiah Curteis and John Waterman, attornies-atlaw, of Rye, and they soon afterwards conveyed the manor itself, with the courts and all privileges and immunities belonging to them, to Sir Edward Dering,
bart. whose son of the same name is the present possessor of it.
BUT the court-lodge and demesne lands of this manor,
were alienated by them to Mr. John Howland, gent.
of this parish, who rebuilt the mansion of it, in which
he afterwards resided. He left three sons, Harman,
Clarke, and William, and a daughter Anne, who married Mr. Thomas Hodges, of Warehorne. On the
division of his estates after his death, Harman Howland,
the eldest, among other estates, became possessed of
the mansion of Tinton, with part of the demesne lands,
which he now possesses, and resides at it; and Clarke
Howland, the second son, became possessed of the remainder of those lands, which still remain his property.
The MANORS OF HAM AND CAPEL lie within this
parish, the latter among the woods near the northern
boundary of it, and the former, though now obsolete,
and its situation almost unknown, on the opposite side
of the parish, somewhere near Ham-green, and was
once of such note as to give name to the hundred itself.
This manor was antiently part of the demesnes of the
family of Orlanston, one of whom, William de Orlanston, obtained a charter of free-warren to his lands at
Orlanston, Werehorne, and other places, in the 51st
year of king Henry III. whose descendant Sir John
Orlanston, about the beginning of king Richard II.'s
reign, marrying the daughter of Sir William at Capel,
and heir to her brother Richard at Capel, who died
s. p. anno 15 Richard II. (whose ancestor John de
Capel, resided here at his manor of Capel, in king
Henry II.'s reign, and as appears by the leiger book
of Boxley abbey, was a good benefactor to that house)
became in her right entitled to the possession of that
manor, which had then been for many descents in that
family. He was succeeded in the possession of both
manors by Richard Orlanston, esq. who died s. p. anno
7 Henry V. and left his two sisters his coheirs, the
eldest of whom Joane, married to Sir William Scott,
of Scotts-hall, entitled her husband to the possession of
these manors, on the division of their inheritance between them; since which they have continued in the
like succession of ownership as the manor of Orlanston
heretofore described, down to the hon. WilliamHenry Bouverie, the present possessor of them.
PARKERS is another manor here, which antiently
gave both surname and seat to a family of that name.
Edward Parker held lands in this parish, Westerham,
and other places, and bore for his arms, Argent, a chevron, ermine, between three mascles of the field. After his
death anno 9 Edward II. this manor continued in
his descendants until king Henry VIII.'s reign, when
it appears by several court rolls that John Engham was
become possessed of it, in whose family it remained till
queen Elizabeth's reign, when it was by sale conveyed
to Taylor, who not long after alienated it to Collyns,
and John Collyns, esq. mayor of Hythe, died possessed
of it in 1598, whose eldest son Giles Collyns soon afterwards sold it to Squire, and he, at the latter end of
king Charles II.'s reign, passed it away to William
Kingsley, D. D. of Ickham, and archdeacon of Can
terbury, who died possessed of it in 1647, (fn. 4) on which it
descended to his eldest son George Kingsley, of Christchurch, in Canterbury, in whose descendants, it remained till it was at length, about the year 1726, alienated to Mr. Thomas Hodges, gent. of this parish,
who devised it to his younger son Joseph, and his eldest
son Mr. Thomas Hodges, gent. now of Eleham, is the
present owner of it.
Charities.
THERE are three fields in this parish, given by some person
unknown, the annual produce of which is 14l. 4s. now in the
occupation of Richard Howland and Samuel Rutton. The rents
of it are distributed yearly by the churchwardens, in whom the
land is vested, to such poor who receive no constant alms, but
are distressed by old age, sickness, or any other misfortune.
The poor constantly relieved are about thirty, casually fifteen.
THIS PARISH is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of
Limne.
The church, which is dedicated to St. Matthew, is
a large handsome building, consisting of three isles and
a chancel, all which are ceiled, and handsomely kept.
At the west end is a square brick tower, built about
twenty-six years ago, in the room of the old one, which
fell down. There are five bells in it. There are but
small remains of painted glass in the windows. Against
the wall of the chancel is a head carved in stone, having a monks bonnet or cap on it; and at the spring of
the lowermost arch of the north isle, is another somewhat like it. Against the wall of the chancel is a monument for John Coventry, rector, obt. 1681, arms,
A fess, ermine, between three escallops. A stone, on
which were the figures of a man and four children in
brass, most of which are gone, excepting part of the
man; and in the middle isle is a stone, with an inscription in brass, for Thomas Jekin, obt. 1438. In the
church-yard are several tombs and memorials of the
Hodges's, the most antient of which, legible, (for there
are several of them otherwise) is for Thomas Hodges,
anno 1703.
The rectory of Warehorne is in the patronage of
the crown. It is valued in the king's books at nineteen pounds, and the yearly tenths at 1l. 18s. There
are twenty acres of upland, and twenty acres of marsh
glebe land. In 1588 here were communicants one
hundred and sixty, and it was valued at one hundred
and twenty pounds. It is now valued at one hundred
pounds.
In the petition of the clergy, beneficed in Romney
Marsh, in 1635, for setting aside the custom of 2½d.
an acre in this parish, and two pence in every other
parish throughout the Marsh, in lieu of tithe-wool and
pasturage, a full account of which has been given before under Burmarsh, the rector of Warehorne was
one who met on the occasion; when it was agreed on
all sides, that wool in the Marsh had never been
known to have been paid in specie, though the other
tithes were paid or compounded for, and in proof of
this custom, an acquittance, given by the rector in
1564, was produced as a proof of it. There is a modus
of one shilling per acre on all the marsh land in this
parish. (fn. 5) The woodland in it pays no tithe, as being
in the Weald, as was determined in a suit between
the rector and Mr. Chute, of Bethersden, for the recovery of tithe for his woodland in this parish.
The PRIORY of Horton was possessed of A PORTION
OF TITHES, arising from their lands of Tinton, in
this parish, which on the suppression of the priory,
came into the hands of the crown, and was granted,
with the rest of the possessions of it, to the archbishop,
anno 29 Henry VIII. and though the scite of that
priory, with the greatest part of the revenues of it,
was regranted to the crown in queen Elizabeth's
reign, yet this portion of tithes seems to have continued with the see of Canterbury, and to have gained
the name of the rectory of Warehorne, which it still retains, and is now parcel of the possessions of his grace
the archbishop.
Church of Warehorne.
|
| PATRONS, | RECTORS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| The King. | Henry Curtise, April 6, 1626,
second induction Dec. 15,
following. (fn. 6) |
| John Asherst, A. M. July 25,
1661. |
| John Coventry, A. M. June 11,
1675, obt. March 3, 1680. (fn. 7) |
| James Perkins, A. M. May 15,
1680. |
| Stephen Thornton, January 13,
1680. |
| John Burletson, A. M. Dec. 15,
1681, obt. Oct. I, 1719. (fn. 8) |
| Richard Bate, A. M. Feb. 19,
1719, obt. March 4, 1736. (fn. 9) |
| John Bate, 1737, obt. 1761. (fn. 10) |
| Sir John Pershall, bart. Dec. 21,
1761, resigned 1771. (fn. 11) |
| John Fleming Stanley, A. M.
Sept. 13, 1771, obt. 1783. (fn. 12) |
| Donald Maclaine, Jan. 1784,
obt. 1796. |
| Charles Williams, 1796, the present rector. |