WINGHAM
IS the next adjoining parish south-westward from
Ash, situated for the most part in the upper half hundred of the same name, and having in it the boroughs
of Wingham-street, Deane, Twitham, and Wenderton, which latter is in the lower half hundred of
Wingham.
WINGHAM is situated in a healthy pleasant country,
the greatest part of it is open uninclosed arable lands,
the soil of which, though chalky, is far from being unfertile. The village, or town of Wingham, is nearly
in the middle of the parish, having the church and college at the south-west part of it; behind the latter is
a field, still called the Vineyard. The village contains
about fifty houses, one of which is the court-lodge, and
is built on the road leading from Canterbury to Sandwich, at the west end of it runs the stream, called the
Wingham river, which having turned a corn-mill here,
goes on and joins the Lesser Stour, about two miles
below; on each side the stream is a moist tract of
meadow land. Near the south boundary of the parish
is the mansion of Dene, situated in the bottom, a dry,
though dull and gloomy habitation; and at the opposite side, next to Staple, the ruinated mansion of Brook,
in a far more open and pleasant situation. To the
northward the parish extends a considerable way, almost
as far as the churches of Preston and Elmstone. The
market, granted anno 36 king Henry III. as mentioned hereafter, if it ever was held, has been disused for
a number of years past; though the market-house
seems yet remaining. There are two fairs held yearly
here, on May 12, and November 12, for cattle and
pedlary.
In 1710 there was found on the court-lodge farm,
by the plough striking against it, a chest or coffin, of
large thick stones, joined together, and covered with
a single one at the top. At the bottom were some
black ashes, but nothing else in it. The ground round
about was searched, but nothing else was sound.
Henry de Wengham, a person of great note and extraordinary parts, and much in favour with Henry III.
was born here, who in 1255 made him lord chancellor.
In 1259, he was elected bishop of Winchester, which
he resused, but towards the latter end of the same year
he was chosen bishop of London, being still chancellor,
and was consecrated the beginning of the year following. He died in 1262, and was buried in his own cathedral. He bore for his arms, Gules, a heart between
two wings, displayed, or.
WILLIAM COWPER, ESQ. eldest son of Sir William
Cowper, bart. of Ratling-court, in Nonington, having
been made lord-keeper of the great seal in 1705, was
afterwards by letters patent, dated Dec. 14, 1706,
created lord Cowper, baron Cowper of Wingham; and
in 1709, was declared lord chancellor. After which,
anno 4 George I. he was created earl Cowper and viscount Fordwich, in whose descendants these titles have
continued down to the right hon. Peter-Lewis-Francis
Cowper, the fifth and present earl Cowper, viscount
Fordwich and baron of Wingham. (fn. 1)
The MANOR OF WINGHAM was part of the antient
possessions of the see of Canterbury, given to it in the
early period of the Saxon heptarchy, but being torn
from it during the troubles of those times, it was restored to the church in the year 941, by king Edmund, his brother Eadred, and Edwin that king's son. (fn. 2)
Accordingly it is thus entered, under the general title
of the archbishop's possessions, taken in the survey of
Domesday:
In the lath of Estrei, in Wingeham hundred, the archbishop himself holds Wingeham in demesne. It was taxed
at forty sulings in the time of king Edward the Consessor,
and now for thirty-five. The arable land is . . . . . .
In demesne there are eight carucates, and four times
twenty and five villeins, with twenty borderers having
fifty-seven carucates. There are eight servants, and two
mills of thirty-four sulings. Wood for the pannage of
five hogs, and two small woods for fencing. In its whole
value, in the time of king Edward the Consessor, it was
worth seventy-seven pounds, when he received it the like,
and now one hundred pounds. Of this manor William de
Arcis holds one suling in Fletes, and there be has in demesne one carucate, and four villeins, and one knight with
one carucate, and one fisbery, with a saltpit of thirty
pence. The whole value is forty shillings. Of this ma
nor five of the archbishop's men hold five sulings and an
half and three yokes, and there they have in demesne eight
carucates, and twenty-two borderers, and eight servants.
In the whole they are worth twenty-one pounds.
In the 36th year of king Henry III. archbishop Boniface obtained the grant of a market at this place.
The archbishops had a good house on this manor, in
which they frequently resided. Archbishop Baldwin,
in king Henry II.'s reign, staid at his house here for
some time during his contention with the monks of
Christ-church, concerning his college at Hackington.
Archbishop Winchelsea entertained king Edward I.
here in his 23d year, as did archbishop Walter Reynolds king Edward II. in his 18th year. And king
Edward III. in his 5th year, having landed at Dover,
with many lords and nobles in his train, came to Wingham, where he was lodged and entertained by archbishop Meopham. And this manor continued part of
the see of Canterbury till archbishop Cranmer, in the
29th year of king Henry VIII. exchanged it with the
king for other premises. After which it continued in
the crown till king Charles I. in his 5th year, granted
the scite, called Wingham court, with the demesne
lands of the manor, to trustees, for the use of the city
of London. From whom, by the direction of the
mayor and commonalty, it was conveyed, at the latter
end of that reign, to Sir William Cowper, knight and
baronet, in whose descendants it has continued down to
the right hon. Peter-Francis Cowper, earl Cowper,
who is the present owner of it. (fn. 3)
BUT THE MANOR ITSELF, with the royalties, profits
of courts, &c. remained still in the crown. Since
which, the bailiwic of it, containing the rents and pro
fits of the courts, with the fines, amerciaments, reliess,
&c. and the privilege of holding the courts of it, by
the bailiff of it, have been granted to the family of
Oxenden, and Sir Henry Oxenden, bart. of Brome, is
now in possession of the bailiwic of it. A court leet
and court baron is held for this manor.
TRAPHAM is a mansion in this parish, which was
formerly in the possession of a family of the same name,
who resided at it, but after they were extinct it passed
into that of Trippe, who bore for their arms, Gules, a
chevron, or, between three borses heads erased, sable,
bridled, collared and crined of the second; (fn. 4) and John
Tripp, esq. resided here in queen Elizabeth's reign, as
did his grandson Charles, who seems to have alienated
it to Sir Christopher Harflete, of St. Stephen's, whose
son Tho. Harflete, esq. left an only daughter and heir
Afra, who carried it in marriage to John St. Leger,
esq. of Doneraile, in Ireland, descended from Sir Anthony St. Leger, lord deputy of Ireland in Henry VIII.'s
reign, and they joined in the alienation of it to Brook
Bridges, esq of the adjoining parish of Goodneston,
whose descendant Sir Brook Wm. Bridges, bart. of
that place, is the present owner of it.
The MANOR OF DENE, situated in the valley, at the
southern boundary of this parish, was antiently the inheritance of a family who took their surname from it,
and held it by knight's service of the archbishop, in
king Edward I's reign, but they seem to have been
extinct here in that of king Edward III. After which
it passed into the family of Hussey, who bore for their
arms, Per chevron, argent and vert, three birds counterchanged; and then to Wood, before it came by sale
into the family of Oxenden, who appear to have been
possessed of it at the latter end of Henry VI.'s reign,
about which time they had become by marriage, owners
of Brook and other estates in this parish. The family
of Oxenden have been resident in this county from the
reign of king Edward III. Solomon Oxenden, being
the first mentioned in the several pedigrees of it, whose
near relation Richard Oxenden was prior of Christchurch, Canterbury, in that reign; in this name and
family of Oxenden, whose arms were Argent, a chevron,
gules, between three oxen, sable, armed, or; which coat
was confirmed to the family by Gyan, king at arms,
anno 24 Henry VI. this manor and seat continued
down to Sir Henry Oxenden, of Dene, who was on
May 8, 1678, created a baronet, whose youngest
grandson Sir George Oxenden, bart. succeeding at
length to the title on the death of his eldest brother
Sir Henry, resided at Dene, where he died in 1775,
having served in parliament for Sandwich, and been
employed in high offices in administration, and leaving
behind him the character of a compleat gentleman.
He married Elizabeth, one of the daughters and coheirs of Edward Dunck, esq. of Little Wittenham, in
Berkshire, by whom he had two sons, of whom George,
the second, was made by will heir to the estate of Sir
Basil Dixwell, bart. of Brome, on his death, s. p. and
changed his name to Dixwell as enjoined by it, but
died soon afterwards likewise, s. p. and that estate came
at length to his eldest brother Henry, who succeeded
his father in the title of Baronet. He married Margaret, daughter and coheir of Sir George Chudleigh, bart.
of Devonshire, since deceased, by whom he has issue
Henry Oxenden, esq. of Madekyn, in Barham, who
married Mary, one of the daughters of Col. Graham,
of St. Laurence, near Canterbury, by whom he has
issue. Sir Henry Oxenden, bart. now resides at Brome,
and is the present possessor of this manor and seat, as
well as the rest of his father's estates in this parish. (fn. 5)
Lady Hales, widow of Sir Thomas Pym Hales, bart.
of Bekesborne, now resides in it.
TWITHAM, now usually called Twittam, is a hamlet
in this parish, adjoining to Goodneston, the principal
estate in which once belonged to a family of that name,
one of whom Alanus de Twitham is recorded as having been with king Richard I. at the siege of Acon,
in Palestine, who bore for his arms, Semee of crosscroslets, and three cinquesoils, argent, and held this estate
in Twitham, of the archbishop, and they appear to
have continued possessed of it in the 3d year of king
Richard II. Some time after which it came into the
possession of Fineux, and William Fineux sold it anno
33 Henry VIII. to Ingram Wollet, whose heirs passed
it away to one of the family of Oxenden, of Wingham, in whose descendants it has continued down to
Sir Henry Oxenden, bart. of Brome, the present possessor of it.
On the foundation of the college of Wingham,
archbishop Peckham, in 1286, endowed the first diaconal prebend in it, which he distinguished by the name
of the prebend of Twitham, with the tithes of the lands
of Alanus de Twitham, which he freely held of the
archbishop there in Goodwynestone, at Twytham. (fn. 6)
BROOK is an estate in this parish, situated northward
from Twitham, which was formerly the estate of the
Wendertons, of Wenderton, in this parish, in which it
remained till by a female heir Jane, it went in marriage
to Richard Oxenden, gent. of Wingham, who died in
1440, and was buried in Wingham church, in whose
name and family it continued down to Henry Oxenden,
of Brook, who left two daughters and coheirs, of whom
Mary married Richard Oxenden, of Grays Inn, barrister-at-law, fourth son of Sir Henry Oxenden, bart,
who afterwards, on his wife's becoming sole heiress of
Brook, possessed it, and resided here. He left Elizabeth his sole daughter and heir, who carried it in marriage to Streynsham Master, esq. a captain in the royal
navy, the eldest surviving son of James Master, esq. of
East Langdon, who died some few days after his marriage; upon which she became again possessed of it in
her own right, and dying in 1759, s. p. gave it by
will to Henry Oxenden, esq. now Sir Henry Oxenden,
bart. of Brome, and he is the present owner of it.
WENDERTON is a manor and antient seat, situated
northward from Wingham church, eminent, says Philipott, for its excellent air, situation, and prospect,
which for many successive generations had owners of
that surname, one of whom, John de Wenderton, is
mentioned in Fox's Martyrology, as one among other
tenants of the manor of Wingham, on whom archbishop Courtnay, in 1390, imposed a penance for neglecting to perform some services due from that manor.
In his descendants this seat continued till John Wenderton, of Wenderton, in the 1st year of Henry VIII.
passed it away to archbishop Warham, who at his decease in 1533, gave it to his youngest brother John
Warham, whose great-grandson John, by his will in
1609, ordered this manor to be sold, which it accordingly soon afterwards was to Manwood, from which
name it was alienated, about the middle of the next
reign of king Charles I. to Vincent Denne, gent. who
resided here, and died in 1642, s. p. whose four nieces
afterwards became by will possessed of it, and on the
partition of their estates, the manor and mansion, with
part of the lands since called Great Wenderton, was allotted to Mary, the youngest of them, who afterwards
married Vincent Denne, sergeant-at-law, and the remaining part of it, which adjoins to them, since called
Little Wenderton, to Dorothy, the third sister, afterwards married to Roger Lukin, gent. of London, who
soon afterwards sold his share to Richard Oxenden,
esq. of Brook, from one of which family it was sold to
Underdown, by a female heir of which name, Frances,
it went in marriage to John Carter, esq. of Deal, the
present owner of it.
BUT GREAT WENDERTON continued in the possession of Sergeant Denne, till his death in 1693, when
Dorothy, his eldest daughter and coheir, carried it in
marriage to Mr. Thomas Ginder, who bore Argent,
on a pale, sable, a cross fuchee, or, impaling azure, three
lions heads, or; as they are on his monument. He
resided at it till his death in 1716, as did his widow till
her decease in 1736, when it came to her nephew Mr.
Thomas Hatley, who left two daughters his coheirs,
the eldest surviving of whom, Anne, carried it in marriage, first to Richard Nicholas, esq. and then successively to Mr. Smith and Mr. James Corneck, of London, and Mrs. Corneck, the widow of the latter, is
the present possessor of it.
At the boundary of this parish, adjoining to Preston
and Ash, lies THE MANOR OF WALMESTONE, usually
called Wamston, which was antiently part of the possessions of the family of Septvans, one of whom, Robert de Septvans, held it in king Edward II.'s reign,
of the archbishop; whose descendant Sir William de
Septvans died possessed of it in the 25th year of that
reign. (fn. 7) How long it continued in this name I have
not found; but at the beginning of king Edward IV.'s
reign it was become the property of William Bonington, of Canterbury, who died in 1463, and directed it
by his will to be sold. After which it became, about
the latter end of king Henry VIII.'s reign, the property
of Walter Hendley, esq. the king's attorney-general,
who left three daughters his coheirs, and they joined
in the sale of it to Alday, who alienated it to Benedict
Barnham, esq. alderman of London, one of whose
daughters and coheirs, Elizabeth, carried it in marriage
to Mervin Touchet, earl of Castlehaven, who being
convicted of high crimes and misdemeanors, was executed anno 7 Charles I. Soon after which this manor
seems to have been divided, and one part of it, since
called Little Walmestone, in which was included the
manor and part of the demesne lands, passed from his
heirs to the Rev. John Smith, rector of Wickham
Breaus, who having founded a scholarship at Oxford,
out of the lands of it, presently afterwards sold it to
Solly, of Pedding, in which name it continued till Stephen Solly, gent. of Pedding, and his two sons, John
and Stephen, in 1653, joined in the conveyance of it
to Thomas Winter, yeoman, of Wingham, in which
name it remained for some time. At length, after
some intermediate owners, it was sold to Sympson, and
John Sympson, esq. of Canterbury, died possessed of it
in 1748, leaving his wife surviving, who held it at her
decease, upon which it came to her husband's heir-atlaw, and it is now accordingly in the possession of Mr.
Richard Simpson.
BUT GREAT WALMESTONE, consisting of the mansion-house, with a greater part of the demesne lands
of the manor, was passed away by the heirs of the earl
of Castlehaven to Brigham, and Mr. Charles Brigham,
of London, in the year 1653, sold it to William Rutland, of London, who left two daughters his coheirs,
of whom Mary married John Ketch, by whom she had
a sole daughter Anne, who afterwards at length became
possessed of it, and carried it in marriage to Samuel
Starling, gent. of Worcestershire, who in 1718, conveyed it, his only son Samuel joining in it, to Thomas
Willys, esq. of London, afterwards created a baronet.
After which it passed in the same manner, and in the
like interests and shares, as the manor of Dargate, in
Hernehill, down to Matthew, Robert and Thomas
Mitchell, the trustees for the several uses to which this,
among other estates belonging to the Willis's, had
been limited; and they joined in the sale of it, in
1789, to Mr. William East, whose son, Mr. John
East, of Wingham, is the present owner of it.
ARCHBISHOP KILWARBY intended to found a college in this church of Wingham, but resigning his
archbishopric before he could put his design in practice, archbishop Peckham, his successor, in the year
1286, perfected his predecessor's design, and founded
A COLLEGE in this church, for a provost, whose portion, among other premises, was the profits of this
church and the vicarage of it, and six secular canons;
the prebends of which he distinguished by the names
of the several places from whence their respective portions arose, viz. Chilton, Pedding, Twitham, Bonnington, Ratling, and Wimlingswold. The provost's
lodge, which appears by the foundation charter to have
before been the parsonage, was situated adjoining to the
church-yard; and the houses of the canons, at this time
called Canon-row, opposite to it. These latter houses
are, with their gardens and appurtenances, esteemed
to be within the liberty of the town and port of Hastings, and jurisdiction of the cinque ports. This college was suppressed in the 1st year of king Edward VI.
among others of the like sort, when the whole revenue
of it was valued at 208l. 14s. 3½d. per annum, and
193l. 2s. 1d. clear; but Leland says, it was able to
dispend at the suppression only eighty-four pounds per
annum. Edward Cranmer, the last master, had at the
dissolution a pension of twenty pounds per annum,
which he enjoyed in 1553. (fn. 8)
After the dissolution of the college, the capital mansion, late belonging to the provost, remained in the
crown till king Edward VI. in his 7th year, granted
the scite of it, with the church appropriate of Wingham, and all tithes whatsoever arising within the parish, and one acre of glebe-land in it, to Sir Henry Palmer, subject to a payment of twenty pounds annually
to the curate or vicar of it.
The Palmers of Wingham were descended from a
very antient one at Angmerin, in Suffex, who bore for
their arms, Or, two bars, gules, each charged with three
tresoils of the field, in chief, a greyhound, currant, sable.
In the seventh descent from Ralph Palmer, esq. of that
place, in king Edward II.'s reign, was descended Sir
Edward Palmer, of Angmerin, who left three sons,
born on three successive Sundays, of whom John, the
eldest, was of Sussex, which branch became extinct in
queen Elizabeth's reign; Sir Henry, the second son,
was of Wingham; and Sir Thomas, the youngest, was
beheaded in queen Mary's reign. Sir Henry Palmer,
the second son, having purchased the grant of the college of Wingham, as before-mentioned, made it the
seat of his residence, as did his son Sir Thomas Palmer,
who was sheriff anno 37 Elizabeth, and created a baronet in 1621. He so constantly resided at Wingham,
that he is said to have kept sixty Christmases, without
intermission, in this mansion, with great hospitality.
He had three sons, each of whom were knighted.
From the youngest of whom, Sir James, descended
the Palmers, of Dauney, in Buckinghamshire, who upon
the eldest branch becoming extinct, have succeeded to
the title of baronet; and by his second wife he had
Roger Palmer, earl of Castlemain. Sir Thomas Palmer, the eldest of the three brothers, died in his father's
life-time, and left Sir Thomas Palmer, bart. of Wingham, heir to his grandfather; in whose descendants,
baronets, of this place, this mansion, with the parsonage of Wingham appropriate, continued down to
Sir Thomas Palmer, bart. of Wingham, who died
possessed of it in 1723, having had three wives; by
the first he had four daughters; by the second he had
a son Herbert, born before marriage, and afterwards a
daughter Frances; the third was Mrs. Markham,
by whom he had no issue; and she afterwards married Thomas Hey, esq. whom she likewise survived.
Sir Thomas Palmer, by his will, gave this seat,
with the parsonage appropriate and tithes of Wingham, inter alia, after his widow's decease, to his
natural son Herbert Palmer, esq. above-mentioned,
who married Bethia, fourth daughter of Sir Thomas
D'Aeth, bart. of Knolton. He died in 1760, s. p. and
by will devised his interest in the reversion of this seat,
with the parsonage, to his wife Bethia, for her life, and
afterwards to his sister Mrs. Frances Palmer, in tail.
But he never had possession of it, for lady Palmer furvived him, on whose death in 1763, Mrs. Bethia Palmer, his widow, became entitled to it, and afterwards
married John Cosnan, esq. who died in 1773. She
survived him, and resided here till her death in 1789.
In the intermediate time, Mrs. Frances Palmer having
barred the entail made by her natural brother Herbett
above-mentioned, died, having devised the see of this
estate, by her will in 1770, to the Rev. Thomas Hey,
rector of Wickhambreaux, and his heirs, being the eldest son of the last lady Palmer by her last husband.
Mr. Hey accordingly, on the death of Mrs. Cosnan,
who died s. p. succeeded to this seat and estate. He
married first Ethelreda, eldest daughter and coheir of
dean Lynch, since deceased, by whom he has no surviving issue; and secondly, Mrs. Pugett, widow of
Mr. Puget, of London. He now resides in this seat
of Wingham college, having been created D. D. and
promoted to a prebend of the church of Rochester.
Charities.
JOHN CHURCH, yeoman, of this parish, in 1604, gave 1cl.
to the poor, to distribute yearly at Easter, 10s. to the poor for
the interest of it.
HECTOR DU MONT, a Frenchman, born in 1632, gave the
silver cup and patten for the holy communion.
SIR GEORGE OXENDEN, president for the East-India Company at Surat, in 1660, gave the velvet cushion and pulpitcloth.
JOHN RUSHBEACHER, gent. of this parish, in 1663, gave
five acres of land in Woodnesborough, the rents to be annually
distributed to ten of the meaner sort of people of Wingham, not
receiving alms of the parish, now of the yearly value of 4l.
SIR GEORGE OXENDEN, above-mentioned, in 1682, gave
500l. for the repairing and beautifying this church, and the Dene
chancel.
SIR JAMES OXENDEN, knight and baronet, of Dene, founded
and endowed a school in this parish with 16l. per annum for ever,
for teaching twenty poor children reading and writing, now in
the patronage of Sir Henry Oxenden, bart.
RICHARD OXENDEN, esq. of Brook, in 1701, gave an annuity of 4l. for ever, to the minister, for the reading of divine
service and preaching a sermon, in this church, on every Wednesday in Lent, and on Good Friday; and he at the same time
gave 20s. yearly for ever, to be distributed, with the consent of
the heirs of the Brook estate, to eight poor people, who should
be at divine service on Easter-day, to be paid out of the lands of
Brook, now vested in Sir Henry Oxenden, bart.
THOMAS PALMER, esq. of St. Dunstan's in the East, London, gave 300l for the repairing, adorning and beautifying the
great chancel of this church.
MRS. ELIZABETH MASTER, esq. relict of Strensham Master,
of Brook, in 1728, gave the large silver flaggon; and MRS. SYBILLA OXENDEN, spinster, of Brook, at the same time gave a
large silver patten for the communion.
Besides the above benefactions, there have been several lesser
ones given at different times in money, both to the poor and for
the church. All which are recorded in a very handsome table
in the church, on which are likewise painted the arms of the several benefactors
There are about forty poor constantly relieved, and casually
twenty.
THIS PARISH is within the ECCLESIASTICAL
JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry
of Bridge.
The church, which is exempt from the archdeacon,
is dedicated to St. Mary. It is a handsome building,
consisting of two isles and three chancels, having a slim
spire steeple at the west end, in which is a peal of eight
bells and a clock. The church consists of two isles
and three chancels. The former appear to have been
built since the reformation; the latter are much more
antient. It is handsome and well built; the pillars between the isles, now cased with wood, are slender and
well proportioned. The outside is remarkably beautiful
in the flint-work, and the windows throughout it, were
regular and handsomely disposed, superior to other
churches, till later repairs destroyed their uniformity.
The windows were formerly richly ornamented with
painted glass, the remains of which are but small. In
the south window, in old English letters, is Edward
Warham, gentill . . . . of making this window . . . .
and underneath the arms of Warham. In the north
isle is a brass tablet for Christopher Harris, curate here,
and rector of Stourmouth, obt. Nov. 24, 1719. Over
the entrance from this isle into the high chancel, is
carved on the partition, the Prince of Wales's badge
and motto. In the south wall is a circular arch, plain,
seemingly over a tomb. A monument for T. Ginder,
gent. obt. 1716. In the south east window the arms
of Warham. A memorial for Vincent Denne, gent.
of Wenderton, obt. 1642. In the high chancel are
seven stalls on each side. On the pavement are several
stones, robbed of their brasses, over the provosts and
religious of the college. A stone, coffin-shaped, and
two crosses pomelle, with an inscription round in old
French capitals, for master John de Sarestone, rector,
ob. XII Kal. May MCCLXXI. Several monuments and
memorials for the family of Palmer. The south chancel
is called the Dene chancel, belonging to that seat, under
which is a vault, in which the family of Oxenden,
owners of it, are deposited. In the middle, on the
pavement, is a very costly monument, having at
the corners four large black oxens beads, in allusion
to their name and arms. It was erected in 1682. On
the four tablets on the base is an account of the family
of Oxenden, beginning with Henry, who built Denehouse, and ending with Dr. Oxenden, dean of the
arches, who died in 1704. There are monuments in
it likewise for the Trippes. The north chancel is called
the Brook chancel, as belonging to that seat, in which
are monuments for the Oxendens and Masters's of
this seat. This chancel is shut out from the church,
and is made use of as a school-room, by which means
the monuments are much desaced, and the gravestones,
from the filth in it, have become wholly obliterated.
On one of these stones was a brass plate, now gone, for
Henry Oxenden, esq. who built Dene, obt. 1597.
Elizabeth, daughter of the marquis of Juliers, and
widow of John, son of Edmund of Woodstock, earl of
Kent, after being solemnly veiled a nun, quitted her
prosession, and was clandestinely married to Sir Eustace
de Danbrichescourt, in a chapel of the mansion-house
of Robert de Brome, a canon of this collegiate church,
in 1360; for which she and her husband were enjoined different kinds of penance during their lives,
which is well worth the reading, for the uncommon superstitious mockery of them. (fn. 9)
At the time of the reformation, the church was
partly collegiate, and partly parochial. The high chancel, separated from the rest of the church by a partition, served for the members of the college to perform
their quire service in. The two isles of the church
were for the parishioners, who from thence could hear
the quire service; and in the north isle was a roodlost, where one of the vicars went up and read the gospel to the people. At which time, I find mention of a
parish chancel likewise.
The church of Wingham formerly comprehended
not only this parish, but those likewise of Ash, Goodnestone, Nonington, and Wimlingswold; but archbishop Peckham, in 1282, divided them into four distinct parochial churches, and afterwards appropriated
them to his new-founded college of Wingham, with a
saving to them of certain portions which the vicars of
them were accustomed to receive. The profits of this
church and the vicarage of it, together with the parsonage-house, being thus appropriated and allotted to
the provost, as part of his portion and maintenance,
the archbishop, in order that the church should be duly
served, by his foundation charter, ordered, that the
provost and canons should each of them keep a vicar
who should constantly serve in it. In which state it
continued till the suppression of the college, in the 1st
year of king Edward VI. when it came, among the
rest of the revenues of the college, into the hands of
the crown, where this parsonage appropriate, to which
was annexed, the nomination of the perpetual curate
serving in this church, remained till it was granted by
king Edward VI. in his 7th year, to Sir Thomas Palmer, bart. Since which it has continued in like manner, together with the scite of the college, as has been
already mentioned, to the Rev. Dr. Hey, who is the
present possessor of this parsonage, together with the
patronage of the perpetual curacy of the church of
Wingham.
In 1640 the communicants here were three hundred
and sixty-one.
The curacy is endowed with a stipend of twenty
pounds per annum, paid by the owner of the parsonage,
and reserved to the curate in the original grant of the
college by king Edward VI. and with four pounds per
annum, being the Oxenden gift before mentioned;
besides which, the stipend of the resident curate, and
his successors, was increased in 1797, by a liberal benefaction made by the Rev. Dr. Hey, of one hundred
pounds per annum, clear of all deductions, to be paid
out of the parsonage, and of a house, garden, and piece
of pasture land adjoining, for the curate's use, both
which were settled by him on trustees for that purpose.
Church of Wingham.
|
| PATRONS, | CURATES. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| Christopher Harris, A. M. September 1672, obt. Nov. 24,
1719. (fn. 10) |
| William Newton, A. M. 1719,
obt. May 1744 (fn. 11) |
| John Nairn, A. M. resigned
1769. (fn. 12) |
| John Loftie, A. M. 1770, the
present curate. (fn. 13) |