NONINGTON.
The next parish eastward is Nonington, which lies
partly, that is, so much as is within the borough of
Kettington, and of Nonington, alias Ratling, in this
hundred of Wingham; and the remainder, containing
the boroughs of Esole, and Frogham, in the lower half
of the hundred of Eastry.
THIS PARISH is, as to soil and situation, much the
same as that of Goodnestone last described, being in a
fine open champaign country, exceedingly dry and
healthy; it is about three miles across each way, the
village called Church-street, with the church in it, is
nearly in the middle of the parish, in a valley, in which,
at no great distance from it, is the seat of St. Alban's, a
low situation, looking up to the uninclosed lands. Near
it is the hamlet of Esole, usually called Isill-street, and
further eastward the estate of Kettington belonging to
Sir Narborough D'Aeth, bart. In the bottom, at
some distance south-west from the church, among some
small inclosures, is the seat of Fredville, a damp and
gloomy situation; near it are the small hamlets of
Frogham and Holt, now called Old-street, near which
is a place called Oxendenden, from whence the family
of that name are said to derive their origin. At the
northern boundary of the parish is the hamlet of Acol,
which had once owners of that name, who bore for
their arms, Quarterly, argent, and azure, over all, a
bend componee, or, and gules, as they were formerly
painted in the windows of this church. It now belongs to Sir Brook William Bridges, and at the western boundary that of Ratling-street. In this parish is
the estate of Curleswood park, now commonly called
the Park farm, belonging to the archbishop, the lessee
of it being Sir Brook William Bridges. There is a
fair held yearly in Church-street, on Ascension day, for
pedlary, &c.
The MANOR OF WINGHAM claims paramountover
the greatest part of this parish, and the manor of Eastry
over the remainder. Subordinate to the former is
The MANOR OF RETLING, usually called Ratling,
in that part of this parish adjoining to Adisham, which
was antiently held of the archbishop by a family of the
same name, who bore for their arms, Gules, a lion rampant, between an orle of tilting spears heads, or, as they
were on the surcoat of Sir John de Ratling, formerly
painted in one of the windows of this church, in which
it continued down to Sir Richard de Retling, who died
possessed of it in the 23d year of king Edward III. leaving a sole daughter and heir Joane, who marrying John
Spicer, entitled him to it. After which, by Cicely, a
daughter and coheir of this name, it passed in marriage
to John Isaac, of Bridge, who died possessed of it anno
22 Henry VI. and his descendant Edward Isaac, esq.
in king Henry VIII.'s reign, alienated it to Sir John
Fineux, chief justice of the king's bench, whose son
William Fineux, esq. of Herne, alienated it to Thomas Engeham, gent. of Goodneston, who by his will
in 1558, gave it to his second son Edward, and his son,
William Engeham sold it to William Cowper, esq.
who afterwards resided here, and was first created a baronet of Nova Scotia, and then, in 1642, a baronet of
Great Britain. His great-grandson Sir William Cowper, bart. was by queen Anne, being then lord keeper
of the great seal, created lord Cowper, made lord chancellor, and afterwards, anno 4 George I. created earl
Cowper, and in his descendants, earls Cowper, this
manor has descended down to the right hon. PeterFrancis, earl Cowper, the present owner of this manor. (fn. 1)
There has not been any court held for it for many
years past.
ARCHBISHOP PECKHAM, on the foundation of
Wingham college, anno 1286, endowed the first subdiaconal prebend of it, which he distinguished by the
name of the prebend of Retling, with the tithes of the
demesne lands, which Richard de Retling and Ralph
Perot held of him in Nonyngton, between the highway
which led from Cruddeswode to the cross of Nonyngtone, and from thence to the estate of the prior, of
Addesham. (fn. 2)
OLD-COURT is an estate in this parish, situated
about a mile northward from the church, which
was antiently the property of the family of Goodneston,
who took their name from their possession and residence in that parish, and it continued in an uninterrupted succession in this family, of whom there is frequent mention in private evidences, which, though
without date, appear to be made in the reigns of king
Henry III. and king Edward I. till at length Edith,
daughter and heir of William Goodnestone, carried
it in marriage to Vincent Engeham, whose son Thomas Engeham, esq. of Goodneston, by his will in
1558, gave it, together with the lands in Nonington,
late Mr. Sidley's and John Bewe's, to his second son
Edward, whose son William Engeham, gent. passed
it away in queen Elizabeth's reign to Thomas Wilde,
esq. descended from an antient family of that name in
Chester, and his son Sir John Wilde, of St. Martin's
hill, near Canterbury, in the next reign of James I.
alienated it to Thomas Marsh, gent. of Brandred, in
Acrise, whose descendant John Marsh resided here till
the year 1665, when he removed to Nethersole, in
Wimlingwold. Since which it has continued, in like
manner as that seat, down to his descendant John
Marsh, esq. now of Chichester, in Sussex, the present
owner of it.
ST. ALBANS COURT, antiently called, at first Eswalt, and afterwards Esole, is a manor situated in the
valley, north-eastward from the church, in the borough of its own name, which with another estate near
it, called Bedesham, (all that remains of the name of
which is a grove behind St. Albans house, called
Beauchamp wood, in which are many foundations of
buildings, being now esteemed as part of the manor
of St.Albans court) was in the time of the Conqueror,
part of the possessions of Odo, bishop of Baieux, and
they are accordingly both thus entered in the record of Domesday:
Adelold holds of the bishop Eswalt. It was taxed at
three sulings. The arable land is . . . . In demesne there
is one carucate, and six villeins, with two borderers having three carucates. There are two servants, and a small
wood for fencing. In the time of king Edward the Confessor it was worth nine pounds, now fifteen. Alnod Cilt
held it of king Edward.
And Somewhat further below:
Osbert, the son of Letard, holds of the bishop, Bedesham. It was taxed at one yoke and an half. The arable. land is . . . . In demesne there is one carucate, with
one villein and four borderers. In the time of king EdEdward the Confessor it was worth sixty shillings, and
afterwards thirty shillings, now fifty shillings. Godisa
held it of king Edward. In the same manor ten thanes
held of Osbern himself one suling and half a yoke, and
there they themselves have four carucates and an half. In
the time of king Edward the Confessor it was worth one
hundred shillings, and afterwards thirty shillings, now
sixty shillings.
On the bishop of Baieux's disgrace, in the year
1084, it came, with the rest of his estates, into the
hands of the crown, whence the manor of Esole, alias
St. Albans, seems to have been granted to William de
Albineto, or Albini, surnamed Pincerna, who had followed the Conqueror from Normandy hither, whose
son, of the same name, earl of Albermarle, gave it, by
the name of the manor of Eswelle, to the abbot of
St. Alban's, in Hertfordshire; which gift was afterwards confirmed by king Stephen; (fn. 3) and from thence
it gained the name of St. Albans. And anno 7 king
Edward I. the abbot of St. Albans claimed and was
allowed, before the justices itinerant, free-warren and
other liberties within this manor. After which it
continued in the possession of the abbey till the 30th
year of king Henry VIII. when the abbot and convent, with the king's consent, sold it, with its lands,
appurtenances, and tithes belonging to it, as well of
corn, grain, hay, and otherwise, then in the occupation of John Hammond, to Sir Christopher Hales,
master of the rolls. Which alienation having been
made in consequence of the licence by the king's word
only, was confirmed by act the next year, specially
for that purpose. On whose death in the 33d year of
that reign, (fn. 4) his three daughters became his coheirs, of
whom Elizabeth, then married to John Stocker, and
Margaret, then unmarried, joined in the sale of their
shares in it, to Alexander Culpeper, who had married
Mary, the other daughter, and he quickly afterwards
alienated the whole of it to his eldest brother Sir Thomas Culpeper, of Bedgbury, who in the 2d and 3d of
Philip and Mary, sold it to Thomas Hammond, gent.
who at that time resided here, being the direct descendant of John Hamon, or Hammond, who was
resident here in king Henry the VIIIth.'s time, as tenant to the abbot and convent of St. Alban's, who
died in 1525, and was buried in this church, as were
his several descendants afterwards, in whom it continued down to William Hammond, esq. of St. Albans,
who married Charlotte, eldest daughter of Dr. Wil
liam Egerton, prebendary of Canterbury, by whom he
left William, of whom hereafter; Anthony, rector of
Ivychurch, and vicar of Limne, and three daughters,
Anna-Maria; Charlotte, married to Thomas Watkinson Payler, esq. of lleden, and Catherine. William Hammond, esq. the eldest son, married Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Osmund Beauvoir, D.D. by
whom he has issue two sons and five daughters, viz.
William-Osmond, Maximilian-Dudley-Diggs; Elizabeth-Mary, Mary-Elizabeth, Charlotte, Julia-Jemima, and Jemima-Julia. He bears for his arms,
Argent, on a chevron, sable, between three ogresses, each
charged with a martlet of the field, three escallop-shells,
or, all within a bordure engrailed, vert; which arms
were granted by Barker, garter, to Thomas Hamon,
gent. of Nonington, anno 1548, and confirmed by
Cooke, clarencieux, and they were certified to the college of arms by William Hammond, esq. last-mentioned, his descendant, in 1779, (fn. 5) and he is the present
owner of this manor and seat, at which he resides.
A court baron is held for this manor, which extends
over some part of the borough of Wingmere, in Eleham, and over a few acres of land in Barham.
SOLES is a manor at the boundary of this parish,
next to Barfreston, which at the taking the survey of
Domesday, in 1080, was part of the possessions of
Odo, bishop of Baieux, under the general title of
whose lands it is thus entered in that record:
Ansfrid holds of the bishop Soles. It was taxed at one
suling. The arable land is . . . In demesne there are
two carucates, and eight viheins with half a carucate.
In the time of king Edward the Confessor it was worth
one hundred shillings, and afterwards twenty shillings,
now six pounds. Elmer held it of king Edward.
Four years after which, on the bishop's disgrace, the
king seized on this estate among the rest of his possessions. After which it was granted to the family of
Crevequer, and made a part of that barony, being
held of it by the tenure of performing ward to Dover
castle. Of Hamo de Crevequer it was held by knight's
service in king Edward I.'s reign, by Richard de Rokesle, and of him again by Hamo and John de Soles,
who certainly took their name from it, but this name
was extinct here in the beginning of king Henry IV.'s
reign, for in the 4th year of it Thomas Newbregge,
of Fordwich, was become possessed of it, whose descendant sold it to Rutter, from which name it passed;
about the beginning of king Edward IV. to Litchsield, whose descendant Gregory Litchfield alienated
it in king Henry VIII.'s reign to John Boys, esq. of
Nonington, in whose descendants it continued down
to John Boys, esq. of Hode-court, who in Charles I.'s
reign alienated it to Sir Anthony Percival, of Dover,
comptroller of the customs there; in whose descendants it remained till, not many years since, it was by
one of them passed away to Major Richard Harvey,
who sold it to Thompson, of Ramsgate, after whose
death it came by marriage to Mr. Stephen Read, of
Canterbury, who afterwards alienated it to John
Plumptree, esq. of Fredville, the present owner of it.
A court baron is held for this manor.
FREDVILLE is a manor in this parish, which in antient deeds is sometimes written Froidville, from its
cold situation, which is both low and watry. It was
held of the castle of Dover, as part of those lands which
made up the barony of Maminot, afterwards, from its
succeeding owners, called the barony of Saye. In the
reign of king Edward I. it was held, in manner as
above-mentioned, by John Colkin, in whose posterity
it remained till the latter end of king Richard II.'s
reign, when it was conveyed by sale to Thomas Charleton, and he, by sine levied anno 2 Henry IV. passed
it away to John Quadring, whose descendant Thomas
Quadring leaving an only daughter and heir Joane,
she carried it in marriage to Richard Dryland, and he,
about the latter end of king Edward IV. alienated it
to John Nethersole, who by fine levied in the 2d year
of king Richard III. conveyed it to William Boys,
esq. of Bonnington, (fn. 6) and he died possessed of it in
1507, and by his will gave this manor to his eldest son
John Boys, esq. of Fredville. His descendant Major
Boys, of Fredville, being a firm loyalist, suffered
much by sequestration of his estates. He had seven
sons and a daughter, who all died s.p. Two of his
elder sons, John and Nicholas, finding that there was
no further abode at Fredville, to which they had become entitled, departed each from thence, with a favourite hawk in hand, and became pensioners at the
Charter-house, in London. (fn. 7) Before which they had,
in 1673, sold it to Denzill, lord Holles, from whose
descendant it afterwards came to Thomas Holles,
duke of Newcastle, who in 1745 sold it to Margaret,
sister of Sir Brook Bridges, bart. of Goodnestone, and
she in 1750, marrying John Plumptree, esq. of Nottinghamshire, he became in her right possessed of it.
He was descended from a family who had been long
settled in that county, who bore for their arms, Argent, a chevron, between two mullets in chief, and an annulet in base, sable. (fn. 8) He served in parliament for Penryn, in Cornwall, and afterwards for Nottingham. By
his first wife above-mentioned, he had no issue; but
by his second, daughter of Philips Glover, esq. of Lincolnshire, he had one son John Plumptree, esq. married to Charlotte, daughter of the Rev. Jeremiah Pemberton, of Cambridgeshire; and a daughter, married
to R. Carr Glynn, esq. He rebuilt this seat, in which
he afterwards resided, and dying in 1791, was succeeded by his only son John Plumptree, esq. beforementioned, who now resides in it.
At a small distance from the front of Fredvillehouse, stands the remarkable large oak tree, usually
known by the name of the Fredville oak. It measures
twenty-seven feet round in girt, and is about thirty
feet in height; and though it must have existed for
many centuries, yet it looks healthy and thriving, and
has a most majestic and venerable appearance.
Charities.
EDWARD BOYS, son of William Boys, esq. of Nonington,
gave by his will in 1596, and annnity of 40s. out of lands which
he had purchased in Nonington and Barfreston, containing 15
acres, to be yearly paid among the poorest of this parish.
ROBERT BATGHAR, yeoman, of Bridge, by will in 1600, gave
to the parson and churchwardens of Nonington, the rents and
profits of his house there, for the relief of the poor.
SIR EDWARD BOYS, of Nonington, by will in 1634, gave to
the poor of Nonington, 6l. to be employed for a stock to set the
poor at work, and not otherwise to be employed, so as the overseers or any sufficient man of the parish be bound yearly to the
heirs of Fredville, whereby the stock be not lost.
A PERSON UNKNOWN gave to two poor housekeepers of this
parish, two houses and an acre and an half of land, in it, at
Frogham, to each, with a sack of wheat to each housekeeper
every Christmas; now vested in the Reverend James Morrice,
owner of Betshanger manor, and of the annual produce of
5l. 10s.
The poor constantly relieved are about thirty, casually forty.
THIS PARISH is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of
Bridge.
The church, which is dedicated to St. Mary, consists of two isles and two chancels, having a tower
steeple at the north corner at the west end, in which are
three bells. In the south isle are the figures of a man
between his two wives, traced on the stone, and inscription for John Hamon and Margaret and Mary
his wives, obt. 1526. A memorial for Wm. Hammond, obt. 1717. In the south or high chancel,
against the wall, a brass plate for Alicia, daughter and
heir of William Sympson, esq. once marshal of Calais, and Catherine Gemecot, wife to Francis Wilford, obt. 1581. A stone, and inscription in brass,
for John Cooke, vicar, obt. March 7, 1528. Several
memorials for the Hammonds. In the north chancel,
now made use of as a school, a memorial for Edward
Boys, esq. obt. 1597. A monument for Mary,
daughter of Edward Boys, and wife of J. Hole, obt.— Several memorials for Trotter and Wood.
A monument for Sir John Mennes. In the windows
of this church were formerly several shields of arms,
long since destroyed; and the figure of a knight,
kneeling on his surcoat, the arms of Boys, of Bonnington, and opposite to him the figure of a woman kneeling, and on her coat the arms of Roper. Another like
figure of a knight, and on his surcoat the arms of
Ratling, being Gules, a lion rampant or, an orle of Spears
heads argent.
The church of Nonington was antiently a chapel
of ease to that of Wingham, and was on the foundation of the college there by archbishop Peckham, in
1286, separated from it, and made a distinct parish of
itself, (fn. 9) and then given to the college, and becoming
thus appropriated to the college, continued with it
till its suppression in king Edward VI.'s reign, when
this parsonage appropriate, with the advowson of the
vicarage or curacy of it, came into the hands of the
crown, where it did not remain long, for in the year
1558, queen Mary granted it, among others, to the
archbishop, but the rectory or parsonage appropriate,
with the chapel of Wimlingswold appendant, continued in the crown till queen Elizabeth, in her 3d
year, granted it in exchange, to the archbishop, when
it was valued at thirty-three pounds, reprises to the
curate 13l. 6s. 8d. At which rent it has continued
to be leased out ever since, and it now, with the patronage of the curacy, remains parcel of the possessions
of the see of Canterbury. William Hammond, esq.
is the present lessee of the parsonage.
At the time this church was appropriated to the
college of Wingham, a vicarage was endowed in it,
which, after the suppression of the college, came to be
esteemed as a perpetual curacy. It is not valued in
the king's books. The antient stipend paid to the
curate as above, was, in 1660, augmented by archbishop Juxon with the addition of twenty pounds,
but by the addition of Mr. Boys's legacy of the small
tithes in this parish and Wimlingswold, mentioned
below, it is now, with that chapel, of the yearly certified value of 71l. 6s. 8d. In 1588 here were two hundred and thirty-five communicants.
Edward Boys, esq. of Nonington, by his will in
1596, gave towards the maintenance of a minister,
being licenced and preaching every other Sunday at
farthest at Nonington, yearly, for ever, all the profits
of the small-tithes of Nonington and Wemingewell,
(excepting those of the lands in his occupation, and
the oblations and obventions due out of them, and the
tithes of wood of all the lands and farms he had, or
his heirs should have, within the parish) the said minister paying to him and his heirs the yearly sum of 40s.
Church of Nonington.
|
| PATRONS, | CURATES. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| The Archbishop . . . . | William Lunn, A. M. obt.
1705. (fn. 10) |
| Edward Lunn, A. M. March 21,
1705, obt. July 28, 1764. (fn. 11) |
| Robert Greenhall, A. B. obt.
Dec. 16, 1770. (fn. 12) |
| Bladen Downing, LL. B. Feb. 9,
1771, the present curate. (fn. 13) |