EASTRY,
THE next parish north-eastward from Knolton is
Eastry. At the time of taking the survey of Domesday, it was of such considerable account, that it not
only gave name, as it does at present, to the hundred,
but to the greatest part of the lath in which it stands,
now called the lath of St. Augustine. There are two
boroughs in this parish, viz. the borough of Hardenden, which is within the upper half hundred of Downhamford, and comprehends the districts of Hardenden,
Selson and Skrinkling, and the borough of Eastry, the
borsholder of which is chosen at Eastry-court, and
comprehends all the rest of the parish, excepting so
much of it as lies within that part of the borough of
Felderland, which is within this parish.
THE PARISH OF EASTRY, a healthy and not unpleasant situation, is about two miles and an half from
north to south, but it is much narrower the other way,
at the broadest extent of which it is not more than a
mile and an half. The village of Eastry is situated on
a pleasing eminence, almost in the centre of the parish,
exhiblting a picturesque appearance from many points
of view. The principal street in it is called Eastrystreet; from it branch off Mill street, Church-street
and Brook-street. In Mill street is a spacious handsome edisice lately erected there, as a house of industry, for the poor of the several united parishes of
Eastry, Norborne, Betshanger, Tilmanstone, Waldershare, Coldred, Lydden, Shebbertswell, Swynfield,
Wootton, Denton, Chillenden and Knolton. In Churchstreet, on the east side, stands the church, with the
court-lodge and parsonage adjoining the church-yard;
in this street is likewise the vicarage. In Brook-street,
is a neat modern house, the residence of Wm. Boteler,
esq. and another belonging to Mr. Thomas Rammell,
who resides in it. Mention will be found hereafter,
under the description of the borough of Hernden, in
this parish, of the descent and arms of the Botelers resident there for many generations. Thomas Boteler,
who died possessed of that estate in 1651, left three sons,
the youngest of whom, Richard, was of Brook-street,
and died in 1682; whose great-grandson, W. Boteler,
esq. is now of Brook-street; a gentleman to whom the
editor is much indebted for his communications and
assistance, towards the description of this hundred, and
its adjoining neighbourhood. He has been twice married; first to Sarah, daughter and coheir of Thomas
Fuller, esq. of Statenborough, by whom he has one
son, William Fuller, now a fellow of St. Peter's college, Cambridge: secondly, to Mary, eldest daughter
of John Harvey, esq. of Sandwich and Hernden, late
captain of the royal navy, by whom he has five sons and
three daughters. He bears for his arms, Argent, on
three escutcheons, sable, three covered cups, or; which
coat was granted to his ancestor, Richard Boteler, esq.
of Hernden, by Cooke, clar. in 1589. Mr. Boteler, of
Eastry, is the last surviving male of the family, both of
Hernden and Brook-street. Eastry-street, comprizing
the neighbourhood of the above mentioned branches,
may be said to contain about sixty-four houses.
At the south-east boundary of this parish lies the
hamlet of Updown, adjoining to Ham and Betshanger,
in the former of which parishes some account of it has
been already given. At the southern bounds, adjoining
to Tilmanstone, lies the hamlet of Westone, formerly
called Wendestone. On the western side lies the borough of Hernden, which although in this parish, is
yet within the hundred of Downhamford and manor
of Adisham; in the southern part of it is Shrinkling,
or Shingleton, as it is now called, and the hamlet of
Hernden. At the northern part of this borough lie
the hamlets and estates of Selson, Wells, and Gore.
Towards the northern boundary of the parish, in the
road to Sandwich, is the hamlet of Statenborough,
and at a small distance from it is that part of the borough of Felderland, or Fenderland, as it is usually
called, within this parish, in which, adjoining the road
which branches off to Word, is a small seat, now the
property and residence of Mrs. Dare, widow of Wm.
Dare, esq. who resides in it. (fn. 1)
Round the village the lands are for a little distance,
and on towards Statenborough, inclosed with hedges
and trees, but the rest of the parish is in general an
open uninclosed country of arable land, like the neighbouring ones before described; the soil of it towards
the north is most fertile, in the other parts it is rather
thin, being much inclined to chalk, except in the
bottoms, where it is much of a stiff clay, for this parish is a continued inequality of hill and dale; notwithstanding the above, there is a great deal of good
fertile land in the parish, which meets on an average
rent at fifteen shillings an acre. There is no wood in it.
The parish contains about two thousand six hundred
and fifty acres; the yearly rents of it are assessed to the
poor at 2679l.
At the south end of the village is a large pond, called
Butsole; and adjoining to it on the east side, a field,
belonging to Brook-street estate, called the Butts;
from whence it is conjectured that Butts were formerly
erected in it, for the practice of archery among the
inhabitants.
A fair is held here for cattle, pedlary, and toys, on
October the 2d, (formerly on St. Matthew's day, September the 21st) yearly.
IN 1792, MR. BOTELER, of Brook-street, discovered, on digging a cellar in the garden of a cottage,
situated eastward of the highway leading from Eastrycross to Butsole, an antient burying ground, used as such
in the latter time of the Roman empire in Britain,
most probably by the inhabitants of this parish, and
the places contiguous to it. He caused several graves
to be opened, and found with the skeletons, fibulæ,
beads, knives,umbones of shields, &c. and in one a
glass vessel. From other skeletons, which have been
dug up in the gardens nearer the cross, it is imagined,
that they extended on the same side the road up to the
cross, the ground of which is now pretty much covered
with houses; the heaps of earth, or barrows, which
formerly remained over them, have long since been levelled, by the great length of time and the labour of
the husbandman; the graves were very thick, in rows
parallel to each other, in a direction from east to west.
St. Ivo's well, mentioned by Nierembergius, in
Historia de Miraculis Natureæ, lib. ii. cap. 33; which
I noticed in my folio edition as not being able to find
any tradition of in this parish, I have since found was
at a place that formerly went by the name of Estre,
and afterwards by that of Plassiz, near St. Ives, in
Huntingdonshire. See Gales Scriptores, xv. vol. i.
p.p. 271, 512.
This place gave birth to Henry de Eastry, who was
first a monk, and then prior of Christ-church, in Canterbury; who, for his learning as well as his worthy
acts, became an ornament, not only to the society he
presided over, but to his country in general. He continued prior thirty-seven years, and died, far advanced
in life, in 1222.
THIS PLACE, in the time of the Saxons, appears to
have been part of the royal domains, accordingly Simon of Durham, monk and precentor of that church,
in his history, stiles it villa regalis, quæ vulgari dicitur
Easterige pronuncione, (the royal ville, or manor, which
in the vulgar pronunciation was called Easterige),
which shews the antient pre-eminence and rank of this
place, for these villæ regales, or regiæ, as Bede calls
them, of the Saxons, were usually placed upon or near
the spot, where in former ages the Roman stations had
been before; and its giving name both to the lath and
hundred in which it is situated corroborates the superior consequence it was then held in. Egbert, king of
Kent, was in possession of it about the year 670, at
which time his two cousins, Ethelred and Ethelbright,
sons of his father's elder brother Ermenfrid, who had
been entrusted to his care by their uncle, the father of
Egbert, were, as writers say, murdered in his palace
here by his order, at the persuasion of one Thunnor, a
slattering courtier, lest they should disturb him in the
possession of the crown. After which Thunnor buried
them in the king's hall here, under the cloth of estate,
from whence, as antient tradition reports, their bodies
were afterwards removed to a small chapel belonging
to the palace, and buried there under the altar at the
east end of it, and afterwards again with much pomp
to the church of Ramsey abbey. To expiate the king's
guilt, according to the custom of those times, he gave
to Domneva, called also Ermenburga, their sister, a
sufficient quantity of land in the isle of Thanet, on
which she might found a monastery.
How long it continued among the royal domains,
I have not found; but before the termination of the
Saxon heptarchy, THE MANOR OF EASTRY was become part of the possessions of the see of Canterbury,
and it remained so till the year 811, when archbishop
Wilfred exchanged it with his convent of Christchurch for their manor of Bourne, since from the archbishop's possession of it called Bishopsbourne. After
which, in the year 979 king Ægelred, usually called
Ethelred, increased the church's estates here, by giving
to it the lands of his inheritance in Estrea, (fn. 2) free from
all secular service and siscal tribute, except the repelling of invasions and the repairing of bridges and castles, usually stiled the trinoda necessitas; (fn. 3) and in the
possession of the prior and convent bove-mentioned,
this manor continued at the taking of the survey of
Domesday, being entered in it under the general title
of Terra Monachorum Archiepi; that is, the land of the
monks of the archbishop, as follows:
In the lath of Estrei in Estrei hundred, the archbishop
himself holds Estrei. It was taxed at Seven sulings. The
arable land is . . . . In demesne there are three carucates and seventy two villeins, with twenty-two borderers, having twenty-four carucates. There is one mill
and a half of thirty shillings, and three salt pits of four
shillings, and eighteen acres of meadow. Wood for the
pannage of ten hogs.
After which, this manor continued in the possession
of the priory, and in the 10th year of king Edward II.
the prior obtained a grant of free-warren in all his demesne lands in it, among others; about which time
it was valued at 65l. 3s. after which king Henry VI.
in his 28th year, confirmed the above liberty, and
granted to it a market, to be held at Eastry weekly on
a Tuesday, and a fair yearly, on the day of St. Matthew the Apostle and Evangelist; in which state it
continued till the dissolution of the priory in the 31st
year of king Henry VIII. when it came in to the king's
hands, where it did not remain long, for he settled it,
among other premises, in the 33d year of his reign, on
his new created dean and chapter of Canterbury, part
of whose possessions it continues at this time. A court
leet and court baron is held for this manor.
The manerial rights, profits of courts, royalties,
&c. the dean and chapter retain in their own hands;
but the demesne lands of the manor, with the courtlodge, which is a large antient mansion, situated adjoining to the church-yard, have been from time to
time demised on a benesicial lease. The house is
large, partly antient and partly modern, having at
different times undergone great alterations. In the
south wall are the letters T. A. N. in flint, in large
capitals, being the initials of Thomas and Anne Nevinson. Mr. Isaac Bargrave, father of the present
lessee, new fronted the house, and the latter in 1786
put the whole in complete repair, in doing which, he
pulled down a considerable part of the antient building, consisting of stone walls of great strength and
thickness, bringing to view some gothic arched door
ways of stone, which proved the house to have been of
such construction formerly, and to have been a very
antient building. The chapel, mentioned before, is
at the east end of the house. The east window, consisting of three compartments, is still visible, though
the spaces are filled up, it having for many years been
converted into a kitchen, and before the last alteration
by Mr. Bargrave the whole of it was entire.
At this mansion, then in the hands of the prior and
convent of Christ-church, archbishop Thomas Becket,
after his stight from Northampton in the year 1164,
concealed himself for eight days, and then, on Nov.
10, embarked at Sandwich for France. (fn. 4)
The present lessee is Isaac Bargrave, esq. who resides at the court-lodge, whose ancestors have been
lessees of this estate for many years past.
THE NEVINSONS, as lessees, resided at the courtlodge of Eastry for many years. They were originally
of Brigend, in Wetherell, in Cumberland. They bore
for their arms, Argent, a chevron, between three eagles
displayed, azure. Many of them lie buried in Eastry
church. (fn. 5)
THE FAMILY of Bargrave, alias Bargar, was originally of Bridge, and afterwards of the adjoining parish
of Patrixbourne; where John Bargrave, eldest son of
Robert, built the seat of Bifrons, and resided at it, of
whom notice has already been taken in vol. ix. of this
history, p. 280. Isaac Bargrave, the sixth son of Robert above-mentioned, and younger brother of John,
who built Bifrons, was ancestor of the Bargraves, of
Eastry; he was S. T. P. and dean of Canterbury, a
man of strict honour and high principles of loyalty,
for which he suffered the most cruel treatment. He
died in 1642, having married in 1618 Elizabeth,
daughter of John Dering, esq. of Egerton, by Elizabeth, sister of Edward lord Wotton, the son of John
Dering, esq. of Surrenden, by Margaret Brent. Their
descendant, Isaac Bargrave, esq. now living, was an
eminent solicitor in London, from which he has retired for some years, and now resides at Eastry-court,
of which he is the present lessee. He married Sarah,
eldest daughter of George Lynch, M. D. of Canterbury, who died at Herne in 1787, S.P. They bear
for their arms, Or, on a pale gules, a sword, the blade
argent, pomelled, or, on a chief vert three bezants.
SHRINKLING, alias SHINGLETON, the former of
which is its original name, though now quite lost, is
a small manor at the south-west boundary of this pa
Kent, anno 1619.
rish, adjoining to Nonington. It is within the borough of Heronden, or Hardonden, as it is now
called, and as such, is within the upper half hundred
of Downhamford. This manor had antiently owners
of the same name; one of whom, Sir William de
Scrinkling, held it in king Edward I.'s reign, and was
succeeded by Sir Walter de Scrinkling his son, who
held it by knight's service of Hamo de Crevequer, (fn. 6)
and in this name it continued in the 20th year of king
Edward III.
Soon after which it appears to have been alienated
to William Langley, of Knolton, from which name it
passed in like manner as Knolton to the Peytons and
the Narboroughs, and thence by marriage to Sir Thomas D'Aeth, whose grandson Sir Narborough D'Aeth,
bart. now of Knolton, is at present entitled to it.
There was a chapel belonging to this manor, the
ruins of which are still visible in the wood near it,
which was esteemed as a chapel of ease to the mother
church of Eastry, and was appropriated with it by
archbishop Richard, Becket's immediate successor, to
the almory of the priory of Christ-church; but the
chapel itself seems to have become desolate many years
before the dissolution of the priory, most probably
soon after the family of Shrinkling became extinct;
the Langleys, who resided at the adjoining manor of
Knolton, having no occasion for the use of it. The
chapel stood in Shingleton wood, near the south east
corner; the foundations of it have been traced, though
level with the surface, and not easily discovered.
There is now on this estate only one house, built
within memory, before which there was only a solitary barn, and no remains of the antient mansion of it.
HERONDEN, alias HARDENDEN, now usually called
HERONDEN, is a district in this parish, situated about a
mile northward from Shingleton, within the borough
of its own name, the whole of which is within the upper half hundred of Downhamford. It was once
esteemed as a manor, though it has not had even the
name of one for many years past, the manor of Adisham claiming over it. The mansion of it was antiently the residence of a family of the same name, who
bore for their arms, Argent, a heron with one talon erect,
gaping for breath, sable. These arms are on a shield,
which is far from modern, in Maidstone church, being
quarterly, Heronden as above, with sable, three escallop
shells, two and one, argent; and in a window of Lincoln's Inn chapel is a coat of arms of a modern date,
being that of Anthony Heronden, esq. Argent, a heron,
azure, between three escallops, sable. One of this family
of Heronden lies buried in this church, and in the time
of Robert Glover, Somerset herald, his portrait and
coat of arms, in brass, were remaining on his tombstone. The coat of arms is still extant in very old rolls
and registers in the Heralds office, where the family is
stiled Heronden, of Heronden, in Eastry; nor is the
name less antient, as appears by deeds which commence
from the reign of Henry III. which relate to this estate
and name; but after this family had remained possessed
of this estate for so many years it at last descended down
in king Richard II.'s reign, to Sir William Heronden,
from whom it passed most probably either by gift or
sale, to one of the family of Boteler, or Butler, then
resident in this neighbourhood, descended from those
of this name, formerly seated at Butler's sleet, in
Ash, whose ancestor Thomas Pincerna, or le Boteler,
held that manor in king John's reign, whence his successors assumed the name of Butler, alias Boteler, or
as they were frequently written Botiller, and bore for
their arms, One or more covered cups, differently placed
and blazoned. In this family the estate descended to
John Boteler, who lived in the time of king Henry VI.
and resided at Sandwich, of which town he was several
times mayor, and one of the burgesses in two parliaments of that reign; he lies buried in St. Peter's
church there. His son Richard, who was also of Sandwich, had a grant of arms in 1470, anno 11th Edward IV. by Thomas Holme, norroy, viz. Gyronny
of six, argent and sable, a covered cup, or, between three
talbots heads, erased and counterchanged of the field, collared, gules, garnished of the third. His great-grandson
Henry Boteler rebuilt the mansion of Heronden, to
which he removed in 1572, being the last of his family
who resided at Sandwich. He had the above grant of
arms confirmed to him, and died in 1580, being buried
in Eastry church. Richard Boteler, of Heronden, his
eldest son by his first wife, resided at this seat, and in
1589 obtained a grant from Robert Cook, clarencieux,
of a new coat of arms, viz. Argent, on three escutcheons,
sable, three convered cups, or. Ten years after which, intending as it should seem, to shew himself a descendant
of the family of this name, seated at Graveney, but
then extinct, he obtained in 1599 a grant of their arms
from William Dethic, garter, and William Camden,
clarencieux, to him and his brother William, viz.
Quarterly, first and fourth, sable, three covered cups, or,
within a bordure, argent; second and third, Argent, a
fess, chequy, argent and gules, in chief three cross-croslets
of the last, as appears (continues the grant) on a gravestone in Graveney church. He died in 1600, and was
buried in Eastry church, leaving issue among other
children Jonathan and Thomas. (fn. 7) Jonathan Boteler,
the eldest son, of Hernden, died unmarried possessed
of it in 1626, upon which it came to his next surviving
brother Thomas Boteler, of Rowling, who upon that
removed to Hernden, and soon afterwards alienated
that part of it, since called THE MIDDLE FARM, to Mr.
Henry Pannell, from whom soon afterwards, but how
I know not, it came into the family of Reynolds; from
which name it was about fifty years since alienated to
John Dekewer, esq. of Hackney, who dying in 1762,
devised it to his nephew John Dekewer, esq. of Hackney, the present possessor of it.
ANOTHER PART of this estate of Hernden, since
known by the name of THE LOWER FARM, was afterwards sold by Thomas Boteler above-mentioned to
Capell, from whom it passed into the family of Johnson, in which it continued till Mr. Edward Johnson
alienated it to Daniel Kelly, gent. of the Upper Farm,
in Heronden, who by his will in 1724 devised it to
his second son Richard Kelly, since whose death it has
come to his two sons Richard and William Kelly, who
are the present possessors of it.
THE REMAINING PART of the Hernden of esate, on
which The mansion of it was situated, since known by
the name of HERNDEN, alias THE UPPER FARM, remained in the possession of Thomas Boteler above
mentioned, at the time of his death in the year 1650,
and was directed by his will to be sold for the benefit
of his surviving wise and children, and accordingly in
1657 it was conveyed by them to John Kelly, yeoman,
of Ash, whose grandson William Kelly, of Hernden,
who bore for his arms, Argent, two lions rampant, combatant, gules, holding in their paws a castle in chief, vert,
in 1766 pulled down the antient mansion of Hernden,
and built the present handsome house on the scite of it,
and in 1784 alienated it to John Harvey, esq. of Sandwich, then a captain of the royal navy, who occasionally
resided at it; he died at Portsmouth on June 30, 1794,
in consequence of the wounds he received in the glorious naval engagement with the French fleet, on the
first of that month preceding; by his will he devised
this estate to his wife Judith for life, remainder to his
eldest son Henry Wife Harvey, esq. which latter now
resides here. Capt. Harvey above-mentioned, (whose
meritorious services to his country ought not to be
passed by unnoticed) was born at Elmington, in the
neighbouring parish of Eythorne, in 1740; his singular
courage and attention to his duty marked his conduct
throughout life, and never shone more conspicuous than
in the memorable engagement of June I, above-mentioned, in which being commander of the Brunswick,
of 74 guns, he as second to the commander in chief,
gallantly supported him in the arduous enterprize of
breaking the French line, and notwithstanding the
enemy by the closeness of their position endeavoured
to deseat the attempt, he intrepidly persevered, grappling with Le Vengeur, a ship evidently of superior
force to his own, and bore her away from the line, never
quitting her till she struck, which was but a short time
before she went to the bottom. During this terible
conslict, which lasted upwards of two hours and an
half, in a situation almost unprecedented betwixt two
ships of such force, he reduced to a wreck L'Achille,
a seventy-four gun ship, which was come down to
the assistance of Le Vengeur, by totally dismasting her;
which individual conduct may truly be admitted to
have contributed very materially to that victory, upon
which the fate of his country in a great measure depended, and will ever render his memory dear to it.
His remains were interred in a vault in Eastry church,
on July 5, having been attended to the gates of Portsmouth by earl Howe and the principal officers of the
fleet with much solemnity; (fn. 8) most of the principal inhabitants of the neighbouring town of Sandwich, in
which he had for some time resided, and had served
the office of mayor of it in 1774, appeared in mourning on the day of his interment, as a mark of their
respect for his memory.
A seal gold ring, weighing nineteen penny weights,
with this motto, Do not, for to repent, and the antient
coat of arms granted, as before described, in king
Henry IV.'s time to Richard Boteler, engraved on it,
was found in the grounds in Hernden bottom, a few
years since, and is now in the possession of William
Boteler, esq. of Eastry.
STATENBOROUGH, written in the survey of Domesday, Estenburge, and in other antient records, Stepenberga, and long since Statenborough, is a seat on the
northern consines of this parish, which was at the time
of taking the above survey in the Conqueror's reign,
part of the possessions of the see of Canterbury, being
held of the archbishop by knight's service, under which
title it is thus entered in it:
William Folet holds Estenberge of the archbishop, and
it was taxed at half a suling, and there he has twelve
villeins with one carucate and an half.
After which the record continues, that it was, with
Buckland and Finglesham, valued in the time of king
Edward the Consessor at forty shillings; when the
archbishop received them, ten shillings, now thirty
shillings.
How this estate passed afterwards I have not found,
till about the beginning of king Henry III's reign,
when it was become the estate of a family which took
its surname from it, as appears by a dateless deed
among the archives of St. Bartholomew's hospital, in
Sandwich, in which lands are given to it, abutting to
those of the heirs of Simon de Statenberg, at Statenberg; (fn. 9) when it passed from this name does not appear, but at the latter end of king Richard II.'s reign,
I find a deed, which mentions William Cooke, of
Stapynberge, and part of this estate is at this day
called Cooksborough; but in the middle of king
Henry V.'s reign, it was in the possession of a family
called Atte Hall, who were succeeded in it by Wm.
Bryan, gent. of Canterbury. How long it continued
in this name I have not found; but in the second
year of king Richard III anno 1484, it was become
the property of John Kennett, gent. of Canterbury,
whose son Thomas Kennet, clerk, of that place, in
1534, conveyed his interest in it to Christopher Hales,
esq. the king's attorney-general, afterwards knighted,
whose daughter and coheir Margaret carried it in marriage to Ralph Dodmore, gent. of Lincoln's Inn, and
they jointly in 1757 alienated it to Saphire Paramor,
yeoman, of Eastry, being descended of a family of
good estimation in this part of Kent, having spread
themselves into the different parishes of Ash, St. Nicholas, Monkton, and Minster, in the Isle o Thanet,
Fordwich, and here at Eastry, all now extinct, of all
of which there are pedigrees in the Heraldic Visitaticn
of this county, anno 1619. They bore for their
arms, Azure, a fess embattled, between three estoils of
six points, or. He died in 1591. After which it continued in the same name and family down to John
Paramor, esq. of Statenborough, who died s.p. in
1750; after which it descended by his will, on the
death of Mrs Paramor, his widow, to his three nieces
and coheirs; that is, one moiety to Jane, wife of John
Hawker, gent. of Sandwich, only daughter of John
Hayward, gent. of Sandwich, by Jane, his sister then
deceased; the other undivided moiety to Jane, wife
of W. Boys, esq. then of Sandwich, and Sarah, afterwards the wise of William Boteler, esq of Eastry, the
two surviving daughters and coheirs of his other sister
Mary, wise of Thomas Fuller, esq. of Sandwich, before-mentioned.
On a division of their estates in 1761, this estate
was allotted to these two surviving daughters and co
heirs last-mentioned; and on a future subdivision between them in 1774, this of Statenborough, with
Gore, in this parish likewise, formed a part of that
share, which was allotted to Jane, since deceased,
whose husband William Boys, esq. late of Sandwich, is
the present possessor of it. Mr. Boys is descended
from the eminent family of this name, spread over the
several parts of East Kent, but whose principal seat
was at Fredville, in Nonington. William Boys, esq.
was of Fredville, in king Henry VIII.'s reign, whose
fourth son, by Mary, sister and heir of Sir Edward
Ringeley, was of Bekesborne, and left among other
children, Edward, ancestor of the Boys's, of Betshanger; and John, who was the second son, of Challock,
from whom descended in the fisth descent, William
Boys, esq. of Deal, who was a commodore in the royal
navy, and afterwards lieutenant-governor of Greenwich hospital, whose eldest son was William Boys,
esq. above-mentioned, the present possessor of Statenborough, author of the Collections for Sandwich as
above-mentioned, and F. S. A. a gentleman well
known in the Republic of Letters, to whom the Editor of this History acknowledges his obligations for
his continued assistance in it. He was an eminent surgeon of that town, from whence he removed to Walmer, where he now resides. He married first Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Wise, merchant, of Sandwich, by whom he had one son William-Henry Boys,
gent. lieutenant and adjutant of the Portsmouth division of marines, who married Elizabeth, daughter of
John Harvey, esq. of Sandwich and Hernden, late
captain of the royal navy; and one daughter Elizabeth, married to John Rolfe, gent. of New Romney,
lately deceased; he married secondly Jane, daughter
of Thomas Fuller, esq. of Statenborough, and coheir
of her uncle John Paramor, esq. of that place, by
whom he had nine children, of whom eight are surviving, viz. Thomas, of Sandwich, a lieutenant in the
royal navy, who married Catherine Impett, of Ashford; John-Paramor, gent. of Sandwich; Jane;
Mary Fuller; Edward, surgeon, of Sandwich; Henry;
Robert-Pearson, and George. He bears for his arms,
Or, a griffin segreant, sable, within a bordure, gules;
being the coat armour of the principal branch of this
family, of Fredville.
The manors of North and South Court, and of
Dane-court, in Tilmanstone, claim over this hamlet
of Statenborough.
Charities
THOMAS ELWARE, of this parish, by his will in 1499, gave
to Roger Frynne, his executor, his tenement in Selveston, in
this parish, with its lands and appurtenances, upon condition
that he and his heirs should pay yearly to the churchwardens, to
the reparation of the church yearly, iijs. iiijd.
CHRISTIAN GODDARD, of this parish, widow, gave by will
in 1574, a tenement and garden in Eastry, over against the vicarage-house, for the use of the poor for ever, now of the annual value of 2l. 10s. and a tenement and garden in Eastry to the
clerk, to instruct in learning, one of the poorest man's children,
being a boy, of this parish, from time to time, both which are
vested in the churchwardens.
THOMAS APPLETON, yeoman, of Eastry, by his will in 1593,
gave to the relief of the poor 5l. to be paid to the churchwardens yearly, and to be distributed by them fourteen days before
Christmas day, to be paid out of lands called Hardiles, in Woodnesborough.
KATHERINE BOTELER, widow, of Eastry, by her will in
1617, gave to the churchwardens 30s. to remain in a stock for
the use of the parish; and to the poor people there the like sum.
RICHARD THOMPSON, by will in 1673, ordered that twentyfour poor people should receive at Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide, a twopenny loaf; secured on a house and garden in
Eastry, the annual produce of which is 12s.
ANNE FREIND, spinster, of Eastry, by will in 1715, gave to
the poor 5l. and to the overseers of the poor and their successors,
three acres and one rood of arable land, at or near a place called
Dedmans gapp, in Eastry, holden of the dean and chapter of
Canterbury; the overseers to renew the lease from time to time;
in trust, that the yearly rents and profits should be equally distributed on Christmas day yearly, in the chancel of the church,
among such industrious poor as should not receive alms; such
letting of the land and distribution to be at the discretion of the
heirs of Charles Bargrave, if living in Eastry; and for want of
that, to the discretion of the overseers and their successors.
The poor constantly relieved are about thirty, casually seventy-five.
THIS PARISH is within the ECCLESIASTICAL
JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry
of Sandwich.
The church, which is exempted from the archdeacon, is dedicated to St. Mary; it is a large handsome
building, consisting of a nave and two side isles, a
chancel at the east end, remarkably long, and a square
tower, which is very large, at the west end, in which
are five very unmusical bells. The church is well kept
and neatly paved, and exhibits a noble appearance, to
which the many handsome monuments in it contribute much. The arch over the west door is circular,
but no other parts of the church has any shew of great
antiquity. In the chancel are monuments for the Paramors and the Fullers, of Statenborough, arms of the
latter, Argent, three bars, and a canton, gules. A monument for several of the Bargrave family. An elegant pyramidial one, on which is a bust and emblematical sculpture for John Broadley, gent. many years
surgeon at Dover, obt. 1784. Several gravestones,
with brasses, for the Nevinsons. A gravestone for Joshua Paramour, gent. buried 1650. Underneath this
chancel are two vaults, for the families of Paramour
and Bargrave. In the nave, a monument for Anne,
daughter of Solomon Harvey, gent. of this parish, ob.
1751; arms, Argent, on a chevron, between three lions
gambs, sable, armed gules, three crescents, or; another
for William Dare, esq. late of Fenderland, in this parish, obt. 1770; arms, Gules, a chevron vaire, between
three crescents, argent, impaling argent, on a cross, sable,
four lions passant, quardant of the field, for Read.—Against the wall an inscription in Latin, for the Drue
Astley Cressemer, A. M. forty-eight years vicar of this
parish, obt. 1746; he presented the communion plate
to this church and Worth, and left a sum of money
to be laid out in ornamenting this church, at which
time the antient stalls, which were in the chancel, were
taken away, and the chancel was ceiled, and the church
otherwise beautified; arms, Argent, on a bend engrailed, sable, three cross-croslets, fitchee, or. A monument for several of the Botelers, of this parish; arms,
Boteler, argent, on three escutcheons, sable, three covered
cups, or, impaling Morrice. Against a pillar, a tablet
and inscription, shewing that in a vault lieth Catherine, wife of John Springett, citizen and apothecary
of London. He died in 1770; arms, Springett, per
fess, argent and gules, a fess wavy, between three crescents, counterchanged, impaling Harvey. On the opposite pillar another, for the Rev. Richard Harvey,
fourteen years vicar of this parish, obt. 1772. A monument for Richard Kelly, of Eastry, obt. 1768;
arms, Two lions rampant, supporting a castle. Against
the wall, an elegant sculptured monument, in alto relievo, for Sarah, wise of William Boteler, a daughter
of Thomas Fuller, esq. late of Statenborough, obt.
1777, æt. 29; she died in childbed, leaving one son,
William Fuller Boteler; arms at bottom, Boteler, as
above, an escutcheon of pretence, Fuller, quartering Paramor. An elegant pyramidal marble and tablet for
Robert Bargrave, of this parish, obt. 1779, for Elizabeth his wife, daughter of Sir Francis Leigh, of Hawley; and for Robert Bargrave, their only son, proctor
in Doctors Commons, obt. 1774, whose sole surviving
daughter Rebecca married James Wyborne, of Sholdon; arms, Bargrave, with a mullet, impaling Leigh.
In the cross isle, near the chancel called the Boteler's
isle, are several memorials for the Botelers. Adjoining
to these, are three other gravestones, all of which have
been inlaid, but the brasses are gone; they were for
the same family, and on one of them was lately remaining the antient arms of Boteler, Girony of six
pieces, &c. impaling ermine of three spots. Under the
church are vaults, for the families of Springett, Harvey, Dare, and Bargrave. In the church-yard, on the
north side of the church, are several altar tombs for
the Paramors; and on the south side are several others
for the Harveys, of this parish, and for Fawlkner,
Rammell, and Fuller. There are also vaults for the
families of Fuller, Rammell, and Petman.
There were formerly painted in the windows of this
church, these arms, Girony of six, sable and argent, a
covered cup, or, between three talbots heads, erased and
counter changed of the field, collared, gules; for Boteler,
of Heronden, impaling Boteler, of Graveny, Sable,
three covered cups, or, within a bordure, argent; Boteler, of Heronden, as above, quartering three spots, ermine; the coat of Theobald, with quarterings. Several of the Frynnes, or as they were afterwards called,
Friends, who lived at Waltham in this parish in king
Henry VII.'s reign, lie buried in this church.
In the will of William Andrewe, of this parish, anno
1507, mention is made of our Ladie chapel, in the
church-yard of the church of Estrie.
The eighteen stalls which were till lately in the
chancel of the church, were for the use of the monks
of the priory of Christ church, owners both of the
manor and appropriation, when they came to pass
any time at this place, as they frequently did, as well
for a country retirement as to manage their concerns
here; and for any other ecclesiastics, who might be
present at divine service here, all such, in those times,
sitting in the chancels of churches distinct from the
laity.
The church of Eastry, with the chapels of Skrinkling and Worth annexed, was antiently appendant to
the manor of Eastry, and was appropriated by archbishop Richard (successor to archbishop Becket) in
the reign of king Henry II. to the almonry of the
priory of Christ-church, but it did not continue long
so, for archbishop Baldwin, (archbishop Richard's
immediate successor), having quarrelled with the
monks, on account of his intended college at Hackington, took this appropriation from them, and thus
it remained as a rectory, at the archbishop's disposal,
till the 39th year of king Edward III.'s reign, (fn. 10) when
archbishop Simon Islip, with the king's licence, restored, united and annexed it again to the priory;
but it appears, that in return for this grant, the archbishop had made over to him, by way of exchange,
the advowsons of the churches of St. Dunstan, St.
Pancrase, and All Saints in Bread-street, in London,
all three belonging to the priory. After which, that
is anno 8 Richard II. 1384, this church was valued
among the revenues of the almonry of Christ-church,
at the yearly value of 53l. 6s. 8d. and it continued
afterwards in the same state in the possession of the
monks, who managed it for the use of the almonry,
during which time prior William Sellyng, who came
to that office in Edward IV.'s reign, among other improvements on several estates belonging to his church,
built a new dormitory at this parsonage for the monks
resorting hither.
On the dissolution of the priory of Christ-church,
in the 31st year of king Henry VIII.'s reign, this appropriation, with the advowson of the vicarage of the
church of Eastry, was surrendered into the king's
hands, where it staid but a small time, for he granted
it in his 33d year, by his dotation charter, to his new
founded dean and chapter of Canterbury, who are the
present owners of this appropriation; but the advowson of the vicarage, notwithstanding it was granted
with the appropriation, to the dean and chapter as
above-mentioned, appears not long afterwards to have
become parcel of the possessions of the see of Canterbury, where it continues at this time, his grace the
archbishop being the present patron of it.
This parsonage is entitled to the great tithes of this
parish and of Worth; there belong to it of glebe
land in Eastry, Tilmanstone, and Worth, in all sixtynine acres.
THERE IS A SMALL MANOR belonging to it,
called THE MANOR OF THE AMBRY, OR ALMONRY
OF CHRIST-CHURCH, the quit-rents of which are
very inconsiderable.
The parsonage-house is large and antient; in the
old parlour window is a shield of arms, being those of
Partheriche, impaling quarterly Line and Hamerton.
The parsonage is of the annual rent of about 700l.
The countess dowager of Guildford became entitled
to the lease of this parsonage, by the will of her husband the earl of Guildford, and since her death the
interest of it is become vested in her younger children.
As to the origin of a vicarage in this church, though
there was one endowed in it by archbishop Peckham,
in the 20th year of king Edward I. anno 1291, whilst
this church continued in the archbishop's hands, yet
I do not find that there was a vicar instituted in it,
but that it remained as a rectory, till near three years
after it had been restored to the priory of Christchurch, when, in the 42d year of king Edward III.
a vicar was instituted in it, between whom and the
prior and chapter of Canterbury, there was a composition concerning his portion, which he should have as
an endowment of this vicarage; which composition
was confirmed by archbishop Simon Langham that
year; and next year there was an agreement entered
into between the eleemosinary of Christ-church and
the vicar, concerning the manse of this vicarage.
The vicarage of Eastry, with the chapel of Worth
annexed, is valued in the king's books at 19l. 12s. 1d.
and the yearly tenths at 1l. 19s. 2½d. In 1588 it
was valued at sixty pounds. Communicants three
hundred and thirty-five. In 1640 here were the like
number of communicants, and it was valued at one
hundred pounds.
The antient pension of 5l. 6s. 8d. formerly paid
by the priory, is still paid to the vicar by the dean
and chapter, and also an augmentation of 14l. 13s. 4d.
yearly, by the lessee of the parsonage, by a convenant
in his lease.
The vicarage-house is built close to the farm-yard
of the parsonage; the land allotted to it is very trifling, not even sufficient for a tolerable garden; the
foundations of the house are antient, and probably
part of the original building when the vicarage was
endowed in 1367.
There were two awards made in 1549 and 1550,
on a controversy between the vicar of Eastry and the
mayor, &c. of Sandwich, whether the scite of St. Bartholomew's hospital, near Sandwich, within that port
and liberty, was subject to the payment of tithes to
the vicar, as being within his parish. Both awards
adjudged the legality of a payment, as due to the vicar; but the former award adjudged that the scite of
the hospital was not, and the latter, that it was within
the bounds of this parish. (fn. 12)
Church of Eastry.
|
| PATRONS | VICARS. |
| Or by whom presented, | |
| The Archbishop. | John Whiston, 1671, obt. 1694. |
| The King, sede vac. | Thomas Sherlock, A. M. inducted
Feb. 1695, obt. June 1698. |
| The Archbishop. | Drue Astley Cressener, A. M.
1698, obt. Sept. 27, 1746. (fn. 13) |
| Culpeper Savage, A. M. Jan.
1747, obt. 1753. (fn. 14) |
| Samuel Herring, 1753, resigned
1757. (fn. 15) |
| Richard Harvey, A. B. July,
1757, obt. March 6, 1772. (fn. 16) |
| Richard Harvey, A. M. March
27, 1772, the present vicar. (fn. 17) |