THE TOWN AND PORT OF SANDWICH.

A View of Sandwich, taken in the year 1719.
THE town of Sandwich is situated on the north-east
confines of this county, about two miles from the sea,
and adjoining to the harbour of its own name, through
which the river Stour flows northward into the sea at
Pepperness. It is one of the principal cinque ports,
the liberty of which extends over it, and it is within
the jurisdiction of the justices of its own corporation.
Sandwich had in antient time several members appertaining to it, (fn. 1) called the antient members of the port
of Sandwich; these were Fordwich, Reculver, Sarre,
Stonar, and Deal; but in the later charters, the members mentioned are Fordwich incorporated, and the
non-corporated members of Deal, Walmer, Ramsgate,
Stonar, Sarre, all in this county, and Brightlingsea, in
Sussex; but of late years, Deal, Walmer, and Stonar,
have been taken from it; Deal, by having been in
1699 incorporated with the charter of a separate jurisdiction, in the bounds of which Walmer is included;
and Stonar having been, by a late decision of the court
of king's bench in 1773, adjudged to be within the jurisdiction of the county at large.
The first origin of this port was owing to the decay
of that of Richborough, as will be further noticed hereafter. It was at first called Lundenwic, from its being
the entrance to the port of London, for so it was, on the
sea coast, and it retained this name until the supplanting
of the Saxons by the Danes, when it acquired from its
sandy situation a new name, being from thenceforward
called Sandwic, in old Latin, Sabulovicum, that is, the
sandy town, and in process of time, by the change of
language, Sandwich.
Where this town now stands, is supposed, in the
time of the Romans, and before the decay of the haven,
or Portus Rutupinus, to have been covered with that
water, which formed the bay of it, which was so large
that it is said to have extended far beyond this place,
on the one side almost to Ramsgate cliffs, and on the
other near five miles in width, over the whole of that
flat of land, on which Stonar and Sandwich too, were
afterwards built, and extending from thence up to the
æstuary, which then flowed up between the Isle of Thanet and the main land of this county.
During the time of the Saxons, the haven and port
of Richborough, the most frequented of any in this
part of Britain, began to decay, and swarve up, the sea
by degrees entirely deserting it at this place, but still
leaving sufficient to form a large and commodious one
at Sandwich, which in process of time, became in like
manner, the usual resort for shipping, and arose a Flourishing harbour in its stead; from which time the Saxon
fleets, as well as those of the Danes, are said by the
historians of those times, to sail for the port of Sandwich; and there to lie at different times, and no further
mention is made of that of Richborough, which being
thus destroyed, Sandwich became the port of general
resort; which, as well as the building of this town,
seems to have taken place, however, some while after
the establishment of the Saxons in Britain, and the first
time that is found of the name of Sandwich being mentioned and occurring as a port, is in the life of St. Wilfred, archbishop of York, written by Eddius Stephanus; in which it is said, he and his company, prosper
in portum Sandwich, atque suaviter pervenerunt, happily
and pleasantly arrived in the harbour of Sandwich,
which happened about the year 665, or 666, some what
more than 200 years after the arrival of the Saxons in
Britain. During the time of the Danes insesting this
kingdom, several of their principal transactions happened at this place, (fn. 2) and the port of it became so much
frequented, that the author of queen Emma's life stiles
it the most noted of all the English ports; Sandwich
qui est omnium Anglorum portuum famosissimus.
FROM THE TIME of the origin of the town of Sandwich, the property of it was vested in the several kings
who reigned over this country, and continued so till
king Ethelred, in the year 979, gave it, as the lands
of his inheritance, to Christ-church, in Canterbury,
free from all secular service and fiscal tribute, except
the repelling invasions, and the repairing of bridges and
castles. (fn. 3) After which king Canute, having obtained
the kingdom, finished the building of this town, and
having all parts and places in the realm at his disposal,
as coming to the possession of it by conquest, by his
charter in the year 1023, gave, or rather restored the
port of Sandwich, with the profits of the water of it,
on both sides of the stream, for the support of that
church, and the sustenance of the monks there.
Soon after this, the town of Sandwich increased
greatly in size and inhabitants, and on account of the
commodity and use of its haven, and the service done
by the shipping belonging to it, was of such estimation,
that it was made one of the principal cinque ports; and
in king Edward the Confessor's days it contained three
hundred and seven houses, and was an hundred within
itself; and it continued increasing, as appears by the
description of it, in the survey of Domesday, taken in
the 15th year of the Conqueror's reign, anno 1080, in
which it is thus entered, under the title of the lands of
the archbishop:
Sandwice lies in its own proper hundred. This borough
the archbishop holds, and it is of the clothing of the monks,
and yields the like service to the king as Dover; and
this the men of that borough testify, that before king Edward gave the same to the Holy Trinity, it paid to the
king fisteen pounds. At the time of King Edward's death
it was not put to ferme. When the archbishop received
it, it paid forty pounds of ferme, and forty thousand herrings to the food of the monks. In the year in which this
description was made, Sanuuic paid fifty pounds of ferme,
& Herrings as above. In the time of king Edward the
Confessor there were there three hundred and seven mansions tenanted, now there are seventy six more, that is together three hundred and eighty three.
And under the title of the bishop of Baieux's lands,
as follows, under the description of the manor of Gollesberge:
In Estrei hundred, in Sandunic, the archbishop has
thirty two houses, with plats of land belonging to this
manor,(viz. Gollesberge) and they pay forty-two shil
lings and eight pence, and Adeluuold has one yoke,
which is worth ten shillings.
These houses, with all the liberties which the bishop
of Baieux had in Sandwich, had been given by him to
Christ-church, in Canterbury, and confirmed to it in
the year 1075, by his brother the Conqueror. (fn. 4)
Afterwards king Henry II. granted to the monks
the full enjoyment of all those liberties and customs in
Sandwich, which they had in the time of king Henry
his grandfather, that is, the port and toll, and all maritime customs in this port, on both sides of the water,
that is, from Eadburgate unto Merksflete, and the
small boat to ferry across it, and that no one should have
any right there except them and their servants.
The town, by these continued privileges, and the
advantages it derived from the great resort to the port,
increased much in wealth and number of inhabitants;
and notwithstanding, in the year 1217, anno 2 king
Henry III. great part of the town was burnt by the
French, yet the damage seems soon to have been recompenced by the savors bestowed on it by the several
kings, in consideration of the services it had continually
afforded, in the shipping of this port, to the nation.
The first example of royal favor, being shewn by the
last-mentioned king, was in his 11th year, who not
only confirmed the customs before granted, but added
the further grant of a market to this town and port, (fn. 5)
and in his 13th year granted the custom of taking twopence for each cask of wine received into it.
After which, the prior and convent of Christ-church,
in the 18th year of King Edward I. gave up in exchange for other lands elsewhere, to his queen Eleanor,
all their rights, possessions, and privileges here, excepting their houses and keys, and a free passage in the
haven, in the small boat, called the vere boat, (fn. 6) and
free liberty for themselves and their tenants to buy and
sell toll free, which the king confirmed that year; and
as a favor to the town, he placed the staple for wool in
it for some time.
The exception above-mentioned, was afterwards
found to be so very prejudicial, as well as inconvenient,
that king Edward III. in his 38th year, gave them other
lands in Essex, in exchange for all their rights, privileges, and possessions, in this town and port. After
which king Richard II. in his first year, removed the
staple for wool from Queenborough, where it had been
for some time, hither.
During the whole of this period from the time of
the conquest, this port continued the general rendezvous
of the royal sleets, and was as constantly visted by the
several monarchs, who frequently embarked and returned again hither from France; the consequence of
which was, that the town became so flourishing, that it
had increased to between eight and nine hundred houses
inhabited, divided into three parishes; and there were
of good and able mariners, belonging to the navy of it,
above the number of 1500; so that when there was
occasion at any time, the mayors of it, on the receipt
of the king's letters, furnished, at the town's charges,
to the seas, fifteen sail of armed ships of war, which
were of such continued annoyance to the French, that
they in return made it a constant object of their revenge.
Accordingly, in the 16th year of king Henry VI. they
landed here and plundered the greatest part of the inhabitants, as they did again in the 35th year of it; but
but this not answering the whole of their purpose,
Charles VIII. king of France, to destroy it entirely,
sent hither four thousand men, who landing in the night,
after a long and bloody conflict gained possession of the
town, and having wasted it with fire and sword, slew
the greatest part of the inhabitants; and to add to these
misfortunes it was again ransacked by the earl of Warwick, in the same reign.
To preserve the town from such disasters in future,
king Edward IV. new walled, ditched, and fortifield it
with bulwarks, and gave besides, for the support of
them, one hundred pounds yearly out of the customhouse here; which, together with the industry and efforts of the merchants, who frequented this haven, the
goodness of which, in any storm or contrary wind,
when they were in danger from the breakers, or the
Goodwin Sands, afforded them a safe retreat; in a very
short time restored it again to a flourishing state, infomuch, that before the end of that reign, the clear
yearly receipt of the customs here to that king, amounted
to above the sum of 16 or 17,000l. (fn. 7) and the town had
ninety five ships belonging to it, and above fifteen
hundred sailors.
But this sunshine of prosperity lasted no long time
afterwards, for in king Henry VII.'s time, the river
Stour, or as it was at this place antiently called, the
Wantsume, continued to decay so fast, as to leave on
each side at low water, a considerable quantity of salts,
which induced cardinal archbishop Moreton, who had
most part of the adjoining lands belonging to his bishopric, for his own private advantage, to inclose and
wall them in, near and about Sarre; which example
was followed from time to time, by several owners of
the lands adjoining, by which means the water was deprived of its usual course, and the haven felt the loss of
it by a hasty decay. Notwithstanding which, so late as
the first year of king Richard III. ships failed up this
haven as high as Richborough, for that year, as ap
pears by the corporation books of Sandwich, the mayor
ordered a Spanish ship, lying on the outside of Richborough, to be removed. (fn. 8)
"Leland, who wrote in the reign of Henry VIII.
gives the following description of Sandwich, as it was
in his time. "Sandwich, on the farther side of the
ryver of Sture, is neatly welle walled, where the town
stonddeth most in jeopardy of enemies. The residew
of the town is diched and mudde waulled. There be yn
the town iiii principal gates, iii paroche chyrches, of
the which sum suppose that St. Maries was sumtyme a
nunnery. Ther is a place of White Freres, and an
hospistal withowt the town, fyrst ordened for maryners
desesid and hurt. There is a place where monkes of
Christ-church did resort, when they were lords of the
towne. The caryke that was sonke in the haven, in
pope Paulus tyme, did much hurt to the haven and
gether a great bank. The grounde self from Sandwich to the heaven, and inward to the land, is caullid
Sanded bay".
The sinking of this great ship of pope Paul IV. in
the very mouth of the haven, by which the waters had
not their free course as before, from the sand and mud
gathering round about it, together with the innings of
the lands on each side the stream, had such a fatal effect
towards the decay of the haven, that in the time of
king Edward VI. it was in a manner destroyed and
lost, and the navy and mariners dwindled to almost nothing, and the houses then inhabited in this town did not
exceed two hundred, the inhabitants of which were
greatly impoverished; the yearly customs of the town,
by reason of the insufficiency of the haven, were so desicient, that there was scarcely enough arising from it
to satisfy the customer his fee. This occasioned two
several commissions to be granted, one in the 2d year
of that reign, and another in the 2d year of queen Eli
zabeth, to examine the state of the haven, and make a
return of it; in consequence of the first of which, a
new cut was begun by one John Rogers, which, however, was soon left in an untinished state, though there
are evident traces of what was done towards making
this canal still remaining, on the grounds between the
town and Sandowne castle; and in consequence of the
second, other representations and reports were made,
one of which was, that the intended cut would be useless, and of no good effect.
Whether these different reports where the occasion
that no further progress was made towards this work,
and the restoration of this haven, or the very great expence it was estimated at, and the great difficulty of
raising so large a sum, being 10,000l which the queen
at that time could no ways spare, but so it was, that
nothing further was done in it.
The haven being thus abandoned by the queen, and
becoming almost useless, excepting to vessels of the
small burthen before mentioned, the town itself would
before long have become impoverished and fallen
wholly to decay, had it not been most singularly preserved, and raised again, in some measure, to great
wealth and prosperity, occasioned by the persecution
for religion in Brabant and Flanders, which communicated to all the Protestant parts of Europe, the paper,
silk, woollen, and other valuable manufactures of Flanders and France, almost peculiar at that time to those
countries, and till then, in vain attempted elsewhere;
the manufacturers of them came in bodies up to London, and afterwards chose their situations, with great
judgment, distributing themselves, with the queen's licence, through England, so as not to interfere too much
with one another. The workers in sayes, baize, and
flannel in particular, fixed themselves here, at Sandwich, at the mouth of a haven, by which they might
have an easy communication with the metropolis, and
other parts of this kingdom, and afforded them like
wife an easy export to the continent. These manufacturers applied accordingly to the queen, for her protection and licence; for which purpose, in the third year of
her reign, she caused letters patent to be passed, directed to the mayor, &c. to give liberty to such of them, as
should be approved of by the archbishop, and bishop
of London, to inhabit here for the purpose of exercising
those manufactures, which had not been used before in
England, or for shishing in the seas, not exceeding the
number of twenty-five house holders, accounting to
every household not above twelve persons, and there to
exercise their trade, and have as many servants as were
necessary for carrying them on, not exceeding the number above mentioned; these immediately repaired to
Sandwich, to the number, men, women, and children,
of four hundred and six persons; of which, eight only
were masters in the trade. A body of gardeners likewife discovered the nature of the soil about Sandwich
to be exceedingly favourable to the growth of all esculent plants, and fixed themselves here, to the great
advantage of this town, by the increase of inhabitants,
the employment of the poor, and the money which circulated; the landholders like wife had the great advantage of their rents being considerably increased, and the
money paid by the town and neighbourhood for vegetables, instead of being sent from hence for the purchase
of them, remained within the bounds of it. The vegetables grew here in great perfection, but much of
them was conveyed at an easy expence, by water
carriage, to London, and from thence dispersed over
different parts of the kingdom.
These strangers, by their industry and prudent conduct, notwithstanding the obstructions they met with,
from the jealousy of the native tradesmen, and the avarice of the corporation, very soon rose to a flourishing
condition.
In the 8th year of this reign, anno 1565, it appears
by the return, made by the queen's command, that
there were then in this town 420 housholds, of which
291 were English, and 129 Walloons, and seven persons were in want of habitations, namely, three merchants, one scrivener, two surgeons, and one master of
sence. That there were at that time employed at Sandwich, in the coasting trade, and in the fisheries, nine
crayers, from fourteen to twenty-four tons; five boats,
from six to ten tons; three hoys, from twenty to sorty
tons; sailors sixty-two.
The strangers here, in a few years, became much
more numerours, insomuch, that in the year 1582, there
were three hundred and fifty-one Dutch settlers in
Sandwich, who exercised fifty-nine different trades or
occupations; and though the haven still further decayed, yet the trade, populousness, and wealth of the
town increased by their means. In this state Sandwich
continued till the next reign of king James I. when the
customs here amounted to 2,9261. per annum; but
by that prince's setting up the company of merchant
adventurers, and appropriating to them the trade to
Germany, the Low Countries, &c. this place soon fell
to decay again, and though the descendants of the
Dutch and Walloon manufacturers still remained here,
they not long afterwards entirely discontinued those
manufactures, they had originally carried forward, and
mixed among the rest of the inhabitants, in the exercise
of the various occupations used in the town; and thus
Sandwich, though it has since increased in the number
of its houses and inhabitants, yet having lost its manufactures, the principal part of its trade, it was deprived
likewise of that wealth and repute it had derived from
them, and in process of time has dwindled down to the
same obscurity as other country towns.
THE TOWN OF SANDWICH was first incorporated by
king Edward III. by the name of mayor, jurats and
commonaltie of the town and port of Sandwich, before
which they were privileged by the name of barons, as
they were at that time, with all such liberties as they
had had granted to them by king Edward the Consessor, or at any time afterwards; and by this incorporation this town continued to be governed, till Charles II.
in his 36th year, granted to it a new charter, which not
having been enrolled in chancery, an information, in
the nature of a quo warranto, was exhibited against the
corporation; upon which it was agreed to surrender
the charter into the king's hands, and a new one was
immediately afterwards granted; but this last, as well
as another charter, by king James II. and forced on
the corporation, being made subservient to his own
purposes, were afterwards annulled by that king, by a
proclamation in his 4th and last year, which was made
to restore all corporations to their antient charters,
rights, and privileges; since which, this corporation
has acted under its former charter, granted in the 36th
year of king Charles II by which it is made to consist
of a mayor and twelve jurats, who are ex officio, justices
of peace. The mayor, or in his absence, his deputy,
is coroner, within all the liberties of the town and port,
and he is the returning officer at the election of barons
to serve in parliament. All the municipal elections,
decrees, and ordinances, are made by the whole corporate body, assembled in the Guildhall, at a Common
Assembly, convened by the sound of the common horn;
there are two regular and fixed Common Assemblies
every year, one on the first Monday after the feast of
St. Andrew, for the choice of mayor, and the other,
on the following Thursday, for the election of officers;
occasional meetings of the corporation are held at the
pleasure of the mayor. The court of general sessions
and gaol delivery, at which all freemen are called to
attend, was formerly held quarterly, but now only half
yearly. A courts of record is always held at the petty
sessions, which is a monthly adjournment of the general
sessions. Courts of conscience and of piepowder were
formerly held in this town, but they have been long
disused.
The mayor is chosen annually, by the mayor, jurats,
and commonalty, at a common assembly, in the Guildhall; he carriers a black wand in his hand, as a badge
of his office, the same as the mayor of Fordwich, a
member of this port, probably for some delinquency
committed by the mayor of this place; for all the
other ports, and their members corporate, bear white
ones. There are at present twelve jurats, exclusive of
the mayor, who are chosen out of the common-councilmen, by the whole body corporate. There is a
steward and a recorder, usually a barrister at law, who
is appointed at a court of record, and a town clerk appointed for life, a deputy recorder to hold his office,
during the pleasure of the recorder; the mayor, deputy
mayor, jurats, recorder, and deputy recorder, are justices of the peace. There is a land and water treasurer, two serjeants at mace, with other inferior officers, necesiary for carrying forward the business of the
corporation, which last-mentioned officers are elected
annually. There is a fair, for drapery, haberdashery,
shoes, hardware, &c. held on December the 4th, being
Old St. Clement's day, and continues two market days;
and a market, which is weekly held on Wednesdays
and Saturdays. It has the grant of pleading, and of
being impleaded, and of having a common seal, a power
of purchasing and holding lands and tenements, not exceeding 200l. per annum, with a non obstanteto the
statute of mortmain. It has the privilege of one large
and one smaller silver maces, and other immunities and
liberties, the same as the other corporations, within the
jurisdiction of the cinque ports.
The arms of the town and port of Sandwich, are
those of the cinque ports, viz. Per pale, gules and azure,
three demi lions, passant guardant, or, conjoined in pale,
to as many bulks of ships, argent.
A court of requests, for the recovery of small debts
in Sandwich, and the neighbouring parishes, was esta
blished here by an act in 1786; all fines and forfeitures, not appropriated by the act, belong to the corporation.
THE LIBERTIES of the corporation were perambulated by Sir Stephen de Penchester, warden of the
cinque ports, at the latter end of king Henry III.'s
reign, who came hither, and was attended for this purpose, by the mayor and commonalty, collected together by the sound of the common horn. (fn. 9)
THE TOWN OF SANDWICH is five miles from Deal,
over the Sandowns, by the horse road, and about seven
miles by the coach road, through Ham and Finglesham;
twelve miles from Dover and Canterbury; six miles
from Ramsgate, and nine miles from Margate. It was
first built, as it should seem, on a point of land, left by
the retiring waters of the Portus Rutupinus, and now extends along the southern shore of the river Stour, which
from hence to the sea is called Sandwich haven; the
town communicates with Stonar and the Isle of Thanet, by means of a bridge, which draws up for the benefit of masted of a ships passing through it, having been
first built by an act in 1755, and again lately rebuilt
with great improvements, being vested in the mayor
and corporation, who receive the toll collected for the
passage over it.
From its exceeding low situation, on what was once
the bed of the sea, bounded by the present haven, or
creek, on one side, and a vast quantity of wet and damp
marshes on the other sides of it, this town cannot possibly be healthy, or even a desirable place of habitation.
It is in shape an oblong square; the houses are old fashioned and ill built, and the streets, which are in general but narrow and ill–convenient lanes, little adapted
either for carriages or even horses; an exception to
this, however, is High-street, which is of good breadth,
and much better built. It was formerly divided into
eight wards, for the purpose of desence, in each of
which were two constables; but from the year 1437,
there have been twelve wards or districts, over each of
which a jurat presides, and nominates his constable and
deputy constable. There are three parishes in Sandwich, and it is said there were formerly four churches
in it, though now but three; St. James s church, which
stood in the western part of the town having been desecrated in king Edward VI.'s reign. The present
three churches are, St. Mary's, St. Peter's, and St. Clement's church, all which will be more particularly mentioned hereafter; and there are besides, three licensed
places of Worship for the Dissenters. The Dissenters
were formerly very numerous in Sandwich, but their
number is now much diminished. The Presbyterians
have a meeting house in the corn-market; the same market,
and the Methodists have one in Lucksboat-street.
At the entrance of the town from Canterbury, is the
grammar school. In the centre of the town, near St.
Peter's church, is the market or butchery, and near
the south part of it, the cattle and fish markets, and
close to them the guild, or town-hall, which was built
in the year 1579, in the mayoralty of Edward Wood,
the initials of whose name, with the date, remain over
the door. There is an establishment of the customs
here, (the custom-house being near the keys, at the
end of the bridge) under the management of a collector, deputy comptroller, supervisor, and other officers.
Much of the fortified walls still remain, seemingly built
in king Edward IV.'s reign, especially on the north
and west sides, on the other sides it is desended only
by a rampart and ditch. There were, till of late years,
five gates, Canterbury gate, taken down in 1784,
Woodnesborough gate, Sandowne gate, Fisher's gate,
and Newgate. Two of these were formerly called St.
Mary's gate, and Ive's gate. Sandowne gate was built,
and the bridge repaired, at the charge of Sir Henry
Furnese, bart. one of the barons in parliament in 1706;
and mention is made in antient writings of David's
gate, over against which was a place, called the Barbican; and Fryer's gate, which was at one end of the
corn market, leading down to the friery of the Carmelites; but these seem to be interior gates, in the inner
parts of the town.
In 1787 an act passed for new paving, cleansing,
lighting, watching, and otherwise improving and ornamenting this town, which has since been carried into
execution, and will no doubt, as far as is possible, remedy many of those disagreeable inconveniences, which
before subsisted in it.
The town is not well supplied with good water; the
springs lie high, and fill the wells with very indifferent
water; but there is every where, at the depth of from
forty to fifty-eight feet, a stratum of flint, which when
once penetrated by the borer, yields a plentiful supply
of fine water; but as the land drains are not kept out
of the wells by steeming, the inhabitants have not that
advantage they would otherwise have form them. The
other supplies are from the haven and the delf, which
is an artificial stream or canal, raised in some parts
above the level of the grounds, through which it runs,
and was made in king Edward I.'s reign, for the purpose of furnishing the inhabitants of Sandwich with
water. It begins at a place called the Roaring Gutter,
and running through the town, discharges itself into the
haven, near Canterbury gate, being cleansed throughout its whole length, at the expence of the corporation.
In the year 1621, a licence was granted to John Gason, esq. of London, to erect water works, and to convey water in pipes for the benefit of the town. He
erected accordingly a water mill, but died before the
works were compleated, and the design fell to the
ground. (fn. 10)
By what has been said before, it appears that in king
Edward the Consessor's time, there were in Sandwich
three hundred and seven inhabited houses; at the time
of the taking of the survey of Domesday, in the Conqueror's reign, three hundred and eighty-three; about
the time of king Richard II. it had increased to more
than eight hundred houses; after which, from the misfortunes it met with, it became so much diminished of
inhabitants and impoverished, that in Edward VI.'s
time, the house did not exceed two hundred; in queen
Elizabeth's reign it seems to have somewhat increased,
for in the 8th year of it, the town contained four hundred and twenty housholds, and there were some persons wanting habitations.
In the year 1689, the persons assessed to the poll tax,
were in number 1447. In the year 1776, the town
contained within the walls five hundred and sixty-two
houses, and 2213 inhabitants; that is not quite four to
a house, and at present they are much the same number.
THE SOIL about Sandwich, to the eastward, is a deep
sandy loam, and the land there was, by the Dutch settlers, wholly appropriated to the growth of esculent
plants, legumes, seeds, and other produce of the kitchen
garden; these were the earliest gardens, for the supply
of public markets, of any in the kingdom, and Canterbury and Dover markets, are still in a good measure
supplied from them, where the garden stuff and seeds,
carried from hence, bear the preference of any others,
especially the carrots, and are distinguished by the
name of Sandwich carrots, &c. notwithstanding which,
only some part of the grounds, formely applied to
the use of gardening remain, so at present, the greater
portion of them being in tillage for corn. The lands
to the southward, consist of a deep, rich mould, and
are highly fertilized by manure from the town.
THE HAVEN of Sandwich, some account of which
has been given before, in the early history of this place,
begins at the town, and gives name to the river Stour
from hence to the mouth of it at Peperness.
The efforts of the corporation and inhabitants of
this town, as well as their applications to the crown,
for the preservation of the haven, have been from time
to time both strenuous and very frequent, from king
Richard III's reign to the present time. So late as
queen Anne's reign, anno 1705, commissioners were
sent down by the queen's command to make a survey
for a new haven, who reported that such a harbour
might be of general advantage to the public; but nothing further was then done towards it. This occasioned petitions to be presented to the house of commons in 1736, praying for a new harbour near the
Downs; and there it rested till the year 1744, when
an address was ordered by the house to be presented to
the king, that he would send proper and skilful persons to view the haven, and examine whether a better and more commodious harbour might not be made
from the town of Sandwich into the Downs, near Sandown castle, fit for the reception and security of large
merchant ships and men of war; in consequence of
which it was resolved by the house, that such a harbour might be made, and be of great use and advantage to the naval power of Great Britain, by preserving
ships in distress, speedily resitting them for sea, and by
saving the lives of many of the king's subjects; and
in the time of war, more particularly be a ready means
of bridling Dunkirk, of guarding the mouth of the
river, and protecting the country from invasion and
insults; and an estimate was made of the whole expence of it, which amounted to 389, 1681. exclusive
of the grounds to be purchased; and there can be no
loss to judge why this great work, supposed to be undertaken by government, was suspended, when it is
considered, that it was at a time when the kingdom
was engaged in an expensive war both with France
and Spain.
After this there were petitions presented to the
house, in opposition to the above plan, that a more
convenient harbour might be made, at or near Ramsgate, capable of containing a greater number of merchantmen, and ships of war, on account of the advantageous situation of the place, from which there
would be a saving to the public of several hundred
thousand pounds, &c. And there was a petition likewise from Sandwich, setting forth, that if piers were
extended into the sea at Ramsgate, it would in a short
time swerve up the mouth of Sandwich haven, ruin
the trade of the town, and by stopping the course of
the river Stour into the sea, would drown the lands
between Sandwich and Canterbury. But the house,
after due consideration, gave the preserence to the
making of a harbour at Ramsgate, and an act passed
accordingly for that purpose, as well as for cleansing,
amending, and preserving the haven of Sandwich, in
1749, anno 22 George II. (fn. 11) By this act, to quiet the
opposition made by Sandwich, a yearly sum of 200l.
was granted out of the profits and dues of Ramsgate
harbour, towards the latter purpose, which sum is now
blended among the rest of the revenues of the corporation. This act, as well as another in 1765, were
both repealed by a subsequent act in 1792, passed for
the further maintenance and improvement of Ramsgate harbour, in which act is continued the like provision, for the cleansing, amending, and preserving of
this haven of Sandwich, and a further power vested in
the justices of Sandwich, with respect to the punishment of persons, who may remove the buoys, mooring posts, beacons, &c. or take ballast from the channel sides or shores of the haven, without the licence of
the mayor and jurats, or the major part of them,
under their hands, &c. but notwithstanding this provision, and every other support given for the preservation of this haven, it is at present but of small account, and by its still further apparent decay every
year, seems hastening to its total ruin.
The exports at this haven are now consined to the
produce of the neighbouring country for a few miles
round, and the imports mostly to shop goods, and
other necessary articles for the town and tl.e adjoining
country; for which purpose there are several hoys,
which sail to and from London, though there are a few
ships of larger size, which at times make voyages as
far as Wales, Scotland, Sweden, Norway, and the Baltic. From the frequent resort to this port, as the usual
place of embarkation, especially for our kings, (whose
royal fleets constantly rendezvoused in this haven)
from these parts to the continent and back again,
there must of course have happened at it a series of
remarkable transactions and occurrences, from the
earliest period to the time of its decary in the reign of
queen Elizabeth, the principal ones of which are so interwoven with public history, that it is needless to recapitulate them here. During that interval this town
became the object of vengeance to the French, and
was frequently spoiled and burnt by them, in their several attacks on it. (fn. 12)
In 1597 the plague raged at Sandwich, as it did
again in the year 1635, which continued with great
violence for the greatest part of the two next years.
On March 12, 1637, there were seventy-eight houses
visited, and one hundred and eighty-eight persons insected. On June 30, twenty-four houses and tene
ments were shut up, in which were one hundred and
three persons; from July 6th to October 5th, there
were buried in St. Clement's parish, about ten every
week, who died of the plague; and it again raged
here in 1643, when there were one hundred and nine
houses insected, and one hundred and sixty-four persons that needed relief. A dreadful storm happened
on Nov. 27, 1703, in the morning; the damage
done by which, in the town of Sandwich, was estimated at 30col.
THE CINQUE PORTS, as well as their two antient
towns of Rye and Winchelsea, have each of them the
privilege of returning members, usually stiled barons, to
parliament. The first return that is found for any
of them, is in the 42d year of king Edward III.'s
reign.
THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST of such returns as
are to be found of the barons returned to serve in
parliament for the town and port of Sandwich, from
the beginning of queen Elizabeth's reign.
IN THE TIME OF QUEEN ELIZABETH.
|
| Years of the Reign, &c. | Names of the Barons in Parliament. |
| Ist. At Westminster. | Roger Manwood,
John Tysar. |
| 5th— | Roger Manwood, esq. |
| Richard Perot, gent. |
| 13th.— | Roger Manwood, sergeant at
law, |
| John Manwood, gent. |
| 14th.— | Roger Manwood, sergeant at
Law, (fn. 13) |
| John Boys. |
|
| Years of the Reign, &c. | Names of the Barons in Parliament. |
| 27th. At Westminster | Edward Peake,
Edward Wood. |
| 28th.— | The same. |
| 31st.— | Peter Manwood, esq. |
| Edward Peake, gent. |
| 35th.— | The same. |
| 39th.— | The same. |
| 43d.— | Sir George Fane, (fn. 14) |
| Edward Peake, gent. |
IN THE TIME OF KING JAMES I.
|
| 1st.— | Sir George Fane,
Edward Peake, esq. (fn. 15) |
| 12th.— | Sir Thomas Smith,
Sir Samuel Peyton, bart. |
| 18th.— | Sir Edwyn Sandys, |
| Sir Robert Hatton. (fn. 16) |
| 21st— | Sir Robert Hatton,
Francis Drake, esq. |
IN THE TIME OF KING CHARLES I.
|
| 1st.— | Sir Henry Wootton,
Sir Robert Sutton. |
| 1st.— | Sir John Suckling, (fn. 17)
Peter Peake, gent. |
|
| Years of the Reign, &c. | Names of the Barons in Parliament. |
| 3d. At Westminster. | John Philipott,
Peter Peake, esqrs. |
| 15th.— | Sir John Manwood,
Nath. Finch, sergeant at law. |
| 16th.— | Sir Thomas Peyton, bart. (fn. 18)
Edward Partheriche, gent. |
IN THE TIME OF KING CHARLES II. (fn. 19)
|
| 12th.— 1660. | Colonel Henry Oxenden,
James Thurbarne, esq. |
| 13th.— 1661. | Hon. Edward Montague, (fn. 20)
James Thurbarne, esq. |
| 31st.— 1678. | Sir James Oxenden,
James Thurbarne, esq. |
| 31st.— 1679. | The same. |
| 32d.At Oxford. 1681. | The same. |
IN THE TIME OF KING JAMES II.
|
| 1st. At Westminster.
1685. | John Strode, esq.
Samuel Pepys, esq. (fn. 21) |
IN THE TIME OF KING WILLIAM AND Q. MARY.
|
| 1st. — 1688. | Sir James Oxenden, bart.
John Thurbarne, esq. |
|
| Years of the Reign, &c. | Names of the Barons in Parliament. |
| 2d. At Westminster.
1690. | J. Thurbarne, sergeant at law,
Edward Brent, esq. |
IN THE TIME OF KING WILLIAM III
|
| 7th.— 1695. | John Taylor,
Edward Brent, esqrs. (fn. 22) |
| 10th.— 1698. | J. Thurbarne, sergeant at law,
John Michell, esq. |
| 12th.— 1700. | Sir Henry Furnse, (fn. 23)
John Taylor, esq. |
| 13th. — 1701. | Sir Henry Furnese,
Sir James Oxenden, bart. |
IN THE TIME OF QUEEN ANNE.
|
| 1st. — 1702. | John Michell, esq.
Sir Henry Furnese, bart. |
| 4th. — 1705. | Sir Henry Furnese, bart.
Josiah Burchett, esq. (fn. 24) |
| 7th. — 1708. | The same. (fn. 25) |
| 9th. — 1710. | The same. |
| 12th. — 1713. | Sir Henry Oxenden, bart.
John Michell, esq. |
IN THE TIME OF KING GEORGE I.
|
| 1st. — 1714. | Sir Henry Oxenden, bart. (fn. 26)
Thomas D'Aeth, esq. |
|
| Years of the Reign, &c. | Names of the Baroms in Parliament. |
| 7th. At Westminster.
1722. | Sir George Oxenden, bart. (fn. 27)
Josiah Burchett, esq. |
IN THE TIME OF KING GEORGE II.
|
| 1st. — 1727. | The same. |
| 7th. — 1734. | The same. |
| 14th. — 1741. | Sir George Oxenden, bart.
John Pratt, esq. |
| 21st. — 1747. | Sir George Oxenden, bart.
John Cleveland, esq. (fn. 28) |
| 28th. — 1754. | John Cleveland, esq.
Claudius Amyand, esq. (fn. 29) |
IN THE TIME OF KING GEORGE III.
|
| 1st. — 1761. | Henry, viscount Conyngham.
George Hay, LL. D. (fn. 30) |
| 7th. — 1768. | Henry, viscount Conyngham,
Philip Stephens, esq. (fn. 31) |
| 14th. — 1774. | Philip Stephens, esq.
William Hey, esq. (fn. 32) |
| 20th. — 1780. | Philip Stephens, esq.
Sir Richard Sutton, bart. |
| 24th. — 1784. | Philip Stephens, esq.
Charles Brett, esq. |
|
| Years of the Reign, &c. | Names of the Barons in Parliament. |
| 30th.At Westminster. | Philip Stephens, esq.
Sir Horace Mann, barts. |
| 36th. — 1796. | Sir Philip Stephens,
Sir Horace Mann, barts. |
The election of the barons of parliament was formerly made in Sandwich, by the mayor, jurats, and
resident freemen; four of the jurats, or principal inhabitants were put in election, and the two, who had
the greatest number of votes, were returned by the
mayor; but by the last determination of the house
of commons, the election now is in the mayor, jurats,
and freemen, a well non-resident, as those inhabiting
within the port, who do not received alms. The resident freemen, as appeared by the poll at the latter end
of the year 1790, were 492, non-resident 320, in all
812; the number that voted at the general election,
in that year, was 586. The lord warden formerly
claimed to nominate a baron to parliament in each
cinque port, but the right was never acknowledged in
Sandwich, and it was expressly put an end to by the
act of the second of William and Mary. Each baron
to parliament was allowed two shillings a day for his
wages, with a few variations, namely, in 1544 the allowance was only eighteen pence a day, and from
1576 to the latter part of queen Elizabeth's reign, it
was four shillings, about which time it seems to have
ceased entirely in Sandwich.
EDWARD, son of Sir Sydney Montagu, youngest
son of Sir Edward Montagu, of Boughton, in Northamptonshire, an account of whose ancestors has already been given in the former part of this work, (fn. 33)
was by king Charles II. in his 12th year, for his signal
service in delivering up to him the English fleet, of
which he had the command in the time of the usur
pation; (having by his singular prudence, so wrought
on the seamen, that they concurred peaceably in it);
by patent, dated July 12, 1660, created baron Montagu, of St. Neots, viscount Hinchinbroke, and earl
of Sandwich. He died at sea, on May 28, 1672. In
his descendants these titles have continued down
to the right hon. John Montague, the present and sixth
earl of Sandwich, viscount Hinchingbrooke, and baron
Montague, who succeeded his father in them in 1792.
He married first Elizabeth, only surviving daughter
of George, earl of Halifax, who died in 1768, by
whom he had a son John George, lord Hinchinbroke,
who died in 1793, having married Miss Beckingham.
The earl married secondly, in 1772, Mary, eldest
daughter of Hanry, late duke of Bolton, who died in
1779, by whom he had John-George, now lord Hinchinbroke; Mary married to lord Templetown, and
other children, since deceased. The earl bears for his
arms, quarterly, two coats; first and fourth, Argent,
three lozenges conjoined, in fess, gules, within a bordure,
sable, for Montagu; second and third, Or, an eagle
displayed, vert, beaked and membered, gules, for Monthermer; on the centre, a muller, sable, for difference.
For his crest,on a wreath, a griffin's head, couped, or,
with wings indorsed and beaked, sable.For his supporters, on the dexter side, A triton, holding over his
right shoulder a trident, all proper, crowned with an
eastern crown, or; (fn. 34) and on the sinister side, an eagle,
with wings endorsed, vert—Motto, post tot naufragia
portum.
As EARLY as king Henry II.'s reign, there was an
eminent and respectable family named De Sandwich,
who no doubt took their name from this place; who
were employed in the highest offices of honour and
trust, and in this county in particular were possessed
of manors and lands of considerable value; many of
them were of knightly degree, and as appears by the
records and histories of those times, continued to slourish in this county from the above reign to the end of
that of king Richard II. after which, most probably,
they were become extinct. King Edward I. summoned
by his writs, in the first year of his reign, several of
the gentry and their wives, to be present at his and his
queen's coronation, in the several counties of Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, Essex, Sussex, Hertfordshire, and Kent; and in the last there was one directed Radulpho de Sandwico & Consorti Sue. (fn. 35) At the
latter end of which reign Sir John de Sandwich married Agnes, one of the four daughters and coheirs of
Sir Hamon de Crevequer, lord of Folkestone, who, in
right of his wife, became possessed of the basony of
Folkestone. His son left an only daughter and heir
Julian, who married Sir John de Segrave, who in her
right became possessed of that barony. This family
bore for their arms, Or, a chief, indented, azure, and
they were so painted on the tomb of Sir Simon de
Sandwich, in St. Peter's church, in this town; in the
windows of Woodnesborough church, and on the roof-of the cloysters at Canterbury. Sir Ralph de sandwich, custos of London in king Edward I's reign, is
said to have borne the addition of a fleur de lis in the
field.
In the above reigns, and almost to the time of the
dissolution of monasteries, there were many of this
name among the clergy, both secular and regular, too
numerous to mention here, but as these in general, on
their entering into the prosession of a religious, quitted
their own surname, and took on them that of the place
of their birth, it is probable, they had no connection
with the above-mentioned family, one of them only
excepted, which was Henry de Sandwich, elected
bishop of London anno 1262, who died in 1273, and
was buried in his own cathedral, where he had a monument erected to his memory. (fn. 36)
THERE WERE SEVERAL FAMILIES of gentility
who resided in Sandwich at different times, whose descents are recorded in the Heraldic Visitation of Kent,
anno 1619; as
Finch, descended of the same stock as those of
Eastwell, and bore the same arms, and were ancestors
to those of Coldred, and other places in this neighbourhood.
Huffam, alias Hougham, who were of Ash, and were
ancestors of the Houghams, now of St. Paul's, in
Canterbury.
Mennes, who resided here for several descents, and
bore for their arms, Gules, a chevron, vairy, azure, and
or, three leopards faces of the last.
Thomson, who were ancestors of the Thomsons, now
of Kenfield, in Petham.
Trippe, whose descendants removed to Wingham,
under which several parishes a further account of them
may be seen.
In the British Museum, MSS. No. 2230, are several Kentish pedigrees, continued from the Heraldic
visitation, anno 1619, to the year 1663; amongwhich
are those of Manwood, Iden, Alday, Peke, Wood,
Finch, and Mennes; all of Sandwich.
HENRY COWFIELD, a German, in the year 1272,
being the last year of king Henry III.'s reign, founded
A PRIORY in the town of sandwich, for the order of
sriars called Carmelites, and afterwards, from the habit they wore, white friars; (fn. 37) but his endowment of
it was so small, that Raynold, or more properly William, lord Clinton, who was a much larger benefactor
to it in the 20th year of king Edward I. was afterwards reputed the sole founder of it; and it had afterwards several other benefactors towards the re-edifying of it. The church and buildings of these Carmelites were in general large and stately, their churches
were much so; this at Sandwich had the privilege of
sanctury; there were buried in it several principal
inhabitants of the town, besides the members of the
priory; after which, I find no further mention of it,
till the supprssion of it, which happened soon after
the 27th year of king Henry VIII. The seal formerly
belonging to this priory, is now kept with the seals of
this corporation; it is of copper, of an oval form;
the figure is a patriarchal cross, sable, with a key on
each side, on the middle of one side a crescent, on the other
a star of six points; in the segment of a circle, at the
foot of the cross, a cross, patee; the inscription is in
letters of an antient form S. JOHANNIS PATRIARCH
JERUSALEM. The priory thus coming into the king's
hands, remained there till the 32d year of his reign,
when he granted it, by the description of the scite of
the priory, called le Whitesryers, near Sandwich, with
the church bells, and all messuages in the town, to
Thomas Arderne, gent. of Faversham, to hold of the
king in capite. After which I have met with no subsequent possessors of this estate, till the year 1614,
when it passed by sale from George, Samuel, and John
Crisp, to Nicholas Richardson, who that year settled
it on his daughter Elizabeth, upon her marriage with
Edmund Parboe. At length Elizabeth Parboe, sole
daughter and heir of Edmund Parboe, marrying Capt.
John Boys, entitled him to this estate; and on a
partition afterwards, of the estates of their inheritance,
this friery, as it was then called, was allotted to William Boys, their fourth son, who in 1684, anno 37 king
Charles II. conveyed it to William Verrier, gent. of
Sandwich, and he in 1703 made a settlement of it to
certain uses, under which it became the property of
Thomas Alkin, gent. of Canterbury, and Susannah
his wife, from whom it descended to their son Thomas
Verrier Alkin, clerk, on whose death the inheritance
of it became vested in his only son and heir, now an
infant, who is at this time entitled to it. The friery
is situated on the south-west side of the town of Sandwich, between the rampart of it and New street; by
the foundations that are remaining level with the
ground, the buildings must have been of considerable
extent, and the house, gardens, and meadows, occupied an area of somewhat more than five acres. This
estate is now in the occupation of Mr. Joseph Stewart.
There is no account of the first foundation of St.
JOHN'S HOSPITAL, in this town; the oldest grant met
with relating to it, is dated anno 16 Edward I. and
it is there called Domus Dei & Sancli Johannis de
Sandwico. Since the year 1293, it has been described
in the evidences, by the name likewise of Hospitale.
It is situated on the north-west side of the corn market, and consists of one large old building, containing
a hall, and several rooms, both above and below stairs,
for the brothers and sisters. Behind this principal
building is a range of single rooms, called the Harbinge, in which travellers were formerly lodged and
entertained.
This hospital was very early under the government
of the mayor and barons, or jurats, of Sandwich, as
patrons and governors; but although the patronage
appears to have been by these evidences, in the mayor
and jurats jointly, yet for the sake of harmony, the
mayor for the time being, fills up all the vacancies
that happen during his mayoralty. Like most others
of early foundation, it was intended for the accommodation of travellers and strangers, as well as for the
support of sixed residents; in it there were separate
rooms for men and women, in which they were refreshed with diet and provided with comfortable
lodging.
It appears by the antient register of the hospital,
that the number of brothers and sisters in it were formerly fifteen, afterwards twelve, which latter number
continued till the year 1737, when the hospital being
in debt, and the revenue much reduced, the mayor
and jurats found it expedient to reduce the number to
six; and that two at the least of that number should
be men, and as many at least women; which rule,
however, has not been strictly observed, the present
six being all women.
The revenues of this hospital were always small,
arising from different benefactions to it; it received,
however,a valuable addition in a benefaction of 2001.
given in 1763, by the will of John Dekewer, esq. of
Hackney, (a native of this town, and a liberal bene
factor to it) to the mayor and jurats, in trust, for the
brothers and sisters; which money has been since invested in the public funds.
The present revenue of it, consisting of the interest
of the above legacy, and several houses and tenements,
quit-rents, is now of the annual value of 47l. 12s. 10d.
the clear yearly value of which, (the charging of repairs and collecting being deducted) is 38l. 2s. 10d.
on an average, which make the annual income of each
brother and sister about six guineas. (fn. 38)
ST. THOMAS'S, alias ELLIS'S HOSPITAL, was
founded in honour of St. Thomas (Becket) martyr,
about the year 1392, anno 16 Richard II. by Thomas
Ellis, of this town, a wealthy draper. He served in
parliament for Sandwich in the 43d year of king Edward III. and in the first year of king Richard II. and
was mayor there in the years 1370 and 1382. (fn. 39) He
was buried with his wife in the north isle of St. Peter's
church, bearing for his arms, Or, on a cross, sable, five
crescents, argent. He endowed it with the manor farm
of Denne-court, in Woodnesborough, which he conveyed to feoffees, with the king's licence, for the use
and benefit of twelve poor persons in this hospital;
after which, Henry Greenshield, gent. of Sandwich,
in the last year of king Edward IV. made an addition
to this charity by giving to it by his will, land in
Woodnesborough. There were afterwards several
other benefactions of rents, lands, and houses made
to it.
The commissioners under the statute of 37 king
Henry VIII. made a return of this hospital of the
clear yearly value of 10l. of. 4½d. beyond reprises;
and archbishop Parker in the year 1562, certified it
to the privy council to be of the yearly value of twelve
pounds, and to consist of twelve brothers and four
sisters, placed there for term of life, and relieved by
alms and the revenue of the hospital. It has from the
time of its foundation been vested in seoffees, the feoffment having been renewed from time to time.
The seoffees are generally of the town, or the adjoining country, who when reduced to three, ought to
create a fresh trust, and enlarge their number to nine,
in conformity to certain rules established in 1725;
by which regulations this hospital has ever since been
governed, the vacancies being supplied by the seoffees
in rotation.
The number of poor persons placed in it is twelve,
according to the original institution, that is, eight
men and four women, all single, by the name of the
brothers and sisters of St. Thomas (Elly's) hospital.
They are to be aged about fifty, and parishioners and
inhabitants within one of the respective parishes of the
town and port of Sandwich. (fn. 40) The present feoffees are
now reduced to two only, viz. Sir Henry Oxenden,
bart. of Brome, and John Lynch, LL. D. archdeacon
of Canterbury. The principal modern benefactor to
this hospital has been John Michell, esq. of Richmond, in Surry, who was for almost twenty years
successively returned in parliament for Sandwich.
Upon the death of John Thurbarne, esq. sergeant at
law, he took upon himself the care of the money belonging to this hospital, which being subscribed into
the South Sea company, with the consent of the other
trustees, in that fatal year 1720, came out again with
a deficiency of near half the principal, amounting to
about 200l. which loss he voluntarily sustained, and
by his benevolence made good again to the brothers
and sisters. He used his care and diligence, with the
consent of the other trustees, towards the renewing and
settling the present, trust, erected in the year 1725,
and in composing the orders and rules for the good
government of the hospital, and the well disposing of
the revenues of it.
This hospital is situated in a retired situation, between New street and the Corn Market, a passage
through the middle of it divides the house into two
parts; on the south side is the hall open to the roof,
beyond which are the womens apartments, two above
and two below; the mens rooms are on the north
side, four above and four below. The income of it
is very considerable, consisting of the manor farm of
Denne-court above-mentioned, and several small pieces
of land, houses, tenements, and quit-rents, almost all
of them in this town, amounting to the yearly sum of
162l. 11s. the reprises out of which, being quit-rents
for their estates, are 6l. 7s. 4d.
ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S HOSPITAL is situated just
without the town of Sandwich, on the south side of
it on the angle, where the two loads join, coming from
Eastry and Woodnesborough; notwithstanding tradition gives a much earlier period to the foundation
of this hospital, yet it appears by a bull of pope In
nocent IV. anno 1244, that it was then begun to be
founded by Sir Henry de Sandwich, in honour of St.
Bartholomew. for the support of the weak and infirm,
and endowed by him for that purpose, so that the brothers and sisters should live in it under some order of
discipline, and be maintained at table, and should
wear a uniform habit. (fn. 41)
In the Custumal of Sandwich there is mention
made of three priests, employed by the brothers and
sisters to officiate in their chapel for the souls of Bertrine de Crawthorne, William Buchard, and Sir Henry
Sandwich, who were probably all three benefactors to
this hospital, in the order of time therein mentioned.
Such as were most liberal in their donations to hospitals, and other religious foundations, acquired the
name of first, second, and third founder, in order of
time as they made additions to the foundation, and
thus several of the family of Sandwich, from their respective benesactions to this hospital, were successively
entitled the founders of it, and were from the first,
the undoubted patrons of it, till Sir Nicholas de Sandwich assig ned the patronage of it to the mayor and
barons of Sandwich, who from that time became governors of it; but great inconveniences arising from
the confusion in the common assemblies, where the
business of the hospital was decided, it was agreed, to
leave the appointments in it, to the mayor and jurats
only; and afterwards again, for the like reason, to the
mayor only, who continues regularly to fill up such
vacancies in it during his mayoralty.
This hospital is regularly visited twice a year by the
mayor and jurats, who are stiled patrons, governors
and visitors of it, for the passing of the accounts, and
the better regulation of the government of it. The
antient visitation of this hospital on the feast of St.
Bartholomew, before the reformation, is related in the
Custumal of Sandwich. Every year on that seast, the
mayor and commonalty visited the hospital in solemn
procession, the laity of Sandwich leading the way,
some with instruments of music, other to the number
of seven score and more bearing wax lights, provided
for the occasion by the corporation, which lights were
to be left in the chapel of the hospital, as an offering
for the use of it throughout the year. After these sollowed the clergy of Sandwich, in their proper habits,
chanting hymns and carrying tapers; the rector of ST.
Peter's, or some other clergyman appointed by the
mayor, celebrating high mass with much solemnity;
some of the better fort of the commonalty, as Sir Nicholas de Sandwich and others, provided their own
tapers and offered them there.
There was usually a great resort of people at this
place at the fair, held on the eve of St. Luke, and the
mayor commonly attended.
It does not appear that this hospital was actually incorporated by any royal patent, and made thereby capable of gifts and grants in succession, till Henry VIII.
in his 27th year, by his letters patent, confirmed the
dispensation which archbishop Cranmer had made to
it, the only public instrument of foundation before
being the bull before-mentioned, of pope Innocent IV.
The above mentioned dispensation of archbishop
Cranmer, was obtained by the hospital, in pursuanace
of the act of the 25th year of king Henry VIII. it
authorised the master and brethren, and their successors, to hold the hospital, with all their then possessions, rights, &c. and future acquisitions, in as free
and ample a manner as their predecessors had enjoyed
their estates and privileges, reserving to the mayor of
Sandwich, all his right and interest in the premises.
After which, though there were several attempts made
to suppress this hospital as a religious foundation for
the king's use, under pretence of the statutes of 37
Henry VIII. and the 1st of king Edward VI. and a
grant was made of it to certain lay persons, in fee farm,
by king James the 1st. yet the corporation being well
advised, disputed the matter, and upon a hearing, the
hospital was found to be a lay foundation, and not
within the meaning of the statutes above-mentioned,
upon which the patentees gave up their suit; in 1636,
a Venire facias was issued for the mayor and jurats to
appear before the commissioners, on a commission on
the statute for charitable uses, to shew by what right
they took on them the government of the hospitals in
Sandwich. The records of the corporation do not surnish the result of this enquiry, but the hospital of St.
Thomas has not been since then under the government
of the mayor and jurats, whilst this hospital and that of
St. John, has continued under their superintendance to
this day. The total number of brothers and sisters in
this hospital seems to have been always sixteen. Formerly there was a limited number of each sex, namely,
twelve men and four women; but at this time the men
and women are presented indifferently, as the vacancies
happen.
The scite of the hospital is surrounded by a sence,
which incloses the farm-house, barns, stables, and other
outhouses, a chapel, and fifteen small, but commodious
houses, with gardens for the brothers and sisters. The
other, or sixteenth tenement, was converted into a farm
house for the residence of the occupier of the lands belonging to the hospital, when they were first hired out,
and the person who is presented to that vacancy, to
which this house would otherwise belong, is permitted
to reside in Sandwich, with an allowance from the hospital in money, in lieu of it. The whole of the scite is
held to be extraparochial.
The chapel is situated at a small distance from the
house; it is a large and handsome edifice, in which and
in the cemetery belonging to it, there were buried not
only many of the brothers and sisters, but others of the
town; there is in it an altar monument, covered with a
slab of Sussex marble, on which lies the effigies of a
man, completely cased in his coat of mail, with a smooth
breast piece over his hawberk; there is a triangular
shield over the body, and a broad sword lying along his
left thigh. It is undoubtedly meant for Sir Henry de
Sandwich, but the whole seems to be a cenotaph, designed to commemorate him as the founder of this hospital. An inscription on a rail over the figure points
out this spot, as the burial place of Sir Henry de Sandwich, and Sir Nicholas his son; but upon a strict examination of the supposed tomb, a few years ago, when
under repair, and of the ground beneath, so far as was
searched, there was neither coffin, nor any other mark
of sepulture found. (fn. 42)
When the reformation took place, and masses and
commemorations for the dead were abolished, the
chaplains officiating in this chapel were of course dismissed, as being of no further use in it; and it does not
appear, that any regular provision has been made since,
for the maintenance of a minister to perform divine
service in it, for the use of the hospital. However,
there were afterwards several different regulations and
orders made from time to time for the providing of a
minister to perform divine service in the hospital; but
in 1636, a clergyman in orders was admitted a brother,
and it was agreed that he should perform all ministerial
duty belonging to the hospital, during his continuance
as such; many years ago there was service performed
in this chapel only once a year, on St. Bartholomew's
day, but now a monthly sermon is preached there by
one of the ministers of Sandwich, upon the most liberal terms.
The benefactions to this hospital have been numerous and ample, as the present terrier and rental of it
shews; its present revenue consists of one large farm,
let at 220l. per annum, several pieces of land and tene
ments in Sandwich, and some quit-rents; and likewise
a clear annual rent charge of sixty-two pounds, paid out
of the tolls arising for the passage over the new bridge,
between Sandwich and Stonar; this altogether amounts
to the annual sum of 357l. 11s. 6d. The clear income,
which is 335l. 8s. would allow to each member nearly
twenty one pounds yearly, but the repairs being very
heavy at present, they do not receive more than about
seventeen pounds each, to which must be added the
value of the house and garden, the carriage of coals
and sand, wood and stubble from the farm, and the
exemption from all assessments and taxes; which makes
the whole benefit from the hospital, at a fair estimation,
about four, or perhaps five and twenty pounds a year.
The seal of this hospital is a small oval, representing
St. Bartholomew sitting under a canopy; inscription,
S. Sancti Bartholemei.
King Edward III in his 23d year, granted by writ
of privy seal, to the brethren of this hospital, all the
profits arising from the ferry over the haven, between
Sandwich and Stoner, in support of the alms of the hospital; an exemplification of which grant was obtained
in the 16th year of king Henry VIII.'s reign. The
profits of this ferry continued part of the revenues of
this hospital, till on pretence of the passage in the ferry
boat being subject to many inconveniences, an act was
obtained in 1755, for building a bridge across the haven, in lieu of the ferry boat, between Sandwich and
Stonar, in which act there is a clause, which secures to
this hospital, from the revenue of the bridge, the annual sum of Sixty-two pounds, being the last and greatest
rent which had been made of the ferry.
ROGER MANWOOD, esq. barrister at law, and recorder of Sandwich, afterwards knighter, and chief baron
of the exchequer, having promoted a subscription in
1563, among the principal inhabitants of this town,
for the purpose of erecting a building for A FREE
SCHOOL, upon a promise to endow it with lands of suf
ficient value to support the building and maintain a
master, solicited archbishop Parker for his approbation of his design, who afterwards became highly instrumental in bringing forward this foundation, by giving his countenance to it, and procuring, through Secretary Cecil's interest, the queen's licence for this
purpose; by which she granted, that the mayor and
jurats of Sandwich should be governors of the school,
and be one body incorporate, by the title of governors
of the free school of Roger Manwood in Sandwich; that
they might sue and implead by that name in all courts;
might purchase estates in fee to the value of forty
pounds a year, and have a common seal, with other
liberties usual in grants of that sort. (fn. 43)
The subscriptions at that time, towards the building
of the school house, amounted to 286l. and upwards;
and Mr. Manwood obtained from the dean and chapter of Canterbury, a grant in fee farm of a piece of
ground, inclosed with a stone wall, sometime called St.
Thomas's house, in Sandwich, near Canterbury gate,
together with a piece of salts over against it, at a small
yearly rent, which land in 1566, together with ninety
acres in St. Stephen's, alias Hackington, and Northgate, near Canterbury, Mr. Manwood enseoffed to the
mayor and jurats, by the name of the governors of his
free grammar school, for the perpetual support and
maintenance of it. On the above piece of ground,
called St. Thomas's house, the building for this school
was afterwards erected, and the school established, and
it continues as such at this time.
Joane Trapps, widow of Robert Trapps, of London, goldsmith, by her will in 1568, gave to the rectors and scholars of Lincoln college, in Oxford, fiftytwo acres of land at Whitstaple, towards the finding of
four scholars in that college, two to be nominated from
this school, by the rector, &c. and two by the gover
nors of it, and so by like turns for ever; in consequence of which the rector, &c. agreed to pay yearly
to the four scholars 10l. 13s. 4d. towards the exhibitions, and charges of finding the scholars; and the
governors of the school agreed, upon every avoidance
of the schoolmaster's place, they would within twenty
days give notice to the rector, &c. who should deliver
in writing, under their common seal, to the mayor, or
to the usher at the school-house, the names of two
persons, fellows of the college, duly qualified, in order
that they the governors should make choice of one of
them within twenty days, or in default thereof, the
nomination of such master should be in the archbishop, the see being full, otherwise in the dean of Canterbury, for the time being.
Thomas Manwood, gent. by will in 1570, gave to
the governors of his brother Roger's free grammar
school lands and tenements to the clear yearly rent of
ten pounds, for an usher, or for other necessary matters of maintenance of the school, in such form as
should be thought meet to the governors.
Sir Roger Manwood above-mentioned, then lord
chief baron, as surviving executor of the will of Joane
Trapps, widow, above-mentioned, in 1581, conveyed
to the master and fellows of Gonvyle and Caius college, in Cambridge, a farm called Bodkins, in Swalecliffe, of the clear yearly value of 11l. 6s. 8d. in consideration of which, the master agreed to pay annually
to four scholars of their college 10l. 13s. 4d. four
marcs to each; to be nominated by the governors of
this school, and by the master alternately. After which
the heirs of Sir Roger Manwood refusing to pay the
master's salary, there were several suits at law and
awards concerning it, but in 1635 the matter was argued before the lord keeper, who directed that the
master's salary should be paid in future by Sir Roger
Manwood's heirs, out of the rents enfeoffed by him
for that purpose, to the mayor and jurats; in conse
quence of which the salary of twenty pounds per annum
has been ever since paid with tolerable regularity by
the proprietors of the estate, the present one being Sir
Edward Hales, bart. of St. Stephen's.
Edward Parboe, esq. by will in 1640, besides many
other legacies to the parishes, conduits, St. John's hospital, and the mayor and jurats, in Sandwich, gave to
the latter, as governors of the grammar school, an annuity of ten pounds out of premises in Sandwich, of
which four pounds was to be to the master of the school,
and five pounds to the rector, fellows, and scholars of
Lincoln college, Oxford, in augmentation, &c. of the
scholars sent from Sandwich; and if none were sent,
the money to remain in the governors hands, to accumulate for such scholars as should be afterwards appointed; the remaining twenty shillings to the mayor
and jurats, for their charges in it; but it does not appear that the school was ever benefited by this bequest,
or how it happened that it was not so.
In 1685 the mayor and jurats purchased a piece of
land, on which were two stables, a kitchen and a cove,
situate in St. Mary's parish, in Sandwich, in trust, for
the sole use and benesit of the master of the school for
the time being.
Sir Roger Manwood drew up in 1580, rules and ordinances, for the better government of this school,
which are still existing, signed by him, and are still observed in the regulation and government of it (fn. 44) in
which, among other rules for the internal government
of the school, it is ordered, that the master should be
elected by the governors, viz. the mayor and jurats of
Sandwich, out of Lincoln college, Oxford, and to be
A. M. if it might conveniently be, and allowed of by
the ordinary, and that he and the usher, who should be
appointed by the master, and admitted by the governors, should teach the grammar in the school. The
overplus of all the lands and tenements, after the master's and usher's falaries were paid, and all other
charges, reparations, and expences, to be equally divided between the master and usher. Of the scholars
to be taught in the school, the children of the inhabitants of Sandwich to be freely taught, without any thing
taken, but of benevolence at the end of every quarter,
towards buying of books for the common use of the
scholars; the rest of the foreign scholars to be taught
for such price, and rate, as should be limited by the governors. And if there should not be so many grammar
scholars as should furnish the school house, there should
be a person, who could write well, who should teach
the scholars reading and writing in the school, in the
time of there being no usher therein, to be placed in it
by the mayor and jurats, and to be paid out of the revenues of the school four pounds yearly, and such gains
as by his diligent teaching he could honestly get. The
master not to take to board, diet or lodge in his house,
or rooms, more than twelve scholars, and the usher
not above six, without leave given by the governors.
There is a common seal, of silver, belonging to the
governors of this school, which is kept among the corporation seals of Sandwich. (fn. 45)
John Conant, A. M. was appointed in 1758; and is
the present master of this school. (fn. 46)
THE CHARITY SCHOOL in this town has been supported a great number of years by casual contributions,
and regular subscriptions begun about the year 1711,
at which time the school seems to have commenced;
the present establishment is thirty boys and thirty girls,
under a master and mistres; the former are taught to
read and write, and the latter employed in knitting and
plain work; nine trustees are appointed every year,
three from each parish, who, with the mayor, examine
the children, and direct all the affairs of the school.
The attention paid to this school, and the visible
good effects of it, have brought it to no small degree
of reputation and prosperity, which has lately been increased by a bequest of 100l. by Mr. Sprat, of Fort
St. George, in the East-Indies. This legacy has been
invested in 3 per cent. consol. Bank annuities, in trust
for the benefit of the scholars, and yields a dividend of
4l. 8s. upon a principal of 146l. 15s. 8d. The subscriptions of late years have amounted to about sixty
pounds, and the collections at sermons to about seven
pounds, which, added to the dividend, have been sufficient to cloath, as well as instruct the children.
The master of this school teaches likewise six other
boys, for the rents of certain houses in sandwich, now
of the yearly rent of 3l. 16s. given by the will of David
Turner, of Sandwich, in 1665, to the mayor and jurats in trust, to be by them disposed of to a person who
should teach to write and read English poor children
gratis.
Charities.
JAMES MASTER, esq. of East Langdon, by will in 1631, ordered that the rent of an acre of ground, which he had behind
the vicarage of St. Clement's church, and abutting to the town
ditch, amounting to 33s. 4d. by the year, should yearly be laid
out in providing sea coal in summer, when it was cheapest, to be
laid up and given among the poor of the three parishes, as the
mayor, together with the overseers of the poor, should think to
have most need; the coals to be given among them, some week
before Christmas yearly, and this to continue for ever.
This seems to be the piece of ground called Mill garden, now
supposed to be given to the reparation of the church, and of the
annual value of three pounds.
LAND IN St. Clement's parish, called St. George's lees, lying
in two pieces, containing in the whole three acres, now of the
yearly rent of 7l. 10s. was given originally to that parish, for the
maintenance of a lamp in that church.
SIR HENRY FURNESE, bart. of Waldershare, who died in
1712, gave by will to the mayor and jurats 500l. to be laid out
in the purchase of a freehold estate, in trust for them, to dispose
of the rents and profits, with the advice of the town clerk and
the churchwardens, upon the 30th of May yearly, being his
birth-day, two fifths to the poor of St. Peter's, where he was
born, and a moiety of the remaining three fifths to each of the
other two parishes in Sandwich. Accordingly, in 1727, the
mayor and jurats purchased a barn and lands, containing about
nineteen acres, at Weddington, in Ash, now of the yearly rent
of 24l.
THE RENTS, issues and profits of a small farm at Marshborough, in Woodnesborough, was given by the will of Mr. Peter
Jarvis, merchant, of Leghorn, and a native of Sandwich, in
1715, in trust for the poor of the three parishes of Sandwich, to
be paid yearly to them, and now of the yearly rent of 12l.
JOHN SPRAT, of Fort St. George, in the East-Indies, merchant, by his will in 1776, gave to each of the three parishes in
Sandwich, 100l. the interest to be distributed to such poor of
these parishes yearly, as the parsons and churchwardens of them
might think proper, on the 25th of November in each year.—These legacies were placed in the public funds, in the names of
turstees. The annual dividend to each parish is 4l. 10s. 8d.
upon the principal stock of 151l. 4s. 6d. Old South Sea Annuities. Mr. Sprat was a native of Sandwich, and died at Madras in 1780.
SEVERAL tenements, shops, and pieces of ground, given to
the poor of St. Peter's parish by different persons, amount altogether to the yearly sum of 16l. 17s. besides other small tenements. And two vaults under the church at the east end, are
let at the yearly rent of 40s.
A TENEMENT in the angle between Love-lane and King-street
is now made use of as the parish workhouse.
THERE ARE several quit-rents paid to the use of the parish
of ST. Peter, from several premises in Sandwich, amounting in
the whole to 13s. 6d. per annum.
SOLOMON HOUGHAM, esq. of London, who was sheriff of
Kent in 1696, and died the next year, gave by his will, in trust,
an annuity, or yearly rent charge of 11l. out of Barton-field, in
the parish of St. Paul, in Canterbury, to be paid to the churchwardens of St. Mary's parish, to be by them disposed of; 4s. in
penny loaves every Sunday: and upon Christmas day yearly,
12s. in penny loaves, to be distributed at church after divine service, to such of the poorest of this parish, as the churchwardens
should think fit; and in case of age and sickness, if any could
not come, their portion of bread to be sent home to them.
JOHN DEKEWER, esq. of St. John's, Hackney, who died in
1762, gave by his will to the minister and churchwardens of St.
Mary's, in Sandwich, 500l. to be laid out in the public funds,
in trust, to repair and preserve the family vault and tomb, and
the iron work round it in St. Mary's church-yard; and on every
Sunday, after divine service in St. Mary's, in every week successively, to give 4s. in bread to the poor of this parish; and to lay
out the remainder of the dividends in coals, to be given to the
poor at Christmas eve yearly, at the discretion of the minister
and churchwardens, &c.
Besides which, there are several small tenements, and pieces
of ground of small yearly rents, and sunday quit-rents belonging
to St. Mary's parish.
THOMAS FULNETBY, gent. of Deal, in 1625, enfeoffed to
trustees, four messuages near the Loopes, and overgainst the Beagrims, to make four dwellings of the premises, for four poor
tradesmen of St. Mary's parish only, that have been born in it,
and have long dwelt there; and in default of such tradesmen,
then for such poor of the parish, as have been born, or long
dwelt there, and the rents, &c. to be divided among them.
SANDWICH is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of
its own name.
There were formerly THREE PAROCHIAL CHURCHES
in this town, and a church or chapel likewise, supposed
by some to have been parochial, dedicated to St. Jacob, which has been long since demolished; but the
three former churches, being those of St. Mary, St.
Peter, and St. Clement, Still remain; an account of all
which will be given separately.
ST. MARY'S CHURCH stands in a low situation in
Strand street, on the northern part of the town. The
original church, built in the time of the Saxons, is said
to have been demolished by the Danes, and to have
been afterwards rebuilt by queen Emma, which building was burnt down by the French, and it was not long
afterwards again rebuilt; notwithstanding which, it appears to have become dilapidated and in a most ruinous state in the time of king Henry VI. for in the 2d
year of that reign, anno 1448, part of the steeple fell,
in consequence of which it underwent a thorough repair,
and then consisted of two isles and the nave; the latter
was terminated by the high chancel, and the south isle
by St. Laurence's chancel. It however, fell down
again on April 25, 1667, and brought down with it
most of the church; the western wall, portions of the
south isle and its chancel only remaining; and though
the church itself was soon afterwards rebuilt, as at present, yet it does not appear that any steeple was built
till the year 1718, when the present low one was raised
upon the south porch, and one bell put up in it. Before this, there were five small bells, which about the
year 1639, had been formed out of three larger ones;
the above five bells were sold, for the faculty had been
obtained in 1669, to fell the useless timber and the bells,
towards the rebuilding of the church, and they were
sold, as it is said, to the parish of Eleham.
In an antient bead-roll of this church, there is mention made of John and William Condy, the first beginners of the foundation of the chantry of that name
in this church; of Thomas Loueryk and his wife,
who founded the chapel of our Lady, at the east head
of it; and of the three windows of the north side of
the church; of Thomas Elys and Margaret his wife,
and Sir Thomas Rolling, vicar of this church, of whose
goods was made the west window of it, and who made
the vicarage of the parish more than it was before;
and besides these, of several other benefactors to the
windows and other parts of it. And there were divers
other gifts made to this church, for its reparation, and
for obits, and other religious services performed in it,
as appears by the evidences belonging to it.
The inventory of the silver and jewels, belonging to
the church before the reformation, sufficiently shew the
costliness of the utensils belonging to it, and the riches
of it. The silver, according to the inventory made of
them, amounting to 724 ounces; and the habits of the
ministers to officiate in it, the linen and books, were
answerable to the rest belonging to it.
The present church of St. Mary consists of a north
isle, and the nave, at the end of which is the chancel,
which has an ascent of three steps on each side; between which entrances are the mayor's seat and other
pews. The altar piece, table, and rails, are of wainscot
and very ornamental. The sont is at the west end of
the nave, it is a stone bason, having eight faces changed
alternately with plain shields and roses, in quaterfoils;
on the shaft are the letters cw. II. RS. DE. IC. POD.
1662.
In this church are numbers of monuments and inscriptions, all which are printed in Mr. Boys's Collections, P. 319, the whole too numerous to mention here,
but among others at the west end of the nave, are memorials of the Smiths and Verriers. In the south space
are memorials for the Petleys and for the Whites. In
the middle space, on an old stone, are the remains of a
cross story, resting on a dog or lion, and the remains of
an inscription with this date, I. M. CCC. XXX. In the
north isle are three grave-stones, on a rise above the
pavement, with inscriptions shewing, that underneath is
a vault, in which lie many of the family of Hayward,
formerly mayors of this town; arms, Argent, on a pale,
sable, three crescents of the field, In the chancel is a
large stone, robbed of its brasses, which formerly commerated the deaths of Roger Manwood and his family;
the place where it lies was formerly St. Laurence chancel. In the chancel is a monument of stone much defaced; on it are the figures of a manand woman kneeling, in a praying posture, for Abraham Rutton, formerly mayor, and Susan his wife, by whom he had seven sons and six daughters. He died in 1608; and
for his descendant the Rev. John Rutton, obt. 1763,
rector of this parish. Against the south wall, is a handsome monument of marble, with these arms, Argent,
five chevronels, sable, and per pale, azure and gules, a
lion rampant, argent; and an inscription for several of
the family of Hougham. Against the same wall a tablet, for Mary, wife of Joseph Stewart, esq. obt. 1775;
arms, Argent, a lion rampant, gules, over all, a bend raguled, or. Over the south door, a marble monument
for Richard Solly, gent. thrice mayor, obt. 1731;
and Anna his wife, daughter of John Crickett, gent,
by whom he had ten sons and three daughters; arms,
Azure, a chevron, party per pale, or, and gules, between
three soles, naient, argent. At the west end of the nave
is an altar tomb, with an inscription, shewing, that in
a vault underneath, lie several of the Cricketts; another altar tomb, with an inscription, for several of the
Nowells; arms, Three covered cups. By the gallery
stairs, on an altar tomb, an inscription for Tho. Danson, preacher, of this town, who died 1764; on a raised
monument of brick, an inscription, for several of the
name of Jordan; this stands close before, and hides
the altar part of a monument, under an arch in the north
wall, to the memory of Sir William Loverick, of Ash,
and dame Emma his wife, the daughter of Sir John
Septvans, of that parish, who are said to have been the
principal repairers, or builders of this church, after it
had been burnt by the French, and were buried in king
Henry IV.'s reign; on an adjoining tomb an inscription
for the Maundys.
There are stones, pointing out the entrances into
the vaults of Solly and Stewart, and there are inscriptions on a board, commemorating the benefactions of
John Dekewer, esq. Solomon Hougham, gent. Sir
Henry Furnese, bart. and Mr. Peter Jarvis.
Several names appear on the stones, on the outside
of the east and north walls of the chancel. Sir Edward
Ringely, of Knolton, was buried in Jesus chapel, in
this church, on the left side of the altar. In the 35th
of king Henry VIII. William, lord Clinton, is said to
have been interred under a gilded arch in the south wall
of this church, which arch was walled up in king Edward VI.'s reign, but it was visible some time afterwards in the church yard, perhaps it may be the same
projectioin that now appears there, on the south side of
the chancel. William Condie, who founded the chantry, afterwards called by his name, in this church, was
likewife interred, together with his wife, in the south
isle of the old church, near the lord Clinton's tomb;
but there is nothing now to point out precisely the situation of their remains, nor those of Thomas Manwood,
gent. who died in king Henry VIII.'s time and was
buried under the belfry. Stephen Perot was buried
likewise in this church in 1570.
There are several altar tombs in the church-yard,
one of which is for the family of Dekewer; arms,
Vert, on a cross, engrailed, or, five fleurs de lis, sable;
in the first and fourth quarters, a caltrop, argent; in the
second and third quarters, a lion rampant, of the last.
An anchoress had her cell at the east end of this
church in the 20th year of king Henry VIII.
At a small distance south-west of St. Mary's church,
was a church or chapel, dedicated to St. facob, supposed
by many to have been a parochial church; there is nothing lest now to point out the situation of the building, the cemetery remains and is used occasionally as a
burial place, for the use of St. Mary's parish. This
church-yard seems to have got into lay hands at the
suppression, for in 1578, it was enfeoffed by Edward
Wood, to certain persons, for the necessary uses of
the parish. The trust was renewed in 1604 and 1649.
At the south-west corner was an hermitage, the residence of an hermit. The last hermit in it was John
Steward, in king Henry VIII.'s reign, who was afterwards vicar of St. Mary's church, whose duty it was to
minister to strangers and the poor, to bury the dead,
and pray for the people in the chapel, which was destroyed, as well as others of the like sort, in the beginning of king Edward VI.'s reign. Great part of this
building was standing at the latter end of Edward VI.'s
reign; there was in it a brotherhood of St. Catherine,
consisting of both brothers and sisters, which was benesitted by the will of John Wynchelse, of Sandwich. It
appears that this church or chapel was under the management of the officers of St. Mary's parish, and
that the building had been repaired in the years
1445 and 1478.
The church of St. Mary is a vicarage, the patronage of which has ever been part of the possessions of
the archdeaconry of Canterbury, to whom the appropriation of the church likewise formerly belonged; it
did so in the 8th year of king Richard II. anno 1384,
when on the taxation of the spiritualities and temporalities ecclesiastic, in this diocese, the church of St.
Mary's appropriated to the archdeacon, was valued
at eight pounds, and the vicarage was valued at only
four pounds, and on account of the smallness of it,
was not taxed to the tenth. (fn. 47) The vicarage is valued
in the king's books, in king Henry VIII.'s reign, at
8l. 1s. since which time, and it should seem during the
reign of queen Elizabeth, the great tithes, or appropriate parsonage of this church, were given up by the
archdeacon to the vicarage, so that the vicar has been
since intitled to both great and small tithes within the
bounds of this parish, which induced several of the
incumbents to stile themselves rectors, but certainly
wrong, for it is still a vicarage, the vicars of which are
entitled to the receipt and possession of the great tithes,
by grant from the appropriator.
In 1588 here were 385 communicants, and it was
valued at forty pounds per annum. In 1640 here
were the same number of communicants, and it was
valued at sixty-eight pounds. It is now a discharged
living, of the clear yearly value of forty pounds. It
has been augmented by the governors of queen Anne's
bounty, the greater part of the money from which has
been laid out in the purchase of marsh land in Wood.
nesborough. At present the vicar receives the tithes
of about eighty-four acres of land. There were great
disputes formerly, between the appropriators of Eastry
and the vicars of St. Mary's, respecting the tithes of a
small district of land called Puttock's downe; but the
decisions were constantly against the vicars of St.
Mary's, and the tithes now belong to Word, a chapel
of ease to Eastry.
Besides the ordinary small tithes, the vicar of this
parish, as well as the incumbents of the two other parishes in Sandwich, collect from every house a certain
sum, under the denomination of dues; this payment
is said to be a composition for all the house, gardens,
barns, and stables, according to custom, since the 12th
year of queen Elizabeth; and the vicar of St. Mary's
receives besides, 6s. 8d. annually, under the denomination of tithe of the old Crane.
In 1776 there were one hundred and sixty-eight
houses in this parish, and six hundred and fourteen inhabitants; and the rents of it were in 1787, according to the pound rate, at rack rents towards the poor,
upwards of 3,500l. per annum.
Church of St. Mary.
|
| PATRONS, | VICARS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| The Archdeacon. | John Lodwick, clerk, July 4,
1661. (fn. 48) |
| John Piggot, A. M. Dec. 21,
1677, obt. 1689. |
| John Thomas, A. M. Jan. 22,
1689, obt. 1706. |
| John Rutton, A. M. 1713, obt.
July 28, 1763. (fn. 49) |
| Egerton Leigh, March 9, 1764,
resigned 1774. (fn. 50) |
| William Thomas, A. B. March
31, 1775, the present vicar. (fn. 51) |
ST. PETER'S CHURCH stands nearly in the centre
of the town; it consisted formerly of three isles, and
in that state was next in size to St. Clement's which
was the largest church in Sandwich. In 1641 it was
certified to the lord keeper by the mayor, &c. that
the steeple of St. Peter's church was in a very ruinous
condition; that it was a principal sea mark, and that
it was beyond the parishioners abilities to rebuild it;
the estimate of the expence being 1500l. The steeple
fell down on Sunday, Oct. 13, 1661, and demolished
the south isle, which has never been rebuilt. There
had been two sermons preached in it that day; it fell
down about a quarter after eleven at night; had it
fallen in the day time, the greatest part of the town
and parish would probably have been killed and buried under the rubbish, but no one was hurt and few
heard of it. The rubbish was three fathom deep in
the middle of the church and the bells underneath it.
This church, as well as the other two, seems to have
been formerly constructed entirely, or at least cased
externally, with the stone of Normandy, well squared,
and neatly put together. The east end of the chancel
is a good specimen of the old work, and there are detached portions of the same fort of masonry in other
parts of the building.
The present structure, which is evidently the work
of different times, is composed of fragments of the
older fabric, mixed with Kentish rag and sand stone,
and slints from the shore. The south isle is said to
have been built by Sir John Grove, about the year
1447, and Sir Simon de Sandwich, warden of the
cinque ports in Edward II.'s reign, both having given
liberally towards the new building of the steeple. The
present steeple is a square tower, built with the old
materials to the height of the roof of the church, and
from thence to the battlements with bricks of the haven mud. There are eight small, but musical bells,
cast in 1779; they cost 430l. 12s. 6d. which expence
was in great measure defrayed by the metal of the
former six old bells; and a clock, which is the property of the corporation, who keep it in repair.
In this church there are the following monuments
and inscriptions, among others too numerous to mention.—In the south isle, now in ruins, are the remains
of a handsome tomb under an arch in the wall, in
which was interred the body of Sir John Grove, who
flourished in king Henry VI.'s reign, on which were
his arms, now obliterated, viz.Three leaves in bend, on
a canton, three crescents. There has been another
arched monument in this wall, but all the ornamental
parts are gone. In the north isle are several gravestones, with memorials for the Jenkinsons, for Jeffreys,
and for the Olivers. On a large stone, coffin shaped,
is a cross resting on a small dog or lion, and round the
verge of the stone some mutilated gothic square characters cut in the stone, for Adam Stannar, priest.
Part of another stone, with similar characters on it, lies
in the same space a little to the westward. On a brass
plate in black letter is an inscription for Thomas Gilbert, gent. searcher, of Kent, who married Katharine,
daughter of Robert Fylmer, of East Sutton, in Kent,
and had six sons and three daughters; arms, Gilbert,
Gules, a saltier, or, on a chief, ermine, three piles, gules.
He died in 1597. In this chancel a gravestone for
Mr. Henry Furnese, obt. 1672; Anne his wife, obt.
1696. (They were the parents of Sir Henry Furnese,
bart.) Mr. John Blanch, merchant, obt. 1718; Elizabeth his wife, daughter of the above Henry and
Anne Furnese, obt. 1737. A memorial for Mary,
first wife of Mr. John Solly, mercer, eldest sister of
Sir Henry Furnese, bart, obt. 1685; and Mr. John
Solly, obt. 1747. Within the altar rails are memorials
for many of the family of Verrier of this town. On a
marble monument against the north wall, an inscription for the Olivers. Opposite the above, a mural
monument with an inscription for Henry Wife, esq.
obt. 1769; Elizabeth his daughter, wife of Mr. Wm.
Boys, obt. 1761; Mary his wife, obt. 1772; arms,
Wife, sable, three chevronels, ermine. An oval tablet
of marble for Elizabeth, wife of John Rolse, jun. gent.
of New Romney, obt. 1780. A marble mural monument against the south wall, near the door of the nave,
for the Jekens and Youngs. A marble tablet underneath for Susannah Wyborn, formerly wife of the
above named Mr. Thomas Young, but late of Mr.
William Wyborn, brewer, of this town, obt. 1755.
On a marble tablet against the north wall of the nave,
an inscription for the Jekens. The gallery at the west
end of the north isle was built by subscription, and is
secured to the subscribers by a faculty. There are
stones in the church pointing out the licenced vaults
of Brown; the Jeken family; Solly; and Ferrier;
the Thurbarne family, a hatchment over it has three
coats of arms, viz. Thurbarne, sable, a griffin passant,
argent, with impalements. In the south east angle of
the north isle is a vault, now belonging to the heirs of
Mr. Solomon Ferrier, but built originally for the family of Mennes, whose atchievment, helm, and crest
are suspended over the place. The arms are, Gules, a
chevron, vaire, or, and azure, between three leopards
faces of the second. In an escutcheon of pretence, quarterly, first and fourth, the royal arms of Scotland, debruised with a batton, sable; second and third, a ship
with sails furled, within a double tressure, story, counterflory. In the wall of the north isle are three arches,
under the eastermost, between the second and third
windows, on an altar tomb are the mutilated figures
of a man and woman lying at length in the dresses of
the time, their heads supported by double pillows, a
lion at his feet, a dog at hers; in the front of the
tomb are narrow gothic arches. The tomb projects
into the church-yard; the second arch is behind the
pulpit; the tomb was exposed to view in digging a
vault in 1770; its front is divided into six compart
ments, in each of the four middle ones is a shield, the
first of which has three wheat fans, a crescent in the
centre; the second a fess fusilly, between three griffins
beads; the third has three lions rampant, and the
fourth is void; over this monument in stones in the
wall, are two coats of arms, that on the right hand
being fretty, a chief; and the other the ports arms,
three demi lious, impaling three demi ships. Under the
westermost arch, which does not penetrate through
the wall, is an handsome altar tomb of Caen stone, in
the front of which are six small shields; there were
arms in all of them, but the bearing and colours are
nearly effaced.
Dr. Harris says, in the north isle were buried Tho
Ellis, esq. of Sandwich, and Margaret his wife; Sir
Simon Sandwich, warden of the cinque ports temp.
Edward II. who was a great benefactor to the building
of the steeple of this church. The Sandwich MS.
quoted by Mr. Boys, says, that the former of these
lies buried here, under a most antient monument, and
that John Ive, esq. a worshipful merchant likewise,
and Maud his wife, lie buried under an arched sepulchre in the wall; and that here likewife were buried
divers of the worshipful men of the Sandwich's knights.
Through the wall that divides the chancel from the
north isle has been an arched door, now closed up;
and another in the opposite wall, from an inclosed
chapel at the upper end of the south isle, between
which and the small house appointed for the chaplains
of Ellis's chantry, was a door of communication,
which, as well as the arch, is still visible; but they
are now shut up with masonry. This probably was
the chapel, where these chantry priests performed divine offices.
There are inscriptions on boards of the benefactions
to the parish by Sir Henry Furnese and Mr. Jarvis.
The figure of Sir John Grove has lately been removed
by Mr. Boys from the fallen isle, where it must soon
have been destroyed, into the church beside the font,
at which time his remains were searched for; an
arched grave was found under the monument containing a coffin with the date 1664, so that probably
the remains of Sir John Grove were removed from
hence at the time that the isle was brought into its
present ruinous state. The outward parts of the figure
having been much injured by the weather and the
trampling of boys, its position has been reversed, and
the other parts brought to view, where the sculpture
is remarkably sharp and elegant.
In 1564 it was ordered by the mayor, jurats, &c.
that the church of St. Peter should be appropriated to
the use of the Flemmings, on account of the plague;
that they might be all at one place.
The church yard, which was much too small, has
been considerably enlarged in 1776, and was consecrated by archbishop Moore, at his primary visitation
on July 9, 1786
The church of St. Peter is a rectory, and was antiently of the alternate patronage of the abbot and
convent of St. Augustine, and of the mayor, jurats,
and commonalty; but this was not without continual
dispute made by the former, of the latter's right to it.
At length this controversy was finally settled in the
year 1227, anno 11th Henry III. when they mutually
acknowledged each others right in future to the alternate presentation to it. After which, the abbot and
convent continued in the possession of their interest in
the patronage of this church, till the dissolution of
their monastery in the 30th year of king Henry VIII.
when it came into the hands of the crown, where
their alternate turn of presentation to this rectory has
ever since continued, the king being at this time entitled to it. The other alternate right of presentation
has continued in the mayor, jurats, and commonalty,
to the present time.
It is valued in the king's books at eight pounds.
In 1640 here were communicants 825, and it was valued at eighty pounds. It is now a discharged living,
of about the clear yearly value of fifty pounds. It pays
five shilling to the archdeacon for procurations, and
3s. 4d. to the archbishop at his ordinary visitations.
The revenues of this rectory arise from dues, collected in like manner as in the other parishes in this
town, from the house in this parish, and from the
tithe of land belonging to St. Bartholomew's hospital,
called Cowleez, containing about ten acres.
In 1776, there were in this parish 228 houses, and
958 inhabitants.
The oldest register begins in 1538, and ends in
1615; the one in use begins from that period.
Church of St. Peter.
|
| PATRONS, | RECTORS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| The Crown. | Thomas Dawson, A. M. ejected
August 1662. (fn. 52) |
| John de Blay, March 2, 1671,
resigned 1673. |
| The Mayor, &c. of Sandwich. | Gervais Howe, clerk, Aug. 21,
1673. |
| The Crown. | John Pigot, A. M. March 10,
1679, resigned 1690. |
| The Dean and Chapter of Canterbury, sede vac. | John Thomas, clerk, July 11,
1690. (fn. 53) |
| The Crown. | Gerard de Gols, 1713, obt. Feb.
22, 1737. (fn. 54) |
| The Archbishop. | George Oliver, August, 1737,
obt. Jan. 1745. (fn. 55) |
| The Crown. | William Bunce, LL. B. Feb, 22,
1745, obt June 12, 1766. (fn. 56) |
| The Mayor, &c. | J. Conant, A. M. 1766, the
present rector. (fn. 57) |
The CHURCH OF ST. CLEMENT stands at the
eastern part of the town, on the highest ground in it;
it is a large handsome structure, consisting of a nave
and two isles; the steeple stands in the centre of the
church, and is by far the oldest part of the fabric. It
is square, and ornamented on each side with three
ranges of pillars and circular arches; the lowest range
has only six, the next seven, and the uppermost nine
arches. It had formerly a spire and battlements,
which were taken down between the years 1670 and
1673; it is built of Norman stone; the other parts
of the church are formed principally of bolders, (that
is, flints worn away by friction on the shore) mixed
with sand-stone, and some Caen stone, probably from
the ruins of the original building. There is a high
chancel, and two side ones at the east end. Here were
stalls, fitted with seats, for some religious fraternity;
and in this church were the chapels of St. James, St.
Margaret the Virgin, and St. Thomas the Martyr,
the chancel of St. George, and Green's chantry; and
there was a brotherhood in this church established for
the procession of St. George, when his figure was
yearly borne about the town. The nave is separated
from the isles by light airy pillars and pointed arches.
The cieling is of oak, in pannels, between arched
beams centered with angels holding shields, with ornaments of roses and foliage. The font is an antient
octogonal bason, and shast of stone; the eight sides
are charged with shields and roses alternately. On
the shields are, first, the arms of France, three fleurs de
lis quarterly, with those of England; second, a merchant's mark; third, the arms of the cinque ports;
fourth, the arms of Ellis. Above these squares, at
the eight angles of the moulding, are grotesque faces,
except at the dexter side of the first shield, where the
ornament is a bird like a heron; and on the sinister side
is a coronet with balls between spires, terminated
with fleurs de lis; the whole of it is besides much de
corated, and ornamented with different devices, leaves,
flowers, fruits, satyrs faces, &c. There are five bells,
not very tuneable, and consequently of little use, but
to hasten the downfall of this venerable steeple in
which they hang. They were cast in 1672. Among
many others, there are the following monuments and
memorials in this church:— In the south isle are
gravestones for the Hawkers; for William Smith,
esq. rear-admiral, obt. 1756; for Elizabeth, wife of
Nicholas Spencer, gent. customer of Sandwich, obt.
1583. On raised monuments, inscriptions for Shelvy
and Wyborne; for Boyman; mural monuments for
Deveson; for the Haywards, and for the Sayers.—In the north isle, for Broughton, the Elgars, and
Kites. On a painted board, inscriptions for the Wybornes and the Bradleys. In the chancel, on the south
side of the altar, is a mural monument, with the effigies of a woman kneeling, for Frances Rampston,
widow, who married afterwards Sir Edward Rede, ob.
1611. An oval mural tablet for Wm. Bunce, LL. B.
vicar of St. Clement's and rector of St. Peter's, in
Sandwich, obt. 1766, and Martha his wife; arms,
Bunce, azure, on a fess, between three boars passant, argent, three eagles displayed, sable, impaling Odiarne,
sable, a chevron, between three covered cups, or. On
gravestones, inscriptions for the Odiarnes and Halsnod. A memorial for John Martin, A. B. vicar. He
died in 1741. Round the verge of a large stone, with
a shield of arms at the four corners cut in the stone,
is an inscription for George Rawe, gent, sometime
mayor and customer of Sandwich, and merchant adventurer of London, and Sarah his wife, obt. 1583.
Two brass plates, with arms, Ermine, on a chief, gules,
two escallop shells, or. Memorials for Bartholomew
Combes, gent. a native of this town, and seven times
mayor, obt. 1694. In the choir, a gravestone for Valentine Norwood, gent. obt. 1690. In the front of
the gallery, in the south isle, are the arms of Oxenden
and Burchett, and an inscription, shewing that Sir
George Oxenden, bart. and Josiah Burchett, esq. representatives in parliament of this town and port, gave
the altar piece and this gallery in 1723.
Many antient stones, deprived of their ornaments
of brass, are scattered over the pavement. The burial
ground of this parish is unusually large, and, including the scite of the church, contains within a very
trifle, an acre and three quarters of ground. The
Dutch residents, in the last century, were allowed to
perform divine service in this church, upon the payment of forty shillings a year, and afterwards upon
bearing a third part of all expences of repair.
The mayor of Sandwich was formerly chosen in this
church, and continued so, till king Charles II. in 1683.
by letter under his sign manual, commanded the election in future to be held elsewhere.
The church of St. Clement is a vicarage, the parsonage of which has ever been part of the possessions
of the archdeacon of Canterbury, to whom the appropriation of the church likewise belonged; it certainly did so in the reign of Edward III. when it was
valued at eight marcs per annum. (fn. 58)
The principal income of this vicarage formerly arose
from the tithe of fish brought into the haven; and
from the resort of fishermen and failors to the town;
but this resource diminishing in value, by the gradual
decay of the haven, to increase the maintenance of
the vicar, archbishop Parker, in conjunction with
archdeacon Gheast, in 1570, augmented this vicarage
with the tithes of hay and corn, before belonging to
the appropriation, reserving to the archdeacon, in lieu
of them, a yearly pension of forty shillings; but this
increase having been made without the consent of Sir
Roger Manwood, the archdeacon's lessee, a new agreement was entered into between archbishop Whitgift,
archdeacon Redman, and Sir Roger Manwood, then
lessee of the parsonage, by which these tithes were
now again granted in lease to the vicar and his successors at the yearly rent of 7l. 6s. 8d. by way of recompence for the abatement in the fines paid at the
renewals of the former leases.
In the registry of the archdeacon's court there is a
return made of the state of this vicarage in 1615, that
the parsonage and vicarage had no glebe land, more
than a little garden, together with the backside and
stable adjoining, belonging to the vicarage house,
which paid three shillings yearly to St. Bartholomew's hospital.
That the tithe of wheat and barley, with other
small tithe whatsoever, was as follows, viz. the vicar
by composition had from the parson, tithe of wheat,
barley, peas, beans, &c. and of his own endowment,
hay, pasturage, wool, lambs; tithe of the Dutchmen's gardens, of all manner of herbs, roots, cabbages, and such like, for which, at his pleasure, the
farmers of the grounds compounded with him; and
in the town, the vicar had composition for all the
houses, gardens, barns, and stables, in this parish, according to custom, ever since the 12th year of queen
Elizabeth.
This vicarage is valued in the king's books at
13l. 16s. 10½d. and the yearly tenths at 1l. 7s. 8¼d.
In 1588 here were communicants four hundred and
sixty-eight, and it was valued at seventy pounds. In
1640 it was valued at 120l. and here were the same
number of communicants. It is now of the clear
yearly certified value of 77l. 10s. 4d. This must be
nearly its full value, for the parsonage of it is let at
this time for seventy-five pounds per annum. The
vicar still pays the annual pension of 7l. 6s. 8d. to
the archdeacon; 2s. 6d. procurations to the archbishop, and three shillings yearly to St. Bartholomew's
hospital, for the vicarage house.
Besides the ordinary tithes, the vicar of this church,
as well as the incumbents of the other churches in
this town, collect from every house within the parish,
a certain sum, under the denomination of dues,
which payment is said to be a composition for all the
houses, gardens, barns, and stables, according to the
custom established ever since the 12th year of queen
Elizabeth.
The lands within this parish amount to four hundred and thirty-three acres, which are rated at the annual value of 461l. and the houses and buildings
within it, at 721l. In the year 1776, there were in it
one hundred and sixty-six houses, and six hundred
and thirty-four inhabitants. It appears that some
part of the land at Stonar, was formerly bounded and
taken into this parish.
The oldest register book begins in the year 1563,
and ends in 1666, from which time the present book
begins.
Church of St. Clement.
|
| PATRONS, | VICARS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| Archdeacon of Canterbury. | Francis Fotherbye, A. M. inducted July 24, 1618, ejected
1642. (fn. 59) |
| The Crown. | Benjamin Harrison, Nov. 24,
1660, resigned 1666. (fn. 60) |
| Geo. bishop of Chester, as archdeacon | William Coleman, clerk, Dec. 1,
1666, resigned 1677. |
| S. Parker, archdeacon. | Mark Parker, A. M. July 21,
1677, obt. Sept. 1680. |
| Alexander Mills, A. M. Nov 1,
1680, obt. Nov. 1714. |
| Thomas Green, archdeacon. | John Martin, A. B. April 30,
1714, obt. March 18, 1742. (fn. 61) |
| William Bunce, LL. B. June 2,
1742, obt. June 12, 1766. (fn. 62) |
| John Head, archdeacon. | Wheler Bunce. A. M. July 8,
1766, the present vicar. (fn. 63) |
THE OLDEST CHANTRY in this town, of which
there is any notice remaining, was founded about the
beginning of the 14th century, in St. Mary's church,
by John Condy and William his son; but it is not
found to what saint it was dedicated. The patronage
of it was given by the founders to the mayor and
commonalty. This chantry was suppressed, among
others of the like sort, by the acts of the 32d of king
Henry VIII. and the 2d of king Edward VI. and the
revenues of it given to the king.
BARTON'S CHANTRY was founded in some chapel,
in or near David's gate; it was suppressed in the second year of king Edward VI. when a commission
was granted for the sale of the chantry, as well as its
revenues.
JENKYN GREEN founded A CHANTRY IN ST.
CLEMENT'S CHURCH, and endowed it with lands.
It was suppressed by the act of the second of king
Edward VI. and the revenues of it were sold to the
king's use. Thomas Clerc was chantry priest here
in 1483. The feoffees of this chantry were the same
as were appointed for St. Thomas's hospital, and both
charities were dedicated to the same martyr parton.
The CHANTRY OF ST. THOMAS, usually called
ELLIS'S CHANTRY, (and it is remarkable that the
two capital endowments of Tho Ellis, were made in
the course of five months) was the principal establishment of this kind in Sandwich, being dedicated to St.
Thomas the Martyr, and founded IN ST. CLEMENT'S
CHURCH by T. Ellis, a wealthy merchant of this town,
who enfeoffed Thomas Rollyng, vicar of St. Mary's,
and others, in two messuages, and 216 acres of land,
and rent to the amount of four pounds in Eastry,
Woodnesborough, Worth, Hinxhill, and Wynclesberg, for the endowment of it; and in 1392 the king
granted a licence of mortmain, to assign these estates
to three priests, or chaplains, to celebrate mass daily in
this church, for the souls of the said Thomas Ellis, &c.
These chaplains were to fill up the vacancies within
three months after they should happen; upon neglect
of which, the patronage was to be vested in the mayor
and jurats of Sandwich; and on their failure for another month, in the archdeacon.
One of the priests of this chantry was bound to instruct the youth of Sandwich to read, and the place
where he taught, was called St. Peter's school; the
want of such a school in this town, after this fell to the
ground on the suppression of the chantry, was so severely felt, there being none other, that it induced the
principal inhabitants to endeavour to set forward another school of the like sort, which, by the care and liberality, chiefly of Sir Roger Manwood, they effected
in the foundation and endowment by him of the present grammar school of Sandwich. The last of these
chaplains was Mr. Green, a learned schoolmaster,
whose house was at the east end of St. Peter's church.
This chantry was suppressed by the act of the 2d
year of Edward VI. and with the revenues of it, was
surrendered into the king's hands.
There was a house of lepers in Sandwich, called the
Maldry, as appears by several wills in the Prerogative
office, Canterbury.