WOOD, alias WOODCHURCH.
SOUTH-eastward from, and adjoining to Birchington, lies the ville or parish of Wood, otherwise Woodchurch, corruptly called by the people Willow-wood,
for Villa-wood, taking its name from its being antiently almost all a wood.
It is, as Birchington, a limb of the town and port of
Dover, and under the government of the same deputy,
and assessed, with Birchington, to the land-tax, though
antiently it was taxed by itself. This town of Wood,
in queen Elizabeth's reign, paid more to the tenth and
fifteenth, than was paid at that time by the town of
Monkton; and yet in the return made by archbishop
Parker, in pursuance of a letter from the privy council, it is said there were no housholds in this parish; the
meaning of which probably was, that this parish, being
chiefly woodland, there were no farm-houses in it, but
only cottages.
The high road from Sarre to Margate separates
Wood from Birchington; about a quarter of a mile
or a little more from which, southward, are the ruins of
Wood, or Woodchurch chapel; near it there is but
one house, the rest of the houses being near a mile from
it, at a ville, antiently called the Millburgh, and now
Acholt, which is about the same distance from Birchington, where there is a fair held at Acholt, on
May 30, yearly, for pedlary and toys. For this reason
it is likely this chapel was so far suffered to go to decay, as at length to fall down; however this may be,
it has been long since demolished, only part of the
walls being left; its yard, containing about half an
acre, surrounded by the original walls of it, converted to a lay fee. The building must have been of a
considerable size, as the foundation measures eightyfour feet in length, and fifty-six in breadth; there is a
mount of eight or ten feet high in the middle of the
area of the church, which evidently appears to be the
ruins of the tower. There is a farm-house adjoining
the inclosure, which is about a quarter of a mile from
the great road leading from Canterbury to Margate.
The inhabitants of this parish are assessed towards the
repair of the church or chapel of Birchington, though
it still maintains its own poor. (fn. 1)
The chapel of Wood was dedicated to St. Nicholas,
it was exempt from the jurisdiction of the archdeacon,
and was standing and used as a place of worship in the
year 1563. The vicar of Monkton, to which church
this was a dependent chapel, was bound by the endowment of his vicarage, to find a chaplain, to celebrate in
this chapel on Sundays, and every Wednesday and Friday, and to officiate in it duly, in divine services, as is
more particularly described in it; for which duty he
paid him 3l. 14s. 4d. yearly.
The parsonage of this parish is united with that
of Birchington, an account of which has already been
given before, and is demised with it, on a beneficial
lease; the present lessee being Mr. Benjamin Bushell,
of Minster.