PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS
OWNERS
PATRICIA WINZAR
Peirce House has stood on the west side of Charing High Street since
the fifteenth century (Plate I). Much of its interest lies in its owners
who have included members of such well known Kent families as
Brent, Dering, Peirce and Sayer, all of whom have left their imprint on
the property and the lives of local people.
The house is approached by a brick pathway leading to an imposing
porch that is just over 10 m. from the road frontage. The name Peirce
relates to a family of that name who held the property in the late
seventeenth century, but the house is much older. The earliest surviving
part is the southern half of the hall which has been dated by the Royal
Commission on the Historical Monuments of E ngland as early
fifteenth-century (Plate II). The original house followed a traditional
plan which comprised a central hall open to the rafters with a parlour
on the ground floor (in this house at the north end) and two service
rooms at the other end of the hall. A fire for warmth was placed in the
hall and the site of the louvre in the roof that allowed the smoke to
escape is still visible in the roof space. Over the parlour was an upper
room, the solar, reached by its own stair and another upper room would
have been sited over the service rooms. The northern end of the
building, containing the parlour and solar, was probably demolished in
the seventeenth century when the house was in the ownership of the
Peirce family. There are surviving drawings by E.W. Parkin from the
time when the hall was still complete showing a bracket on the north
east corner that could have supported a jettied extension to the solar
(Fig. 1). The northern end of the hall was pulled down shortly after
1962, when plans were submitted for a major renovation of the building
(Figs. 2a, 2b, 3a, 3b).
It is not known whether the original service end was jettied as it was
rebuilt in the early sixteenth century.1 That rebuild is the one seen today
1 RCHME - Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England.
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Fig. 1. Sketch plans based on a ground-floor plan by E.W. Parkin, c. 1960 with
amendments by RCHME, 1990 showing the fifteenth- and sixteenth-century building.
PIERCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
and two dragon bemns confirm that it was jettied on three sides. It is
unlikely that the present flint walls on the ground floor of this wing are
the original sixteenth-century walls; they are more likely to be a form
of later under-pinning at the same time that an extension to the south
was added. The walls are 2 ft. thick on the east front and the west rear
of the building and are built of coarse unknapped flints. They seem to
be of one build, although the line was broken by a doorway between
the wing and the extension at the front prior to 1962, and at the rear
obscured by a two-storey corridor built to link the main house and the
timber-framed building at the rear after 1962 (Figs. 3a and 3b). This
smaller building probably began as a detached kitchen - a safety
feature of many early timber-framed buildings to minimise the fire-risk
to the main building.
At the same time as the new sixteenth-century service wing, an
extension was added to the front of the house containing a porch with a
chamber above and a staircase leading from the hall to a first floor
corridor. A block stair leads from the corridor to an attic. It is possible
that this stair was re-used from either the parlour or service end.
Despite being only half its original size, the house still presents an
attractive faade to the main street with its timber framing and the later
herring-bone brick infill.
THE FAMILY OF BRENT
John Weever said that the Charing Brents were 'branched out of the
ancient stock of Brent in Somersetshire, of which house, Sir Robert
Brent was a Baron of Parliament in the time of Edward I' .2 The exact
connection of William Brent with the main line of the Somerset Brents
of Cossington is not known. His wife, Julian, was the youngest
daughter of John and Amabel Gobyon and was co-heir, with her two
sisters, to the manor and advowson of Pevington in Kent.3
William and Julian had two sons, Hugh and William, who came to
Kent in the fifteenth century. It is most likely that they were younger
sons and came with expectations of inheriting their mother's interest in
Pevington. It is a fact that the estate eventually became vested in
Hugh's descendants and passed through them to the Dering family.
2 John Weever, Ancient Funeral/ Monuments, 1631, 294, Edward Hasted, The History
and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, 2nd ed., vii, 437, quotes Weever, but
incorrectly names the Brent family's main residence as 'Wickins'.
3 Edward Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, 1st
ed., iii, 223.
135
P. WINZAR
PRE - 1962 GROUND FLOOR
PEIRCE HOUSE
PRE - 1962 FIRST FLOOR
Fig. 2. (a) Sketch plans of Peirce House before 1962. (b) Sketch plans of the proposed
alterations. (By permission of Mr C. Williams).
136
PIERCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
I'',', I '•
5 10
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PROPOSED FIRST FLOOR
Fig. 3.
137
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P. WINZAR
PRE - 1962 GROUND FLOOR
PEIRCE HOUSE COTTAGE
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Fig. 4. (a) Sketch plans of Peirce Cottage before 1962. (b) Sketch plans of the proposed
alterations and the new corridor linking both buildings. (By permission of Mr C.
Williams).
138
PIERCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
PRE - 1962 FIRST FLOOR
STEP
11 PART!TlONS
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STAIRS IN VOO BElWEEN
GROUND FLOOR CEILING
AND FIRST FLOOR LEVEL
PEIRCE HOUSE
PROPOSED FIRST FLOOR
Fig. 5.
139
P. WINZAR
William married Alice, daughter of John Crekyng of Ruckinge and
Bilsington, and was styled as of that place. His only daughter,
Christine, became a nun.
Hugh Brent of Charing - testament dated 1474
Hugh had married Christine, daughter and heir of Robert at Rye of
Charing by 1439, because he and Christine sold a house in Canterbury
in that year.4 No documentary evidence has been found of the land
holdings of the Rye family in Charing that may have come to Hugh on
his marriage, but documents recording the purchase of property and
land transactions of Hugh Brent survive. The first is dated 25 June,
1431, and refers to an estate at Halden and Little Chart.s The second of
25 June, 1436, refers to one messuage, 20 acres of land, 2 acres of
meadow, 3 acres of wood and l ls. 8d. of rent in Charing, but it is not
known exactly where this holding was situated. 6 Other documents refer
to the purchase of land and property in Charing, Stalisfield, Pluckley,
Smarden and Lynsted.
A document, dated 1439/40, does mention an identifiable piece of
land owned by Hugh in Charing; it is a land transfer deed which gives
the site of a garden as 'lying next to the land of Hugh Brent called
pycots.'7 Pycots is a large meadow, which lies behind the properties on
the west side of Charing High Street, behind Peirce House. It is now
bounded by School Road on the north and the A20 on the south, but is
likely to have extended further south before the main street through
Charing was bisected by the A20. It is also recorded as Pycottys in a
bundle of documents entitled 'Coles juxta Pett in Charing and Westwell
1389-1456, with rental, 1456-57' .8 The name is clearly listed along
with other fields in the Charing area in the first document, but,
unfortunately, neither the date nor the holder of Pycottys is readable.
With the date of early fifteenth-century for the surviving hall bay, it
seems there was a house on the site by 1439, but there is no evidence
that it was owned or occupied by Hugh. The most that can be said is
that the house lying back, as it does from the street frontage and
without the buildings which now partially conceal it, would have
dominated its neighbours and must have belonged to a person of
importance.
4 PRO. C.P.25/1/115/313.
s PRO.C.P.25/1/115/306.
6 PRO. C.P.25/1/115/310.
1 CKS. U386 T20 - Darell MSS (Calehill Est ate).
s CKS. UJ454 Ml to M12 - Miscell aneous MSS.
140
PIERCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Hugh Brent became a leading citizen of Charing and left 10 marks in
his will for the upkeep of the fabric of the church. The wooden church
tower was being re-built in stone at that time and many benefactors left
money which was used for this purpose. Hugh's son, John, left 13s. 4d.
to be used specifically for the 'new bell-tower'. The eminence of the
Brent family is emphasised by the fact that their 'wyvern' shield of
arms appears on the sinister spandrel of the west door of the church and
the badge of Edward IV - 'A White Rose en Soleil' on the dexter
spandrel. The stone is now so weathered that the carving is barely
discernible, but it has been recorded within living memory as well as in
older records.
The phrase 'Last will and testament' is familiar to most people and
was used in early probate documents to differentiate between the goods
and chattels of the deceased, including actual money, and the land and
property. Only the testament of Hugh Brent's probate records, dated 12
March, 1474, has been found.9 The bequests to family and friends are
of interest in determining relationships and can be seen in the summary
of this testament (Appendix A). It is a pity that the actual will is
elusive, as that would have given an idea of Hugh's wealth illustrated
by his land and perhaps a better indication of the site of his main
dwelling. Hugh and Christine's eldest son was named William and they
had five other sons and two daughters.
William Brent, d. 1495/6
William Brent was married twice. His first wife is said to have been the
daughter of a man named Barnes10 and she and William had two sons,
Hugh and Roger, and two daughters, Anne and Elizabeth. His second
wife was Amy Rosmodres, the daughter and co-heir of William
Rosmodres, and the widow of William Pashley of Smeeth (Fig. 5).
Both the will and the inventory of William have survived. The former
is dated the 21 December, 1495/6, and the inventory of his 'moveable
goods' was taken on the 2 February following. He held manors and
lands in Charing, Pevington, Smarden, Boughton Malherbe, Challock,
Kennington, Willesborough, Hinxhill, Lympne, Wye and Boughton
Aluph. How much of this land he had inherited from his father is not
known, but William had become a land owner of some importance.
He did not rely on his land to provide his wealth but became a
lawyer holding a number of official appointments.11 His legal work
9 CKS. U275 TS0/10 - Dering (Brabourne) MSS.
10 Visitation 1574 (Harleian Society, lxxiv, 33).
11 See Brent pedigree.
141
P. WINZAR
probably accounts for Sir John Fineux of Swingfield being a feoffee of
his will. Sir John was Lord Chief Justice from 1496-1526.
William's house in Charing was Peirce House. The 1495/6 inventory
helps to visualise the house as it was then. It is well known that caution
must be exercised when using inventories to reconstruct buildings as
rooms could be empty and therefore omitted by the appraisers.
However, it is possible to present a theory to relate the number of
rooms and their use in the house as it was in 1495.
A number of alterations to the house must have been necessary by
the arrival of Lady Moyle. In 1480, Sir Walter Moyle of Eastwell died
and his widow Margaret came to live in Charing until her death in
1493. Some authorities say that she was the aunt of William Brent but,
in fact, she was only his aunt by marriage, being the sister of his wife
Amy's mother, the wife of William Rosmodres.
The house had the original layout on the ground floor, viz. the hall,
parlour, and service rooms. The kitchen, although it does not
specifically say so, was probably still in the building at the rear. The
upstairs rooms are a little more difficult to place, but the following
explanation is acceptable given the number of occupants.
A chamber over the service end was traditionally a large single
room, but this inventory lists both 'the chamber over the buttery' as if
it was directly over that room, and another chamber. There is no reason
why the second chamber could not have been made by partitioning the
original large room.
The other upstairs rooms were the chamber over the parlour and 'My
Ladys Chamber'. There was no porch chamber mentioned in this
inventory and this helps to confirm that it was not built until after
William's death. His will says that Amy should have all 'suche
chambers as my Lady Moile had with the parloure undernethe the saide
chambers', which suggests that the solar had also been divided into two
rooms. There are two 'draghts', thought to be closets, which were
filled with old furnishings. It would seem that Lady Moile (Moyle) had
more than her fair share of a crowded household. The hall had not been
floored over, even partially, at this time.
There was another member of William's household who should have
had accommodation and that was his chaplain, William FitzJames.
According to the architectural evidence the rear range may have been
of four bays, not necessarily all of one build.12 A smoke-blackened roof
suggests that one bay was a kitchen, but the function of the rest is
unknown. Perhaps this could have contained rooms allocated to the
12 RCHME, see note 1.
142
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
chaplain. If the contents were considered his property, then the room or
rooms would not appear in the inventory.
William and Amy had two sons, John and Thomas and a daughter
Margaret. Both these sons were under the age of 22 years when their
father made his will, and Margaret was unmarried. Amy was
allocated the 'dwelling place' in Charing and Filthes Mill in Egerton
until John came of age at 22 years and she was also allotted 10 marks
annually for three years to send John to school, but there is no
indication of his age at the time the will was drawn up. When John
was 22 years old, he was to give his mother 10 marks yearly and
allow her the right to inhabit the chambers that Lady Moile (Moyle)
had occupied with the parlour underneath, provided she remained
unmarried.
Roger, the only surviving son of William's first marriage, inherited
all the lands that remained in Kennington, Willesborough and Hinxhill,
and after three years, the manor of Rippell Wicheley and Halfiche with
all lands and tenements in Lympne. During the three years the profits
were to be used to execute the will and build William's chapel in
Charing Church on the south side of the chancel.
William asked to be buried in Charing Church next to the tomb or
sepulchre of Roger Rey, who was probably a member of his mother's
family of Rye. As the early church memorials were all destroyed in the
church fire of 1590, it is not known where Roger Rey's tomb was or
whether William was buried near him, or even re-interred in his chapel
when it was built. Today it is named the Wickens Chapel having been
adopted in the seventeenth century by the branch of the Dering family
who lived at Wickens, a house to the east of Charing on the borders of
Westwell.
The manor and advowson of Pevington together with Selepynden in
Smarden and Chapmanfolde in Boughton were to go to son Thomas
after Amy's death, with reversion to his brother John, if Thomas died
without heirs before he was 30 years old.
The feoffees and executors had great difficulty in administering the
will for a great many debts were outstanding. Some would appear to be
personal borrowings; some· amounts for donations promised, such as
the building of the steeple at Charing. Other amounts must surely be
monies held in the course of his legal work; £66 8s. 8d. was due to the
'Parson of Pluckley' and £20 for 'My Lord Cardinal'; £4 was owing to
'the three children'. Divers other churches were mentioned and £26
13s. 4d. was owing for his 'Chapel', which implies that building had
already started before William's death.
On 10 July, 1499, an Indenture was drawn up by the agreement of
the three main beneficiaries, Roger, the eldest son and heir, Amy, the
widow, and John, her eldest son, who at the time of his father's death
143
P. WINZAR
was under 22 years old.13 His interests were represented by his uncle,
Master Thomas Brent and John Brent, clerk. Various holdings were
apportioned between Thomas and Amy Brent and they were to use the
profits to pay off certain of the deceased's debts within eight years. The
debtors were listed and Thomas Brent had to find £97 17s. 0d. Amy
was said to have agreed to pay £146, but her list totals £209 2s. 0d. The
lands at Boughton Aluph and in Wye were to be sold to pay Margaret
Brent's marriage portion of £40. The proceedings were held in the
presence of 'the most Reverend father in God, John, Cardinal
Archbishop of Canterbury, Chancellor of England'. John Morton
studied at Cerne Abbey and Balliol College and practised as advocate
in the Court of Arches.
John Brent- brother of William, will dated 1505
Mention must be made at this point of William's brother, John, who
died in 1505. A Memorandum records that he, John Brent, had let to
Nicholas Baldocke his houses called 'Wykinges and Caprons' together
with other lands totalling 33 acres by a lease dated 16th Henry VII.14 lt
may be that this is how Edward Hasted came to confuse the 'ancient
seat' of the Brents (Peirce House) with that of Wickens. This house
was a small medieval house which was later rebuilt by Christopher
Dering in 1607, one bay being retained as a kitchen.
John's will implies that his main house was probably nearer Pett
Lane by a field named as Snagwell. Snagwell is the last field on the
south side of Pett Lane before the lane curves round the boundary of
Pett Place. After seven years 'Wykinges' and its land, with the
exception of a two-acre meadow, was left to John Brent, gentleman, his
nephew. John asked to be buried in Charing Church 'before the door of
the new Chapel of St. Mary where no body from ancient time has been
buried'. This was his brother's new chapel.
Amy Brent - will dated 1516
Amy Brent's will made her son, John, her principal heir leaving him
her property in Devon and Cornwall. He had already inherited the lands
left to him by his father when he reached 22 years. His wife, Anne, was
to receive a bequest which included Amy's 'best gown freized with
13 No source is known for this document. It is described as in Latin on parchment, c. 55
cm. x 27 cm., in a Tudor hand. It has two seal tags, the first has a red wax seal but no
impression, and the second seal is missing.
14 CKS. U1454 Ml-Ml2- Miscellaneous MSS.
144
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
mynkyes'. Anne was the daughter and co-heir of Thomas Berkeley and
her mother was the daughter of the first Lord Bergavenny. The only
guide to the date of her marriage is in the Brent pedigree where her date
of birth is given as c. 1498. If she was 16 years when married, then the
date could be c. 1514. It is not likely to be any later because she is
named as John's wife in her mother-in-law's will of 1516. It may have
been on the occasion of this marriage that the old house was renovated
and updated. A new and opulent sixteenth-century wing replaced the
service end of the old hall. The ground floor retained the traditional
layout of two service rooms with the addition of a cellar. At the same
time a porch was added and a new stair with a first-floor corridor
leading to the new wing along the side of the old hall (Fig. 1). The first
floor of the new wing contained two rooms that still have elegant
moulded ceiling joists.
Each room has a blocked doorway opening on the southern side. It is
known that a jetty ran along that wall so that the purpose of these
openings is not clear, closets or garderobes have been suggested. The
room over the porch was reached from the new corridor; it was, and is,
a delightful room with painted wall panels (Plate III). The hall rafters
remained in situ and the wall plate on which they rested became what
would seem at first glance, a cross rail on the hall side of the new
corridor (Plate IV).
The doorway at the north-west end of the hall, marked as sixteenthcentury
on the plan, was over-large for a room door and opened
outwards, which means it probably led to a stair lobby leading to the
two solar rooms used by Lady Moile (Moyle), the rooms which later
became those of William's widow Amy, together with the parlour
underneath (Plate V). This would have given Amy virtually a selfcontained
dwelling, if a new door was cut through into the ground floor
parlour from the lobby.
On the west front immediately to the north of the new stairs at the
side of the porch, a hall window was inserted, which is also early
sixteenth-century (Plate VI). The hall had still not been floored over and
so there must have been at least one more companion window nearer to
the parlour end, if there was to be any form of symmetry.
The reason for retaining an open hall in the sixteenth century, when
so many owners were taking the advantage of inserting brick chimneys
and gaining first floor rooms, can only be guessed. The owners who
retained their halls, even if they built chimneys and hearths on the side
walls, were usually higher up the social scale. There seems no doubt
that Amy Brent felt that the Brent family had attained a sufficiently
high status to flaunt a modernised hall; her will indicates her opinions.
It is impossible to know how the new hall was heated, but a side
chimney on the west wall would seem probable.
145
P. WINZAR
PLATE lTI
(RCHME: Crown copvright)
The porch chamber with painted panels.
146
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Sixteenth-century first-floor corridor.
PLATE IV
(RCHME: Crown copyright)
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The impaled arms of Brent and Rosmodres are carved on the dexter
spandrel of the outer porch door. That the arms were placed there after
the death of William is in no doubt for Philip Blake says that men did
not impale the arms of their wives in those days; they quartered them,
if their wives were important heiresses. The impaled arms means that
Amy was a widow. On the sinister spandrel is a badge of crossed
staples, indicating the connection with the Nevill (Bergavenny) family,
coming from John's mother-in-law and his sister Margaret's husband.
(Plates VII and VIII).
On the inner spandrels of the same doorway are a rose and a
portcullis. These badges have been said to represent Henry VII and his
mother who was a Beaufort, but could they also be badges connected
with the Nevills? Debrett of 1976, describes two Abergavenny badges
as - 'dexter- a rose gules barbed and seeded proper', and 'sinister- a
portcullis or'. John's brother, Thomas, was not mentioned in his
mother's will, neither was a widow nor any issue. No evidence has
been found of Thomas's death but it seems likely that he had died sine
prole and that his brother John had inherited the manor and advowson
of Pevington and the lands in Smarden and Boughton.
John's sister, Margaret, had married George Nevill, Lord Bergavenny
as his econd wife and Amy's will shows that she was very proud of
that connection. Margaret, Lady Bergavenny, was alive in 1516 but,
according to The Complete Peerage, i, 1910, Lord Bergavenny married
for the third time in 1519, both Margaret and her daughter Jane having
died. Margaret is said to have died 's.p.superstite' or 'without issue
surviving'.
There was a bequest of some household goods and £6 13s. 4d. to -
'my lityll daught' Amye Brente', who was not mentioned in William
Brent's will of 1495. A posthumous child of Amy's marriage to
William would have been aged 21 years by 1516, so the term 'little
daughter' was probably used in the sense of 'youngest'. Amy was
buried in the new Lady Chapel, built at the request of her husband.
John Brent d. 156515
Under the terms of his father's will John came into his inheritance
when he was 22 years old. He inherited a house with the hall still open
to the roof. The parlour and the two rooms above were the domain of
his mother. The sixteenth-century renovations, described previously,
would have given the house an elegant face-lift, but would not have
provided much space for John, his new wife and expected family,
1s CCA. DCb/BTl/58 - Bishop's transcripts.
148
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
although the rooms in the back building, possibly used by a chaplain in
his father's day, may have been vacant for use. After the death of Amy
in 1516, the house would have been adequate for John's family of two
sons and two daughters.
John was a captain in the retinue of Lord Bergavenny mustered at
Canterbury on the 17 May, 1515. In 1528, he was granted a lease, dated
8 August, by William Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury, of the manor
and lands of Charing, with the houses, edifices, lands, rights and
appurtenances, etc., and divers tenant services.16 He did not receive any
of the rights and privileges of lordship; in other words, he farmed the
land with the assistance of certain tenants who still held their land by
'service', and he could collect rents from other tenants. The archbishop
retained the use of the great stable and one barn 'for the lord's hay' but
it would seem that John Brent had the right to live in the Palace had he
wished. A further lease for 50 years on the same terms was granted by
Archbishop Cranmer in 1541 to John Brent and William Brent, his son.
There are no further surviving leases for the Brent family. In 1544,
Edward Hasted says John Brent 'feasted king Henry VIII in this house
as he passed this way towards his then intended siege of Bullein' . 11
Hasted was still under the misapprehension that the Brent house was
'Wickens'. It is more likely that the king was 'feasted' at the manor
house, now kn own as the Palace. Peirce H o u s e could hardly
accommodate a royal cavalcade so, perhaps, the statement adds weight
to the possibility that John and Anne lived in the Palace. On the other
hand, it is quite possible that they had continued to live in Peirce House
only opening up the Palace for auspicious occasions.
In 1579, a lease in reversion, reciting the 1541 lease, was granted to
Thomas Perry, gentleman, by Queen Elizabeth after the expiration of
the 50 years which meant he stood to gain possession in 1591, 12 years
after the grant was signed. During that time he would have had the
opportunity to assign the lease.
John's eldest son, William, is said to have died unmarried by 1566
and his other son, Thomas, became the heir to the Charing property. He
also became the heir to his kinsman Robert Brent of Willes borough who
died without issue in 1567. Thomas married Jane, the daughter of
Thomas Greene of Bobbing, at Willesborough in 1552 and lived there
from 1569,18 but they also had no heirs. The 1541 lease which was to
run until 1591 was granted to John and his son, William, their executors
or assigns and, although no will has been traced for William, it is
16 Topographer and Genealogist, 'Honywood Evidences' 256,257.
11 Edward Hasted, op.cit., 2nd ed., vii, 438.
1s CKS. Ul 107 El/3 - Dering MSS.
149
P. WINZAR
PLATE V
Sixteenth-century hall doorway.
150
PEIRCE HOUSE. CHA RING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
PLATE VI
Sixteenth-cenlur) hall window.
151
P. WlNZAR
PLATE Vil
(RCHME: Crown copyright)
The Brent arm on the dexter door spandrel.
possible that the lease passed to William's brother, Thomas. Amy,
John's youngest daughter, .married William Crispe, Lieutenant of Dover
Castle and also died without issue. The other daughter, Margaret,
married John Dering of Surrenden Dering in Pluckley and was the only
child of John Brent to produce children. The date of the death of John's
wife, Anne, is not known, but it is assumed that she continued to live in
the family home, wherever it was, with her son William whilst he and
she were still alive.
The Brent family had lived in Charing for about 150 years and Hugh
and his descendants had moved steadily up the social ladder making
advantageous marriages, amassing lands, wealth and professional
appointments. Two of Hugh's sons, William and Roger, became lawyers
involved with legal services for St. Augustine's Abbey in Canterbury.
Amongst a long list of appoint ments, both of them became a
Commissioner for t h e Peace in Kent and William was also the
Escheator for Kent and Middlesex in 1486-87. William's son, John, was
a Commissioner in Kent in 1550/1 and J.P. for Kent in 1553/4. (See
152
PEIRCE HOUSE. CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OW ERS
PLATE vm
(RCHME: Crown copyright)
The Neville badge on the sinister door spandrel.
Appendix A). With the death of John Brent's two sons, Peirce House
passed to the Dering family through John's daughter, Margaret.
THE HERALDRY OF THE BRENTS
The arms and quarterings of the family of Brent are marshalled, that is.
set out in correct order, by Robert Cooke, Clarenceux King of Arms, in
the Visitation of Kent, 1574 (Harl. Soc. xxiv, 83), where they are
blazoned, or described in heraldic terms. Although he does not name
them, they may be taken as being those of the families of Brent Rye.
Rosmodres, Lucombe, Kayle, Euthy, Bodbran and Stevenston. The
arms and quarterings are next set out by Augustine Vincent, Windsor
Herald (Coll. of Arm , Vincent's Kent, 145, p. 48), who died in 1626,
aged about 42, and is noted for the reliability of his work. He does not
blazon, but tricks, i.e., sketches, ten coats, which he names as those of
Brent, Rye, Charing, Rosmodres, Bradfyld, Lucombe, Kayle, Stonard,
153
P. WINZAR
Quarterings of the Dering Family
I. Dering 17. Selling 33. Stonard 47. Waltheof
2. Dering 18. Bettenham 34. Berkeley 48. Betisboume
3. Dering. Vin.145, SO. 19. Appulderfield 35.0omer 49. Hoult
4. Heton. L 9, 61 20. Appulder.field 36. Cornwall 50. Cholmeley. 2 D. 5,
5. Pennington. I. 9,61 21.Denc 37. Marshal 132
6. D'Jpre I. 24, 85 22. Gatton 38. Strongbow 51. Eton. 2 D. 5 132
7. Badlesmere 23. Brent. Vin. 145,48 39. Clare 52. Henshaw. Fun. Bks.
8. Bahun. I. 24, 85 24.Brent 40. Macmurrough N. 10, 114, lL 5.108
9.Marshal 25.Rye 41. Bottetourt. Norfolk l. 53. Roper. c. 16, 24
10. Clare 26. Gobion 136 54. Tigershall
11.Hawtc 27. Penington 42. FitzOtcs SS. Appulder.ficld
12. Malc:ville. I 9, 61 28. Charing 43. Somery 56. Appulder.ficld
13. Surreuden 29. Roemadriffe 44. Zonch 57. Browne. c. 16, 121
14. Pinckley 30. Bradfyle 45. Beauchamp. Norfolk 58. Charlton
15. Malmaincs. I. 9,61 31. Lncombe I. ISO 59. Frances
16 Bendinges. I. 9, 61 32. Kaylo 46. Hastings 60.Dering
A true copy of the Shield ofQuarterings of Dering as entered in Norfolk,
vii. 157, in the College of arms, London.
GEO. HARRISON, Winsor Herald
Fig. 6. The quarterings of the Derings of Surrenden in Pluckley.
154
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Berkeley and Betishorne. Note that he introduces Charing, Bradfyld
(Bradfield) and Stanard, but omits Euthy, Bodbran and Stevenston,
which is curious because these last three can be established
genealogically. It is also difficult to account for Cooke's omission of
Berkeley and Betishorne, seeing that he records the marriage of John
Brent, grandson of Hugh, the first of the family in Kent, to A nne
Berkeley, 'daughter and coheire of Berkeley of Hamshire', i.e., Thomas
Berkeley, of Avon Tyrell, near Ringwood, Rants.
The third and final listing occurs in the shield of sixty Dering
quarterings set out in College of Arms MS. Norfolk, vii, 157 (Arch.
Cant., x (1876), 330), where they are nos. 23-34 and no. 48. (Fig. 4).
Of these, no. 24 can be disregarded, along with nos. 35-47. The list
otherwise agrees with that of Vincent, except that it introduces the arms
of Gobyon and Pevington between those of Rye and Charing. The
marriage of Hugh Brent to Christine Rye accounts for the inclusion of
the arms of Rye, which Vincent suggests bring in those of Charing,
although he does not offer in explanation any descent from a marriage
with a Charing, nor has such marriage yet been found. Even so, the
quartering may, perhaps, be accepted on the ground of the known
reliability of Vincent, who, it must be presumed, had good reason for
introducing it where he did.
It is important at this stage to bear in mind that in considering a
shield of quarterings the order in which they are marshalled shows how
they were brought in. If the bearer of a coat, 'A', married the heir or coheir
of 'B', the arms of 'B' follow those of 'A', which is described as
'A' bringing in 'B'. But the bearer of coat 'B', or his ancestor, may
have married the heir or co-heir of 'C', so that 'B' brings in 'C', and
the male descendants of 'A' will bear the arms of 'A', 'B' and 'C', and
so on. If there is a number of quarterings, an examination of the
pedigree of the bearer of the first coat will reveal which of his male
ancestors married heirs or co-heirs, so that the arms and quarterings
brought in by each such marriage can be determined. Conversely, the
bearer, or family, of an unidentified coat may often be deduced from an
examination of the pedigree of the man whose heir or co-heir brought it
in. The working of these principles can be seen in the pedigree of Amy
Rosmodres (Fig. 5).
The placing of the arms of Gobyon and Pevington after those of Rye
in the Dering shield suggests that they were brought in by Rye, but
deeds formerly in the Surrenden muniments, evidently unknown to
Cooke and Vincent, but apparently known to Hasted and which,
fortunately, still survive (penes Mr Vernon Harris of Pluckley), indicate
that Hugh Brent's father was not John, as given by Cooke, but William,
and that he married as her third husband, Julian, the third and youngest
daughter and co-heir of John Gobyon, of Essex, by Amabel, daughter
155
P. WINZAR
and eventual heir of John de Pevington. It follows, therefore, that, when
Hugh married Christine Rye, he already bore the quarterings of Gobyon
and Pevington, so that Rye must follow Pevington and be followed in
tum by Charing, as given by Vincent.
The next two quarterings are of Rosmodres and Bradfield. The
placing of the latter, Dering's no. 30, immediately after Rosmodres and
before Lucombe shows that it was brought in by William Rosmodres
and not by his wife, but exactly how has not yet been discovered.
Lucombe, Kayle and Stonard, Dering's nos. 31-33, which come
next, present no difficulty and are obviously brought in by Amy's
grandfather, John Lucombe (Fig. 6). Of the three coats that follow
these, however, none occurs among the Dering quarterings or in
Vincent's sketch, though all are blazoned by Cooke. The third is known
to be the arms of Stevenston, so that two remain to be identified. The
first of these follows Stonard, which suggests that Stonard brought it
in. Amy's pedigree shows that John Stonard married the heir of John de
Euthy, of Ethy, near Lostwithiel. With her he got the Manor of Ethy,
along with the accompanying Polmenna, which descended to John
Lucombe. There seems little reason to doubt, therefore, that the first
unidentified coat is that of Euthy.
The identification of the next coat, Cooke's no. 7, is more abstruse.
Its position suggests that it could have been brought in by Euthy, but, in
1469, Margaret, Elizabeth and Alice, daughters of John Lucombe, were
described as co-heirs of William, son of Geoffrey de Bodbran
(Assession Roll, 9 Ed. 4, Duchy of Cornwall Office), and one is
inclined to associate Bodbran with Lucombe rather than with Euthy,
because the late date suggests a co-heirship that came about later than
would seem possible, if it had arisen through Euthy. Having established
all but one of John Lucombe's heirships, it is logical to conclude that
the only remaining unidentified coat is that of Bodbran and that it came
to Lucombe through the marriage of a direct ancestor, very possibly his
grandfather, with the heir or a co-heir of William de Bodbran.
The extraordinary feature of the three versions of the Brent
quarterings is that they all omit any mention of the arms of Graunt,
which should come next, the indisputable fact being that Amy
Rosmodres was the granddaughter of Jane, wife of John Lucombe and
daughter and co-heir o f William Graunt, of Westleigh and of
Stevenstone, in St. Giles in the Wood, both in Devon. What makes the
matter even more extraordinary is that only Cooke records the
quartering for Stevenston, yet he omits the arms of William Graunt who
brought it in. How Graunt did it was through his wife, Elizabeth de
Stevenston, and, in 1428, he was assessed on
1
/8 of a knight's fee in
Stevenstone, lately (quondam) held by John de Stevenston. Graunt died
within the next 28 years, as also did his wife. Stevenstone was an
156
Mauger le Graunt
of Westleigh, Devon; assessed 12d in Westleigh
for the lay subsidy of 1332; held Westleigh of
Hugh, Lord Courtenay [T. Risdon, Survey of
Devon, reprinted by Porcupine Press (1970),
283], later Earl of Devon, who d. 23 Dec., 1340.
I
Walter Graunt
John de Stevenston
held 1/8 kt's fee in Stevenstone,
in St Giles in the Wood, Devon,
of the honour of Gloucester. in
1346, as his father John, had held it
Walter
of Westleigh; surely s. & h.; held I kt's fee in Westleigh in
1377 of Hugh, 2nd Earl of Devon [Hugh's J.P.M., Devon
and Cornwall Notes and Queries, XVIII (1934-35), 114].
of Stevenstone [J. Prince,
Worthies ofD evon p.7 06]
I
WilliamKayle
grandson & heir of
Roger de Kaul, of
Castle Kayle, in
Phillack, Cornwall.
Henry
John Stanard Richard Rosamodres = Muriel
of Ethy and Polmenna in St. Winnow,
Cornwall, which he had with his wife,
Maude, dau. & h. of John de Euthy, of
Ethy, [see Comish Fines, 20 Apl. 1298].
of Rosemodris, in St Buryan, Cornwall;
confirmed his grandfather's grant to
Robert de Tredeny, 1317 [Cat of Ancient
Deeds, Vol. I, A232], d. 14 Apl. 1351
[Thomas Cheverton, Book of Obits].
or MeJior.
dau. of Ralph
Vivian of
Trevidren
Robert
of Ethy
in 1337
in St Buryan;
d. 13 Dec. 1343.
Thomas = Constance
s. & h. (no date) witness to a grant by Wm.
I
dau. of Benedict Brune of
de Doshuston 50 Ed.111 (Boshuton of Levan) Boskeny (Lord of Boskennie)
[Visitn. of Cornwall, Harl. Soc. IX, 23]. in St Buryan [Cheverton,op.dt.]
William John
of
(-)Lacombe=? (-)heir or coheir of William, Ralph = Maude
of Ethy
I
[ Genealogist, xii, 240,
Henry = Muriel
of Westleigh; s. & h.; grandson of Mauger,
not his son or the father of Elizabeth Graunt
[as in T. Risdon, loc. cit.]; his s. & h.,
William
of Westleigh; in 1428 he, with Thomas Trobrygge
and John Wythell, held 1/2 kt's fee in Westleigh; he
Stevenstone
I
= Elizabeth
dau. and heir; she and
husband dead by 10 Oct
1456 [PRO. 91/29/288]
Thomasine
son of Geoffery de Bodbran
[For six kt's fees held by
Wm. de Bodbran in 1317
jure quoting De Banco
uxoris 9 Hen. 5, m. 305 (1431)]
See Devon and Cornwall
Ree. Soc. NS xvii. 13].
(-)Lacombe= Margery
Sister and
in her issue
heir of Ralph
Jane = John Lacombe
Ralph
will proved 20
Nov. 1419 IPCC.
16 March ].
H =H
son & heir I dau. of Alexander
(no date) : de Trogillow
I [Cheverton op. ciL] I
I
I
I
Thomas =H
of St. Buryan ·
grandfather of
William.
Eleanor=
held 1/8 kt's fee in Stevenstone that John de Stevenston
formerly held; and, with Maurice Berkely and Robert
Berry, he held 1/2 kt's fee in Dad.scot (in St Giles in the
Wood); on 21 June. 1434. Wm. Graunt, Jane. late the
wife of John Lacombe, and Wm. Deviock and Eliz. his
wife presented Sir John Shanke, clerk, to the rectory of
Warleggon, Cornwall.
dau. & cob.; ? had Westleigh;
m. John Manke of Potheridge
[PRO, Cin9/288].
dau. & coheir I PRO.
I
Esq.; of Ethy and Polmenna; son &heir dau. & h. or cob. of
Henry Trenwith
alias Baillie
of Trenwith
* Margaret
dau. and cob. m. Walter Moyle [PRO. CJ/26/3
and 29/288]; had Stevenstone; for dispute
with John Deviock over the manors of Ethy
and Polmenna see PRO. Cl/31/119; Walter Moyle
was a Justice of the King's Bench, 1454,
er. KB 24 May 1465, and living 1474/5.
• coheirs of William son of Geoffrey de
Bodbran in 1469 [Assession Roll 9 Ed. 4,
Duchy of Cornwall Office].
* Elizabeth
dau. & cob.; had
Ethy and Polmenna
m. Wm. Deviock
and both living 1434.
I
John
PRO. C l/38/204]
William Pashley
C l/26/331[; living MP. Lostwithiel 1425; dead
23 June 1434;? had by 23 June 1434. For his
Dodscot lands see PRO. Cl/31/138
(-) Bradfyld, but she
could have been
grandmother of William
instead of mother
• Alice
dau. & coh. [PRO. C l/26/3
and 29/288]. Had unidentified
lands in Cornwall and Devon,
but see PRO. Cl/31/119.
= William
of St Buryan; occurs as 'gentleman' in Patent and
Close Rolls, 1440--64; and see PRO. Cl/31/119;
feoffee with Piers Trenwith of Otis Trenwith, his
brother [Cal. of Early Chan. Proc. p211. no. 15];
writ of diem clausit extremum 1 Jan. 1473/4, but
inquisition is wanting.
Otis
occurs in Comish Fines
34 Hen. VII; d 1464
[lost effigy St. Ives];
his feoffees sued Thomas
Lacombe for the abduction
by his son Harry, of Agnes,
dau. of Otis.
in St. Ives
=(?) Piers
son & heir
= William Brent
of Charing
Isabel Agnes = Harry
dau. & coh. s. & h. (d.v.p.)
The ancestry of AMY ROSMODRES
contributed by Philip H. Blake
of Evegate in Smeeth, b. 1449-50 d.s.p. 1475--80;
granted his 'manor of Evygate' to Sir Walter
Moyle, Thomas Lacombe and John, son of the said
Sir Walter, 10 Jan. 1474/5 [Arch. Cant. LXXIV, 39].
= AMY
ROSMODRES
dau. & coh. b. c.
1453 d. 1516
m. after 1475.
Fig. 7
m. Wm. Upton
of Trelaske.
dau. & cob., abducted
from the house of
Walter Moyle in Kent
by Harry Lacombe
of Thomas Lacombe
MP for Bodmin, 1442 .
P. WINZAR
important estate, which descended to the Moyles of Eastwell, near
Ashford, Kent, one of whom sold it temp. Hen. 8, to George Rolle, a
London merchant, whose descendant, John Rolle, was created Lord
Rolle of Stevenstone in 1796. The missing arms of Graunt are
fortunately blazoned, though in a somewhat muddled way, among the
quarterings of Monke of Potheridge given in the Visitation of Devon,
1620 (Harl. Soc. vi, 189). They should read: gules, on a fess between
three crosses fitchy a r gent, a lion passant azure. The Monke
quarterings also show that Graunt bore coats for Vautort and Esse, both
of Devon, before the marriage with Stevenston, but, since it is not
known how they were acquired, they are not included here among the
Brent quarterings, though that does not necessarily imply that they
were not genuinely borne by William Graunt.
Cooke's curious omission of Berkeley and Betishorne has already
been noted, but it is significant that although Vincent does include them
he makes no mention of the thirteen coats that come between them in
the Dering scheme of quarterings. He rightly observes that the coat for
Hoult that follows Betishorne there 'shd. not be g,d,•, and since he also
ignores the other thirteen, which in any case could probably not be
justified, it seems proper to exclude them from the Brent assemblage.
In sum, when Thomas Brent of Willesborough and Charing, including
Wykyns, died in 161 2 , his Dering successors in Charing, as
descendants of Margaret, his sister and heir, became entitled to quarter
his arms with his fifteen quarterings as follows: Gobyon, Pevington,
Rye, Charing, Rosmodres, Bradfield, Lucombe, Kayle, Stonard, Euthy,
Bodbran, Graunt, Stevenston, Berkeley, and Betishorne. The coats of
Charing and Bradfyld (Bradfield) are included mainly on the authority
of Vincent, but further evidence is needed before Vautort and Esse ( or
Ashe) can safely be added.
It is worth mentioning that at this time the Derings did not bear the
arms that are now so familiar and were, in fact, created by Sir Edward
Dering, 1st bt., but their original and true arms of gules, three deer's
heads couped or, canting, or punning, on the name Dering (Fig. 4, no.
3). The accompanying crest of a deer's head as in the arms was still in
use in 1634 by Robert Dering, of London, draper, son of Finch, of
Charing (see pedigree). The authentic Dering quarterings before the
seventeenth century were: (I) Haute, or, a cross engrailed gules, being
the arms of Thomas de Marynes, of Otterpool in Lympne, adopted by
John Haute of Pluckley as grandson of his daughter Margery, wife of
Henry de Haute; (2) Haute ancient, azure, crusilly or, a lion rampant
emiine, a fess gules over all, being the arms of James Haute of Selling,
father of John of Pluckley; (3) Maleville, for Christine, wife of James
Haute, father of John; (4) Surrenden, for Margery, daughter of John
Surrenden, wife of John Dering of Westbrook, near Lydd; (5) Pluckley,
158
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
for Agnes, daughter of Sir William Pluckley and wife of John
Surrenden, father of the aforesaid John; (6) Bettenham, for Alice,
daughter of William Bettenham of Cranbrook and wife of Nicholas
Dering of Rolvenden, father of John, who married Margaret Brent. The
four Dering quarterings recorded in the Visitation of Kent, 1592 (Harl.
Soc., lxxv, 95), include the significant and suggestive, and unidentified,
coat of or, a saltire couped sable following that of Surrenden, which
may, therefore, have brought it in, but it never appears again, unless we
see it in the now familiar coat with the saltire complete! (Fig. 4, no. 2).
THE FAMILY OF DERING
John and Margaret Dering's son and heir, Richard, died before his
uncle Thomas Brent and so it was his son, Sir Anthony Dering, who
became sole heir to his great uncle, thereby inheriting both the Charing
and Willesborough holdings.
Anthony Dering (Anthony of Charing) d. 1616
Sir Anthony's father, Richard Dering of Pluckley, had four brothers one
of whom, Anthony, became the occupier of Peirce House and became
known as Anthony of Charing.
Anthony Dering of Charing married first Jane Lambert and had
seven or eight? sons (see Dering pedigree), and six daughters. His
second wife, Elizabeth Horne, gave him a further son and a daughter.
He died in 1616 and left both a will and an inventory. The date of the
chimney and the flooring of part of the hall is said to be seventeenthcentury
and this would have helped accommodate Anthony's large
family. It was not common to floor half the open hall when a chimney
was inserted and this house is even more unusual in that the northern
half of the hall remained open until it was demolished in this century.
Anthony's house had a hall and a 'howse within the Hall' which
could refer to the newly created room with a hearth in the south end of
the old hall. The 'Chamber over the Porch' was still there and also the
main Bed Chamber in the opulent south wing. The old kitchen was
possibly the 'gardinge house' but only contained an old bed and a few
covers. In the two service rooms, the milk house had a few household
vessells, and the brew house contained 'one Costlet, one Pike, two
Baskett Muskette, two swerdes [swords] and two souldiers Coates'. The
brewing took place in the cellar with 'hogsheades Tubbs and other
beare vessells'.
The 1443 Charter granting the right to hold two Fairs a year in
Charing has not been traced, but on the 17 October, 1612, a copy was
159
P. WINZAR
made.19 This copy, which was found in the Wheler MSS, says that the
'Letters Patent themselves remained in the hands of Mr Anthony
Dering'. At that time the manor was owned by the Crown and the right
to the Fair Tolls was leased out. The original charter ought to have been
returned to the Wheler family when they obtained the lordship in 1692,
but it is fortunate that the copy survived.
His will paints a very different picture to that of the affluent Brent
family. The only mention of land in Anthony's will was three acres at
'Kenerton' which was to go to his youngest son, Anthony, and a further
parcell of four or five acres 'being the land of Thomas Brent esquire
late deceased and not by him devised in the which I am to have a parte,
I freely give my part unto Brent Moore & his heirs'. After a few
specific bequests the residue of 'all my goodes, c hattells, debts,
moveable and household stuffe' was to be shared equally amongst his
heir, Finch, and four other sons, one daughter and the children of his
deceased son, George. His executor, Finch, had to find the money to
pay Mr Thomas Pope of London who drew up the will and was
enjoined to take no advantage of any loans made previously to any of
his brothers or sisters. It seems that was the best he could do for his
family and asked them to live together in 'brotherlie love'.
Finch Dering d. 1625
When Finch died he had five sons and seven daughters surviving. He
had held some property for he confirmed that the messuages and
tenements conveyed to his wife, Mary, as her Jointure, should remain
unto her, without specifying where they were. He said that everyone of
his children under the age of 21 years were to have portions of £20
each; the sons when they reached that age and the daughters at 21 years
or the date of their marriage.
With such large families of surviving children a change in the status
of the Charing branch of the Derings is noticeable. It was no longer
possible to provide all the sons with sufficient land to support them and
their families. Anthony 'of Charing' had attended Queen's College,
Cambridge, as a 'sizar'20 and scholar, which no doubt helped towards
his appointment as Escheator for Kent and Middx. Two of his sons
went to Universities, Alexander to New College, Oxford, obtaining his
M.A. in January 1589/90. George w e n t to Magdalen College,
1 9 CKS. USS E33 - Wheler MSS.
20 'Sizar' is a term used only by Cambridge and Trinity College, Dublin. The definition
given is 'a student receiving allowances from the college and formerly charged with
certain menial offices'. The Oxford Illustrated Dictionary, I 963 ed.
160
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Cambridge, gaining his M.A. in 1590. Another son, John, had a career
in the forces and served with famous commanders, 'under Sir Francis
Drake upon the seas foure tymes. To the west Indians & under hym also
in the year '88 at sea. And also under the Earle of Cumberland to the
Islands, under Sir Henry Palmer upon the narrow seas, & under the
Lord T homas Howard after Earle of Suffolk to the Islands, & in the low
Countries under the Earle of Lecicester, & after under Sir John Norris
there, & in Brittayne, & in Ireland, & alsoe in the Portugal voyage.
And with Lord Willoughby in France at king Henry the fourth his entry
thither' .21
The greater change came with the children of Finch. It would seem
that the portions required by their father's will were used to set up four
sons in various trades in London. Anthony became a citizen and a
haberdasher, Robert a citizen, draper and also a tobacco seller at the
sign of the Three Apes in Fleet Street; Edward was apprenticed as a
skinner and John became a citizen and draper. Emigration was
becoming a way of making one's way in the world for younger sons,
but it was the eldest son of Brent Dering, who emigrated to Barbados,
an indication that a substantial inheritance was not expected from his
father.
Finch's heir was his eldest son, Brent, who was to allow his mother
'Juell and fierbote' from his woodland at Crowshole to be spent in 'my
mansion house' in Charing. This is the traditional provision for a
widow, and gave her access for cooking facilities sometimes called
'bench and hearth'. He expected that his son and widow would
continue to live in the family home.
Finch owned more property than his father but, with so many
children and a number still under age, he left a heavy burden on his
eldest son, Brent. Some holdings were to be sold to pay the children's
portions and the deceased's debts but that also meant a reduced income
for the heir. This property was in Charing and was described as 'all my
houses and buildings in Charing street being now used for a brew
house, dayry house, Millhouse, Corne loftes, one dwelling house or to
what use or uses now lying scytuat and adioyning to Charing street
betwixt my stone wall and garden and the land of the heires of Sir
Justynian Lewyn, knight, in the same street, with the curtylages to the
sayd buildings and houses'. Being in the High Street these buildings
must be the cottages presently nos. 41/43. There is a blocked first floor
opening in no. 41 facing south, which may have given access to the
Corn lofts mentioned. There was also room for the other buildings on
21 CKS. U350 07 - John Dering's service overseas.
161
P. WINZAR
the site of what is now Richmond House, which could well have been
built after the sale requested in Finch's will. There were at least two
more buildings that are still standing that could possibly be included in
the above list.
The difference between the inventories taken after the deaths of
Anthony and his son Finch is interesting; at a first glance it is difficult
to be sure if it is the same house. The hall was still there as was the
'howse within the hall' called by Finch 'a little Roome next the Halle'.
Both inventories list a 'Great Parler'; Anthony's inventory a 'Parler
Chamber' and Finch's a ' Great Parler Chamber'. These two Chambers
seem to be on the ground floor as there is also a ' Chamber over the
parter' in Anthony's time; Finch had 'one Upper Room' and a
'Chamber over the lit tle parlor' besides a number of other rooms said
to be 'over' those on the ground floor. Both documents list a cellar.
Bearing in mind the number of Anthony's descendants when he died, it
is probable that the house was occupied by both Anthony and Finch
and that Anthony only occupied a part of the building. It should be
noted that there is no kitchen listed in Anthony's inventory. The
appraisers would only have the task of listing the goods and chattels of
the deceased and would ignore any rooms only used by other members
of the family. This theory is born out by the fact that Anthony's goods
were valued at £111 3s. 8d. whereas Finch's goods amounted to over
£300.
Brent Dering 1599-1645
Brent was only 26 when his father died and the following year he
married Ann Ely, the daughter of the Vicar of Charing, who is unlikely
to have been the heiress he needed to revive the family fortunes. There
were a number of younger brothers and sisters still entitled to 'portions'
that he was bound to supply. Brent was the owner of the 'ancient house
of the Brents' in Charing when J. Weever published his Funerall
Monuments in 1631.22 He was as prolific as his forbears and had a
rapidly growing family of his own; he had ten children, two of whom
are known to have died young. Not unexpectedly, considering his
commitments, he eventually is seen to be disposing of land. The
Churchwardens accounts of 1633 assessed him on 61 acres of land and
20 acres of woodland but, by 1638, his acreage was said to be nil and
he was assessed at a nominal 6d.
Brent was Captain of the select Band of Calehill, but whether he ever
saw action in the Civil War is not known. He died and was buried in
22 John Weever, op.cit., 294- see note 2.
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PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Charing in 1644/5. His inventory mentions a parlour, kitchen and brew
house downstairs and two rooms upstairs, but, as has been said
previously, it does not mean that those were the only rooms. The goods
he did possess seem of a high standard and he still had a lease of land
at Boughton Malherbe worth £10 and an amount of corn and hay with a
similar value. He did not !eave a will and the administration was
granted to his widow. At what time Ann Dering had to leave the family
home is not known but she was i n dire straits by 1651 for the
Churchwardens paid out 7s. 6d. on her behalf for 'finishing a Chamber
for Mistress Dearing - for lathes & nailes and rades and workman'.
She also had some wheat and a load of wood. By 1653, she was
receiving regular payments and loads of wood from the overseers of the
poor who also paid her rent. It would seem she had been placed in a
house owned by Thomas Cloak with someone named as Hooker who
was probably the widow Hooker. In 1656, the glass was repaired 'about
Mistress Deeringes house' for the sum of 3s. 2d. and she was given
ls. Od. worth of wood. In 1664, Mistress Dering had a load of wood
shared with widow Craddock and widow Hooker. Sometimes she was
called widow Dering but more consistently Mistress Dering, a kind
courtesy title for someone 'on the parish'. She was given an extra
payment in 1656 as she and her daughter were both sick. In 1657 , extra
payments were made because she and her son were sick and 6d. was
paid to Cox for carrying Ann Dering's child to Smarden and an extra
ls. for the horse to carry her. Which child was being taken to Smarden
is not known and there is no mention of a return journey although
Mistress Dering did return to Charing. In the same year she had either
moved house or there was a new owner, William Spillett, but her rent
was still being paid by the overseers. By 1658, Richard Beeching was
receiving the rent for Mistress Dering and Hooker. Joseph Davy was
paid 2s. in 1660 for a pair of shoes for Frances Dering so the name of
one of the children still living with Ann Dering is known.
Mistress Dering died in 1666 and was buried at Charing on 7
September. A small payment to Goodwife Hooker was made until
December but, after that, the payments cease after a final payment for
the purchase of a pair of shoes for Frances Dering. What happened to
Goodwife Hooker and Frances is not known. The contrast between the
affluent Brent family and the Peirce House branch of the Dering family
is marked.
THE FAMILY OF PEIRCE
When Mr Edward Peirce came to Charing from Tiverton, Devon, in
1952 , he noticed a booklet in the Church which said that there were
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some fine old houses in Charing, including Peirce House, but little was
known of its history. He wrote to the vicar saying that Peirce House was
the residence of his ancestors and that the family migrated to Doddington
about 1700 and later to Canterbury. They were still living there when his
father married in about 1850 but had since scattered - to India, the Cape,
the U.S.A. as well as this country. He enclosed a copy of his branch of
the family tree beginning with Gabriel Peirce the elder, who died in 1669
and was buried at Charing, and ending with his own grandchildren but,
unfortunately, gave very few dates or details of marriages. The Peirce
pedigree, compiled from other sources, confirms Mr Peirce's belief that it
was Gabriel Peirce who founded the Charing family.
Gabriel Peirce d. 1669
There are a number of people variously named Pers, Peirs, Peerse,
Peirse and Peirce in Charing records from 1595 onwards, but no
relationship has been found to link them with the branch founded by
Gabriel Peirce the elder other than those in the pedigree.23 In 1635,
Gabriel Peirce appears in Charing Churchwardens' accounts as a
'foreigner' holding 80 acres of land and 30 acres of woodland in
Charing parish, which means he owned taxable land in Charing parish
but lived elsewhere, in this case at Stalisfield. The following extracts
from the accounts note the transfer of land from Brent Dering to
Gabriel Peirce in 1637.
1634 Brent Dering held 50 acres and 20 acres of woodland.
Gabriel Peirce did not hold any land in Charing parish.
1635 Brent Dering held 50 acres and 20 acres of woodland.
Gabriel Peirce held 80 acres and 30 acres of woodland in
Charing.
1636 Brent Dering held 50 acres and 20 acres of woodland.
Gabriel Peirce held 70 acres and 20 acres of woodland in
Charing.
1637 Brent Dering did not hold any land or woodland but was
assessed at 6d.
Gabriel Peirce held 70 acres and 20 acres of woodland, but he
also held 50 acres of land and 20 acres of woodland which are
listed as 'late Mr Dering'.
23 A family named Peirce was also of some importance in Challock, for when John
Peirce, a yeoman, died without issue in 1675 his five nephews inherited a large estate in
gavelkind. His namesake, nephew John, inherited two manors, that of Lorrenden now
Great Paddock Farm, and Deane, now known as Deane Court.
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PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Gabriel must have become a local resident by 1643 for he is classed
as an 'indweller'; in 1646, he was elected as one of the Churchwardens
and so was accepted as a local worthy. He and his wife Katherine were
both buried in Charing, Katherine in 1666 and Gabriel three years later
in 1669.
Gabriel's will has not survived but the inventory describes a· house
that had a Hall, Parlour and Kitchen, which in this period would have
been what was once the room divided from the large hall. The large
chimney had a bread oven which is now blocked. The old service
rooms, originally two at the south end of the original house had been
increased to the brewhouse, bakehouse, milke buttery, the 'other'
buttery and the meale house. W hich of these related to the original two
cannot be established and there is no way of knowing where the extra
store rooms were. It could be that Gabriel bought the properties in
Charing High Street specified in Finch Dering's will when he began to
purchase land in Charing in 1635. There was room to extend the
service rooms southwards attahed to the house for there are later
additions there that were built when the house was in more than one
family's occupation. There were extra dwellings, for Mistress Creswell
lived in a house with some of the contents owned by Gabriel, as did
Mistress Wolfe and Sarah Hart who lived 'in the outhouses'. The house
still contained a cellar and a porch chamber. The Peirce family soon
became substantial local landowners with Gabriel senior holding land
with an assessment value of £86, Joseph with £46 worth and Gabriel
Junior with £52 worth. Only Sir Robert Honywood held more land with
an individual holding valued at £120.
Joseph Peirce 1630-1680
Joseph, Gabriel senior's eldest son who died in 1680, does not feature
in Mr Edward Peirce's family records. He existed for he is mentioned
at the foot of his father's inventory as Probate to Joseph Pearce filius de
Charing gent. . Joseph certainly lived in Charing, for both he and his
wife Anne were buried there and their three daughters were baptised in
the church, but he does not seem to have lived in Peirce House. Joseph
left both a will and an inventory. The latter describes a three storey
house, the Hall had a Chamber over it and a garret over that, as had the
kitchen and there was no porch chamber. Even allowing for the
difficulties of interpreting inventories it does not seem to be the Peirce
House of Charing High Street. Joseph did own property in Charing for
it was left to his wife Anne for her lifetime and was then to be held by
his three daughters equally. The most interesting holding he wished to
bequeath to his daughters was his lease of the manor of Orgarswick
which he held from the Dean and Chapter of Christchurch, Canterbury.
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Orgar is the earliest named holder of land in Charing. In the Domesday
Monacho r u m e ntry for Charing, after the description of the
Archbishop's manor is a concluding sentence 'Orgarus X solidus pro
dimidio sullinc'. The name Orgarswick survives on Romney Marsh as
Orgarswick Far m (N.G.R. TR 09 1160). Whether there is any
connection with the half sulung of the eleventh century Orgar is not a
matter for discussion in this paper.
Gabriel Peirce d. 1709
Gabriel, the second son of Gabriel senior, does feature in Mr Edward
Peirce's records and followed his father as the occupant of Peirce
House. He died in 1709, leaving both a will and an inventory and
having outlived his son, Sampson, who died in 1692. He seems to be a
caring old gentleman and remembered his daughter Mary who had
married a Mr Nowers and their two daughters, Elizabeth and Ann, in
his will. He also remembered his sister-in-law, Sarah, widow of his
brother, John. Roberta Jones, the widow of his son Sampson, who by
then had re-married, was not forgotten. The silver tankard with its own
plate and the two silver salts left to his grandson, John, do not appear in
the inventory, neither do the half dozen silver spoons left to Mary
Nowers. In fact, the inventory is very sparse for a man that could be
classed as wealthy. He did possess two gold rings, but there were no
rooms or furniture mentioned and the list was mostly farmyard
implements with two cows, two sheates (young hogs) and an old Mare.
He was credited with owning twenty loads of hay in the barn.
Giving the family the benefit of the doubt, it is possible that in the
three years between the making of his will and his death he made over
most of his worldly goods in one way or another. He was most likely
being cared for by his grandson John and his wife Elizabeth as his own
wife, Anne, had died in 1659 and his daughter-in-law had remarried
and does not appear in local records again.
Sampson Peirce 1656-1692
Sampson Peirce' s will made in 1691 speaks of the Marriage Settlement,
dated 1687, made just before his marriage to Roberta Whitfield of
Canterbury, which gives an approximate date for his marriage. He left
his two younger sons, George and Sampson junior, £250 each which
was a handsome sum for the seventeenth century and £20 each yearly
until the major legacy was paid. Sadly, Sampson, the youngest son,
died in 1693 aged under two years and his elder brother George died in
1694 at 4½ years old. His eldest son, John, born in 1688 was not
mentioned by name in the will, but he must have benefited under the
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PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
clause in the Indenture relating to the first son. Without the actual
Marriage Settlement document, it is not possible to speculate further.
The remainder of Sampson's goods and chattels went to Roberta. The
memorial slab in the nave of Charing Church at the entrance to the
chancel, records the marriage and death of Sampson and of his two
sons, George and Sampson. By the side of this slab is one to his
brother-in-law William Henman.
Sampson Peirce, gentleman, died on 10 October, 1692, and was
buried in Charing on 13 October.24 His will was proved on the 25th
October, 1692. The inventory should have been made shortly after his
death. It is dated 17 August, 1693, which would mean it was about ten
months before his goods and chattels were listed. It was also unusual in
that two men from Canterbury were called in as appraisers, usually two
local men of standing, such as the Churchwardens, were appointed.
The inventory gives a good description of the furnishings of a
wealthy owner of the period. The hall had two Spanish Tables with
carpets. Early carpets were used on furniture or on the walls, rather
than on the floor. There were six old leather chairs and two low stools.
Two small maps and 19 little printed pictures were valued at 2s. 6d.
The downstairs parlour contained tables and 12 turkeywork chairs.
Sampson liked to adorn the walls of his rooms for the parlour had
'twelve Ceasars Heads printed In Frames' worth 6s. Od.
The kitchen, brewhouse, malthouse, wash house, milk house and
the cellar completed the downstairs rooms. The kitchen had all the
implements one would expect but also 'one clock with Lyne and
weights' valued at IOs. Od. It is not possible to identify the other
service rooms with a particular position in the house for the
contents are a jumble with the exception of the milk house, which
does seem to be used as a dairy. Upstairs there was a number of
rooms, the best chamber, the sad coloured chamber, the porch
chamber which contained a bed with a feather mattress and bolster
weighing 48 pounds, the maides chamber and the chamber over the
kitchen.
It is interesting to compare the standard of comfort in the house in
William Brent's time with that of Sampson Peirce. Taking the hall as
an example, William had a board set on two trestles as a table with
two forms to sit on, albeit with a touch of luxury supplied by six
cushions. The heating came from the open fire set on a hearth on the
floor. The windows would have been closed to the elements by
shutters. As seen above, Sampson had typical seventeenth-century
furniture and was warmed by a fire from a brick stack. The curtains
24 CCA. DCb/BTI/58 - Bishop's transcripts.
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and rods may have been for door draughts in the Hall but are
specifically stated to be window curtains and rods when listed in the
parlour. It is probable that window glass was installed in all the main
rooms in the house.
John, Sampson's only surviving son, who was baptised at Charing
in 1688, was buried there on 6 March, 1726. After her husband's
death, Elizabeth, his wife, went to Doddington for both she and her
two children, Sampson and R oberta were buried there. John of
Charing's grandson, although born at Lynsted, became John Peirce of
Canterbury, and it was there that the next three generations of the
family settled.
THE FAMILY OF WAKELEY (WAKELY)
The Wakeley family was better known in Lenham where they were of
yeoman status. The first known instance of the name in Charing occurs
when Edward Wakeley was listed in the earliest surviving Poll Books
of Charing in 1713.25 Nothing more is known until his death appears in
the Parish Register in 1730. Edward is thought to have been the builder
of Wakeley House, dated as 1718, if the date inscribed on a brick near
the front entrance is to be believed. The front elevation of the house
would fit that assessment.
James Wakeley and his wife, Mary, lived in Peirce House26 and
their only daughter, Catherine, was married to George Sayer of Pett
Place in 1786.27 There is a small monumental stone set in the floor of
Charing church to one side of the pulpit which records the death of
Catherine, relict of Rev. George Sayer, on 14 January, 1836. No link
has been found between Edward and James. According to Edward
Hasted, Peirce House was 'an antient mansion, which has been
modernised'.
James Wakeley died c. 1798 between the publication of Vol. vii of
Edward Hasted's history and the amendments published in Vol. viii,
which said that he had died but that his widow still resided at Peirce
House. What happened in the intervening years between the last Peirce
owner and James Wakeley is not known for certain.
25 CKS Q/RPel 1713 - West Ashford Poll Books.
26 Edward Hasted, op.cit., 2nd ed., vii, 430.
21 A.J. Willis, Canterbury Marriage Licences 1781-1809 25. An entry reads '1781
Wm. Allen of Little Chart elk. bach, and Catherine Wakely of Charing sp. 22 at Charing 6
Dec.' There is no marriage at Charing on that date or thereabouts, so it must be assumed
that the marriage did not take place.
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PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
THE FAMILY OF SAYER
I t was through the marriage in 1786 of James' only daughter,
Catherine, to the Rev. George Sayer that Peirce House became the
property of the Sayer family of Pett Place. There is no record of any
member of the Sayer family occupying Peirce House, and it was
eventually converted into a number of dwellings. The cross passage
was opened up right through the building to give access to the rear
building, once the detached kitchen and then known as Peirce Farm,
and the ground floor of the old hall converted into two dwellings
known as 'the almshouses'. It would seem that the main staircase gave
access to the upper floor including the room over the floored southern
end of the hall and another staircase was built in what was once the
western service room. There were two cottages built against the
boundary wall of Richmond House, the building on the north side, but
their age is not known as they were later demolished. The property also
included three cottages fronting the High Street.
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
There is a considerable gap in available records until 1914 when the
West Ashford Rate Books pick up the thread.28 The Sayers still owned
the whole property; the main house, the detached part, the barns and
the cottages. The occupants of the almshouses were Mrs. Beale and
Mrs. Wood; Thomas Sage lived in Peirce Farm.
By 1927/8 (the date of the next Rate Book to survive), the Sayer
family had sold the entire holding. At this point I have reason to be
grateful to many local residents who can recall that period either from
their own memories or from what their parents have told them. Philip
Edwards, a local builder lived in the main house. He probably built the
carpenter's loft which was recently demolished. He had three
daughters, Agnes, Alice and Minnie. Minnie married Robert (Bob)
Geering of the well known Ashford family and lived for years at
Barrow Hill House, Ashford, next to the old Roman Catholic Church.
Before his death in 1931, old Mr Edwards can be remembered sitting in
a chair near the porch entrance watching the world go by in Charing
High Street. His was the last burial in the churchyard and his grave is
under the yew tree by the path at the far end. The Misses Agnes and
28 West Ashford Rate Books - RD/Aw/RP2/1 (April 1914): RD/Aw/RP2/2 (Sept. 1914):
RD/Aw Rl/1 (1927 /8): RD/Aw/Rl/? (1942); RD/Aw/Rl/6 (1946/7): RD/Aw/Rl/8
(1956/7): Note: Rl/7 is missing.
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Alice lived on in Peirce House after their father died. Mr Joe Edwards,
the only son, had died before his father, after being knocked off his
bicycle near 'The Olive Branch' at Westwell Leacon.
Mr R. Laws told me that when Philip Edwards died, his father, Mr
E.G. Laws carried on the builder's business on behalf of the Edwards
sisters until approximately 1944-45 when he branched out on his own.
In 1948, he was joined by his son when he returned from war service.
Shortly before Philip Edwards died, the building at the rear of Peirce
House that probably began as a detached kitchen and by this century
had become Peirce Farm House, together with a barn, was sold to
Mr H.D. Headley. He also bought the two cottages that were against the
wall of Richmond House. The barn was sold, re-erected at the
Broadway in the Pluckley Road and named the Old Barn House, and is
now called Century House. Sometime around 1946/7, Mr A. Coppins
started a business as a builder at Peirce Farm, living in a wooden
building 'used as a scrap depot during the war'. 'It had previously been
occupied by Spanish Civil War evacuees'. He used the cottages as a
workshop (Fig. 6).
Miss Ruglys can remember Miss Wood and Mrs. Hopper living in
the two almshouses at the northern end of the main house in 1942.
Mr and Mrs. Woodcock lived in Peirce Farm. She also recalled that
beyond Peirce House near a lime tree was a large barn, the one owned
by Mr Headley, and she confirmed that it had been taken down and reerected.
She thought that at one time the ramshackle building which
replaced it had been used as a Youth Hostel. Miss Agnes Edwards
eventually died and Miss Alice Edwards sold the property to Mr R.J.
Geering, her brother-in-law. She went to live in part of Forge House.
The carpenter's loft was used as a carpenter's and coffin maker's by
Mr Tom Settatree, described by Mr Laws as an ex-Court Carpenter.
Mr Laws pointed out that many of the ladders used in those days
were 25 ft. long and great difficulty was experienced taking them up
the brick path of the main house and turning sharp right to get to the
workshop. It seems there was no other means of access from the rear.
The property, which included two of the cottages fronting the High
Street, was purchased sometime after 1957 by Mr P.J. Harvey. The third
cottage occupied by Mr Colbreay had been sold separately. He and his
wife hoped to restore the hall of the old house although the south wing
was still tenanted. On 9th June, 1959, the house was inspected by
Mr A. Reed on behalf of the Society for the Protection of Ancient
Buildings. He reported that the building was of considerable historical
interest and in good structural condition. It was recommended that the
Society assist Mr Harvey to have a comprehensive survey and a set of
drawings prepared to ensure that any adaptations took account of the
history and character of the house. During the subsequent renovation
170
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PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
setch Plan of Puru Hou•• provided bV nr R Law;
;noving Iha naH• of ;oae ot tno tenant; and occupur; of the cottage;
nlhin living aa•ory,
Barn rebuilt in
Pluckley Road
Replace d by timber building
first used
from the
for Spanish Children
Ci\/il War 1936-1939,
Used during the Second World War
1939-
A Cop
and h
1945. as a Salvage Depot
pins converted It to a dwelling
e used the empty cottages
( Curtis
aswor
· and Hodges then empty )
kshops.
Now 'Monks Walk' Development
Garde ns fa Cottages - CUrtis
- Hodges
-Woodcock
To School Road
Curtis
demolished
Hodges
demolished
Settatree
two-staey
workshop
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demolished Richmond\
Peirce Farm House
A Woodcock
Now part of main house
Passageway
Peirce House
Passa
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Party Wall ( presumed )
through I
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= House I
Garden
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I I Francis Settatree Colbreay Richmond\
later Harvey later Leadbetter
( Hair sl)iist ) later Harvey later Dodgson
Cottages fronting the High Street
High Street
House
Machin
Fig. 8. Sketch plan by Mr R. Laws showing the names of some of the tenants and
occupiers of Peirce House cottages within living memory.
171
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work a number of architectural features were discovered. The panelling
in the open hall had decayed from ground level and had to be removed,
exposing a window on the east front and a large doorway at the far
north end facing west. Both features were photographed at the time of
discovery but no measurements were taken. Particularly in the case of
the window, measurements such as the height above ground level
would have been useful. Reasons for the existence of the doorway have
been postulated in the Brent section of this paper.
A most interesting discovery was found at first floor level. Decayed
plaster was being removed near the brick stack in what had been the
south end of the original hall, which was later floored. A small book
was found amongst plaster debris on the floor. It had once been
contained in a cloth bag, which had rotted, but the book was in
reasonable condition except for a torn title page. Mr Harvey said he
was not sure whether it had come away from the wall with the plaster
or had been dislodged from the top of the massive tie-beam supporting
the crown-post. The Invectyve Agaynst Swearyng, by Thomas Becon,
was written under the pseudonym of Theodore Basille. It was printed at
Botulphe Lane in London, at the sign of the W hite Bear, by John
Nayler for John Gough in 1543 so this book was a first edition. The
book was examined by Dr W. Urry, the Canterbury Cathedral Librarian
and Archivist at that time, who gave as his opinion that the inner cover
could have been part of a Missal or Breviary and was probably a
section of an altar book because of its large print. Many books and
documents, discarded at the time of the Reformation, were made of
parchment and re-used by printers as binding. The book was later given
to the University of Kent who preserved it before placing it in the
Special Collection within the University Library.
Thomas Becon was an advocate of Protestantism and the prefaces of
his earlier books are addressed to many Kent notables whom it must be
presumed he believed held his Protestant beliefs. One such dedication
was to Sir Thomas Nevill (c. 1480-1542), a member of the Bergavenny
family, who entertained him at Mereworth. He was a prolific writer but
this book in particular could have been a dangerous possession in 1544
when Henry VIII visited Charing and was hosted by John Brent, even if
that e v e n t took place in the Manor House that was once the
Archbishops' Palace. The book uses Biblical texts to restrain people
from taking oaths.29
As it happened, the extent of the restoration work was prohibitive
and the property was sold to Mr and Mrs. Hyde Parker. It is sad that it
29 Further information on the life of Thomas Becon may be found in the Dictionary of
National Biography and Arch. Cant., lxix (1955) 159-70.
172
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
was then that the northern end of the hall was demolished but the rest
of the house underwent extensive repairs. The cross passage right of
way was closed and the wall to the remaining part of the old hall was
removed to make one large room as an entrance hall (Figs. 2a and 2b).
A brick corridor was built on the south-east corner of the main building
to link up with the building at the rear (Figs. 3a and 3b). The next
owner was Mr E. Hutchens who furnished the old house with antiques.
There have been no major alterations to the main house since that time
although part of the surrounding ground to the west has been developed
for private housing. The carpenter's loft was, unfortunately, demolished
as part of the same development.
The present owners are Mr and Mrs. C. Williams whose four children
have made this old house the family home that it was when it was built.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Although this history began some years ago, the main stumbling block
has always been the conflicting information on the descent of the Brent
family. Several pedigrees have been published and historical accounts
printed which differ from each other and are rarely confirmed by
accurate references to original sources. I am greatly indebted to
Mr Philip Blake for he has not only compiled the pedigrees of the Brent
and Dering families of Charing but has also written the section headed
'The Heraldry of the Brents' and the descent of Amy Rosmodres. His
knowledge of the correct procedures in compiling pedigrees has been
most important and without his help and encouragement this account
would not have been concluded. I am also appreciative of help from
Dr W.E. Church of Bethersden, whose comprehensive family records
solved a number of apparent inconsistencies. I am grateful to the staff
of the Centre for Kentish Studies who have treated my requests for help
with unfailing courtesy.
The two photographs of the early sixteenth century hall door and
window were given to me by the late Mr P.J. Harvey, the owner of
Peirce House in 1958. The prints were very dark but have been copied
and lightened as much as possible by Mr Ian Gambrill. The rest of the
photographs have been reproduced by kind permission of the Royal
Commission on the Historical Monuments of England (RCHME). The
sketch plan of the house c. 1960 is based on one drawn by Mr E.W.
Parkin with later amendments by RCHME. I am also indebted to Miss
S. Pearson for advice and giving time to read the first draft.
Acknowledgements are also due to a number of local people who
have given me information on the occupants of Peirce House from their
own recollections; Mr R. Laws, Mr J . Moon, Miss M. Ru glys,
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Mr J. Woodcock of Charing and Mr M. Clark of Lenham. Finally, but
by no means least, I wish to thank Mr C. Williams, the present owner,
who has allowed me to view his home seeking inspiration and for
giving me permission to reproduce the 1962 'before and after' plans of
Peirce House. The proposed alterations were not modified to any extent
by the time the alterations were completed.
Appendices: The original spelling in the wills and inventories has
been retained. The wills have been summarised but the inventories
printed in f ull. Ro man n umerals in the inventories have been
transcribed as arabic numerals for ease of reading.
APPENDIX A
SUMMARY OF THE TESTAMENT OF HUGH BRENT OF CHARING, KENT. Dated 12 March,
1474. Proved 5 July, 1474.
This document is complete with two attached but damaged seals. The Will does not seem
to have survived.
Styled Hugh Brent of Charing.
Burial: To be buried before the image on the altar of the Trinity in Charing Church.
Bequests:
To the High Altar for tithes and oblacions forgotten 6s. 8d.
To ten 'Lights' within the Charing Church various amounts from 2s. to Bd.
To the upkeep of the fabric of Charing Church 10 marks to be paid within five years of
his death by equal instalments.
To the upkeep of the fabric of the church of the Blessed Mary at Stalisfield 6s. Bd.
To the High Altar of the same church for tithes forgotten 20d.
To the prioress and nuns of Minster in Sheppey 13s. 4d.
To Dame Christine a nun there 6s. Bd. (Daughter of Hugh's brother William).
To Hugh and Roger Brent (sons of William Brent, grandsons of Hugh) a cow each.
To John and William Brent (sons of Robert Brent, grandsons of Hugh) a cow each.
To John, Christine and Elizabeth (children of William Manning and his wife Elene
Hugh's daughter) 6s. 8d.
To Elene Brent (daughter of Robert Brent) 6s. Bd.
To Anne and Elizabeth (daughters of William Brent) 6s. Bd.
To all his sons and daughters Bd.
Residue: to his wife Christine.
Executors: Master T homas Brent Doctor of Law, John Brent and Robert Brent, Hugh's
sons. The overseer was probably Hugh's eldest son, William.
CKS U275 T50/10
SUMMARY OF THE WILL OF WILLIAM BRENT OF CHARING, KENT. Dated 1 December,
1495. Proved 29 February, 1495/6.
Testament:
Styled: William Brent of Charing, gentleman.
Burial: In Charing Church next to the tomb of Roger Rey or at the discretion of his
executors.
174
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Bequests:
To the High Altar of Charing Church and nine named 'Lights'.
To the maintenance of the Church 13s. 4d.
To Anne (dau.) wife of Edmund Millys 13s. 4d.
To John, Edward, William and Margaret (grandchildren), children of Edmund and Anne
Millys - each 6s. 8d.
To Elizabeth Wombwell (dau.) 13s. 4d.
To Joan (granddaughter) child of Elizabeth Wombwell 6s. 8d.
To Margaret (dau.) for her marriage £40.
William FitzJames (his chaplain) to celebrate in the church for as long as the executors
order.
To each of his godsons 4d.
The executors to have 10s. yearly out of a meadow called Broctonysmede by the
occupants of my mansion house in Charryng for my obit in the church of Charryng for
masses & gifts to the poor.
Residue to Amy (his wife), Thomas Brent, Doctor of Laws and John Brent (brothers) and
William Brent (nephew) all of whom were appointed executors.
Witnesses Robert Brent, (brother), Roger Pende & John Duke.
P.C.C. 32 Vox. and CKS U1107 E l/1.
Will:
Made on 1 December 1495.
Feofees: Lord John Fyneux, Thomas Brent, - Elcocke, John Nethersole, Christopher
Blenden, John Auger, John Duke and Roger Pende.
The executors to take the profittes of all manors and lands in the parishes of Charing,
Sevington, Smarden, Boughton Malherbe, Challock, Kennington, Willesborough,
Hinxhill, Lymmne, Wye and Boughton Aluph for three years to administer his will.
The Charing House, lands and Filthes Mill:
Amy his wife - after the three years to have his dwelling place in Charing with all other
lands and tenements in that parish together with Filthes Mill until son John reached 22
years, provided she remained unmarried. If she remarried the executors were to have
the profit but to allow Amy, 10 marks a year to send John to school until he reached 22
years.
John his son - When he was 22 years he and his heirs were to receive the dwelling place,
the lands in Charing and Filthes Mill with the obligation to pay his mother 10 marks
annually. If she remained unmarried he was to allow her to live in the chambers once
occupied by Lady Moile, with the parlour underneath the said chambers, during her
life.
Thomas his son - If John died without issue the above property and conditions devolved
on Thomas. If Thomas died without issue then the dwelling place and lands were to go
to Amy for her life if she remained a widow.
Roger his son - If Amy remarried after Thomas died without issue then the above lands
went to Roger but he was bound to pay Amy 10 marks annually.
The Manor and advowson of Pivington, The lands in Smarden called Selepynden. The
lands in Boughton called Chapmenfolde:
Amy his wife - To have the above manor, advowson and lands for her life.
Thomas his son - After Amy's death, Thomas or his heirs to inherit the above property.
John his son - If Thomas died before 30 years without issue, the property was to go to
John, if he or his heirs were living.
Roger his son - If both Thomas and John died without heirs, then the property was to go
to Roger.
The Manor of Rippell Wicheley and Halfiche. All landes and tenements in Lymmne: To
Roger and his heirs.
Lands in Challock, Kennington, Willesborough and Hinxhill:
175
P. WINZAR
The executors to use the profits to administer the estate and build the Chapel in Charing
Church. If necessary land may be sold. When the administration is completed the land
in Kennington, Willesborough and Hinxhill are to go to his son Roger. The land in
Challock is to go to Amy for her life and thereafter to his son John.
The messuage and land in Boughton Aluph and the land in Wye:
To be sold to provide money for his daughter Margaret's marriage.
Four acres of meadow called Broctonysmede:
Whosoever has or occupies his dwelling house in Charing has this meadow land to
provide 10s. annually and for ever to keep an obit in Charing Church. It is to consist of
dirges, masses and alms giving.
P.C.C. 34 Vox. & CKS Ull07 El/1
THE INVENTORY OF WILLIAM BRENT OF CHARING, KENT. 1495/6
This is the Inventary of all the goodis catallis and detts of William Brente of Charyng in
the Counte of Kent praised by Roger Pynde John Dewke and John Stokely the secunde
day of February and in the 11 th year of the Reigne of Kyng Henry the V II.
In the Hall:
Imprimis a hangyng of Red Say price Ss.
Item 6 quyshons at 3d. the pece 18d.
Item a Cupbord price 12d.
Item a Tabull with 2 formys and 2 trestylls price 3s. 4d. Summa
In the parloure:
Imprimis a hangyng of grene Say price 3s. 4d.
Item a foldyng Tabull price 10s.
Item half a doss. quyshons at 4d. the pees - Sum. 2s.
Item a Jorned chere and 5 stoyls price. 2s.
Item a carpett for a cupbord price 3s. 4d.
Item a pair of Andyrons price 3s. 4d.
Item a fyreforke and a fyre panne price 4d.
Item a grett glasse price 16d. Summa
In the Chambour:
Imprimis a Celor and a Testor of a stayned cloth with 3 Curtens price 10s.
Item a Federbed a bolster price 16s. 8d.
Item a Matrese price 3s. 4d.
Item a coveryng ofTapistry 13s. 4d.
Item a cupborde and a chere price 16d.
Item a Coveryng of whit and blake with bryds price 20d. Summa
In the Chambor over the Parloure:
lmprimis a hangyng a grene Say 6s. 8d.
Item a federbed with a bolster price 26s. 8d.
Item a cov'yng of grene Say 2s.
Item a Selor and Testor of grene Say with 3 Curtens price 6s. 8d.
Item a Tabull and a Coffer and j(oi)nned chere price Ss. Summa
In the Draght:
Imprimis an old hangyng of grene Say 16d.
Item a Selor and testor of whyte price 15d.
Item a matrese price Ss.
Item a Coverynn ofTapistry brokyne price 3s. 4d.
Item an old foldyng Tabull price 2s.
Item an olde federbed and a bolster price 8s. 4d.
Item a littyll coveryng price 2s.
176
10 10
1 5 8
2 6 4
2 7 0
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Item a selor and testor of whyte price 12d. Summa 4 3
In my Ladys Chamber:
Imprimis a selor and testor of a staned cloth with 3 Curtens of bokerarn price 20s.
Item a Cowntyre payne of Verdure price 33s. 4d.
Item a federbed and a bolster price 20s.
Item a hangyng of Grene Say price 6s. 8d.
Item a cupbord price 12d.
Item 2 sherys price 16d. Summa 4 2 4
In the draght:
lrnprirnis a selor and testor of grene Say with an hangyng of the same 10s.
Item a federbed and a bolster price 13s. 4d.
Item a pece of Russett Cloth conteynyng 16 yards at 4s. the yard - Summa £3 4s. Od.
Item a Tayny Cloth conteynyng 16 yards at 3s. 4d. the yard - 53s. 4d.
In the Chamber over the botery:
Summa 7 0 8
Irnprirnis a hangyng of Red Say with a selor and a testor of the same price 13s. 4d.
Item a federbed and a bolster price 16s. 4d.
Item a Coveryng of Say and a noder littyl Coveryng price 8s.
Item a federbed price 10s.
Item a Coveryng price 4d.
Item a long setyll and two forrnes price 2s.
Item two grett Chestis price 6s. 8d.
Item a Shepe Cheste and a square Cheste price 2s.
Item a littyll square Cheste price 2s.
Item a foldyng Tabull price 4s.
Item two shepe Chestis price 13s. 4d.
Item two stone of owlle (wool) at 4s. the stone. Sum 8s.
Item in yron p'sed at 7s. Summa S O 10
Shetys with napery:
Irnprirnis three pair of shets of three breds at 1 Os. the pair Sum. £3
Item two bed shets price 13s. 4d.
Item four pair of shets at 13s. 4d. the pair. Sum. 53s. 4d.
Item four pair of shets at 6s. 8d. the pair. S urn. 16s. 8d.
Item eight pair of Course shets at 2s. the pair. Sum. 16s.
Item Tabull cloth of dyaper price 6s. 8d.
Item two tabull clothis of playne Cloth price 1 Os.
Item seven playne course tabull Clothis p'sed at 22s.
Item three dyaper Towellis course price Ss.
Item five playne Towellis price Ss.
Item a doss. Napkyns of playne Cloth price 4s.
Item five wasyng Towellis price 20d. Summa 11 2 8
Gownes with odyr weryng geyre:
Imprimis a Russett gowne furred with marters price £4
Item a Tayny gowne furred with Lanchith 20s.
Item a longe Tayny gowne singyll price 16s.
Item a long Russett gowne price 20s.
Item a short Russett Gowne price 10s.
Item a jakett of puke furred price 6s. 8d.
Item his dowblet and his hosyn praysed 6s. 8d. Summa 7 19 4
In the Kechyn:
Imprimis four potts at fours the pece. Sum. 16s.
Item two potts at 2s. the pece. Sum. 4s.
Item two lytyll potts at 20d. the pece. Sum. 3s. 4d.
177
P. WINZAR
Item two Chaffers and possett price 3s. 4d.
Item two water chaffers price Ss. 8d.
Item a grete Kettyll brokyn price 3s.
Item three pannes price 6s. 8d.
Item four lityll pannes price 6s. 8d.
Item a Straner price 8d.
Item a lityll basyn price 6s. 8d.
Item five Andirons price 8s.
Item four spitts price Ss.
Item all odyr small necessaryes vessalyes 6s. 8d.
Item a brasyn morter and pestyll price Ss.
Item a bokett with a chayne price Bd.
Item two Trivetts price 20d.
Item an nold Ketyll price 20d.
Item Colle panne price 6d.
Item a stone morter price 12d.
Item quyrne price Ss.
Item Tub bis and fatts (vats) with stonds price 8s.
Item twelve shemys of barly malte at 3s. 8d. the sheme - Sum. 44s. Summa 6 19 10
In the botery and Pantre:
Inprimis a garnyssh of pewter vessell I ls.
Item halff a garnyssh price 6s.
Item a garnyssh of newe vessell price 16s.
Item two Chafyndysse price 2s. 4d.
Item three Candyllstykes price 3s.
Item three basyn and two Ewers price 8s.
Item six Candylstyks price 2s. 8d.
Item four salts of pewter price 16d.
Item a nalmery price 2d. Summa 2 12 0
In the Stabull:
lmprimis a blake ambuyng horse price 33s. 4d.
Item a grey ambuyng horse price 33s. 4d.
Item a baye geldyng price 10s.
Item two old geldyngs price 13s. 4d.
Item two Cartehorsses price S3s. 4d.
Item two odyr horsses price 20s.
Item three marys (mares) price S3s. 4d. and two marls staks.
Item two marls price 20s.
Item a grey Colte of two yere age gorne 13s. 4d.
Item two sadylls and two brydlls gorne 6s. 8d.
Item a yron forke price 2d. Summa 12 16 10
In the Courte:
Imprimis a shode Carte with harnes for four horses price 23s. 4d.
Item two dong carts price 6s. 8d.
Item a ploughte with odyr apparell 6s. 8d.
Item two spadis with shovyls and dongforks 2s. Summa 1 8 8
In the Barne:
lmprimis sixty quarters of whete in the garnar and in the mowne by estimac(i)on 3s. 4d.
the quarter. Sum. £10
Item forty quarters Barly in the garnar and in the mowne by estimac(i)on at 2s. 8d. the
quart'r. Sum. £S 6s. 8d.
Item six coppys of peyson at 5d. the cope. Sum. 2s. 6d.
Item two shemys of Ots at 2s. 8d. the seme. Sum. Ss. 4d.
178
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Item six lode of hay at 4s. the lode. Sum. 24s.
Item twenty coppis of Tarris at 3d. the cope. Sum. Ss. Summa 14 10 2
Catall:
lmprimis eight oxen at 12s. the pece. Sum. £4 16s.
Item twelve kyne at 6s. 8d. the pece. Sum. £4
Item five sterys at 6s. the pece. Sum. 30s.
Item four heffers at Ss. the pece. Sum. 20s.
Item eight steris at 4s. the pece. Sum. 32s.
Item twelve Caluys at 2s. 8d. the pece. Sum. 32s.
Item fifty wedyr hoggs at 13d. the pece. Sum. 54s. 2d.
Item forty ewes with Lambes at 16d. the pece. Sum. 53s. 4d.
Item twenty Ewes at 12d. the pece. Sum. 20s.
Item twelve hoggs at 14d. the pece. Sum. 14s.
Item twelve small hoggs at !Od. the pece. Sum. 10s. Summa 22 1 6
Plate with Redy money:
lmprimis a cuppe with a couere (cover) parsell gylte, poz 36 unces at 3s. 3d. the unce.
Sum. £5 18s.
Item poncede pece, poz 16 unces and three q'ter percell gylte at 3s. 2d. the unce. Sum.
53s. ½d.
Item two Salts with a Couere p'cell gylte poz 21 unces and three q'ters 3s. 2d. the unce.
Sum. £3 10s. 4½d.
Item lityll gylte cuppe poz 15 unces q'ter 3s. 2d. the unce. Sum. 53s. IOd.
Item a lityll stondyng maser gylte poz 11 unces and 6 quarter at 3s. 4d. the unce. Sum.
38s. Jd.
Itm twelve sponys poz 13 unces and 3 q'ter at 3s. the unce. Sum. 41s. 3d.
Itm thirteen sponys with knoppis gylte poz 44 unces and 3 q'ters at 4s. 4d. the unce.
Sum. £3 2s. 6d.
Item a strondyng cupe p'cell gylte poz 25 unces and a q'ter at 3s. 2d. the unce. Sum. £3
19s. lid. Summa
Item in Redy money £16 Summa
Speratt detts:
Imprimis John Pympe squyre -£9 6s. 8d.
Item John Harnden -£8 6s. 8d.
Item William Holsse - £10
Item Reynold Pympe -£10
Item John Algare -30s.
Item William Turner -8s.
Item Richard Wodward- 20s.
Item Richard Horte -£10 6s. 8d.
Desperatt Detts:
Imprimis Richard Herte of Smethe - £3 I Os.
Item William Carpenter - £12 (in margin Sol. £6)
Item Peris Yonge -£5 17 s.
Summa
26 17 10
16 0 0
so 18 0
Item John Kymbre executure -£4 . Summa 25 7 0
Summa to'ls huius lnventary CC:xxiii' .xvS ijd.
Detts that he owyth:
Imprimis William Robynson -£28 13s. 4d.
Item Robert Gorlyn -£13 6s. 8d.
Item Mr Wryght of We (Wye?) - £6 13s. 4d.
Item the p'son of Plockeley -£3 6s. 8d.
Item Malpase of Feversham - l Ss.
Item to the stepull of Charyng of his faders bequeste -£4 13s. 4d.
Item to the same stepull of oder mans bequyste -£5 13s. 4d.
179
£223 15 2
Item to Roger Herte - £3 6s. 8d.
Item to William P ayne - £6
Item the vicar of Stalefelde - 50s.
P. WINZAR
Item the Executors of Richard Brent - £24 7s. 6d. Summa 99 5 10½
Item Funerall Expences at his burying and mone thys mynde £14 6s. 4d.
Item to my Jorde Cardinall for the stoke of his Fermes £20
Summa to'ls Cxxxii}i xiijS il ob. 133 13 2½
Leland Duncan transcription - KAS Library
SUMMARY OF THE WILL OF JOHN BRENT OF CHARING, KENT. Testament dated 5 April,
1501. Will dated 24 March, 1504/5. No probate date.
Testament:
Styled: John Brent of Charing senior, gentleman.
Burial: In Charing Church before the door of the new Chapel of St Mary where no body
from ancient time has been buried.
Bequests:
To the high Altar for tithes forgotten 5s.
To seventeen 'Lights' in Charing Church - five at 15d. and the rest 5d.
To work in the church connected to his burial 15s.
To the work of the new Bell-tower 13s. 4d.
To Elene Manning 20s.
To Anne Manning 20s.
To Christine Manning 13s. 4d.
To Agnes Manning 13s. 4d.
To Isabelle Wombewell 15s.
To Thomas her son 6s. 8d.
To Johanne Nayler her daughter 6s. 8d.
To Cristine Nayler 5s.
To each of their boys 5s.
To John Millys my godson 20s.
To Margaret Millys 20s.
To William Millys 13s. 4d.
To Edward Millys 5s.
To the two sons of Edmund Millys by his (second?) wife 3s. 4d. each.
To one priest to celebrate for my soul in the aforesaid church for one year and a quarter
£8 6s. 8d.
To a new Cross of silver with Mary and John above there £14.
To Margaret Brent 66s. 8d. and all his brasse pots and chafing dishes.
To Robert Nayler every year for the terme of seven years 3s. 4d. to be collected from the
tenement in Charing on the deceased Anniversary Day.
To William Brent on the same day 5s.
To John Rogers on the same day 5s.
Executors: William Brent and John Rogers.
Will:
Made the 24 March 1506.
His messuage and land called Snagwell in Charing parish:
To Roger Brent, gentleman - to pay 5d. every Good Friday to five poor men for seven
years.
Dormestone on the Downs:
To be retained by the executors for seven years - thereafter to Roger Brent and his heirs
together with 2 acres of Medowe lying in Wykyns.
180
The BRENTS of CHARING, Kent.
contributed by Philip H. Blake
Hugh
of Charing, Kent; 'Hugh and Wiilfam came our of Somerset' [Vincent's Kenr, v. 145, p. 48, Coll. of Arms]: with
Robert Leche and John Drawbridge he granted to Thos. at Rye and Joan his wife a messuage and 25 ac. by fine
1434 (Larking index to Dering deeds, vH. J 88]: a comm1• in Kenr to inquire concern big cenaJn farms for lands
granted and divers other sums of money and yearly profits that were paid to the king's progenitors, but which
through negligence or other cause have not been fully paid for a long time and cenify thereon before 1he King
and Council at Westminster in the quinzaine of Michaelmas next, 18 Aug. 1473; test!· as of Charing. dat. 12 Mar
14 Ed. IV 1474) [CKS. Brabome Papers, Dering, Wills no. 1], to be bur. Charing before the altar of the Trinity.
WILLIAM BRENT (3)
presumably of Somerset (vide V incent, below), perhaps
whither he took his wife and where they both died. For
Julian's kin see E. Hasted, History of Kem, Ist ed.,
iii, 233. The pedigree given there in a footnote can
be supponed by documentary evidence.
Christine
JULIAN (GOBYON)
wid. of Thomas Paunsherst of ChJing and fonnerly wife of Mathew Hauchcregge,
3rd and youngest dau. and coh. of 1ohn Gob yon, of Essex, by Amabel (but in
church of the Anchorites, Canterbl)'i (the: Austin, or White Friars); will pr.
26 De. 1405 [Cant Cons. 1115]), ly dau. of John de Pevington of Pevington
and of West Fairbourne in Harriet.sham and heir of her bros. John and Thomas.
William Alice
dau. of Roben Rye of Charing, brother
and heir of Roger Rye. Living 1456
[De Banco Roll 780, Hilllry 34, H.VI.
m. 327); residuary legatee of her husband.
of Ruckinge and Bilsington; he ancl Roger Brent and ThQs. Godfrey were
feoffees of John Crekyng. the elder, 29 Hen. VI (1450) (PRO, C l /291 and
375); d. by I Dec. 1461 [will of John Crekyng]. His nephew, Wm. and
Christine, summoned John Beykyn of Heme. husbandman. for trespass at
Herne [De Banco Roll S H. VI. m. 334, m. 362 and Gen/alogist, xxii, 148]
dau. of John Crekyng of Ruckinge and Bilsington.
She survied her husband (sec will of said John daL
1 Dec. !46!),pr. 1463 [Cant Al/1301).
Dame Christine
A nun at Minster Sheppey [testt. o f
Hugh Bren who leaves h e r 6/SJ.
dau. of(-) Barne, (I) William (2) (2) Amy John Joan (!) Robert (2) Joan Master Thomas Richard Isabel (1)=
dau. of Edward
Dorant, of
Canterbury,
Mason, free by
redemption,
Roger (2) = (2) Lettice' (I) John Stokes Helen Cbristine
[Vistn. of Kent. 1574. Hori. Soc. lxxiv, 33]; Wife of
perhaps Thomasine dau. and coh. of Wt[liarn
Bemys, or Barnes. of Wye, by Bennet. dau.
of Richard Lewknor, of Throwley, by Malina
or [vide Hasted. Hist. of Kem, vi. 450] Eleanor,
dau. of Thomas at Towne, of Town Place in
Throwley.
Richard Pargate (1) Elizabeth
of Merton, alias d. & h. of(-) Hunt.
Dodingdale, in of Charing (Visitn.
St Mary Bredin, of Kent. 1619; Hori.
Canterbury, (which Soc. xiii, 211,
of Charing; eld. son and overseer of father's will; a lawyer, he is paid 2s.4d. in 1463 by Sir
John Soon, Compcroller of the Household co Ed. IV. 'for a Sergant to plete fore my
Sessame't' [Arch. Cant. x, 254] and receives his annual salary of £2 from St. Augustine's
Abbey for legal services 1468/9 {Arch. Cant. Ii. 84). Appointed during pleasure as Surveyor
of all the king's castles, lordships, manors and lands, and the farms of ulnage of cloth in 1he
counties of Kent, Surrey, Sussex and Hampshire 26 Mar. 1472. wilh Southampton Town and
Canterbury City 6 Aug. 1472: Comm'· 'de wallis etfosscuis' (by the coast of the sea and
marsh) between Tenterden and Lydd, 3 Dec. 1473; again between Margate and Rochester (in
the Isle of Sheppey and Harty) 24 Jan. 1477/8; again from Appledore to Camber and from
Camber to Fulston 19 June 1479; as Commr, in Kent he had tO pay 1300 archers 6d. a day.
1475 [Larking's index to Dering deeds. vii, 195); Comm1• with Roger Brent and others to
inquire in Kent into an shipments of wooJ, hides. wooJpells, lead, tin and other merchandise
that ought to repair to the Staple of Calais, 3 Aug. 1475; appointed again with Roger Brent
and others 3 Dec. 1475; Eschea1or for Kent and Middx.., 5 Nov. J 486 10 6 Nov, 1487. Cornmr,
to collect in Kent the subsidy on aliens, 21 Jan. 1487/8. Commr: of array co. Kent 19 June
1490 and again I July following Comm'. of the Peace, Kent 1487-96: Comm'· of gaol
delivery Maidsrone Sep. 1487, Cancerbury Castle Oct. J487, Maidstone 1487/8, 148819 and
1489, Canterbury Castle 1490, 1491 and 1491/2, Maidstone 1492 and Canterbury Castle
1494; d. 1496; will and test'- dat. 21 Dec. 1495, pr. 17 Feb. 149516 [PCC 34 and 32 Vox].
= (2) Hugh
in tesl'· of
grandfather Hugh
(who left him and
bro. Roger a cow
Roger
of Poldres (Poldhur:;t) in Harbledown: in wills of father and
g'father: witness 10 wiJJ (pr. 1509) of Edward MilJys, father
of Edmund; d. 1529, bur. St Michael's, Harbledown. Ml.;
wid. of Wm. Passhley of
Evegate, in Smeeth, (whorl.
before Sep. 1480 (See PRO
Cl/281/65 and Arch. Cant. lxxiv,
39-401, elder dau. & coh. of
William Rosmodres, gent., of
ComwalJ, i.e. Rosemodris in
St Buryan, who occurs as witness
to deeds, etc., from 1440; to be
bur, in the Lady Chapel 'of myn
owne Edification' in Charing
Church (finished by 1501);
will dat. 3 May, l S l 6; no date
of proof, [Cant. C l2n].
of 'Wykyns' in Charing;
an ex0r of father and
bro. William; an elector
in Kent in 1478; d.
unmar.; will. (as
'senior' 20 H.7 (!SOS),
ro be bur. in the new
Chapel of St Mary in
Charing Church; testt.
dat. 5 April !SDI.
[Cant. C8/94J.
I
Anne Elizbeth
dau. and h. of
Gregory Wyneday;
wid, of John
Crakyng, the
younger s. of
John Crakyng the
elder of
Bilsington: m.
about 1450 when
aged about I 9
[PRO Cl/311291
&375].
I
John
She and her sister
Elizabeth [s.ic.J left;
m. John Wombwell:
fin will of uncle
John Brent named
as Isabelle].
in father's will and under
he bought temp. H6); where the 'Hughs' each) 1474, but
Ed. Hasted mentions a brass inscription (now gone) showing the
arms of Brent. and Brent impaling Martyn and Butler quanerly
(Hist. of Kenr. ix. 19); he m. Anne. 3rd dau. and coh. of John
Manyn of Poldhurst: her will dat. 6 Oct. 1565, pr. 12 Mar. 1566/7
(Cam. A29/201 J; by his will dat. 4 Feb. 1525/6, pr. 16 July 1529.
Roger left to his wife in fee simple the land he bough1 in Ruckinge
and Westwell. and his other lands to her for life, then his Charing
lands to godson William son of his brother John Brent, his lands in
Kenyngton, Hinxhill and Willesborough to godson Robert son of
618 by grandfather
Hugh; m. Edmund
Millys as his first wife
and living in 1497 [will
of father-in-Jaw], but
dead by 1501 [see will
of uncle John Brent,
which names children
John, Margaret,
William and Edward);
Edmund's will, as of
Lenham, dat. 13 Dec.
?1496/8, pr. 1509
21. Had 'Wykyns' by will of
uncle John and will of mother
Amy; Capt. in retinue of Lord
Bergavenny mustered at Cant.
17 May 1515 [Leners & Papers
H.8. v.12 p417]. d. between
Intrantes of are confused J.
Canterbury, 1449/SO. Adman. 12 Jan.
Will 1457 [Cant. 148718 [Cant. Arch.
Arch. 1120]. Act Bk.1,f.3).
not in that of
bis fBrher.
d.v.p.s.p. c.! R3
(1483) [Visitn.
of Kent, Harl.
Soc., loc. dt.).
William Brent of Willesborough, his lands in Lymne to remain to
William Wombwell his sister's son [Cant. Al 8/239]. 'He gave away
as much land in Poldres and other places and now weU is wonh 2000
annually unto one Howley (Horseley] that was of no kindred to him'
fVisicn. of Kem, 1619, Harl. Soc. vo/ xiii, 212. This note. as
also the Brent pedigree, is manifestly by Sir Ed. Dering,1 st bt.).
Edward Pargate William Pargate. Agnes Pargate
m. Nicholas Sheldwich,
William
of Canterbury. His mother's
administrator, 1487/8;
Freeman of Canterbury
as gent. 1480; will 1497
(Cant. Arch. A6/320).
of Canterbury, Freeman,
ac; s. of John Sheldwich, 1469;
Mayor 1482-4; M.P. for the City,
1485-8; d. 1494; an administrator
of his mo1her-in-Jaw; bur.
St. Augustine's eh. yd. Will pr. 1494
[Cant. A6/69J. Her wm as of Canterbury.
wid .. pr. 151617 [Cant. Al 41317).
In will of Roger 152516;
dead by 1566, Lease to
him and his father of
lands. etc., in Chaling,
dat. 15 Nov. 1541,
confirmed 31 May, 1542.
[Cant. A.II 146].
Thomas
of 'Wykyns' Charing and
Willesborough; aged 40 and more in
1566, Admon. [PCCJ 14 Sep. 1612,
to Sir Anthony Dering, his sister's
grandson and his next of kin. He m.
at Willes borough, II Aug. I 552,
Jane, 2nd dau. of Thomas Greene.
of Bobbing; Capt. of 150 Footmen
raised to resist the Spanish invasion
in 1588 [Arch. Cant. xi 390).
I May 1564 & 1 May 1565
(Bishops' transcripLc;, Charing
CCA. DCb/BTl/58]; admen.
4 Aug. 1565 to son Thomas,
[CKS, PRC22/ 6/24J; Comm•· in
Kent 1550/1 to collect the relief
granted 1 Ed. VI; JP for Kent 18
Feb. 1553/4,
John Dering (I) Margaret
of Pluckley; under sole ex'trlx of her
21 in 1517 [father's 1st husband; d. I Dec.
will]; BA Cantab I 560 and bur. Pluckley
1514/5; d. 19 Aug., [burials register] in
1550, bur. Pluckley S. chancel, Ml.,
(brass); will dat. which has 1562.
24 May, 1536, pr.
13 Sep. 1550
[Cant. Arch. 2712].
of Willesborough; an ex0r of father's will: grant to Robert Brent, one of the Yeomen of the King's
Chamber, of the office of Reeve of Middleton, co. Ker.i, receiving the accustomed wages from the
Hundreds of Middleton and Morden, 17 July 1461 and again 4 Oct. 1485; to be arrested (reason not
stated) and brought before the King in Council, 10 Nov. 1470; grant for life to the King's servant,
Robert Brent, one of the Yeoman of the Crown, of 6d a day from the Feast of St. Peter ad VincuJa
last past (l Aug. 1470), when he was appointed, from the issues,of the subsidy and the ulnage of
cloth and a moiety of the forfeiture of the same in Kent, JO July,1471; Robert Brent and others are
gran1ed the manor of Easthall, Kent,f or the life of Theobalda,l ate the wife ofThos. Mauncell,h e
and they having been granted it by Humphrey Euyas. 12 Apl. 1473; as king's servant granted
custody for life of Sandwich Castle and the office of Verger of Sandwich with wages of Id daily,
with 'Castell Medes' in recompense of the wages, 16 Jan. 1477/8 and again 4 Oct. 1485; appointed
during pleasure, as Comptroller of the petty customs, the subsidy of wools, hides and wool pells and
the subsidy of 3s in the tun and 12d in the pound in Sandwich and ports and places adjoining with
the fees, provided he executes the office in person, 13 July 1480; a commr. of array of 1000 archers
to be taken in Kent for the defence of Calais, 16 July 1482; general pardon to Roben Brent, late of
Willes borough, Kent, yeoman alias gentleman, late one of the Yeomen of the Crown of the present
king and of Ed. IV, alias Reeve of Middleton, Kent, 28 Feb. 1483/4; a comm•. of gaol delivery,
Maidstone, 13 Sep. 1489, and of array, Ken, 1 July 1490 (Cal. of Patent Rolls]; d. 1491; will dat.
30 Oct. 1491, pr. 4 Dec. 1491 [PCC 2 Dogett), to be bur. St. Thomas of Aeon, London.
I
Anne Thomas Margaret Amy
only dau. & Inter h.
of Reynold Moresby
of Allington Castle
(b. 1459), by Alice
dau. of Robert
Chadleswonh of
Sandwich. She was
wid. of John (who
d. before 10 Aug.
1486), s. & h. ap. of
Nicholas Gaynesford
of Carshalton,
Surrey, She d. 17
July 1492, bur.
Carshalton, MI, now
lost; Will dat. II
July 1492, no dat.
of proof [Cant Cons.
1/245].
I
John
in father's will; ex0r
to bros. Richard &
William overseer to bro.
Robert; of Winchester &
New College Oxford,
Rector of Great Chan
1478 to death; Dean of
S. Mn1ling, Sussex, 1481,
10 death; Almoner lo
Queen Elizabeth, wife of
Edwd. IV, in 1479 and an
ex01 of her will:
chaplain to the King in
1500; dead by Apl. 1515.
[For a full account of
Thomas see A.B. Emden
Biographical Register of
1he Uriiversil)· of Oxford
to AD 1500, Vol. I, p260],
I
William
dau. & coh. of Thomas
Berkeley. 'of Avyne in
Hampsher' [Visitn. of
Kent 1530-1, Hori.
In father's will
and then under 21
d.v,m.s.p.,
probably young
[see will of Amy];
apparently dead by
1505, not being in
the will of uncle
John.
1n father's will, and
μnmar. in 1495;
married after 1501
[test'· of uncle John]
In mother's
will & unmar.
1516, but not
In father's will.
s. & h. of
Robert; d.v.p.;
In tcstt. of
Grandfather
Hugh, (1474),
who left him
and bro. Wm.
a cow each,
of Willesborough,
Jn 1est1• of Hugh;
Commr. in Kent to
collect 1he subsidy
Soc. Ix.iv,3 ]. i.e. granted for four
Avon Tyrell, near
Ringwood, Hants., s. & h.
of Sir Edward Berkeley,
of Avon 'fyrel1, Sheriff
of Cos. Gloucester and
Hants. She born c. 1498:
her sister-in-Jaw was
her aunt by maniage
i.e. the wife of her uncle,
5th Lord Bergavenny,
(2) John Moore
of Benenden, who by her had
six sons & one dau .. of whom
was Sir Edward, ancescor of
the Earls of Drogheda, and
Lt, Col. Brent Moore, his
youngest son of Clonkilly,
Co. Longford [Archdall's
'Lodge', II, 84); d. probably
1562, the date given for his
wife's death on her monument.
Amy
m. Wm. Crispe,
10 George Nevill, 5th
Lord Bergavenny, K.G.,
s his 2nd wife (and
see will or Amy), by
whom she had a dau. Jane
[Vistn. of Kent 1619.
Harl. Soc. Vol.42 (I 898)
p212], who seems to have
d,v.m.; Margaret 'was
living in 1515, but died s.p.s.'
[11te Complete Peerage Vol. I
p33 (1910), apparently
quoting the original pedigree
in the College of Arms.]
Lieutenant of Dover
Castle & d.s.p,
He m. 2nd, Mary, dau.
of Avery Randolf. of
Bad!esmere, by whom
he had issue, (Misc.
Gen, et Her, Ss., V. 3SJ.
yeurs, 30 Aug. 1523
and again I Aug. 1524;
ndmon. with wi11
to his son, Robert,
8 Dec. 1531. and
again 21 Feb. 1531/2.
[Cant. A Act. 61113,
118) an ex0r of his
uncle, William Brent.
Robert
of WiUe.sborough; a Commr. of Sewers,
Kent, June & Nov. 1539, Mar. 1541
and 8 Dec, 1553; d. Willesborough
14 Jan. 9 Eliz. (1567); admen. 6 March
following; I.P.M. 5 May, 9 Eliz. His
kinsman Thomai; Brent, is next heir.
of London; Cit. and draper, merchant of
the Staple of Calais; m. Agnes, dau. of
William Brograve, of London, cit. and
draper, and of Kelsey. in Beckenharn,
Kent, by Elizabeth, dau. of John A!phew,
of Bore Place, in Chiddlngstone, Kem;
d.s.p., will, which shows he was in
financial difficulties, dat. 24 Sep. 1492.
To be bur. St. Anne's chapel in St.
Antholin's, London. pr. Lambeth 13 Aug.
1494 [PCC 9 Vox.); his wid. rn. 2ndly
Richard Drakes of St. Bartholomew the Less,
and of Hitchin, Herts, but he d. 1499 [will
PCC 33 Home] and she in 150 I; will dat.
Feast of St. Lawrence (10 Aug.) 1500, pr.
24 Sep. 1501 [PCC 3 Blamyr], to be bur.
St. Antholin's 'before the sepulture of
Richard Brent', overseer Master Thomas
Brent, 'doctor in the law·.
Agnes,
dau. of John Digges
of Barham; m.
before 7 June 1502
Elizabeth
I
Ellen
by father's will
10 have mnnor
called 'le More'
[i.e. More in
Rucldnge) but it
passes to nephew
Robert.
1425.
Elizabeth
dau. and coh. ofThomas Gedding
of Mydelton; i.e. Milton next
Sittingboume; bur. Willesborough
20 Jan. 1564/5.
m. Walter Mayney of
Biddenden; dead s.p. before
1566 (1PM on bro. Robert.).
of Dongeon, Canterbury; Freeman 1459 by first marriage; a lawyer.
he is paid his annual salary of £1 for legal services by St Augustine's
Abbey, 1458-9; an elector in Kent, 1460, and with brothers John and Roben,
1478; a Yorkist; MP for Canterbury 1461-2, 1463-5, 1467-8, 1474-5, 1478,
Jan. 1483//4, 1484 and 1485-6; an attorney in Kent on Plea Roll of 1460;
dep. Sheriff of Kent 1470; Mayor of Canterbury 1471-2, 147314 and 1476
when aldennan; Protonotary of the Common Bench, 15 June 1472; received a
general pardon 24 Feb, 1483/4 as of Canterbury, gent., alias late of
London, alias esquire, alias late Escheator of Canterbury, alias late Mayor.
alias late J.P. for Kent: commr, to deliver Maidstone gool of 3 prisoners,
23 Oct. 1463, Canterbury gaol of the like 2 Aug. 1485 and Canterbury again
9 Dec. 1486: Commr, 'de wallis etfo.s.satis' between Tenterden and Lydd
3 Dec. 1473, be1ween Appledore and Camber and from Camber to Fuls10n,
11 June 1479, and between Whitstable and Faversham 4 Sep. 1483:
Comm1• in Kenr ro assess the subsidies granted to rhe la.re king from
aliens and to appoint collectors 27 Apt. and l Aug. 1483 and 18 Feb. 1484;
a Cornmr. of the Peace in Kent 1481-85; commr. in Kent to inquire into
grants in mortrnain; d.s.p. 1487, will dat. 4 Feb. 1486/7, pr. 30 Oct. 1487
[PCC 5 Milles]; bur. St. Mary's chapel, All Saints, Canterbury, Ml, with
arms of Brent impaling Lee lEd. Hasted, History of Kem, ::d, 2l2J.
John Stokes
under 21 yrs, in 1488
\will of Sir Rich. Leej.
dau. of Sir Richard
Lee, Cit. & Grocer.
Mayor of London
and M.P. for qcy,
Her will daL 11 Sep.
1488, pr, 3 Nov. '88.
(Cant. AS/SO.J.She
leaves to Master
John Coleman 'her
'best Blessed ary
that once beloDged
to l.sabe] Brent'.
Alice Stokes
m. John Randolf
soon after 11 Sep,
1488 (will of Sir
Rich. Lee(.
of London, Cit
& Grocer, living
4 Sep. 1471 [will
of Sir Richard Lee.]
Sir Richard Lee.
Mayor 1460-1 and
1469-70; M.P.
London 1450-1;
Kt. 21 May 1471:
ances1er of Lee
of Delce. in
St. Margaret's
Rochester.
Margaret Stokes
unm, in 1488
\wUI of Sir
Rich. Lee].
unmar. 1474 (father's
will}; m. William
Mannyng before Apl.
1501 [will of bro.
John] and had issue
John, Christine.
Elizabeth (who each
had 6/8 by test of
grandfather, Hugh)
and Agnes mentioned
by brother John.
Joan Stokes
living in 1488
jwill of Sir
Rich. Lee].
Roben Naylor
[will of bro. John].
Finch
of Charing; aged 48 in 1606 [PRO,
Town Depositions, 32S/24--26J:
in father's will; ciL and draper
of London, free 6 Apl 1584 by
John Askew; bur.
Charing 15 July, 1625;
will. by which his son Brent
'shall during his mother's life
allow unto her• fuel for
her use "in my mansion house
in Charing', dat. 12 Apl.,
pr. 13 Ocl, 1625
(Cant. Cons,. 47/146);
some authorities
(e.g. Add. MS 5507)
give him a wife
(-) Oxenbridge, by whoma
son Brent, who d. young,
but no support for
this has yet been found.
= Mary
dau. and heir of CapL John Poore,
of Hants. {Vis1tn. of London,
16334, Harl. Soc. XV, 229]
and Sussex, m. 14 Apl. 1592
at St. Augustines, Canterbury;
exm ... of her husband, 'by whom
she had 5 sons & 7 daus.';
adman. London. she as
of Rochester 27 Jan. 1662'3,
to Dau. Margaret Pya.
(see table 2)
Jahn
b. at Charing; in his father's will;
churchwardenof Charing, 1619-20;
living 8 Mar. 1631, the date of his
attested naval and military service,
viz. served at sea four years
with Drake,including the year
of the Armada, and under the
Earl of Cumberland,
Sir Henry Palmer (of Howlets]
and Lord Thomas Howard,
He served in the Low Countries
under the Eru1 of Leicester
[of Penshurstl and under
Sir John Norris in Brittany,
Ireland and the Portugal voyages,
and undr Lord Willoughby
when Henry JV invaded
France (as Henry of Navarre],
(CKS U350 071 ]; commonly
called "Rough Dering''
(Add. MS 5534 - 31b).
= A1ice
dau. of
lohn Moore
of Coventry
George
bap. Pluckley
17 May 1564;
in his father's
will as deceased;
matric. siznr,
from Magdalen Coll.
Cambridge,
Easter 1583,
BA 1586/7,
MA 1590.
John
apprentice
in London;
m.M argaret
dau. of John Cox,
of Ca. Berks.
The DERINGS of CHARING, Kent.
(excluding the line of Wickens)
contributed by Philip H. Blake
Elizabeth Susanna (1) Alexander
1 Richard
of Surrenden in Pluckley;
grandfather of Sir Edward, 1st. bt.;
in dispute with Rainborn Durham
I over Charing parsonage.
Table 1
JOHN DERING MARGARET BRENT
of Pluckley; under 21 in 1517 (father's wHJ); devisee of land in Little dau. of John Brent of Charing, sister, and in her issue heir, of Thomas
Chart by will of uncle, Richard Dering, 1547; d. 19 August 1550; bur. Pinckley
(brass); will dat 24 Mny 1535, pr. 13 Sep. 1550 [Cant. Arch. 27/57).
Brent, of WilJesborough, sole ex1r1 of husband; bur. Pinckley where lhe register
has - 1560, Margit Moor, 1he wife of Mr John Moore died l day of December, the MI, has 1562.
John
of Egerton; father of Edward of Boughton
Malherbe (see Wilkinson, below); in
dispute with Rainbom Durham over
Charing parsonage.
Christopher
of Wykyns in Charing, 1550-1627 {posthumous);
a' quo Bulwer, Long, of Heyden Hall, Norfolk
[See Burke's Landed Gentry, 1925, pl56l].
(2) Katherine Thomas Elizabeth WiUiam Grace (1) = Robert = (2) Jane (3) ludilh Jane Mary Elizabelh
eldest dau. of Goddard
Hep den of Holshurst in
Burwash Sussex, whose
will pr. Lewes, 18 Mar.
1632/3 [Visirn. nf Sussex,
Harl. Saa. LXXXIX, 6 I,
and W. Berry Sussex
Genealogies, 303).
dau. of of Hempstead, Ess4, dau. of Richard Hovell, of Lenham dau. of James Elmstone, d. young f Add. dau. of Hay of Charing and Egenon, dau. of dau. and coh. of David Leigh,
servant to the Archbishop of
Canterbury, and wid. of
Henry Philpot, of Folkestone,
by whom she was mother of
John Philipot. Somerset
Herald, 1624-49, Lie.
Canterbury, 20 Apl. 1622, to
Roben Dering,
d. young 'my daughter Shastowe' bap. Pluekley
Alex.ander {Visitn. of London of Haughley, later b. probably (the name was Elson in MS. 5534, f. 31b), but
Mordaunt. 16334 Harl. Sac., 1(Y. of Stratford c. 1568; in the Lenham Registers since this source also
229]; in his father's:.wm; (? Stratford SI. Mary), father's will before l 603) bap. states that
matric. New Coll., Suffolk (1567-76); as d.v.p. Lenham 13 Aug, 1581, Thomas and Elizabeth
Oxford, as wid. of Edward bur. Pluckley as dau. of d. young, and gives
gent.. 8 Feb. 158213 Mordaunt of 6 May 1613 'Rickard' Elson; m. Anthony of Charing a
aged I 8; scholar 152; Hempstead, Esq., Lenharn, 15 Apl. 1600, dau. Dorothy, d. young,
BA 2 May 1584; I and fonnerly wife of by lie. (Cant.) dnt. who was a dau. of
MA. 27 Jan. 1589/90. George Fiske, 10 Apl., her fa1her Anthony of Pluckley,
by Margery, dau. & being bondsman; the truth of William's
coh. of John Ford, 'Elizabeth, wife of existence may be
of Frating, Essex Thomas De.ring, killed doubted.
[Suffolk Man. herself,
Fam., ii, 36], bur. 28 Nov. 1608',
[Lenham Register].
Mary Anne Maria daughter Edward William James Anne
d. unm. m. John Wolger only child d. inf. bap, Lc.nham in will of of London: bap. Lenham
of Beedoo, [Add.MS. [Add.MS. 12 Oct. 1602 grandfather bap. Lenham 8 Dec. 1605,
Elizabeth (?Seeding) 5534, f.3 lb I 5534, f. 3lb]. in will of dat. 1613. 3 Apl. 1608. bur. Lenhwn
Sussex m.Edward grandfather 14 Nov. 1608.
[Add. MS. 5534, Farnham. Anthony Dering,
f. 3Ib).
of Sussex. bap. Charing 1576; in Henry Bradshaw
[Add. MS. 5534] father's will; commonly of Bourn, Sussex
or Hayes called "Jolly Roger" (sic. but ? Surrey]
I Add. MS. 3526, (Add. MS 5534]; lie. wid. of Lucas,
f.236) (Can1erbury) 10 marry (Add. MS. 3526,
Jane Lucas, of m. 160].
Warehorne, wid. at
SL Mary Bredman,
Canterbury 5 Mar,
l 608/9,
Finch Dering, of
Charing, bondsman.
Edward Alice
of Egenon. about 40, wid1• to
marry Judith Philpot of
Bekesbourne, wid., about 50,
relict of Henry Philpot, late
of Folkestone, gent. deed.,
at Bekesbourne; m. there
I 7 (sic.) April, 1622.
{W. Berry. Kem
Pedigrees], but
not in Add. MS.
5534).
Rnlnborn Durham
of London, cit, and skinner, and of
Chnring, gent; he and wife appointed
administrators of the estate of
Margaret Seager (see will of
Wm. Seager) 9 Nov. l 604. Far their
dispute with the Derings re Charing
parsonage see Abstracts of English
Records1 Dearing and Whipplt
(privately printed, Boston, Mass.
1929) ppl, 284,272 and 2, and
CKS (Braboume MSS.) U274 LI7.
in father's will;
m. lsl Edward Callyn,
2ndly (-) Cha.sley
rsic.J of Co. Berwick
[ Add. MS. 5534 and
6138. f. 124), The
Home pedigree IM isc.
Gen. et Her., 4s. i,
106] has 'married to
H Shastan'.
r::: Eliznbc.th
mar. lie,
(Canterbury)
ns of Charing,
9 Apl, 1604
at Charing,
20July 156!;
bur. there
26 June 1562.
Doro1hy
m, Humphrey
Wardle of
Maidstone, yeom.
nt Charing
l 3 Apl. 1607;
lie. (Canterbury)
10 Ap!. 1607.
Clara AJice
Jane (1) =
dau. & h. of James Lamben
of Kenardington; his will
pr. 1548 [Cam. Arch. 26/1711.
Anlhony (2)
of Peirce House, in Charing; under 21 in 1535
{father's will); matric. sizar from Queen's Coll ••
Cambridge, Mich. 1548, scholar 1548-50;
Escheator for Kent and Middx. 22 Dec. 1587 -
2 Jan. 1588/9; bur. Charing 28 Sep.
1616; will dat 3 Dec. !6l l, pr. 25 May
1616 (Cant Cons. 441374].
(2) E1izabeth Horni:
widow of George
Acworth
(see tab!e3)
Margaret =Wm. Seager Nicholas (2) = Anne Aewonh = (]) Amhany
bap. Pluekley bap. Charing, 1571; bur. Charing of Charing; of Charlng. 2nd son, bap.
PJuckley 17 Nov. 1562;
bur. Charing
2 Sep. l627.
Darell {see
9M ar. 156617; in rable 3)
father's will;
in father's will;
m. Charing
m. Edward Drayner. 17 Aug. 1597 to
of W. Peckham, clerk, George Scott,
vicar 1624-36; of Hawkhurst,
rector of clerk, rector of
Addinglon l 615-36; Balcombe, Sussex.,
bur. W. Peckham
15 Jan. 1635/6.
Christian
m. Thomas
Borrowes,
4 Apl. 1608
al Charing.
1586, and preb. of
Chichester,
1586-1611; will
pr. 1618 [PCC 18
Meade).
Anne
m. Siephen Taylor
of Maidstone,
haberdasherj lie,
(Canterbury), she as of
Maidstone, 3 July 1613
at Sitdngboume; m. S
July 1613 al All Saints,
Maidstone. He as
'Hatter'.
14 Jan. 1590/1
sole ex1ru1. of
1er husband.
I
Thomas
bap. Chnring
23 Apl. 1598;
in wi11 of
Mary Hales.
will pr, 1590.
JPCC 52 Drury].
He devised the
lease of Charing
parsonage to
dau. Elizabeth
and her sisters
equally.
William
bap, Charing
25 Nov. 1599
d.s,p. before
1625, not being
mentioned in
will of Mnry
Hales.
in father's will; Escheator
for Kent and Middx,
22 Jan. - 1 Dec. 1589,
and 23 Nov. 1608 -
27 Nov. 1609. He claimed
rent for 19 ac. land
called Claypitts and
Ballances in Lenham from
John Finch, of Grovehursl,
12 Nov. 1617
[Chanc. Proc. Chas. I,
F35/42 and F50/10J.
m. Charing 17 Aug. 1597;
bur. there 14 Dec, 1640.
Jane
bnp. Chnring
10 Mar, 1604/5;
in will of
Mary Hales.
Elizabeth
bap. Charing
13 Apl. 1606;
in will of
Mary Hales.
(see table 3)
Dorothy
bap. Lenham
10 July 1608
in will of Mary
Hales: m. as of
Smeeth, spr. about
40 to Thos. Hooker,
of Hythe, butcher
wid'. as his 4th
wife, by He.
(Canterbury),
24 Feb. I 645/6 at
Smeeth.
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Messuage and lands in Mystole and Brodoke:
To go to Ferme for seven years - the profits retained by his executors. After seven years
to go to William Brent and his heirs.
Messuage and lands called Wickins in Charing and Westwell:
To go to Ferme for seven years - the profits retained by the executors. After seven years
to go to John Brent, gentleman and his heirs with the exception of the 2 acres
mentioned above.
The profits of the above messuages and lands retained by the executors:
To provide 20s. a year to support William Brent in London for seven years.
Land called Hawksnest in Stalisfield:
To William Cherell junior and his heirs. He or they to pay to the executors 6s. 8d.
CKS PRC32/8/94
SUMMARY OF THE WILL OF AMY BRENT OF CHARING, KENT. Dated 3 May, 1516. No
probate date.
Testament:
Styled Amye Brent of Charing gentlewoman - widow of William Brent late of the same Esq.
· Burial: In the chapel of 'myn own Edification' within the Church of Charing.
Bequests:
To the High Altar in Charing for tithes and oblacions forgotten 10s.
Four named 'Lights' within Charing Church 12d. and every other light 6d.
A torche for Charing Church 6s. 8d.
A Tryntall of 30 masses on the day of burial 20s.
To the poor on the burial day 20s.
To 'my most singular good lord my lord of Burgavenny my basyn with the Ewer of
Sylver and 13 sylver sponys with the sygnes of Jhu and his 12 Apostyls'.
To 'myn own in esspeciall good Lady and my most singler comforthe and trust in this
Worlde my lady of Burgavenny a newe cope of Sylver with a Cover parsell gylt and a
saltseller of Silver with the Cover Dowble gylt'.
To 'my Sone John Brentte A lityll Bowll of Sylver Dowble gyltt with the Cover a
saltseller of silver with owte cover and a dossyn sponys of Silver'.
To 'my daughter his Wyfe a payer of bordys of jete gawdyt with silver gowld and my
best gowne freized with mynkyes'.
To 'Margrett Brente the daughtt' of my sone John Brente my best maser a payer of fyne
shettys my beste brasyn potte and in mony £10 st'lyng'.
To 'my lityll daughtt' Amye Brentte a lityll maser a payer of fyne sheyttes a brassyn
potte And in mony £6 13s. 4d. st'lyng'.
Residue: Equally between Lord Bergavenny and his wife (Amy's daughter Margaret) and
her son John. Lord Bergavenny was also appointed the supervisor.
Executors: Lord and Lady Bergavenny and John Brent.
Witnesses: Thomas Durnell preste and Robert Brett.
Will: Made on 3 May 1516.
To John Brent (son) and his lawful heirs. All lands, tenements, manors etc. in Cornwall
and Devonshire.
To Margaret Bergavenny (dau.) and her lawful heirs if John dies without issue, all the
above lands.
To John Brent (son). All lands in the parish of Charing viz. 2 pieces of ground called
'Longham and Cokkows grene' on condition he makes a deed of gift of a tenement
within his inheritance called 'Chapmannys Fowld' to Lord Bergavenny whenever it is
requested. If John fails to do so then both the tenement and the two pieces of land go
to Lord Bergavenny.
CKS PRC 32/12/7
181
P. WINZAR
APPENDIXB
SUMMARY OF THE WILL OF ANTHONY DERING OF CHARING, KENT. Dated 3rd
December, 1613. Proved 25 May 1616.
Testament and Will:
Styled Anthony Dering of Charing, Esquire.
Burial: At Charing 28 April 1616.
Bequests:
To his daughter Shastowe £4.
To his daughter Alice Skott £4.
To his daughter Elizabeth £4.
To his maid Joane Seyar 20s.
To Edward Dering, son of his son Thomas deed. 40s.
To his son Anthony and his heirs, three acres of land at Kennington, if not already
devised to him; Anthony to pay another 40s. to Edward Dering son of Thomas deed.
for his 'better bringing up'.
To William Dering, son of his son Thomas deed. £4 towards his 'bringing up'.
Four or five acres of land in Kennington, once held by T homas Brent esq., late deceased,
of which Anthony of Charing was to have a part, to go to Brent Moore and his heirs,
provided his brother John Deering and Sir Anthony Deering 'will do the like'.
Residue: Goods, chattels, debts, moveables and household stuff to be equally divided
amongst his children viz. Fynch Dering, John Dering, Nicholas Dering, Alexander
Dering, Robert Dering, Clare Drayner (dau.) and the children of his son, George,
deceased.
Executor: His son Fynch Dering. Fynch is asked not to take account of any sums of
money which the deed. may have lent to any other children when dividing the residue
into equal portions.
Overseer: His son-in-law Edward Drayner.
CKS PRC32/44/374 Act Book PRC22/14/96
THE INVENTORY OF ANTHONY DERING OF CHARING, KENT. 1616
An lnventorie of all and singular the goods Chattels and debts of Mr Anthony Deereinge
of Chareinge gent. deceased taken the 28th of August Anno. Dom. 1616
lmprimis in readie monie in his purse
Item in plate of all manner
Item his Apparrell all manner
Item one horse and acowe
Item one Stone Colt
Item in Sheepe
In the howse within the hall:
Imprimis in peuter all manner
Item in brasse all manner
Item in Rackes, spittes, Trivettes and other Iron Stuffe of all manner
Item in an old Chest with hempe and other lumber
In the Saller:
Item in hogsheades, Tubbs and other beare vessells
In the hall:
Item one longe table with a frame, one old Table with an old book of Marters
In the great Parler:
Item two Tables with frames, Joyne Stooles and Chayers, two Carpette
& certain quishons
182
£ s. d.
9 18 0
6 0 0
5 0 0
8 0 0
1 10 0
3 0 0
10 0
13 8
8 10
10
14 10
13 4
12 10
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
In the Parler Chamber:
Item one Bedstead, one old Table, one Fetherbed, two old Blanketes
and one old Coverlet
In.the Chamber over ye Parler:
Item one Cannipie bedstead, one Fetherbed, two bolsters & one Coverlett
and one little table
In the Gardinge howse:
Item an old Bedstead, one Fetherbed, two blanketes and one Coverlett
In the Chamber over ye Porch:
Item one Bedstead, one Fetherbed, two bolsters & one Coverlett
In his Bed Chamber:
Item one Bedstead and Truclebed, two Fetherbeds and fower blankettes
Item one Tapstrie Covertett
Item one Cheste, boxes, Ruggs and Coverlette with other lumber in the said
Chamber
In the Garrett:
Item two Bushels of wheat, one Bushell measure, two Shovells & an old
Chest
Sum is
Item in Linnge of all manner
Item in the Milch howse and Brew howse in vessells
Item one Costlet one Pike two Baskette two swerde and two souldiers Coates
In Debts oweringe:
Imprimis Mr T homas Pope of London, Merchant Tayler - which make his
will to be proved in the Prerogative Court
Item in other Debts all manner
Sum is
Prized by us whose names are under written. Summa totalis
2 10
3 0
2 16
2 11
4 15
1 10
2 14
10
£60 17
13 19
2 0
2 6
12 0
20 0
£50 6
£111 3
Rainborn Durham, John Wood, Christopher Brathwait, Anthony Deringe Junis
CKS PRC28/8/93
8
0
8
8
4
0
4
8
8
4
0
8
0
0
0
8
SUMMARY OF THE WILL OF FINCH DERING OF CHARING, KENT. Dated 12 April, 1625.
Proved 13 October, 1625.
Testament:
Styled Finch Dering of Charing, gentleman.
Burial: At Charing 15 July, 1625.
Bequests:
His wife Mary, mother of his five sons, Brent, the eldest, Anthony, Robert, Edward and
John and his seven daughters, Katherine (wife of T homas Stephens), Bennet, Mary,
Frances, Ann, Margaret and Alice - to have all such messuages lands and tenements as
the deed. had already conveyed to her by Jointure for life.
To all sons and daughters except the eldest son Brent, £20 each when they are 21 years.
The daughters to receive their £20 either at the age of 21 years or on marriage.
Executrix: Mary, his wife. She is to pay the above portions at the due time. If any son
dies before 21 years then their share is to be divided between the remaining sons.
Likewise, should any daughter die, her portion is to be divided between her sisters.
To pay these portions and his debts he says that all his houses and buildings in Charing
183
P. WINZAR
Street 'now being used for a brewhouse, dairy house, Mill house, Com Loft and one
dwelling house, situated between my stone wall and garden and the land of the heirs of
Sir Justinian Lewyn' which adjoin Charing Street, could be sold. His executrix is also
empowered to sell a tenement and two acres called 'the gore' in the parish of Charing
for the same purpose. Any remainder is to go to Mary his wife.
Lands, messuages and tenements in Charing, Kenarton and Woodchurch or elsewhere in
Kent:
Other than those holdings that he has agreed may be sold, all the above is bequeathed to
his eldest son Brent and his heirs. Brent is to allow his mother to reside in the deed.
mansion house in Charing with fuel and the use of a fire, supported out of his woodland
called Croweshole. Brent is not to sell or cut down any timber trees from that wood
unless it is to be used for the improvement of any houses in Charing. Brent is to assist
his mother in the sale of the specified holdings to pay the portions and debts.
The corn and grain sown on his ready-ploughed land is to be counted as chattels and put
towards the payment of his debts.
Executrix. Mary, his wife.
Supervisors. Sir Anthony Dering, kt. and John Darell, esq. (his kinsmen).
If Mary should renounce the executorship then his son Brent is appointed under the same
conditions as his mother viz. to sell the named property to pay the portions and debts.
If Brent becomes the executor and does not administer the estate in the way decreed
then he is not to have any part of any of the lands mentioned 'which in general were
given to him before'.
These lands are specified as:-
Lands called the upper and lower Downs of about forty acres.
The tenement called Gore with the lands belonging.
Lands called Commes of about six acres - all above in Charing parish.
All the houses and buildings in Charing Street between the stone wall and the deed.
garden and the lands of the heirs of Sir Justinian Lewyn kt.
All the above are then to be bequeathed to Sir Anthony Dering and John Darell to sell for
the aforesaid purposes and to give any remainder over the amount of £220 (which
amount would pay the portions of Brent's four brothers and seven sisters) to be given
to Brent Dering after deducting their charges.
If it so happens that the two supervisors are administering the estate and Mary needs any
money for the upkeep of any children during their minority, the supervisors may
advance her their portion for which she will have to give security to pay the whole
amount of £20 on the due date. Otherwise, the supervisors may allow Mary thirty three
shillings a year towards the upkeep of any child. & yeare First above written.
Witnesses: Robt. Ely. Nichs. Deringe. Rainborn Durham.
CKS PRC32/47/146 Act Book PRC22/16/91 (Mary, widow, was named as executrix.)
THE INVENTORY OF FINCH DERING OF CHARING, KENT.
An Inventorye of all the geodes and Cattelles moveable of Fynch Deringe of Charinge in
the Countye of Kent gent. Deceased made and taken the Eleventh daye of Auguste
1625 and in the Fyrst yeere of the raigne of our soveraigne Lord Charles by the grace
of god Kinge of England Scotland Fraunce and Ireland Defender of the Faith ymprised
by Nicholas Deringe gent. Anthonye Deringe gent. Rainborn Durham and Thomas
Hutchin as Followeth
Imprimis in his pursse
Item his wearinge Apparell
Item his Gowne of Chamlett Furred with Fur att
Som is £3 3 4
184
£ s. d.
JO 0
6 8
6 8
Brent
of Egerton in 1622. but he is
Mr Brent Dering. of Charing, gent.
by 1638; in his father's will;
bap. Charing II Feb. 1599/1600
Capt. of the select band in the
Hundred of Calehill; bur. Charing
5 April 1644; admon. 28 Oct. 1645
to wife Ann [Cant. Cons. 30/1645].
Finch Thomas
bap. Charing bap. Charing
5 Sep. 1630 7 Oct. and
Had 27 ac. in bur. there
parish of St. 15 Oct. 1632.
Lucy, Barbados
on 30 Dec. 1679.
Anne
dau. of Robert Ely, of
Charing clerk. vicar
1595--1644; mar. lie.
Canterbury, he aged about
26, and she of Charing
about 21, at St. Margaret's,
Canterbury; bur. Charing
7 Sep. I 666.
Anthony John
bap. Charing bap. Boughton
22 Oct. 1637 Malherbe
bur. there 27 Feb. I 64112.
8 Mar. 163718.
Bren!
Anthony
of London, cit. and haberdasher:
bap. Charing 14 Mar. 1601/2;
in father's wiU; Poll Tax £3
as yeoman haberdasher, of
Fenchurch St. m. Anne(-),
who was bur. 12 Jan. I 659160
at St. Benet. Gracechurch St. He
d.s.p. 6 Apl. 1683, bur, St. Botolph,
Bishopsgate; will dat. 1681,
pr. 21 Apl. 1683 [PCC 44 Drax].
Mary Anne
bap. Charing bap. Charing bap, Charing
10 Dec. I 643. 20 Nov. 1627, 4 June 1629
m. John Greys
at Willcsborough
I Apl. 1652.
Roben
of London, cit. and draper, free by patrimony,
tobacco seller a1 the sign of the Three Apes,
Fleet St. in St. Dunstan's in the West; in
his father's willi arms given in Visitn. of
London, 1633-5 [Harl. Soc. XV, 229) as
Dering, (saltire with a chief sa.), quartering
Brent, Lambert and Poore. The crest is a deer's head
couped, or, with a crescent for difference (the b'Ue
crest of Dering); will tlat. 8 Aug. pr. 23 Aug.
1648 [PCC 128 Essex].
Elizabeth Judith Frances
bap. Charing bap. Charing bap. Charing
5 Jan. 1633/4. 5 Nov. 1635. 4 Aug. 1638.
Anne
dau. of Thomas Whatman of
Chichester, Suksex, by
Cecily, dau. of John
Sackville, of Po1esden Lacy,
in Great Bookham, Surrey, by
Anne, dau. of William Harvey,
Clarenceux King of Anns; her
husband's sole ex111x. d. Nov.
1660.
Anthony Robert
under 21 in not in
fa1her's will; father's
drowned at will.
sea, 1654.
Edward
bap. Charing 20 Mar.
1607/8; In father's will
app. skinner of London
for& years, 15 Aug. !626
Edward Bathsheba
not in father's will in father's
'! m. as of St Dunstan's will.
in the East, aged 23,
Sarah Goldiken, of the
same parish, aged 21
[lie, Comm. of Surrey]
at St. Olave's or St.
Sav iours, Southwark,
4 July 1663.
The DERINGS of CHARING, Kent Table2
Finch
DERING
(sec Table I)
= Mary POORE
Dorothy
John
of London, cit. and draper. free by patrimony, 10 Oct.
1632; bap. Charing 1 Apl. 1610: in father's will:
grocer in Fleet St., in St. Dunstan's in the West,
but later of St. James, Clerkenwell, apparently Garden
Alley; will dat, 12 Jan., pr. 5 Mar., 1679180
[PCC 37 llatil]: he asks to be bur. St. James, Clerkenwell,
but burial not recorded; mentions wife Anne and cousins
Joseph Ncwington, of Burwash, and Richard Newington.
Mary John
Anne
dau. of(-) Wetherall: m. 28 Feb.
163516 at St. Oregory's; bur. in
sth. aisle of chancel of St. James,
Clerkenwell as Mrs Anne Dearing, wid.
from Garden Alley; original will
pr. 8 July 1684 [Arehdeaconry of
London 14/62].
under 18 in in father's in father's will; b. Tydd St Giles, Gambrldge, 18 Dec.
father's will:
only child
mentioned in
Visitn. of
London, 1633-5
m. Robert Whitworth
in 1649.
will. 1635, only son of John Dering, grocer [Gems. Mag. Ill, 30];
entered St. Peter's Hill School, London, from Merchant
Taylors, 25 July, 1650; bur. in chancel of St. James,
Clerkenwell, 27 Mar. 1684, as Mr. John Dering, of Liquor
Pond St.: admen. [PCC] to Grace Dering, relict, Apl. 1684;
further grant by her 5 Feb. 170112 to Chas. Goodhand,
creditor,
Henry
Hnch
bap. Charing
5 July ]620,
bur. there
16 Juno 1621
Elizabeth
bap. Charlng
7 Sept. 1606
bur. there
28 Oct,
following.
Grace Knight
rn. lie. (Bishop
of London), 7 July
1663; bur. S. aisle
of the chancel, SL
James, Clerkenwell,
S Aug. 1686.
Elizabeth Bowman
Anne
Catherine
bap. Cha,ing 18 Feb. 159213; in
father's will: m. as of Maidstone.
about 24, to Thomas Stephens, of
Wye, yeom. about 28, by lie.
(Canterbury) 12 Oct. 1622 at
Harrietsham, the reception being
held at the house of her uncle,
Anthony Dering, there: bur. Charing
18 July 1641.
bap. St. James, Clerkenwell,
8 Sep. 1651; m. St. Magnus,
3 Feb. 168617, aged about 30,
10 Nicholas Hanbury, packer,
of All Hallows, Barking, bac.
about 30 [lie. Vic. Gen., I Dec.
l fi86J; cit. and clothworker,
Master of the company 17 I 9.
Joan
in grandfather's will; m. St, Giles in the
Fields, I Oct. 1691 to Elizabeth llowrnan,
both of the parish, by lie.
in grandfather's wil1;
m. Lawrence Rayner rnc.
Fae. Off. 30 Oct. 1695]
John
d.v.p, unm. and on H.M.S. Kent; admen.
26 Jan. 1712113 to Edward Bowman, on
behalf of Henry Dering, the father.
Bennet
bap. Cha,ing 17 Nov. 1594
in father's will;
m. John Johnson, MA.,
clerk, of Charing, by lie.
(Cant.) 30 May 1625 at
St. Mary Bredin.
Mary
bap. Charing
16Jan. 159617;
in father's will;
m. Henry Field
at Charing,
25 Feb. 1644/5.
Frances
bap. Charing
12 Nov. 1598;
in father's wiH;
bur. Charing
13 Sep. 1527.
Anne
: bap. Charing
'6 Dec. 1612;
in father's will.
Margaret
bap. Cha,ing
24 June 1617;
in wms of
father and brother
Anthony; m. John
Pyrn, genL who
predeceased her;
d. 20 Mar 168314,
bur. Roches1er
Cathedral, Ml.
Alice
bap. Charing
5 July 1620
(twin with Finch);
in wills of father
and brother Anthony;
m. Luddesdown
27 Sep. 1638,
Augustus Caesar.
of Rochester, MD,
who predeceased her,
d. I 677 aged 75.
bur. Rochesrer
Cathedral, MI.
Jane Lamben (I) = Anthony DERING (2)= (2) Elizabeth
(see table !) (see table I) dau. & cob.
Nicholas DERING
(see table!)
(2) =Anne =
bur. Charing
(I) Anthony Darell
of Royton and West
2 Sep. 1627. Shelve, in Lenham;
I son of Nicholas, 2nd.
son of Sir James Darell,
of Calehill, in Little
Chan; bur. Charing,
(see table I) 26 Mar. 1595.
William Wilkinson
of Wateringbury; tnd
of West Shelve, J.u.;
d. 2 Nov., bur. 9 Nov.
1618 at Newnham.
Anne
dau. & h.
m. lie. (Canterbury),
as of Charing,
29 Sep. 1606
at Charing; bur.
Len ham 18 Nov. 1654.
Frances (1) Richard (2) Margaret
(I) George Acwonh
Sizar from Petrhouse, Cambridge
1548; MA. 1555, LLD. 1560/1;
Prebendary of Southwell, 1559-61;
Judge of the Prerogative Coun of
Ireland, 1576/7; d. 1580-2 [J. Venn,
Alumni Canrabrigienses i, 4, & D.N.B.
Elizabeth
bap. Charirig 27 Aug. 1587;
in father's will and in will
of Mary Hales as her niece,
'another daughter of my sister
Dering'; m. Charing 10 Aug. 1607,
as his 2nd wife, John Somers, of
St Margaret's, Rochester,
Attorney of the Rolls, by whom,
apparently, she had Alexander,
Rob", Anthony and Anne, His
will pr. 13 J;eb. 1638/9.
dau. of Edward Dering
of Boughton Malherbe;
m. lie. (Canterbury),
of Wateringbury
and West Shelve;
sold Wateringbury
to Oliver Style;
dau. of Sir Roben Honywood, MP,
of Pett Place, in Charing, and
Markshall, Essex, by Alice,
aged about 19, at Lenham
or Boughton Malherbe,
12 Dec. 1639, bro.
Thomas, bondsman
(father of Edward of
Chalk); she d. 13 Oct.
1643. Ml. Lenham.
a Clerk in
Chancery; aged
about 23 in 1639;
bur. Lenham, Ml.
dau. of Sir Manin Barnham,
of Hollingbourne, bur. Lenham.
16 Mar. 1688/9.
The DERINGS of CHARING, Kent Table 3
Roben Home Margary . . .•. .
b. c. 1519; Bishop of Winchester, 1561-79;
will dat. 29 May, 1579, to be bur. Winchester
Cathedral, pr. 27 June, 1579 [PCC 26 Bakon].
her sister, or her husband's,
m. William Barlow, Bishop of
Rochester, 1565-68 [D.N.B.].
John Hales
will as 'Esquire
son of Edward, of
Tenterden', 1600
[PCC 78 Wallopp].
Mary
will dat. before
4 Sep. 1627, pr.
5 Nov. I 629 [Cant.
Cons. 49/289].
Sir Thomas Dayrell
of Lullingstone Dayrell
Co. Bucks.; will pr.
6 May 1618 [PCC 51 Meade].
Margery
d. 1617-1618
Anthony (I)= Susan (3?) = (2) Leonard Browne (I) Anne Frances
of Charing, b. 1593
[Add. MS 5534, f.316];
in father's will, by which
lands in Snargate were
settled on him and his heirs
11 Jas. I (1613) [Braboume
MS 127]; m. as of Egenon,
about 30; in will of Mary
Hales as 'son of my said
sister Dering'.
dau. of Edward Merywether,
of Eythome, deed. and his
ex0r. with bro. Edward;
m. 1st by lie. (Cant.), as
of St. Gregory's, Canterbury,
aged about 23, dat. 19 Sep.
1623, at Preston next Faversham;
she m. 2ndly, before 1646n;
d. at Hamburg 27 Dec, 1656
[Household Book, of Sir
Edward Dering, 2nd. bi,
Edward
commonly called "White Ned";
bap. Egenon 14 Mar. 1633/4;
only child of Anthony Dering
Bethersden [Household
Book of 2nd bt.]; a Hamburg
merchant in 1676 [Col. Off.
Papers]. d.s.p.
of Canterbury, gent., freeman
as son of Nicholas, haberdasher,
1640; Mayor 1660; Auditor of
Canterbury Cathedral; bur.
St Margaret's, Canterbury.
4 Nov. 1671 [Reg. Cant. Cath.];
he may have m. 2ndly, Anne
Ashfeld, of St. Margaret's
Cant. wid. at Brenzet or
Brookland by lie, (Cant) dat.
14-17 Mar, 1641/2.
Francis Nower, of St. Martin's
in the Fields (the herald painter)
for Leonard Brown and Susan, his
wife, granted an annuity of £14
for 29 years to Sir Edward Dering
of Surrenden, out of lands in
Bethersden, Kenardington,
Pluckley and Snargate, 27 Nov. 1651
[Brabourne MSS., no. 115; see also
nos. 127 and 142].
dau, of Capt.
Richard Bargrave
of Chanham; m. as
of Eythorne, aged 20 and
upwards, he as
of St. Margaret's, Cant.,
notary public, about 30,
by lie. (Cant.) dat.
28 July, 1635, at Eythorne;
issue one son and one dau.
bap. St Swithin's
Winchester
25 Mar. 1567;
in will of
Mary Hales as
'Frances Gyfford
dau. of my
sister Dering'.
• John Achilles
bap. Chittlehampton oflnstowe,
Devon, 24 July, 1588. Devon.
• in will of Mary Hales
as children of her niece,
Frances Gyfford.
Anne
will Dat. 20 Sep.
1622; pr. 5 Mar.
1624/5 [Cant. Arch.]
John Darell
of Calehill
in Little Chan;
d. 19 June, 1618;
Achilles Gyfford
son of John Gyfford,
of Brightleigh.
Devon.
[see Vivian,
Visitations
of Devon, p400].
*Elizabeth (1)
m. as of Little
Chan at Charing,
lie. (Cant.),
6 Oct. 1617.
will dat. 2 Aug. I 6 l l
pr. 30 May, 1619
[Cant. Cons. 45/147].
Nicholas
m. as Prebendary
of Winchester
Cathedral.
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
In the great parler:
Item the hanginges of olde darinpe
Item one table, one Joine Forme, 4 Joine s tooles all att
Item one Courte Cubbard with a greene Cubbard Cloth att
Item one olde greene Carpet
Item 3 olde velvett Cushions att
Item a payre of yron Cobirons and one yron Forke att
Item 2 olde Chaires att
Item one payre of plainge tables att
Item Fowre olde picturs att
Item one small mapp att
Item the Fyrst vollume of the booke of martyrs and one olde bible ymperfecte
[Should be £2 19 OJ Som is £3 0 0
In the greate parlor Chamber:
Item one small table with a Frame and a Joine Forme att
Item one olde bedsted with a Fether bed, one Fether bolster, one Flocke
bolster, one downe pillowe, one payre of sheetes, one olde Coverlett
and towe old blanckettes
Item one olde Court Cubbard and an olde Cloth uppon itt
Som is £3 1 6
In the butterye next the greate parlor:
Item one bynn one olde Cubbard, Certaine olde shelves & other lumber att
Som is£- - -
In the Halle:
Item one longe table with 2 Formes
Item one other olde table and Forme
Item 2 olde Courte Cubbardes att
Item the latter parte of the booke of Marters Defase and a Deske
Item Certaine ledden waytes all waying 115 pound waght att
Item one armour and a picke att
Som is £2 6 10
In the Roome over the Seller:
Item one olde Chest with towe olde armoures rustye and brocken att
Item an olde stalder att
Som is £1 7 2
Item in the seller 4 barrelles 4 kilderkins 2 old stalders one tub and a little
Keeler att
Som is£- - -
In a little Roome next the Halle:
Item 4 quarters of wooll att
Item 10 quarters of Hempe att
Item 3 !ether Botles att
Item one yron Rack one spitt, one olde yron potthanger, a graplewhocke
and a payre of Brasse stirropes att
Item one olde Cheestt, an olde table with other lumber att
Som is£1 178
In the Well Close & entreye:
Item 2 buckinge tubbes att
Item a payre of Scalles, one yron beame and one wodden beame
Item a buckett with a rope and a winch
Item Fouer olde washing tubbes
Item an olde lather and other lumber
Som is£- 13 10d.
185
6 8
13 4
12 0
3 4
5 0
4 0
4 0
2 6
1 0
6
6 8
6 8
2 13 4
1 6
6 8
13 4
2 6
1 6
2 6
9 0
18 0
6 8
6
0 0
12 0
10 0
4 0
5 0
6 8
4 0
2 6
3 4
3 0
1 0
P. WINZAR
In the olde larder and dyreye howse:
Item one olde stalder, a saltinge stocke and Certaine olde shelves
Item an olde table with Certaine shelves
Item 28 Cheeses small & greate
Item 7 gall ones of butter
Item a little keeler
Item 3 emptye Crockes
Item a Cheesse presse, a Chorne, a Keeler and 2 Cheesse Balles
Item one yron trivett, one yron pann, Certaine stone waites and other lumber
Item 16 bowles and trugges with towe milkinge pailes
Som is £3 14 4
Item the myll howse and the myll lofte:
one myll with towe myll stones and a mawlte bynn
Som is£- - -
In the Brewe howse:
Item a Furnasse
Item towe great Tunnes
Item 3 little old tunnes
Item a buckett with a Chaine
Item 7 olde Kilderkines, one ole Keler and an olde tunnell
Item a payre of Slinges, a Jett and other lumber
Som is £4 8 10
In the Kittchin:
Item Certaine olde peeces of pewter as pottes Candlestickes & other peeces
Item more in other peeces of pewter as dishes platteres and other peeces
Item Fower great olde Caldrons
Item 6 olde Ketlles of Divers scantlinges
Item 6 brasse pottes of Sundreye bignes
Item 3 brasse stupnettes
Item 3 brasse morters
Item one little Bell
Item a warminge panne
Item 4 olde Brasse pannes
Item a Brasse Chaffer
Item Fower yron Drippinge pannes
Item 6 yron Spittes
Item 4 yron Rackes
Item 3 Cobyrons, one fyreslise, one gridyron and a Fryinge pann
Item more 2 Spittes
Item 4 payre of potthangers and 2 paire of pott hoockes
Item 2 brocken Brasse stupnettes
Item 2 small brasse Candlestickes
Item a stone morter a grate and a Choppinge blocke
Item 2 tables, one Forme, one borded Cubbard, Cartaine shelves and othe
lumber
Item 3 olde pailes
Item One Jacke in the Custodye of Robert Willard, Smith to be mended
Item an yron backe in ye Chimneye
Item 2 old Chaires
Som is £16 15 6
In the host loafte: one hair Clothe att
186
3 4
5 0
6 8
1 0
4
1 0
5 0
2 0
10 0
2 6 8
13 4
10 0
10 0
2 6
8 0
5 0
15 0
2 14 0
2 10 0
I 13 4
2 0 0
10 0
13 4
7 6
2 6
13 4
10 0
10 0
6 0
16 0
5 0
2 0
3 0
3 0
I 4
I 6
10 0
1 0
0 0
6 8
I 0
6 8
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
In the litle parlor:
Item one feild bedsted, one fetherbed, one Flocke bed 3 blanckettes, a Fether
bolster, a Flocke bolster, one olde Coverlett, 2 downe pillowes with pillow
Coates
Item one table att
Item a blewe Cloth Carpett
Item 2 Cubbardes & a Joyne chaire
Item a muskett, 3 Cali vers and a Casse of pistolles att
Item a payre of yron Andirones
Som is £5 10 4
In the Backe howse:
Item 2 Knedinge troffes, one mustard querne, 2 planckes with shelves and
other lumber
Item 2 olde leather sacks att
Som is£- 14 6
In one Upper Roome:
Item one bedstede, a Flocke bed, Fower olde blanckettes, one sheete, a truckle
bed, 3 olde Chestes, one yron spitt
Item in the gallerye a Joyne Cheest
Som is £1 11 8
In the Chamber over the little parlor:
Item one Joyne bedsted, 3 Fether bedes, 3 blanckettes, a Coverlett, 2 Fether
bolsters, 2 Downe pillowes & one Flocke bolster
Item a Court Cybbard, 4 Chaires, one litle stoole & 3 Cushions
Item a weinstotte Cheest and 13 paire of shettes
Item 2 Damaske table Clothes and one Damaske Cubbard Clothe
Item 2 longe table Clothes, 3 square table Cloths, Fower longe Towelles,
4 Cubbard Clothes all of Diaper
Item 2 Dozen and a halfe of Diaper napkines
Item 5 longe Table Clothes
Item 9 longe Towelles
Item 2 square Table Clothes
Item 4 Cubbard Clothes of linnen
Item 8 Dozen & a halfe of napkines
Item one wainscot Cheest
Item 7 Dozen of pewter platters & Dishes
Item halfe a Dozen of pye plates
Item a Dozen of small pewter dishes
Item one Dozen of Frute Dishes and 15 sacers
Item a Wainscott Cheest
Item 2 Chestes, a cradle, an olde Chaire and an olde bedsteed
Item a Dozen of porrengers and 2 Dozen of platters
Som is £45 15 4
In the greate Chamber:
Item one Carved Joyne Bedsted with 2 Fether bedes, a Fether boulster, 3
blanckettes & one wollen Coverlett
Item 5 greene Curtaines of Flannell
Item a halfe hedded bedsteed with a Fether bed and Flocke bed
Item a Court Cubbard with a Cubbard Clothe
Item a weinscott Deske
Item a Tester and vallance of blwe velvett ymbrodered with silke and golde
& 3 taftye Curtaines
Item towe Tapestreye Coverlettes
187
3 6 8
3 4
3 4
15 0
0 0
2 0
12 0
2 6
6 8
5 0
10 0 0
1 0 0
8 0 0
3 JO 0
5 JO 0
J 13 4
2 0 0
J JO 0
8 0
6 0
5 2 0
5 0
4 10 0
6 0
5 0
6 0
8 0
8 0
8 0
8 8 0
6 0
5 0 0
13 4
3 4
13 16 8
8 0 0
P. WINZAR
Item a Tapestreye Coverlette, a bearing mantle & a Fase Clothe in the
Custodye of Thomas Steephens of Wye, lent hertofowe unto hime by the
testator in his life time prised as unseese
Item one longe windowe Cushion and eleven others
Item 5 nedle wrought Cushians and towe of Turckeye Worke
Item 10 payre of Fyne sheetes
Item 17 pillowe Coates
Item a Cheeste plated with yron
Item a Cheeste and Towe Chaires
Item a little side table
Som is £57 12 2
In the Chamber within the great Chamber:
one bedsteed, a wainscott presse, a truncke, 2 ould wicker Chairs, an olde
Cheest, an yron payre of Cobyrones and 2 Red velvett Cushiones
Som is£- - -
In the Chamber over the porch:
A bedstede, 2 Fether bedes, 2 blanckettes, 2 Fether bolsters, one pillowe
& pillowe Coate, a payre of sheetes, a little table and a Coverlett
Som is£- -
In the Chamber over ye sellar:
Item 2 bedstedes, 3 Fether bedes, 2 Flocke bedes, 3 Fether Bolsters, 3 pillowes,
2 payre of sheetes, 4 wollen blanckettes, 2 olde Coverlettes, Certaine
testers and vallances beelonginge
Item a wainscott presse
Item a greate Cheest, 2 little boxes with 2 Chaires and a !owe stoole
Item 2 Cheests, a Drawinge Cubbard & a little table
Item a truckle bed and a presse
Item in plate, one playne silver Cupp, a gilt saltseller, a gilte Cupp with a
Cover and a topp of a Cupp parsell gilte
Item a gold Ringe with a turckeye stone
Som is£1780
In the Chamber over the larder:
Item 5 olde bedsteedes, 3 olde bedes, 5 blanckettes, 2 bolsters, a payre of
sheetes & other lumber
neere thatt Chamber in a Clossett:
Item 2 small boxes, Cartaine shelves and a paire of Cobiyrons
Som is£1182
In the Garden howse:
Item one old bedsted, a wollen wheele, a Joine Forme, Certaine shelves and
one old Cheest
Item in the garden a stone Role
Item in the garden next the seller, towe pewter stilles and 5 stockes of Bees
Som is£1184
In howsold linnen abowte the howse:
Item 4 payre of Sheetes, 1 Dozen of napkins, 2 payre of pillow Coates, 3
longe table Clothes, 3 towelles with other small peces
In the Worke howse and in the menes Chamber:
Item 2 borded bedsteedes and one olde Chest
Item 3 duble hand sawes and 2 handed sawes
Item a Timber Binne, 3 poles with ropes and other thinges belonginge
Item one olde sadle with other lumber
Som is£-17 6
188
5 0 0
2 8 0
1 8 0
10 0 0
2 0 0
12 0
13 4
1 6
1 13 4
5 0 0
6 13 4
10 0
0 0
8 0
10 0
6 13 4
1 13 4
13 4
4 10
6 8
5 0
6 8
2 0 0
1 6
10 0
5 0
1 0
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
In the Gardner:
Item one Serye, 2 bushelles, a tovett, a Fann, 3 scoppettes a seede Codd, a
payre of Ropes & 2 hemp sacks
Som is£- -
In the Closse and in the groundes abowte the howse:
Item Certaine timber Battes
Item Fyre Wood of all manner
Item a wagon, 2 plowes, harrowes, Courter, harnesse For horse and
all other ymplementes beelonginge therto
Item in the Barne 24 loads of haye
Item 4 mares and 2 Geldinges
Item sixe milche Kyne and Towe twel(ve) monthinge haiffers
Item 5 hoges and 5 shetes
Item the powltyre of all sortes
Item 2 lathers
Item heemp on the grownd
Item Fruite growinge in ye orchard
Item 2 rackes and other lumber in the Closse
[Should be £69 6 OJ Som £69 5 0
In the Feildes in Corne Growinge:
Item 7 acres and a halfe of wheate
Item 18 acres of Barleye
Item 6 acres of pease and tares
Item 9 sheepe and lambes
Som £56 5 0
[Should be £312 13 8] Som Total is £313 18 8
CKS PRC28/10/292
THE INVENTORY OF BRENT DERING OF CHARING, KENT. 1645
15 4
4 0 0
2 10 0
7 10 0
12 0 0
18 0 0
20 0 0
3 0 0
16 0
5 0
10 0
10 0
5 0
15 0 0
30 0 0
9 0 0
2 5 0
An Inventory of the goodes and Chattells of Captayne Brent Dering deceased made the
26th of October, 1645, prized by us whose names are heare under written.
Imprimis his Purse with monys
his Wearing Aparell
In the Parlour:
one Press 6 Chayers one stoole
5 Joynd stooles one table
In the Kitchen:
Chayers one littell Table
Furniture for the Chimney
one Jack
In the Brewhouse:
one Fumes and the bruing vessells
one Meale sacke & meale Tubb one sive
In the Chamber over the Parlour:
one Bed & Furniture to it
one Table & 10 Joyned stooles
one Court Cubbard, one Table, one Box, one Truncke,
2 Boxes, 2 Trunckes
In the Chamber over the Kitchen:
2 Beds with ther furniture
189
£ s. d.
3 0 0
3 6 8
1 10 0
13 4
3 4
10 0
13 4
2 10 0
2 6
5 0 0
1 0 0
14 0
10 0
5 0 0
one littell Table
lorn Furniture for ye Chiminie
2 lorn Ketcles, 2 Iron Potts
P. WINZAR
one Brass pott, 3 Ketcles, 2 skillets, one Mortor & pessell, one warming
pann & other brass things
19 payer Sheets
8 payer Pillow coates
3 dozen of Napkins
8 Table Clothes
3 Ii. of Pewter
3 Carpits & Curtaynes for Bed & 4 Qushins
one flock Bed & the Furniture
one Trungle Bed & Furesht
2 Bedstedgles one press
2 keelers
Come and Haye
one Lease at Boughton Malherbe
in Lumber unprized & forgot
(Actual total £63 13 10)
John Hart
Robert Willard by his x marke
PRC27/12/12
3 0
3 0
12 0
1 0 0
8 13 4
12 0
18 0
12 0
5 0
15 0
0 0
0 0
10 0
4 0
JO 0 0
10 0 0
13 4
£60 13 10
Note: The Administration was granted to Ann Dering, his widow, 28 October, 1645.
PRC22 / l 9/80
APPENDIXC
THE INVENTORY OF GABRIEL PEIRCE THE ELDER OF CHARING, KENT. 1669.
A true and perfect Inventory of all and singular the goodes Chattells and Credits of
Gabriel Peirs the elder late of Charing in the County of Kent gent deed valued &
apprized the third day of January in the yeare of our Lord God one thousand sixe
hundred sixtie and nine by us whose names are hereunto subscribed as followeth (to
witt)
lmprimis his ready money & Apparrell
Item debts oweing to the dee' d at the tyme of his death
Item Ewes and Lambs
Item wood in the yard & Elsewhere
In the Parlor:
Item one long table, eight Joyned stooles, seaven Chaires, six Cushions, one
little Table, two Carpets, one Windowe Curtayne and rodd, two paire of
Andirons, one fire shovell & tonge
In the Hall:
Item one table, three Chaires, five Joyned stooles, two paire of Andirons &
other small things
In the Kitchin:
Item two tables, one Court Cupboard, sixe spitts, one Jacke, two Iron
dripping pans, foure tynne dripping pans, one Coope, three Chopping
190
£ s. d.
10 0 0
23 0 0
23 1 0
10 8 0
4 5 0
8 8
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
knives, three Gridirons, foure stooles, five Chaires, one fire shovell &
Andirons & other things there
Jn the brewe house:
Item five tubbs, five keelars, one Furnace, one small Querne & an old Kettle
In the Bake house:
Item three brasse kettles, three warmeing pans, two brasse potts, three
brasse Chaffing dishes, one morter & pestle, foure brasse skillettes & other
things there
In the milke buttery:
Item three brine tubbs, foure pailes, seaven boules, Eight Crockes & other
things
Item parcel! of Iron
In the other buttery:
Item one Safe, one old Chest, fower kellars, one Chaire, & other small things
In the meale house:
Item two knead tubbs, one Forme, two sieves & other small things
In the Cellar:
Item nine barrells, three Stalders, one salt-Stocke, one tuvell and old tubb & a
keelar
In the house in Ms Creswells occupacion:
Item one Furnace, one table, one forme, one Safe, one Court Cupboard, one
Jacke & a little Cupboard
In the outhouses where Ms Wolfe and Sarah Harte lives:
Item two old beddstead, one Forme, one table, one Chest, one trendle
bedstedd, one Cupboard, one little table, one Forme, one high bedstead
with Curtaine rodds
In the servants Chamber:
Item two old bedsteads, two Flockbedds, Foure Flocke boulsters, foure
blancketts, one little table, one old Chaire
In the buttery chamber:
Item one bedstead, one featherbeadd, one feather boulster, one flocke
boulster wth blancketts, Curtaines and rodds
In the Chamber over ye Cellar:
Item two high Bedsteds, two trundle bedsteds, one presse cupboard, two
Chests, one Court Cupboard, foure stooles, two feather bedds, three feather
boulsters, three feather pillowes, seaven blanckettes, foure Coverings, two
paire of Curtaines & vallance, one paire of Andirons, two Flockebedds,
two Flocke boulsters and other things there
In the Porch Chamber:
Item one bedstead, one feather bedd, two feather boulsters, one Coverlett,
Sixe feather pillowes, two Chests & blanckettes
In the Garrett:
Item three Chests, one table, one Cupboard, a parcell of blanckettes & old
Curtaines and other things
Item eight Dozen of Napkins, foureteene table clothes, seaven towells,
fifteene paire of pillowebeers, one Cupboard cloth, two walletts, eight
Course table clothes, eight Course Towels, five & twentie paire of fine
sheetes, twelve paire of Coarse sheetes
Item for hay
Item about one hundred weight of pewter
Item things unseene & forgotten
6 5 0
4 0 0
3 15 0
2 1 0
12 0 0
1 16 0
12 0
1 15 0
2 6 0
2 6 8
2 10 0
5 0 0
17 9 6
6 5 0
4 17 0
38 9 6
6 0 0
4 0 0
1 0 0
(Actual total is £194 10 4) Total is £196 10 4
191
P. WINZAR
valued & appraized the day & yeare aforesaid
by us
Anthony Nowers
George Deedes
Probate to Joseph Pearce
filius de Charing gent.
CKS PRC 27/21/78
SUMMARY OF THE WILL OF JOSEPH PEIRCE OF CHARING, KENT. Dated 1 November,
1680. Proved 27 Nov. 1680.
Will and Testament:
Styled Joseph Peirce of Charing, gentleman.
Burial: At Charing 10 November 1680 (Bishop's transcripts - CCA.DCb/BT l /58).
Bequests:
Lands and Tenements in Charing: To his wife Anne all such property not previously
settled on her for her life.
To his three daughters, Anne, Jane and Katherine and their heirs, all the above lands and
tenements to be divided equally between them after their mother's death. If any daughter
should die without heirs then her portion to be divided between any living sisters.
Lease of Orgarswicke Manor in Kent:
He holds the lease from the Dean and Chapter of Christ Church, Canterbury and it
has 'divers years' to run. T h e lease is bequeathed equally between his three
daughters. His wife has power to renew the lease at her discretion at the most
beneficial time.
His wife may deduct out of the profits of the Orgarswicke lease and his personal estate,
sixteen pounds a year for every daughter's education and maintenance until they are
21 years or until the day of their marriage. She is to be his executrix and on receiving
probate is ordered to give his friend, John Coppins of Canterbury, a Bond in the
penalty of one thousand pounds, that she administers the Manor of Orgarswicke on
behalf of his daughters in the way he has expressed.
His executrix is to sell his stock to pay his debts and expenses and all personal estate not
otherwise disposed of; any surplus to be divided between the three daughters.
If any of the three daughters are 'disobedient unto their mother' or marry before they
attain the age of twenty six years without the consent of their mother, then she may
dispose of their portion to the remaining daughters.
His wife to have six pounds annually until she can sell the wood from his Charing land
which is part of her Jointure. The six pounds may be taken from the profits of his
daughters' estate. She may also have all the linen she brought to her marriage and the
use of the household goods in his dwelling house for her life. After her death it is to be
equally divided between the daughters.
He forgives his wife's daughter, Elizabeth Williams, any money he had lent her, so it
seems she was a widow when she married Joseph Peirce.
To his sister, Mary Nowers, five pound annually to be paid quarterly, beginning after the
decease of her husband Mr Nowers. If any payment is more than ten days overdue,
Mary Nowers can distrain on the Manor of Orgarswicke.
If his wife dies before his three daughters are 21 years then his friend, John Coppins,
takes over the executorship and administration of the estate according to the
conditions previously stated. He is to have ten pounds a year out of the estate.
If his wife re-marries then she will forfeit all the lands in Charing and they will go to the
three daughters immediately. The daughters' estate will have to be surrendered to John
192
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Coppins and she will also lose the right to educate her daughters unless she accepts
ten pounds a year for each of them.
If all the daughters die before 21 years or their marriage then his cousin T homas Henman
receives the lease of the Manor of Orgarswicke out of which he must pay his cousin
Allen Henman ten pounds a year for life. His cousin, Sampson Peirce is to have all the
lands and tenements in Charing. If all the daughters die then their father's personal
estate is to go to his sister Mary Nower's children, equally.
Witnesses. William Jacob, Amos Jacob and Lydia Baldock.
CKS PRC 32/54/548
THE INVENTORY OF JOSEPH PEIRCE OF CHARING, KENT. 1680
An Inventory of the goods and Chatles of Joseph Peirce late of Chareinge in the County
of Kent gent. deceased which he had at the time of his death taken and apprized the
Tenth day of December Anno Dm. 1680 by George Withwick gent. and John Peirce gent.
as followith:
Imprimis is his weareing apparrell & ready money
In the parlor of his dwelling house:
Item twelve Turkey worke Chaires
Item one Table & Turkey worke Carpett
Item the Hangings in the same roome
Item one paire of Curtaines & rods
Item one paire of Andirons, one paire of iron dogs, fire slice, Tongs & bellows
Item glasses & earthen weare in the parlour Closset
In the Hall:
Item 6 leather Chaires
Item one greate !ether chaire
Item Table and Carpett
In the parlour Chamber:
Item one Camlett bed, bedsted, three blanketts, one fether bed, two pillowes,
one bolster, head peice, Counterpan, 6 Chaires, a table, lookeinge glasse,
windowe Curtaines, hangings & one paire of dogs
In the Hall Chamber:
Item one bedsted, three blanketts, one Counterpan, one bolster, two
pillowes, one fetherbed, Curtaines & vallance hangings, two window
Curtaines, Six Chaires, one Table Carpett & one lookeinge glasse
In the Kitchin Chamber:
Item one fetherbed, one bedstead, three blanketts, one rugg, one bolster,
£ s. d.
35 0 0
4 16 0
2 10 0
1 10 0
6 0
0 0
4 0
10 0
3 4
5 0
20 0 0
11 0 0
two pillowes, Curtaines & vallance, headpeice, teaster hanginge, 2 window
Curtaines, one Table, one Carpett Six Chaires, one paire of Andirons, fireslice
& Tongs 7
In the brew house Chamber:
Item one flockbed bedstead, Coveringe, Curtaines and vallance, two
blanketts, one Trundle bed and bedstead, one little fetherbed, window Curtaines
& other things 3
In the Garrett over the kitchin:
0 0
0 0
Item one feather bed, bedstead, Curtaines, vallance, Rugg, two blanketts, one
Chest, a Caser of Drawers, a Lookeinge glasse, one Couch chaire, & one
paire of Andirons 5 10 0
In the garrett over the Hall:
Item wheate and three Chests 4 0 0
193
P. WINZAR
In the garrett over the Brewhouse:
Item a Screene, Apples & other Lumber
In the Kitchin:
Item one Jack, one Clock, five Spitts, one pasty pan, two dripping pans,
two iron dripping pans, one toastinge iron, one Trivett, one paire of
bellowes
Item eight Chaires, fowre brasse Candlestickes, One Little table, fowre dozen
of pewter plates, 17 pewter dishes, two porringers & three plates
In the Bakehouse & Buttery:
Item two iron potts, one brasse ketle, one warmeinge pan, fowre brasse
Skilletts, one Chaffing dish & other goods
In the Brewhouse:
Item two old Coppers, Six Tubs, five keelers & other things
In the Seller:
Item six Kilderkins, fowre milke keelers & fowre dozen of bottles
Lynnen:
Item 23 paires of Streaken Sheetes
Item 8 paire of Tow sheetes
Item three longe streaken tablecloths
Item 6 short streaken tablecloths
Item 6 Tow table Cloathes
Item I 8 paire of pillow coates, 6 paire being old
Item 36 Tow towells & 12 of streake
Item 42 Streake napkins fine & 42 course
Item 36 dyaper napkins & 1 Tablecloth
Item 2 homemade sideboard Cloath
Item Six Silver Salts & nine Silver Spoones
Item three gold rings
Without doores:
Item in husbandry implyments
Item twenty Lambs
Item three Cowes
Item one horse
Item fowreteene weather Sheepe
Item one Mare
Item (. ..) hoggs
Item wool
Item in wood about his dwelling house
Item 6 cords of wood more
Item in hay Sanfoyne & Clover
Item 17 acres of wheate Sowen at Sindane
Item for one hundred & thirty ewes at I ls. a peece
Item fowre Rams
Item 98 Wether Sheepe at I ls. a peece
Item 67 Lambes at 7s. a peece
Item JO runtts at £3 JOs. Od. a peece
Item two Steer
Item two Cowes
Item two Colts
Item two Mares
Item ten runtts
Item 78 whether sheepe at I ls. a peece
Item 78 Lanbes at 6s. a peece
194
10 0
4 10 0
7 3 0
2 0 0
4 0 0
2 0
JO 0 0
I 15 0
1 JO 0
1 5 0
6 0
1 0
0 0
11 0
0 0
4 0
3 6 0
15 0
3 0 0
6 0 0
7 JO 0
3 0 0
6 0 0
4 0 0
2 0 0
70 0 0
2 JO 0
I 16 0
6 0 0
17 0 0
71 JO 0
3 0 0
53 18 0
23 9 0
35 0 0
4 JO 0
6 JO 0
5 0 0
11 0 0
17 3 0
42 18 0
23 8 0
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
Item 52 barron ewe sheepe at 7s. a peece
Item hay & some about it
Item Two Cowes
Item a lease of the Manor of Orgarswick from the Deane & Chapter of
Canterbury
Debts due to the deceased:
Item from Edward Carpenter
Item from John Latter
Item from Rich. Franke
Item from John (Dams) - desperate
Item from Thomas Godfry
Item from Mr Freind - desperate
Item from Mr Luxford
Item from James Curd
Item from John Tayler
Item from Mr Tho: Henman
Corn at Syndane:
Item thirty two seames of barley threshinge deducted
Item twenty Six Seames of oates threshinge deducted
Item for two Seames of pease & Seven bushells of tares, threshinge deducted
Corne at Charinge:
Item 14 Seames of white oates threshinge & Carriage deducted
Item things unseene & forgotten
George Wightwicke, John Peirs
18 4 0
10 0 0
5 0 0
600 0 0
42 0 0
21 10 0
8 14 0
1 10 0
7 0 0
19 0 0
1 0 0
5 0 0
6 10 0
20 0 0
22 11 0
13 0 0
2 7 0
7 6 0
1 0 0
Sum totall £1402 16 4
CKS PRC27/29/159
SUMMARY OF THE WILL OF SAMPSON PEIRCE OF CHARING, KENT. Dated 21 Jan., 1691.
Proved 25 October, 1692. Buried at Charing, 10 October, 1692.
Will and Testament:
Styled: Sampson Peirce of Charing, gentleman.
Burial: At Charing 10 October 1692.
Bequests:
To his two younger sons, George and Sampson £250 each to be paid out of the estate in
an Indenture dated 14 March 1687. T h e Indenture would seem to be a Marriage
Settlement the parties being Gabriel Peirce, Sampson's father and Sampson himself of
the first part and John Whitfield of the City of Canterbury, gentleman, and one of his
daughters, Roberta Whitfield of the second part.
George and Sampson are also to receive twenty pounds annually out of the same estate,
for their keep until they receive their legacies of £250 each.
His wife Roberta is to receive all the rest of his goods and chattels and is made the sole
executrix.
Witnesses. Elizabeth Poole, George Carter, George Poole.
CKS PRC 32/56/140.
THE INVENTORY OF SAMPSON PEIRCE OF CHARING, KENT. 1693
He was buried at Charing on 10 October, 1692, and his will was proved on the 25
October, 1692, but the date on the Inventory is quite clearly August 1693.
An Inventorie of the Goods Chattells and Debts of Sampson Peirce late of Charing in the
County of Kent Gentl. deceased taken and appraised the 17th day of August Anno. Dom.
195
P. WINZAR
1693 by us Richard Allen of the Citty of Canterbury Gent!. and Edward Fendall of the
same Citty - Carpenter as followeth (vizt)
Imprimis his Purse Girdle and wearing apparell
In the Hall:
Item 2 Spanish Tables with Carpetts
Item 6 old Leather Chaires
Item 2 Low Stooles
Item a paire of small Andirons, 6 fire pan Tongs & 6 hooks
Item 3 Linnen Curtaines & 2 Curtaine Rodds
Item 2 Small Mapps & 19 little printed pictures
Item 3 Flower potts
In the Parlor:
Item one Large Spanish Table 5s. ye Carpett 12s.
Item one small Table & Carpett
Item 12 Turkiworke Chaires
Item a paire of Tongs, fire pan, bellowes and two paire of Creepers
Item 3 window Curtaines & 2 Curtaine Rodds
Item 12 Ceasars Heads printed In Frames
In the Kitchen:
Item one Jack & Lynes, Spitt Chaine and Iron fender
Item one Spitt more, 2 Iron Dripping panns, one Iron plate to stand behind the
meate
Item one fire pan & tongs, one Iron Ovenlid & one Iron peele
Item one paire of Cobirns, 1 paire of Creepers, 1 Gridiron, 1 Tosting Iron,
one paire of Bellows & 1 paire of Snuffers
Item one Case Iron & 2 Heaters, one paire of pott hangers & one Iron plate
frame
Item on Clock with Lyne & weights
Item 2 Fowling peeces & an Iron Sworde
Item 162 pound of pewter at 6d ye pound
Item one Brasse Mortor & pestle & 5 tinn plates
Item one Table & 3 joyned Stooles
Item 3 old Chaires
In the Brewhouse:
Item one Copper
Item one Small Copper
Item 2 Brewing Tunns, 6 Keelers, one hand jett & a Tap hose
Item one paire of potthangers, one Iron Forke, one washing block one Seive &
one Sauce pann
In the Malthouse:
Item one Malt Querne, one Cheese presse
Item one Bucking Tubb, one Rencing Tubb & one brewing Tubb, 2 bucking
keelers
Item one Sider presse & one Syder Trough
Item one old Chest & one Deale board & two hand Saws & two old Chaires
Item one Garden Rake, one hay Rake & 3 wedges
Item one Bridle & Saddle
Item 2 Spades & a Small Rake
Item one old Still & a watering pott
Item one old horse harness & 3 pitch forkes
Item 2 halters & 2 old keelers
Item in ye Grainery 12 sacks, a parcell of hoops & an old side bedd
196
£ s. d.
10 0 0
11 0
5 0
I 6
3 0
4 0
2 6
1 0
17 0
4 0
3 1 0
8 0
6 0
6 0
14 0
6 0
6 0
5 6
6 0
10 0
1 10 0
4 1 0
3 4
5 0
1 0
2 15 0
1 1 0
I 4 6
3 6
2 15 0
10 6
10 0
4 6
3 0
6 6
I 3
3 0
5 0
I 6
12 0
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS OWNERS
In the Wash house:
Item 2 Brasse Kettles
Item one Brasse skillett, one brasse pot lid, one brasse Candlesticke
Item one Bed Mettle Skillett
Item one Brasse Warming pann & one pair of Brasse Scales & Beame
Item one greate Iron pott & pott Lids
Item 2 Iron potts & an Iron kettle
Item 3 Iron Candlestickes, one bread Grater & a Candlebox
Item one Trough, one forme, one hogwash tubb, one hogwash paile & one
water paile
In ye Milk house:
Item 2 leaden Milke panns
Item 7 Milke Bowles
Item one Charne & Staffe
Item one Butter platter & Creame Crock
Item 2 Milking pailes
Item one Brine Tubb, one little Stalder & one forme
In ye Larder:
Item one Table, 2 chaires and one brine Tubb
In the Celler:
Item 7 Beere Vessells, 2 Stalders, 2 tilters
Item 14 dozen of Glasse bottles
Item for all ye Earthen ware
Item for a pair of Scales & Beames, & 144 pound in Leaden Weights
Without Doors:
Item one Waggon with ye Wimbrosses
Item one Court & 2 Iron harrows
Item 4 Ladders & 2 Deale Boards
Item one Barly Roll & 3 Troughs
Item 2 Cowes
Item one open Sow & one Barron hog, 3 piggs
The Linnen:
Item 19 paire & an odd Sheete
Item 19 pillow Beares
Item 4 Sideboard Cloathes
Item 6 Fine Towells & 13 old ones
Item one Damask Table Cloath
Item one Diaper Table Cloth good
Item 3 diaper Table Cloths more
Item 3 doz. of Diaper Napkins
Item one homemade Table Cloth and Tenne Napkins more
Item 3 dozen & ii Course homemade Napkins
Item one homemade Table Cloth & 2 dozen of Napkins more
Item 11 Course Table Cloths
Item 4 Linnen Walletts
In ye Study:
Item for all ye Bookes
Corne:
Item 7 quarters & halfe of Yeallow pease
Item one Quarter of Gray peas
Item 10 quarters of white Oates
Item 14 quarters of Barley
Item for Chaffe & Straw
197
0 0
5 6
2 6
4 6
10 0
11 0
I 6
3 6
8 0
6 0
4 0
I 0
3 0
6 0
11 0
I 12 0
2 2 0
5 0
16 0
10 0
0 0
8 0
5 6
9 0 0
2 10 0
8 15 0
I 10 0
5 0
0 0
0 0
15 0
10 0
18 0
0 0
4 0
14 0
18 6
4 0
2 14 0
II 5 0
I 12 0
6 0 0
15 0 0
10 0
Item 3 fat hoggs
Item one Rideing horse
Item one Rideing Mare
Item for hempseed in all
P. WINZAR
Item 2 Loads & an halfe of hay in ye Barne
Item 2 old Cowes
Item Sold 2 young Budds
Item Seaven Quarters of hempe and a Beddford
Item seed hempe which come to
Item for ye wood about ye house
Item wood laid in at Canterbury by Mr Peirce & intended for his own use
Item peares & pies walnutts & Quinces
Item four Bushells of Saintfoyn seeds
Item rec' d halfe a yeares Rent of Mr Bachellor due at Michaelmas 1692
Item rec' d by hay from the Ground & for Rowine
Item rec' d for ye (lime) of the Stable
Item due from Mr Henman for parte of a horse in ye Trap
Item rec' d of Mr Hornsby
Item in ready money
Item in Rings & Jewells
Item one Silver Watch & Four paire of Silver buttons
Item in Silver plate - Eighty & Eight ounces at five shillings the ounce
In the Best Chamber:
Item one feather Bedd & Bolster weighing Eighty & Four pounds weight
Item the Beddstead Curtaines Vallence Counterpanes & Two Blanketts
Item Tenne yards of Sarcenett Intended for a Quilt
Item one Armid Caine Chair & six other Caine Chaires with padds
Item a Walnutt Tree Case of Drawers & a Looking Glasse
Item one Clout Box
Item on paire of Brasse Tongs & Fire pann & hooks one paire of Brasse
Andirons & Creepers
Item Two Window Curtaines & a Curtain Rodd
Item the hangings about the Chamber
In the Sad Coulored Chamber:
Item one Feather bedd & holster weighing Fifty four pounds weight
Item one Bedstedd Curtaines & Vallence with Two Blanketts & Quilt
Item Six Cushion Chaires Two Window Curtaines & Rodds
Item one paire of Andirons
Item the hanging about ye said Sad Coloured Chamber
Item in ye Closett in ye Sadd coloured Chamber one Chest & one Trundle
In ye porch Chamber:
Item one Featherbedd & Bolster weighing Forty Eight pounds weight
Item one Beddstedd with Curtaines & Two Blanketts
Item Two old red Chaires & one Stand
Item in ye Garrett Forty Four Quarters of Thistle hempe
In the Chamber over ye Kitchin:
Item one Feather Bedd & Bolster weighing Eighty & Five pounds weight
Item one Bedstedd Curtaine & Vallence Two Blanketts & a Coverlet!
Item one other Feather Bedd & Bolster weighing Ninety & six pounds weight
Item one Bedstedd Curtaine & vallence Two Blanketts & a Coverlett
Item one old Chest & one old Case of Drawers
Item one folding Table, one Trunke & Two leather Chaires, one old Stoole, a
small Box, a paire of Tongs & a paire of Creepers
198
6 1 0
3 0 0
9 5 0
3 11 7
2 JO 0
4 5 0
2 JO 0
11 JO
2 5 JO
5 0 0
I 12 6
2 3 6
15 0
41 16 0
11 6 0
17 0
16 9
JO 6
16 17 0
13 JO 0
1 JO 0
22 0 0
3 3 0
15 0 0
1 0 0
1 14 0
3 5 0
15 0
10 0
4 0
6 8
1 11 6
4 JO 0
15 0
2 6
1 5 0
4 0
4 0
0 0
1 6
2 4 0
2 2 6
2 0 0
3 12 0
2 10 0
9 0
7 6
The Family of SAYER of Charing, Kent.
George Sayer Esq. of Bouchiers Hall in Essex
Vice-Chamberlain to Queen Catherine, Consort
to Charles II and also to Queen Mary I! who
made him Sub-Gov. and Gentleman of the
Bedchamber to William Duke of Gloucester,
Freeman of Canterbury and M.P. 1695 & 1702.
d. 21 May 1718 aged 63, bur. at Charing Ml.
Frances dau. and heir of Sir Philip Honywood of Pett.
m. I 685, d. 2 August 1731 aged 63 yrs.
George Sayer of Pett Place
only son b. 1691.
d. 1733 aged 42, bur. 8 June
north transept. Ml.
George Sayer of Pett Place
Westminster School at 9 yrs.
Admitted Middle Temple 1739,
entered Oriel College 1740,
High Sheriff of Kent 1755,
d. 1778.
George Sayer of Pett Place
bur. north transept Charing Church,
Ml.
Mary, sister of Daniel Godfrey
of Faversham, bur. at Charing
17 August 1757.
Mary, dau. of John Greenhill
of Maidstone by his wife, Mary
sister of Matthew Chandler of
St Radigunds's in Polton, Kent
Mary
d. unm.
= Catherine only dau. of James Wakely
· ( or Wakeley) ofCharing, m. 1786;
Catherine
d. unm.
b. 1751. Matriculated Oriel College 1768.
Admitted Lincoln's Inn J 772 - Bachelor
Civil Law, 1782 Rector of Egglescliffe,
Durham until his death in May 1814.
Resided only occasionally at Pett Place.
Had issue that died young, a son and
m. lie. of 1781 for Wm. Allen b. of Little Chart
five daughters surviving.
George Edward Sayer
1795. Educated Westminster School
& Oxford. Admitted Lincoln's Inn 1815.
After father's death he settled at Pett
Place & ecame a JP, & DL, d. unm. May
1871. On death of his last surviving
sister, Charlotte, he was succeeded by
his cousin's son, John Sayer.
& Catherine Wakely of Charing s. 22 to be married
at Charing 6 Dec. but there is no record in Charing
Registers. She d. 14 Jan. I 836. MI, near north
transept.
George & John
b. 11 Jan. 1787
bur. 31 Jan. 1787
I. Mary
b. 3 Feb. l 788
m. Henry Egerton Esq.
2. Jane
b. 18 June 1787
3. Catherine
date of birth
unknown
4. Frances
b. 16 March 1791
d. 27 Dec. J 794
5. Charlotte twin of
Selina.
b. 20 Apl. 1792;
d. unm. 1874
6. Selina twin of
Charlotte.
b. 20 Apl. 1792;
d. unm. 1861; bur.
vault in north
transept, Charing.
7. Frances Elizabeth
b. 1798 d. 1816
aged J 8 years MI.
Major John Sayer, of Doddington
Educated Westminster School
Charlotte dau.
Charles Van of
Llanwem co.
Mon.
Mary
d. unm.
April
1829
& Oriel, 18th Reg. of Foot,
the 89th & the 25th. Finally
the 1st Foot in 1793, d. I Feb.
1799, Ml, north transept.
Rev. John Sayer, b. 1787
Vicar of Arlingham, Glos.
in 1814 and later Rural Dean
of Gloucester. m. 1815
d. 1836.
John Sayer of Pett Place and
Arlingham, Barrister-at-Law
(Lincoln's Inn 1850) JP. Kent;
Elizabeth only dau. & heir of
Rev. Thomas Hodges of Slowwe
in Arlingham, also Vicar of
Arlingham. She d. I 784
Charlotte Sibella eld. dau. of
Rev. William Crawley, Incumbent of
Flaxley, Gloucs. 5th s. of Sir
b. 21 Jan. 1823 at Slowwe in
Arlingham where he is buried,
edc. Rugby & Trin. Coll. Oxford
MA. 1849. m. 13 Sept 1849.
Thomas Crawley-Boevey, 2nd, Bt. of
Flaxley Abbey. She d. 20 Jan. 1900
aged 74. Ml.
d. I July 1886. Ml.
John of Pett Place
JP, & DL. Barrister
Lincoln's Inn 1875
b. 3 July I 850. educ.
Rugby & Christ Church
Oxford, MA. 1876
m. 30 April 1889
d. 19 Jan. 1917 MI.
Dorothea Hugoline
(Clearmount. Charing
eld. dau. of the Rev.
Hugh Pigot, Rector of
Stretham, Cams.
b. 31 May 1865
d. 18 August 1949 Ml.
George, MA.
JP. b. 1853.
d. 1920
MA. d. 1920
Catherine
m. Rev. Wm
Gregory, 2nd
s. of Dr John
Gregory of
Edinburgh.
Mary Elizabeth
m. Rev. John
Lloyd Crawley
MA, Vicar of
Arlingham. She
d. 1848
William Arthur
b. 1854 b. 1888
Frances
d. unm.
3 March
1829
m. 1888 m. 1922
d. 1912 d. 1952
inherited
& sold Pett
Place
Gladys Hugoline Major Philip Sibella Katherine Dorothea Joseph Lawrence
m. 17 Aug 1922 Ormiston Nutley Margaret m. 22 Oct. 1930 Heathcote Stisted
and has issue. Jordan R.E. of d. 1927. and has issue. s. of Major C.H.
Stubble Hill Stisted of Egerton
Harriet.sham, Kent. House, Egerton,
Kent.
I. Mary
m. 1882
d. 1908
2. Sibella
Fanny
m. 1899
Frances
Joan
b. 31 Jan.
1899
d. 2 Apl.
1993.
Eleanor
Gabriel Peirce Katherine
bur. Charing
18 Aug. 1666
The Family of PEIRCE of Charing, Kent.
bur. Charing 7 Dec. 1669.
2nd son of Sampson Peirce
yeoman of Stalisfield who
d. about I 6 I 5 and Ann, dau.
(-) Craft. m. 21 Sept. 1579.
She alive in 1629.
Joseph Peirce gent.
m. aged 30. lie.
Anne Williams
of St Margaret's
Canterbury.
Gabriel Peirce gent
bur. Charing 6 Sept.
!71l9. Will dat.
Anne
bur. at Charing
21 Sept 1659
John of Pluckley gent. aged
32 lic. 31 May 1679 m. at
Kingsnorth or Little
= Sarah Hart of Pluckley
v. aged 35. She survived
30 Dec. 1670
bondsm. Nich. Burges
Ald. of Canterbury.
bur. Charing 7 March 1706. pr.
17 Sept. 1709
Chart. Geo. Silles
cordwainer swore consent.
He d. before 1706
her husband, see bro.-in-law's
will [CKS PRC32/58/237.J
3 Feb. 1706.
m. at Boughton Aluph.
bur. Charing see brother's will
10 Nov. 1680. [CKS PRC32/58/237.J
Will dat. I Nov. 1680.
pr. 27 Nov. I 680.
Anne Jane & Catherine Sampson Peirce Roberta dau. of
bapt. 8 Mar.
1671
twins born 28 Oct. 1677
Jane bapt. 2 Nov. I 677
Cath. bapt 9 Nov. I 677
born 28 March 1656
bapt. Charing; d.
there aged 37
John Whitfield of Canterbury.
Marriage Settlement
dat. 14 March I 687
John of Charing gent.
bapt. 24 Jan. l 688
bur. 6 March J 726;
Lincoln College Oxford
4 May 1709. BA 18 March
1712/13. Named in
grandfather's will
Sampson
of Doddington
bur. there
9 Sept. 1759
10 Oct. 1692
d.v.p. Ml, Charing
Church on nave floor
near chancel.
lie. m. 5 April 1688 at Molash.
Apparently re-married after
l 692 as will of father-in-law
says 'my daughter-in-law
Will dat. 21 Jan. Roberta Jones'
1691 pr. 25 Oct. I 692 [CKS PRC32/58/237.]
Elizabeth bur. George Sampson
at Doddington bapt. 4 March I 689 bapr. 2 Oct. 1691
20 June 1746. bur. at Charing bur. at Charing
II Sept. l 694. 30 July 1693.
M.I. with father M.1. with father
Charing Church. Charing Church.
Sarah dau. of Roberta Catherine
(-) Halbett bapt. at Doddington
d. 26 Dec. I 808 28 Dec. 1726, bur.
bur. at Doddington there 30 March I 727
John of Mary Halford dau. Sampson of James of Rebecca
Canterbury gent. of Rich. Halford London gent. London gent. b. Newnham
b. at Linsted of Cant. gent. b. 22 July 1753 b. 2 Jan. l 755 2 Oct. 1757, d.
Richard
born 25 April 1659
at Charing. bur.
26 March I 660.
William Hemming Esq.
He living J 828.
Roberta Catherine
b. Doddington
4 April 1752
Mary = Edw. Nowers
bapt. Charing l 29 April 1644
See brother
Gabriel 's will
[CKS PRC32/58/237.J
Elizabeth Ann
See uncle Gabriel's will
[CKS PRC32/58/237.]
Terry Marsh of
Boughton. He died
before his wife &
4 July 1746 m. 13 Oct. 1774 bapt. Doddington bapt. Doddington 24 April 1814 s.p. bapt. I 5 April 1752 was bur. at
eldest son living
1828. lie. 12 Oct
1774 to be married
at St Andrew's, Cant.
J. Wm. Henry
2. George Gab.
3. John
all d. young.
John Sampson
b. 13 Oct. 1821
bapt. St Alphege
Canterbury.
d. 1789, bur. in J 6 Aug. following: 27 Jan. 1755, d. 9 July 1821 Staplehurst.
St Margaret's Church living in Guernsey living in 1828. bur. Staplehurst.
Canterbury.
Sampson Creed
eldest son
b. 5 Nov. 1777
bapt. at St Alphege
Cant. 26 Nov. l 777.
unm. in J 828.
John James of Cant.
gent. b. 9 July 1781
bapt. St Margaret's Cant.
20 Aug. foll'g.
d. at Tarragon• in Spain 31
Dec. I 8 l 3 & bur. there.
m. at St John's Church, Margate
20 May 1817,
Mayor of Canterbury 1813 & 1825
Richard King
b. 2 Feb. I 823
bapt. St Alphege
Canterbury.
Robert Hodges
b. 28 May 1827
bapt. St Margaret's I
Canterbury.
Caroline Sare
Augusta Elizabeth
dau. of(-) King of
Margate 20 May 1817.
Mary Marsh
b. 31 July 1775
bapt. St Alphege
Cant. m. St James
Church, London
Rich. Buckner Esq.
Capt. in the Royal
Artillery, Only s.
& h. of Adm. Charles
Buckner, living 1828
Eliz. Roberta
b. I 5 Dec. 1778,
bapt. St Alphege
Cant. 20 Jan 1779
living unm. I 828.
4 children
living 1828
Augusta Mary
b. 3 April 1818
bapt. St Alphege
Canterbury.
Emma Roberta
b. 13 Dec, 1819
bapt. at St Alphege, Cant.
Catherine Stisted Halford=(-)
b. 29 Nov. 1824
I
bapt. at St Margaret's
3 children d. young: 3 sons & 6 daus.
Canterbury.
l son: 2 daus.
Cath. Sarah
b. 4 Mar. l 785
bapt. St Marg'ts
Cant. 6 April 1785
living unm. 1828.
Charlotte
b. 20 Aug. 1788
bapt. St Marg'ts
Cant. 2 Oct. 1788
Jiving unm. 1828
Sarah Halford &
Caroline both died young
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND IT S OWNERS
Item in the Closett to that Chamber, one Broad Box, Two old Trunks
Item Thirty yards of new Cloth & Forty pounds weight of Spun yarne
In the Maides Chamber:
Item one Small Flock bedd & Bedstedd & one Blankett & a new Bedd Cord
Item one old Chest one Bedstedd & ajoyned stoole
Item Two small Tables
Item one Flock bedd & bolster very old with a joyned Beddstedd & two old
Chaires
Item six pillows weighing Twenty Six pounds weight
Item six Knives Six Forks & a Case
Item personal Bond due from Mr Curteise
Item for old Lumber & things forgotten
4 6
4 0 0
7 0
5 0
4 6
5 6
6 0
5 0
10 0 0
2 0 0
Sum Total of this Inventory is Three Hundred Forty Two pounds Nyne Shillings & Three
pence
CKS PRC27/33/167
SUMMARY OF THE WILL OF GABRIEL PEIRCE OF CHARING, KENT, 1706. Made 7 March,
1706. Proved 17 September, 1709.
Will and Testament:
Styled Gabriel Peirce of Charing, gentleman.
Burial: In Charing Church 6 September 1709 - M.I. in floor in front of chancel.
Bequests:
To his grandson, John Peirce, his silver tankard with the silver plate belonging and two
silver salts.
To his daughter-in-law Mrs Roberta Jones, one guinea.
To his sister, Mary Nowers, five pounds and six silver spoons.
To Elizabeth and Anne, daughters of Mary Nowers ten pounds each.
To his sister-in-law, the widow of his brother John Peirce, ten shillings to buy a ring.
To the poor of Charing forty shillings.
To his old servant, John Knock, and his wife two shillings each.
To Elizabeth and Anne Nowers and his servant Elizabeth Speed, all the household goods
to be equally divided.
Messuage or Tenement and lands called Harts in Stalisfield; The Annuity or Rent Charge
of five pounds a year from this holding to his grandson, John Peirce and his heirs. For
want of such heirs it is to go to his sister Mary Nowers and after her death to her
daughters, Elizabeth and Anne, equally divided between them and their heirs.
A small Tenement and about three acres of land in Stalisfield. T his property had
belonged to his brother Joseph Peirce and was the holding of his widow, Sarah, for her
life. After her death the deed. would have an interest in the property which he
bequeathed to his sister Mary Nowers for her life and after her death to her two daughters
and their heirs.
Land called Westbrooke in Charing. The increase in the yearly rent on the lease of this
land the deed. had made to Francis Munn, over and above the yearly rent payable to Sir
George Wheler for the same land, is to be used by his executrix towards the payment of
his debts.
One messuage, shop, barn, stable, garden, orchard and eight pieces of land, of about 16
acres in Stalisfield. The moiety or half of this property which he purchased from John
and Elizabeth Somers to go to Mary Nowers, as executrix, to be sold.
The wood growing on Westbrooke, Charing. His executrix to sell the wood growing in
Westbrooke and all his goods and chattels not already given. With all the money raised
199
P. WINZAR
from the sales above she is to pay all the debts and expenses. The surplus, if any, to be
equally divided between his grandson, John Peirce and his sister and executrix, Mary
Nowers.
Witnesses. Joseph Smith, John Huckstep and George Poole.
CKS PRC32/58/237 Act Book 22/22/172
THE INVENTORY OF GABRIEL PEIRCE, 1709
A true and perfect Inventory of all and singuler the Goods Chattells and Creditts of
Gabriel Peirce late of Charing in the County of Kent gent. deceased valued and apprised
the foure and twentieth day of September in the yeare of our Lord Christ One thousand
Seven hundred and nine as followeth (That is to say)
Imprimis his ready money, wearing Apparrell both lynnen and woollen
and two gold rings
Item oweing to the deceased at the time of his death
Item in the Closett severall leaden Waights
Item in the Corne Loft five bushells of Wheate
Item one Strey, two Stuppetts, one old Fan, one bushell, one Tovett, one
gallon, one Seed codd, two basketts and three drye Casks
Item seven old Sacks, and one sacke of Charcoales
Item in the Malthouse foure Cord of Wood
£
12
8
2
s. d.
0 0
0 0
7 6
0 0
18 0
6 0
8 0
Item eight ladders, foure Sawes, two bills, one Iron Crow, one Mattock and two
howes
Item in the Yard eight loades of Faggotts
Item one Cart, one Dung Court and one paire of Chow le Wheeles
Item in the Well close one hundred of pales
Item a parcell of plaine Tiles
Item some peices of timber and poles
Item in the Barne twenty loades of hay
Item two Cowes, two Sheates and one old Mare
Item the Alders in the West brooke
Item for things unseen and forgott
Valued and apprized the day
and yeare abovesaid by us
John Smart
15 0
2 0 0
2 10 0
7 0
8 0
11 0
20 0 0
10 5 0
8 0 0
6 8
Sum totall £70 2 2
James Browne agreed 7 October 1709
CKS PRC27/38/41
200