( 187 )
HERALDIC LEDGER STONES.
BY N. E. TOKE.
GEEAT attention has been paid in years past to the study of
Monumental Brasses, and rubbings have been taken of the
majority of those now extant in the British Isles, even when
the brass consists merely of a shield of arms or of a plain
inscription. This is particularly the case in Kent, whose
numerous brasses have been illustrated by Mr. W. D.
Belcher and others, and carefully catalogued and described
by Messrs. Ralph Griffin and Mill Stephenson.
It seems strange, therefore, that little or no interest
has been taken in the heraldic ledger-stones, of which the
county possesses many examples. These consist, as a rule,
of slabs of bluish-grey marble, 6 to 7 feet in length and
about 3 | feet in width, on which is cut an achievement of
arms with an inscription below. The achievement is either
incised in the manner of an engraved brass, or, far more
frequently, cut in relief within a roundel, or medallion, about
22 inches in diameter.
Out of 160 heraldic ledger-stones noted in some fifty
churches in East Kent only fourteen are incised ; seven
others being partly incised and partly in relief. AU the
incised and semi-incised stones belong to the last half of the
seventeenth century, and may be regarded as transitional
between the preceding period of brasses and the medallions
in relief which are characteristic of the eighteenth century.
With the exception of the two extremely poor specimens
to Benjamin and Philadelphia Greenwood (1773) at St. Mary
Gray, there are only two brasses in Kent with figures or
shields of arms subsequent to 1650—stone having now
replaced brass for heraldic memorials. The reason for this
change was possibly the great havoc wrought by the
Cromwellian soldiery in the Civil War. The brasses could
be easily wrenched off and cast into cannon, or melted down
for the sake of the metal; in 1644 Lincoln Cathedral lost
188 HERALDIC LEDGER STONES.
207 of its brasses in this way, and other cathedrals and
churches suffered in proportion. But a heavy ledger-stone
was not easily removable, and was of little use for other
purposes. It is therefore probable that armigerous families
wishing to commemorate their dead preferred to employ
stone for this purpose, because it offered no temptation to
marauding soldiers. Be this as it may, it is certain that
stone replaced brass throughout the country for monumental
memorials from 1650 onwards.
The seven semi-incised stones—four of which occur in
New Romney Church—are peculiar in that the shield of arms
is cut in relief on a slab of white marble inserted in a blue
ledger stone on which is incised the mantling or other design
round the shield. It is probable that this form was suggested '
by brasses in their setting of stone, and it may be noted in
this connection that the latest figure brass in Kent—that at
Great Chart (1680)—is surrounded by six coats of arms cut
in the stone background.
The medallions in relief were produced, for the most
part, between 1700 and 1750. Out of over 140 of which I
have made rubbings, thirty-four belong to the seventeenth
century, twenty-seven to the second half and the remainder
to the first half of the eighteenth century. The earliest
medallion of this kind which I have come across is dated
1634, but this is exceptional inasmuch as it is not cut on a
ledger stone but on a tomb with sloping sides. The most
recent one is dated 1794.
It seems curious that the fashion in heraldic monumental
memorials should have changed thus abruptly at
the close of the eighteenth century. In the next century
heraldic ledger stones are replaced by mural tablets on
which the coats of arms are painted in colours. The
bluish-grey ledger stones continued to be used far into the
nineteenth century, but only for the purpose of inscriptions—
heraldry being relegated to the walls. With the prohibition
of burials within churches, the use of ledger stones has
almost ceased, although in a few eases they are being
employed again as a setting for modern brasses.
HERALDIC LEDGER STONES. 189
The engraving of the incised stones calls for little
comment ; it is obviously a continuation of that of the later
brasses, and was very probably executed by the engravers
in brass who found that with the disuse of the harder
material their occupation was in danger of extinction.
The medallions, on the contrary, are worth special study,
not only by genealogists to whom the armorial bearings and
full inscriptions should prove of considerable value, but
also by heraldic artists, to whom the varied forms of the
shields and the often beautiful carving of the arms, mantling
and scroll-work should be of assistance.
In spite of many enquhies I have not yet succeeded in
discovering whether these medallions were executed by
guilds of engravers or by local artists. In several cases the
inscriptions have evidently been cut by a more or less
illiterate workman—capitals and small letters being used
indiscriminately in the same word—but even then the coat
of arms is often well designed and the mantling artistically
rendered. This would lead one to suppose that the
achievement was the work of a professional craftsman, while
the lettering was executed by the local stone mason. But
Mr. Martin Hardie, Keeper of the Department of Engraving,
Illustration and Design at the Victoria and Albert Museum,
South Kensington, whom I consulted on this point, is of
opinion that both arms and inscription were done locally,
illiteracy not necessarily entaiUng the lack of artistic talent.
This opinion seemed corroborated by the fact that no two
medallions are exactly aUke in the arrangement of the
mantling or other design round the shield. Had the work
been executed by guilds of engravers, one might suppose
that stereotyped designs would have been employed to save
trouble. On the other hand, an ex-worker in stone told
me that it was easier for a craftsman to engrave freehand
than to use a stock pattern. The point, therefore; needs
further elucidation. If the stones were engraved by guilds,
records should exist somewhere of the cost of production,
selUng prices, and the purchasers' names.
The provenance of the bluish-grey ledger-stones is also
190 HERALDIC LEDGER STONES.
an interesting subject for inquiry, yet one difficult to
determine. In colour and appearance they resemble slate,
but are much harder and more durable than that material.
I made numerous inquiries both in this country and in
Belgium, where precisely the same ledger-stones with
achievements of arms and inscriptions are found in the
churches, but no one could give me any certain information
until I found a broken fragment of one of these stones and sent
it to the Geological Survey and Museum in Jermyn Street,
S.W. On analysis, Dr. H. Thomas reported the stone to be
a black limestone of carboniferous age which has been found
in various places in England and Wales, but which comes
principally from Belgium, where the material, for all practical
purposes, is identical in character and composition with the
English stone. It is probable that these monumental slabs
were imported from Belgium in the same way as plates of
" latten " (laiton) had been in the era of brasses. This would
account for their prevalence in Kent and East Anglia, for the
transport of these heavy stones would be easier and cheaper
by sea than by road.
Although the stone is hard, it is, of course, far more
easily destroyed than brass, and these heraldic memorials
are rapidly becoming indecipherable in churches where they
are not covered by matting, or otherwise protected. This is
especially the case in the N.W. and S.W. transepts of
Canterbury Cathedral, whose pavements of ledger-stones
are fast being worn away by the feet of the thousands of
visitors who flock to the building.
It was with a view to preserving records of these
valuable memorials that I first started making rubbings, and
I hope that others will be induced to continue the task. It is
possible, of course, to make a photograph directly from the
stone, although an exposure of an hour or two is necessary
even in a weU-Ughted church, and the result is usually very
flat and disappointing. A rubbing with heelball, on the other
hand, shows up boldly the main features of the achievement,
though it cannot represent the under-cut portions of work in
relief. Attempts to reproduce anything but the upper
>&G&ffi -5
M « «j
HERALDIC LEDGER STONES. 191
surface of the carving result in failure, owing to the tearing
of the paper.
The accompanying illustrations show the effect of this
method of reproducing the medallions. Two of them,
Nos. 1 and 3, are taken from the churches of New R.omney
and Lydd ; No. 2 is given to show a variation in the form
of the shield and mantling.
They may be blazoned as follows :
(1) Ar., a chevron between three moor-cocks gu., for Cobb,
impaling a cross within a bordure engrailed, for
Grebell. Crest. Out of a ducal coronet, or, a demileopard
rampant, ppr.
These are the arms of Benjamin Cobb of New Romney,
obt. 1756, and his wife Catherine, daughter of Allan Grebell
of Rye.
(2) Ou., a lion rampant erm., oppressed by a chevron or,
bearing the hand of Ulster, for Hardres, impaling
Ar., on a chevron engr. between three rooks sa. as many
chess-rooks of the first, for Rooke. Crest. A stag's
head, attired.
These are the arms of Sir Thomas Hardres of Upper
Hardres, Bt., obt. 1688, and his wife Ursula, daughter of
Sir Wm. Rooke, Kt.
(3) Ar. a chevron, gu. ; on a chief of the last, three mullets
of the first. Crest. A griffin's head erased, ar.,
pierced through the neck by an arrow, gu., barbed, ar.,
vulned of the second.
These are the arms of John Fowle of Lydd, obt. 1727,
Previous
Previous
Bourne Park, near Canterbury
Next
Next