PLANS OF, AND BRIEF ARCHITECTURAL NOTES ON, KENT
CHURCHES
PART HI. DARENTH, STAPLEHURST, BEARSTED, AND HORTON
KJRBY
By F. C. ELLISTON-ERWOOD, F.S.A.
THE CHURCH OF ST. MARGARET, DARENTH (Plan 11)
DARENTH church consists of a pre-conquest nave, a large and unusual
early Norman chancel, traces of a transitional addition to this chancel
and a thirteenth century aisle and tower, but the nave arcade has been
several times modified.
Pre-Conquest work
The nave of the church, originaUy 36 feet 9 inches by 19 feet is
undoubtedly of this period and though only two of its waUs and part
of a third remain (and one of these, the west, unpardonably mutilated
by the building of a modern vestry that could easily have been placed
elsewhere) it possesses some definite pre-conquest features. The
three existing coins, the NE, NW, and SW, this last visible in the
corner of the afore-mentioned vestry, display the tile technique in
re-used Roman material1 which, while in itself is no criterion of preconquest
construction (similar work exists at St. Pauhnus' Cray, which
is certainly post-conquest) can certainly be regarded as indicative of
early bmlding. This dating is confirmed by the existence of a double
splayed window, open inside the church, but partly concealed by the
roof of the wooden porch. The head of this window is turned in
tile, and the opening preserves the remains of the original
perforated oak plank that served as the framework for a closing
shutter. This window may be compared with those at Swanscombe2
and West Peckham (to be described later in this series). About
sixteen feet east of this window and on the same level, are the
unmistakable traces of a second window, now completely blocked.
In the centre of the west waU was originaUy an opening of semicircular
headed form, but it was blocked tiU 1922, when it was opened
out to form an entry to the new vestry. I was able to be
1 This material is almost certainly derived from the Darenth " Villa " or
" Dye Works " which was uncovered by the late George Payne, P.S.A., in 1894.
The overgrown and indistinguishable ruins are in a field some half-a-mile south of
the Church. See Arch. Cant., XXII (1897), p. 49.
2 Arch. Cant., XLIII (1931), p. 242.
46
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
present when this was done and to photograph the detaUs as revealed.
This was fortunate as nearly everything was destroyed in the process.
The doorway, for such it proved to be, had been cut straight through
the waU without any provision for a rebate for a door. This had
undoubtedly been supplied in wood, and I thought I could detect the
marks of it on the plaster that remained, but the evidence was slight
and since then, all of this plastering, which was very thick and uneven,
has gone, except a smaU almost invisible fragment incorporated in the
modern rendering on the soffit of the arch.
As to the nature and plan of the eastern arm of the church at this
period, there is no evidence. In my original account of the building1
I suggested a smaU approximately square chancel, but Canon Livett in
his article on the church at Eynsford,2 suggested a much longer and
apsidal one, but as there is no evidence either way, both of these
suggestions must be regarded as purely hypothetical.
The Eleventh Century additions
The enlargement of the church in early Norman times, while it
foUows the usual course of making a larger chancel, is exceptional in
this case because of the unusual length of the addition. This extension,
consisting of a two-compartment chancel (making thus with the old
nave an example of the three-celled Norman church) is longer than the
pre-conquest nave to which it is attached, and there appears to be no
alternative but to regard the whole extension as of one period, in spite
of the fact that the middle section preserves no features assignable to
the eleventh century. There can be no doubt about the easternmost
portion, for while the ornament round the window heads is entirely
unconvincing, and indeed it differs from that shown on an engraving in
the Gentleman's Magazine of 1820, which also is not normal, the interior
leaves not the shghtest doubt of its antiquity. A low unornamented
" arch of triumph," with smaU stone voussoirs, a groined vault, and the
splays of the windows, these two last entirely covered with contemporary
painting in imitation stonework, are clear indications of date. Thus,
though the central section carries no precise dating features, an
eleventh century sanctuary and a pre-conquest nave must have been
connected by work which was contemporary with one or the other,
and as there is a definite straight joint at the junction of the nave and
this section of the eastern arm, the problem cannot be said to exist.
Just east of the present north porch the vestiges of another roundheaded
opening can be seen, and this opening is shown inside the church
by the removal of the plaster. One or two much-weathered voussoirs
remain in situ, and judging from the ornament that survives, the door
1 Proc. Woolwich Antiq. Soc, XVTI.
2 Arch. Cant., XLVI (1934), p. 162.
47
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
must have been of some distinction and possibly a httle later than the
eastern end.
There are varied opinions as to the nature and purpose of the space
above the sanctuary vault. It has been compared with the weU
known upper chapel at Compton, Surrey, but an investigation by the
Dartford Antiquarian Society in 1932,1 makes it clear that it had neither
utilitarian nor ecclesiological purpose; that the waUs above the
vault had been raised some two feet at some early date ; and that the
partition separating the space from the chancel is of lath and plaster
and like the woodwork of the roofing, of fifteenth century date.
In brief, the space is nothing but the normal one between the upper
surface of a vault and its covering roof, in this case subsequently
enlarged by the raising of the waUs. This makes the two other openings,
the cross, and possibly the circular gable opening suspect, though they
are given on the plate in the Gentleman's Magazine before mentioned.
A brief mention should be made of the tub-shaped font which belongs
to the latter part of this period. It bears round its circumference a
series of arcaded niches, each containing a sculptured subject, concerning
the interpretation of which there has been considerable speculation.
The sanest of these is that by our member the Rev. A. H. Collins, M.A.
F.S.A.,2 but one panel admits of no controversy ; it is a contemporary
representation of the rite of Baptism by immersion.
The Late Twelfth Century
In the south waU of the middle section of the church are the remains
of a blocked arcade of two pointed arches springing from two responds
and supported in the centre by a free pier. All these have square
capitals with scaUoped ornament and are clearly transitional work. Of
the size of this aisle, or more likely chapel, there are now no indications,
as the structure has disappeared and the arches are blocked. As the
east window of the aisle and the two smaU lights in the arch filling
are of fourteenth century work, it would seem that this chapel had
disappeared by then.
The Thirteenth Century
Building operations during this period were devoted to the erection
of the tower, the addition of an aisle with the making of a nave arcade,
and a few window insertions. The tower is a plain substantial erection
without any structural stairway, and unbuttressed. (The angle
buttress shown on the plan on the SW angle is shght and late.) The
North waU was pierced when the vestry was buflt. I am not happy
1 Trans. Dartford Ant. Soc, No. 2 (1932).
2 Arch. Cant., LVT (1943), p.6.
48
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
about the aisle. In the first place it is very wide for an early aisle and
there are now no vestiges of the arcade that must have accompanied it.
But the existing arcade appears to be a much rebuilt feature and in
the course of several alterations, the thirteenth century work has
disappeared, and there seems to be no evidence of a widening. The
aisle then must be accepted as an original piece of work.
The Fourteenth Century
The transitional arcade was probably blocked in this century, the
chancel arch inserted in place of an earher one of unknown date, and the
present entrance door to the church under the porch was put in. But
the main problem is in the nave arcade. This at first sight is fifteenth
century, but it springs from grotesque heads, which, whatever their
date, rest on fourteenth century corbels sinular to the capitals of the
chancel arch. The piers are perpendicular, but the eastern of the pair
rests on a base that was intended for two semi-circular or half shafts
and it, too, is of the same style as the bases of the chancel arch responds.
This can only be explained by presuming a Decorated arcade, followed
in the next century by the present or third arcade.
The Fifteenth Century
The rebufiding of the nave arcade, as previously indicated, was
the chief work of this period, together with one or two windows, and
judging from the woodwork of the roofs there was much done in this
direction, including the work over the sanctuary roof (see ante), and
the large squint through the south respond of the chancel arch. The
consecration cross on the north nave wall is probably associated
with the alterations of the thirteenth century. The black marble
pavement " Ex dono Edmund Davenport 1670" seems to have
disappeared, as do scraps of painting and worked stone noted by Sir
Stephen Glynne. The screen and stalls are new and the Laudian altar
rafis, after forming a railing round the font, have once more—in part
at least—returned to their original position, while the rest of them form
a screen to the tower arch. The large stone vessel behind the font is in
aU likelihood a domestic mortar.
THE CHURCH OP ALL SAINTS, STAPLEHURST (Plan 12)
Staplehurst is a fine Wealden Church and its architectural history
has been weU written by the present Rector, the Rev. A. J. Walker,
M.A., but as is so often the case there is no plan to elucidate the text.
This plan may serve to fiU the gap tiU a better is produced, and this
brief note wfll aUow me to put on record one or two points where I
diverge from the pubhshed account.
49 7
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
The Twelfth Century church
The search for vestiges of the Norman church is mainly concentrated
on the north waU of the present church, between the modern organ
chamber and the great buttress supporting the chancel arch. This may,
I think, be accepted as part of the north wall of the tweUth century
nave. It is obviously older than the rest of the walling and has some
herring-bone work, which may be corroborative. Anyhow I have taken
this as the basis of my reconstruction. Behind the hymn board on the
south chancel arch abutment, the plaster has been cut away and some
rough masonry has been revealed. It is not by any means easily datable
but as some early work might have been expected here, in spite of the
bad logic, I accept it as another part of the early church. But where
was the western termination ? And where was the chancel ? The south
waU was on the line of the present arcade, and I think that the west waU
must have stood from somewhere about the centre of the organ chamber
arch to a point midway between the first two piers of the arcade. I
choose this position because it makes a suitably proportioned nave, and
there is no trace of the early walling west of the organ chamber. Of the
chancel there is no evidence at aU, and this part of my plan is purely
speculative. The result as shown in tint on my drawing is however as a
church of the period might be. The Vicar, supported by such a high
authority as Mr. F. C. Eeles, would have a tower on the south side
of the nave at its eastern end. This, while not unknown (see the plan
of Kingsdown near Wrotham)1 generaUy leaves some trace, even if
destroyed, but here there is absolutely none. As wiU be seen later on,
there is a problem here, but I do not think it can be solved in this
manner.
The Thirteenth Century
An extraordinary and extensive enlargement took place in this
century when additions were made west, south and east. The old
Norman west waU was taken down, and the nave enlarged a bay and a
hah. The chancel was extended eastwards to its present extent and an
aisle of five bays was put to the extended nave, and a chapel with three
bays to the chancel. The Vicar says that the south tower was still in
existence and separated these two sections, but again I fail to find the
least evidence of this ; the aisle waU appears to be homogeneous right
up to the commencement of the south chapel.
The Fifteenth Century
There was very httle work done in the fourteenth century except
window insertions which are indicated on the plan, and we can now
1 Arch. Cant., XXXV (1921), p. 109.
50
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
come to the second great building period in the history of the church.
This was first the erection at the west end, of the fine tower of typical
Kentish type with its stairway in a separate turret. Secondly, the
chapel was rebuilt as regards its east and south waUs ; this is clearly
shown by the existing plinth, which encloses these waUs only. There
were more window insertions and finaUy, the great bone of contention
the rebuilding of the easternmost arch of the nave arcade. I cannot
help f eehng that this was connected with the building of the rood-screen.
I t wiU be noted that this eastern arch is wider than the rest. If it
had been originaUy (as I think it was) of the same width as the others,
which would be normal, there would have remained, projecting from
the chancel abutment a length of the original Norman waU of about
4 to 5 feet. This would be in the way of the extension of the screen
in front of the south chapel, so the arch was widened and rebuilt. There
would be no difficulty about this were it not for the fact that the cap of
the added fifteenth century pier has two " ears " suggesting that
it had been built into a waU as the cap of a respond. I cannot see
where any such wall could have been and aU I can think about the
matter is that it is a case of re-used material. Further, there were
rood-screen works going on in 1497 which might easily be an appropriate
date for this late Perpendicular work, and the interpretation of the
terms " High Beam " and " Low Rood " may be seen in the beams
across the main chancel and the chapel arch respectively.1
This account cannot close without a reference to Staplehurst's most
prized possession, namely the iron work on the outside of the door in
the south wall of the aisle. It seems clear that this was originally on
a round-headed door ; that the iron-work is probably twelfth century ;
that it has been remounted, perhaps more than once ; and that it is
damaged. The Vicar in his booklet has a plausible explanation of it
aU, but he admits that a Daniel has yet to arise who can read the riddle.
I cannot attempt it, seeing only the whimsies of the local smith as he
fashioned divers strips of hammered iron to strengthen and, maybe, to
his notions, decorate the door.
FinaUy there is the Anker's ceU, the opening of which into the
church is open, and excavations outside the building revealed its
floor. The smaUer opening, with a very rough passage through
the wall is our very old friend t h e ' ' putlog hole.'' The ancient character
of the masonry revealed may be an indication of the extent of the
original Norman Chancel, which would have extended about as far east
as the ceU, and may serve to prove that the core of the waU is older than
its facing, or it may be merely another case of reused stone. Here
again I must disagree with the Vicar and Professor Grensted, as I must
concerning his very elaborate explanation of the results of the obvious
1 See Testamenta Cantiana, sub Staplehurst.
51
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
tilting of the arcade waU and piers. The peculiarities of the roofing
that he mentions are those produced by the reconstruction of the
roofwork in the fifteenth century or later, caUed for by the gradual
tilting of the arcade wall over some two centuries.
THE CHURCH OP HOLY CROSS, BEARSTED (Plan 13)
Bearsted Church does at first sight promise a great deal of interesting
material, and at the desire of the Vicar I went down and produced
the accompanying plan. The Norman church was not easy to locate
because the whole of the exterior of the building has been carefuUy
" restored," and in the process nearly aU the datable material had
disappeared. But I thought I could see some shght evidence of early
construction in the south waU between the porch and the tower. There
was, too, a change in the character of the masonry by the rood-stair
turret, and another concealed behind the buttress east of the modern
vestry. With this information we may suggest the growth of the
church was probably something as foUows :—
(1) A smaU Norman church extending from the tower arch to the
screen, the eastern portion of this being a smaU and nearly square
chancel. (It is shown on the plan as a pale tint.)
(2) This church was enlarged in the thirteenth century by the usual
absorption of the old chancel in the new nave and the bufiding of a new
chancel further east.
(3) The fourteenth century saw the addition of an aisle to the north
with a chapel to the chancel. An arcade of three piers and two responds
was put in and the south porch was built.
(4) In the fifteenth century the fine west tower was constructed
and joined on to the Norman nave, and the chancel was further extended
as indicated by the existing plinth. The eastern part of the chapel
was likewise rebuilt. The insertion of the rood-screen necessitated
the bufiding of the stair and the rebufiding of part of the arcade at
a wider span to accommodate the screen as it crossed the church
from north to south. Part of this screen remains in situ.
Two matters of interest should receive some mention. The first
must be the three strange beasts that decorate the angles of the tower in
place of the usual pinnacles. Popular legend speaks of them as bears,
and thus obviously associated with the name of the village, but they
are certainly not those animals. They have been associated with the
symbolic beasts of the apocalypse as representing the evangehsts (though
these are always four in number) and they have, in a moment of
ecstatic patriotic fervour, been regarded as symbohc of the Enghsh,
Scottish and Welsh elements of the British Empire, but an account in
the local parish magazine for October, 1948, written by the Vicar
(Rev. W. H. Yeandle, M.O, A.K.C.) dismisses aU these theories,
52
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PLAN 13.
tf> 3° r.CEtL1STOn-ERW0ODf F.S.A..
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[face p . 52
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
ncluding a more feasible one that the beasts are heraldic in origin, and
\erives from the lion, the panther and the griffin, some at least of those
dmirable virtues and precepts of hf e with which readers of the ancient
jastiaries are quite familiar.
But by far the most interesting thing was a casual discovery made
Ue photographing. The eastern respond of the nave arcade is much
re substantial than the others and it might even be of earher date.
as a projecting bracket on its western side and above, quite clearly
n seen from the far corner of the nave, are marks of something
has been removed. Closer examination made it seem probable
a crucifix had stood here, and a tilted oval where the crucified
would have rested seemed corroboration. The dedication of the
'a, " Holy Cross ", is sufficiently unusual to caU for some comment
\e entry " to buy a candlestick of latton to stand before the
of the Trinity in the piUar beside the high chancel there, 20 d."
nU of John Gemott, 15131 seems to make it clear that a represenf
the Trinity, the Father enthroned and supporting a Cross with
ified Son with the Dove hovering above, was formerly on this
d was destroyed at the Reformation.
.—Since the above was written, the Vicar informs me that
i of ancient masonry, with part of an arch, were found under
>f Commandments that used to be on the waU at the west end
wle. This evidence has been again concealed, but it would
ndicate that this portion of the waU, is, as I have suggested
, part of the Norman church.
gave me another date for the image of the Crucifixion in
Register VH, p. 377, where it is mentioned in a grant of
lated 1425.
OP ST. MARY, HORTON KJRBY (Plan 14)
h, the next on the right bank of the Darent going south
offers as many contrasts to that church as it is possible to
s (or rather was) a perfect cruciform church of the
iury, and in spite of the considerable damage it has
ferent periods it is stiU of absorbing interest. Of any
Norman church that stood on this site (and both are
in) there are no traces save a few re-used Norman
ied stones, and it is not possible to say with certainty
" churches have left their mark on their successor.
ttkely, but the complete destruction of the thirteenth
es any deductions out of the question.
iction of this nave that is the centre of the whole
ttraordinary, to me at least, that no previous writer
bearsted.
53
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
has read aright the manifest signs that appear everywhere, to teU the
story. Edward Cresy, an architect of no mean abihty, lived in the
village during the early part of the nineteenth century, and though he
has left behind some very valuable information, he is silent, or rather in
very great error, about the older nave. It is perfectly clear that the
present nave is not the one put up in the thirteenth century, when the
older structure was replaced by one which had a fine aisled nave, two
transepts, a central tower and a chancel twice as long as that existing
to-day (see note at end).
To deal with the present nave first. It is 31 feet wide, whioh is
abnormal for a country parish church ; it is out of ahgnment with
the rest of the buUding ; there are no arcades or aisles ; there is much
re-used stone in its fabric ; and at its east end are two arches, one hah
blocked and the other communicating with the transept by a very
unusual slanting passage. To anyone in the least familiar with church
plarming, it is plain that these arches were those at the ends of aisles
leading into transepts. The mouldings of the capitals of the tower
arches are extended on aU sides tiU they reach a return waU, but on the
west face of the tower, fronting the nave, these mouldings discontinue
some three feet on each side of the arch, exactly where an arcade wall
would (and did) join the tower west wall. FinaUy, by examining the
exterior of the existing transepts, we see that the straight joint and line
of coin stones on the west waU of the north transept is indisputable. The
corresponding place on the south transept is not so perfect. It is
masked by a buttress, but there is sufficient evidence remaining for us
to be certain that conditions were the same. In short, the evidence is
more than sufficient to enable the plan of the Early Enghsh church to
be laid down with certainty, and this is indicated in tint on the plan.
The transepts are to aU intents and purposes intact, the ground plan of
the tower remains, and the added length of the chancel is vouched
for by many witnesses, including Cresy himseh. The west door of the
present bunding is of the foUowing century, but it and the two adjacent
buttresses are the only features that preserve the ahgnment of the axis
and I have httle hesitation in regarding that part of the west waU as of
thirteenth century fabric. It might be as well here to give Cresy's
notes on the church as printed in Trans. Dartford Ant. Soc, No. 2 (1932)
p.l5,ff.
" The chancel (at Horton Kirby) the interior dimensions of which were
38' by 18' and the walls 2' 9" in thickness. The N. and S. sides had each six
lancet windows 8' high and 1' 9" wide set in deep splays with semicircular
heads around which was a pointed arch. Slender Purbeck marble pillars
5" diameter with carved capitals supported the latter pointed arch.
" There were never any side aisles.
" These details (concerning the chancel) are from drawings made in
1816 : On returning from my continental journey I found the present
54
Horton Kirfa}, Kent. SJPoXu,.
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
chancel rebuilt, abridged of half its length and the old materials made
use of."
" The original interior (of Court Lodge or Horton Castle as it is sometimes
termed) was more rudely handled by Mr. George Smith the Surveyor, who,
when he frightfully disfigured the church' and removed the wooden spire,
metamorphosed the old castle . . . etc."
To return to the Church itself. The crossing, tower and transepts
are fortunately, as far as the interior is concerned, in their original
form and httle altered. There are two deep recesses in the eastern wall
to house transeptal altars and the lower part of the waU is arcaded;
above it runs a continuous string-course. The architecture is of a
severe kind, without any of the characteristic features of Early Enghsh
work, and forms a marked contrast to the weU-known church of Stone
next Dartford, only four miles away to the north. The richness of the
detail of Stone appears in aU the textbooks, but the almost majestic
simplicity of Horton is un-noted. Though so far as I know neither
church was associated with the reformed Benedictine orders, Stone
might easily represent the magnificence of Cluny and Horton the
austerity of the Cistercians.
The chancel, as we know from the testimony of Cresy, has been
shortened and much altered. The six windows remaining, three in a
group on each side waU are to me singularly unconvincing. They may
represent the original arrangement but they have obviously been rebuilt
and mutUated. WhUe the interiors are clearly made up of thirteenth
century material, the exteriors are equally obviously a century later, and
even then those on the north are different in detail from those on the
south. The east group is certainly re-inserted, and in many parts
entirely new. From the outside the extent of earher damage is apparent
from the extensive repairs in brick, especiaUy to the tower and parts of
the transept. This is a later alteration than that which produced the
present remodelling of the nave, for Cresy speaks of the nave as if it
were original. Thus we have two catastrophies that have overtaken the
building and of which we have no record whatever. There was a great
gale in November, 1703, which did much damage in London and the
vicinity. It certainly destroyed Reynold's Place in Horton as Cresy
teUs us, but he does not add any details about damage to the church.
In fact he imphes that it was about a century later, for changes had
taken place whUe he was abroad during the early part of the century,
and the brickwork would tend to confirm this latter date. But what
about the nave, when did that disappear ? AU one can say with some
certainty is that it was after the fourteenth century and probably before
the end of the sixteenth century, for scanty detaUs in the present
nave, such as the roof work, bear out some such period. Re-used
work is everywhere. The outer jambs of the porch seem to be contrived
from old window muUions ; there are pieces of fourteenth century
55
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
arcading or windows inserted in the sides of the same porch, and one of
the coins contains a " mass dial " inserted upside down. A decorated
piscina is inserted in the oblique waU by the north transept, where it is
highly improbable an altar could ever have been sited. And so the
church remains bereft of its shingled spire and with but a shadow
of its former splendour, but stiU a monument that is worthy of more
attention than it has received tiU now.
NOTE.—I have but recently discovered two early accounts of the
Church, one in the Transaction of S. Paul's Ecc. Soc, Vol. HI, detailing
a visit made by that Society in 1893, under the leadetship of Mr. J . P.
Seddon, F.R.I.B.A. and the other in The Reliquary and Illustrated
Archaeologist, Vol. XI by Mr. J. RusseU Larkby, 1905. Both of these
accounts seem to imply an aisled church and some of the evidence is
noted. Particularly in the latter account, our member Canon Livett
points out the significance of the west door and the flanking buttress
as being on the axis of the church. But the plans in each account make
no attempt to indicate the probable development of the church, though
I feel convinced that if Mr. Livett examined the church in any detaU—
the true solution cannot have escaped him and somewhere among his
papers may be an account of this interesting building that should have
been pubhshed long since.
FURTHER NOTE re BEARSTED.—The arch-fragment referred to in
the earher Note has been opened out again, and other details revealed
may cause some slight alteration in the plan as given. Investigations
are proceeding, and the results and the modified plan wiU be given in
the next part of this paper.
56