PLANS OF, AND BRIEF ARCHITECTURAL NOTES ON,
KENT CHURCHES
SECOND SERIES. PART I
By F. C. ELLISTON-ERWOOD, F.S.A.
THE resumption of this series of notes on Kent Churches, after an
interruption extending over two years, during which it was not
possible to prepare the necessary plans, affords an opportunity of
adjusting the scale of the reproduced plans to that most generaUy
used, i.e. 24 feet to the inch. The need for uniformity and for economy
is thus happdy met. Subsidiary plans which are sometimes necessary
to make the story more lucid will be reproduced to a scale of either
32, 40 or 48 feet to the inch, as convenience demands, but in every
case a scale will be given on the plan.
THE CHURCH OE ST. MARY, STONE-NEXT-DARTEORD
There is but httle necessity to dwell at great length on the
architectural detaUs of this church. Every book on English church
architecture gives illustrations of its most important features, and there
are the accounts of Edward Cresy (1840, before the restoration) and
G. E. Street (Arch. Cant., I l l , 1861, after restoration) which between
them contain almost everything the student may require, except
an historical plan.
Most writers, past and present, dweU at length on three features,
viz. the unity of the fabric; its aUeged association with the Abbey
of Westminster ; and lastly, the gradual growth of ornament from
west to east. Of these matters the first is untrue, the next is unproven
and improbable, while the last is not uncommon. All, without
exception, avoid offering any solution to the problems that a careful
study of the fabric will present. This is an attempt to supply this
omission.
Of the church or churches of pre- and immediate post-Conquest
times that may have occupied this site, there is no evidence. There
is plenty of re-used material, Roman brick fragments, stones with
diagonal tooling and pieces of calcareous tufa, ah likely constituents
of an early waU, but there is nothing that wUl give a clue to the plan
or extent of any buUding anterior to that now existing. There was
a complete rebuilding in the 13th century, and it is around this that
difficulties arise.
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
These can be summarized thus :
(a) The aisles are extended to the west and are clearly of a later
date than the main portion of these aisles. The thirteenth
string course of the eastern part of the church stops abruptly
opposite the tower piers.
(b) The west tower is obviously of two dates, shown by the
character of the capitals and the base molds.
(c) The present entrance in the west bay of the north aisle is
an insertion, if, indeed, it is not a composite feature made
up from two other doorways.
(d) There are traces of a vaulted western porch of 14th-century
date.
(e) The stair turret to the tower is an addition and a somewhat
clumsy piece of construction.
(/) Finally there are the two hah arches that span the aisles
at the termination of the 13th-century work, one of which,
the south, has a window above it, with a splay to the west,
visible only inside the church.
These factors are, of course, to be considered in addition to the more
obvious extensions of a vestry and the later Willshyre Chantry. The
collection of fragments budt into the wall of the south aisle must
not be ignored in estimating the character of the rebuilt church,
and the ravages of fire and too zealous restoration must also be borne
in mind.
The solution of all this appears to me thus. The 13th-century
church consisted of the present chancel, an aisled nave of three bays
only and a western tower standing free on three sides, i.e. not included
between aisles. Major reconstructions took place in the next century.
The aisles were extended one bay further west, thereby enclosing the
tower. The north and south walls of this tower were pierced and the
present 14th-century arches built, the tower now becoming a part
of the nave. This may have had the effect of weakening the tower,
so the two half arches (in reahty parts of the original west waUs of the
aisles) were put in as internal buttresses. The new stah turret was
built. But where was the old one ? I think the above-mentioned
window supplies a clue. The original tower stah was in the angle
between the south waU of the tower and the west waU of the south aisle,
and this enigmatic window must have been put in to give hght to
the first few steps. Opening as it did to the aisle the amount of hght
it could give was small, but the church as a whole is remarkably hght.
The present entrance, badly weathered and a strange medley of
12th- and 13th-century forms, is certainly an insertion in a 14th-century
waU and may have been originally in the west waU of the tower, from
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
whence it was removed when the porch, of which traces stiU remain,
was buUt. There is some indication in the bay east of this doorway,
that a porch or entrance may have stood here; there is a large area
of what seems to be later blocking.
Street (op. cit.) gives a different explanation of the varied features
of the tower without considering the other points I have detaUed,
and maintains that the moldings of the arches above the 14th-century
caps are of 13th-century date. Without a ladder it is difficult to be
certain, but I thought that even from the ground I could detect 14thcentury
characteristics.
An unusual feature is the bay that intervenes between the chancel
arch and the commencement of the vaulting of the quire proper. This
is covered by a pointed barrel vault and in the south waU is a blocked
up doorway. It seems a perfect setting for a rood screen and loft,
but such things came later, and there appears to be no indication of
the position this screen may have occupied. FinaUy, the architectural
fragments preserved in the south aisle indicate a scheme of ornament
and architectural decoration of which no trace is left, but which would
have formed an ideal setting for the fine series of paintings that have
been preserved for posterity by Professor Tristram's faithful reproductions.
The mention of " old boards naUed across the chancel arch "
seems to suggest another lost painting, probably a Doom.
THE MEDIEVAL CHURCH OE ST. MARY (? ST. LAURENCE), WOOLWICH
The present church of St. Mary (Magdalene) is a brick and stone
structure of no great architectural pretensions, buUt as one of the
fifty churches sanctioned by Parhament for the metropohs and its
surroundings, and was particularly provided for by 5 Geo. ii. c.4 and
12 Geo. h. c.9. Its architect is unknown unless it was Mathew Spray
of Deptford, generaUy described as a bricklayer, a word that most
likely imphed rather more than it does to-day.
The old church had been in a very precarious state since the beginning
of the century and was puUed down in 1740, when the new church
was ready for occupation. A few scattered stones in the churchyard
adorning rockeries are obviously of 12th-century date, mingled with
broken purbeck slabs that once covered the bones of local worthies.
But fortunately there is enough material avaUable in other dhections
to make it possible to produce a plan of the vanished medieval church
which can be regarded as inherently probable and correct in ah save
absolute measurements. This matter is :
(a) B. and N. Buck's engraving of the " North Prospect of
Woolwich," 1739, which shows the old and the new churches
side by side, just previous to the destruction of the former
in 1740.
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
2. Its development in the foUowing 13th century is indicated in
solid black. Matters to note are :
(a) The aisled nave extended to the west by one bay with
the addition of a western tower.
(b) The extended chancel.
(c) The north and south chapels.
(d) The clasping buttresses of the tower and the absence
of a structural stairway.
(e) According to Mr. Bourne, foundations were found at
the point marked 0, which were parts of the footings
of the missing north arcade.
(/) The 13th-century coins stiU remaining at the places
marked X.
The peculiar, if not unique, arrangement of the north chapel " Our
Lady of Pity " shows a smaU sanctuary projecting from its east waU.
This has now lost its unusual character by being incorporated with the
remainder of the church by enclosing the narrow strip of ground that
on separated the two chancels. The pecuhar splays of its two east
windows should be noted. The south chapel, that of the Home famUy,.
is perhaps a httle later than the other, but it is stiU in the main 13th
century, though it has many later additions.
In the 14th century there seems to be evidence that the south
aisle was widened and some windows inserted and opportunity taken
to put a fine screen across the whole church, but this work did not
remain unscathed for very long, for in 1380 the church was burnt by
an invading French band. Traces of this fire can stiU be seen in
the reddened stones at the west end of the nave ; in fact the fire appears
to have been more or less confined to the nave and aisles, for the screen
or at least the greater part of it escaped much damage. The north
arcade was certainly lost and never rebuilt, for when the church was
repahed towards the end of the 14th or the beginning of the 15th
century, the north aisle was thrown into the nave and the whole covered
by a single span roof. This gives the building an unusual appearance
with a nave of 25 ft. width. The existing arcade belongs to the restoration
period, but several of the arches appear to be of the original
construction. Other alterations were carried out in the same and
subsequent centuries, i.e. the modification of the west front of the tower,
and several windows (shown on the plan) can be securely dated from
information in wiUs. The screen across the church has aheady been
mentioned. The central section is of later date, replacing maybe that
part that was lost in the fire. The cresting is modern throughout.
The font with heraldic carvings is early 15th century.
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
THE CHURCH OE ST. JOHN BAPTIST, ERITH
This church in the past has certainly not lacked its historians,
but it stiU lacks a history, and this is in no smaU measure due to the
drastic treatment that has been meted out to the fabric in its several
restorations. Wall plaster has been stripped and the exposed stonework
has been pointed with a hard unsympathetic c ment, hberaUy
mixed with soot. Not only so, but the workman, possibly exhorted
thereto by minds more imaginative than his own, has produced arches
and openings by emphasizing certain lines, to produce anchorites'
cells and the hke, to the utter confusion of later students. Faked
antiquities have been constructed from misceUaneous pieces of carved
stone and mutdation and destruction has completed the sorry tale.
I t is no wonder therefore that a coherent story of the church is difficult
to obtain, and as such evidence that does remain points to a church
that differed in many detaUs from the normal Norman nucleus, the
difficulties are not diminished. Possibly in this may be traced the
influence of the great church builder, Richard de Lucy, the holder of
the manor here in the 12th century, and the budder of Lesnes Abbey
in the parish in 1178. This abbey church was never in any way
parochial, and this points to the fact that a church aheady existed
in the parish. De Lucy's ideas on church budding were perhaps
advanced, for another of his churches on the opposite side of the river
Thames, at Rainham, Essex, is also of uncommon planning.
Whether de Lucy was responsible or not, it appears that the
church buUt at Erith was a large one with its nave coterminous with
that now existing, and a chancel, also preserved in its enthety and
twice the usual size. In addition there was a large western tower
and it is not beyond probabihty that an aisle, half the width of the
present one, may have been added on the south side.
The evidence for this church is :
(a) Traces of four Norman windows, two each north and south,
can be noted in the chancel walls.
(b) One of the external nave coins, the south-east, is stiU to
be seen in the north-west comer of the Wheatley chapel.
This, of course, implies that any aisle added on this side
would not be contemporary with the earliest work, but
could have been added later.
(c) The existence of part of what appears to be a waU arcade of
Norman work in the north-east angle of the chancel, coupled
with the definite statement of Flaxman Spurrell (Arch. Cant.,
XVI) that four simUar arches were to be seen on the east
waU, though no trace seems to exist to-day.
(d) The same authority mentions a Norman doorway in the
north-west angle of the chancel.
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
(e) The western tower is of massive construction with clasping
buttresses and has no constructional stahcase. It is not
central with the nave, its north waU being on the hne of the
north waU of the nave, but this feature is often found when
it is proposed to add an aisle.
(/) The numerous worked stones re-used in various parts of the
budding, many showing Norman ornament.
Taking aU this into consideration it would appear that the first
church was of a more elaborate character than the usual village church
but additions in the next century made the buUding even more impressive.
An aisle was certainly built, though stiU narrower than that of
to-day and the existing nave arcade was put in, but even before this,
two chapels were added north and south of the chancel, the transitional
arches of which still remain. Of these chapels the south is in use
to-day as the Wheatley Chapel, but that to the north had disappeared
some time before the restoration of the church in 1877, for the new
vestries were built on its site. Its blocked arch is shown on the
plate facing p. 154, Arch. Cant., XVI.
But meanwhile another of those unrecorded disasters which are
so frequently encountered in studying old churches, had occurred
at Erith. Even the most casual examination wUl show that the west
tower has been riven from parapet to foundation and has been rebuilt.
When and how this happened is unknown. There is, however, a clue.
Above the entrance to the tower, high up on the interior west waU
of the nave is a blocked-up opening. Investigating this from the
ringing stage of the tower, it proves to be a window and its date may
be 14th-15th century. Now it is hardly likely that such a window
would be inserted whUe there was a tower in being. A small
" peephole " for observation is understandable, but this is a large
opening and can only be for hght (the church is incredibly dark). It
seems reasonable, then, to suggest that
(a) The church tower was badly damaged, say about 1450.
(b) I t remained in this state for some time and a window was
put in the exposed east wall to give much needed hght.
(c) At some later period, again not known, the tower was rebuilt
and the now useless window was filled up.
FinaUy the church was restored and enlarged in 1877 in the style
of the period, but it must be put on record as evidence of the real
" gothicness " of the time, that a blocked doorway was actuaUy inserted
in the north waU, as unintelligent a piece of antiquarianism as it is
possible to conceive.
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NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
One or two matters are worthy of comment. Low-side windows
are weU known, but here-is a high side window. It is of the early
16th century, and its outside is shown on the plate above mentioned.
But inside the church, this window, high up near the waU plate and
stiU retaining its original ironwork, has its sill splayed downwards
for about 4 ft. or more, obviously to shed Ught on the reader's desk
below.
The sundial on the south side of the church has the inscription
'" The gift of Nicholas Stone, 1643." Is this the Nicholas Stone,
Master Mason to His Majesty, who died 24th August, 1647, at the age
•of 61, andVho was buried in the old church of St. Martin in the Fields,
London ? And if so, what was his connection with Erith ? No one
seems to know.
It should be mentioned that just recently the church has been
(colour washed throughout, and the distressing effects of the ugly black
lines of pointing have been considerably modified. But nothing
can bring back the evidence destroyed when this early restoration
took place in 1877.
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