Hasted as Historian
HASTED AS HISTORIAN
JOANTHIRSK
Passing judgment on Hasted as a historian is a subjective exercise,
deeply influenced by the time and the viewpoint from which it is
carried out. Fashions in historical investigation come and go. They are
most effectively revealed when authors, seeking facts that are essential
for new research, find the data they require summarized in an old work
that has for long been disregarded. When this happens, it is clear that
the wheel has turned again; our historical vision of the past has shifted,
and attention is directed at facets of history which long neglected
authors of the past also viewed perceptively. The precise viewpoint of
those earlier writers will have been in some way different, but at least it
set them in search of the same facts.I
Assessing Hasted's History of Kent, therefore, is like holding a
mirror to the prejudices and preferences of the person and the age that
judges him afresh: the exercise has to be carried through with a clear
view of the bias contained in that judgment. Furthermore, since no
single individual has the knowledge or insight to evaluate with the
same discernment every page of Hasted's massive work, every attempt
at an assessment is partial. The present writer is especially diffident on
that score. Hasted has been studied much more intently by Alan Everitt,
who wrote the introduction to the new edition, when it was reprinted in
1972. He was studied more thoroughly still by John Boyle, who pored
for countless hours over Hasted's manuscripts and final text, and
brought to light a great deal that was hitherto unknown about the man
and his methods. At the end of a fine detective story, he uncovered
much original information about Hasted as a historian.2
1 This essay is the revised text of a lecture originally given at a one-day symposium on
Edward Hasted, arranged by the Kent Archaeological Society at Sutton-at-Hone,
November 23rd, 1991.
2 Alan Everitt, Introduction in Edward Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey
of the County of Kent, Reprint of the second edition, Canterbury, 1972; John Boyle, In
Quest of Hasted, Chichester, 1984.
1
J. THIRSK
Nevertheless, fresh insights are always possible. One of the least
offered here derives from an experience not entirely unlike that of
Hasted, that of being involved for nearly forty years in a large
publishing venture. Work of a prolonged kind, on a similar scale,
teaches many of the same lessons learned by Hasted. While the work
itself leads to fresh discoveries, it also steadily alters viewpoints; yet,
the toiler in the field must of necessity adhere to the structure of the
original plan. In his long march to the end of the history of every parish
in Kent, Hasted must often have wished that he had arranged things
differently, even perhaps wished to step aside and do other things.3
In Hasted's persistence, however, lay one of his strengths; the
highest tribute has to be paid to him for completing his heroic work.
Historians who have worked in detail on counties (like Lincolnshire),
which lack such a county history, know the good fortune of those who
study Kent. 4 The tribute to Hasted must be even more fulsome when
the unusually complex manorial history of Kent is recognised. The
parish of Hadlow, for example, far from unusual in its structure, has
some seven to ten small manors;5 it poses an entirely different
historical problem from parishes in some Midland counties where one
manor often spans the whole of one parish, and where, at worst,
parishes generally have no more than three or four manors. The
contrast illuminates the magnitude of Hasted's task in trying to identify
all the owners in all Kent parishes through all the ages.
A further tribute needs to be paid to Hasted's striving for accuracy.
Some of his informants expressed harsh words about his mistakes, but
no matter how many errors of fact one may find, Hasted undoubtedly
strove hard to supply a correct record. Corrections at the end of volume
IV demonstrate an almost finicky concern. One correction tells us that
at the burial of Matthew Parker, Archbishop of Canterbury in 1575, his
bowels were deposited near the remains of his wife in the Howard
chapel in Lambeth church. The main text shows this to be a somewhat
fussy correction. In fact, Parker instructed in his will that his bowels be
buried in the Duke's chapel in Lambeth church, and his body in the
chapel of Lambeth Palace.6 The change was evidently deemed
3 The author is General Editor, volume editor, and part-author of The Agrarian History
of England and Wales, 8 vols., Cambridge, 1967-.
4 The author's first published work surveyed the agriculture and society of
Lincolnshire. See English Peasant Farming. The Agrarian History of Lincolnshire from
Tudor to Recent Times, London, 1957.
5 Hasted, 2nd edn., [henceforward = 0 for octavo] V, 177-93.
6 Canterbury Cathedral Archives(= CCA) Irby Deposit, Ull, 430, pages unnumbered;
Hasted, 1 st edn., [henceforward F for folio] IV, p. 46 of corrections at end of vol., and p.
741. Hasted's accuracy in text and maps is examined in considerable detail, and
2
HASTED AS HISTORIAN
necessary, in part to correct the name of the chapel, show the separation
of bowels from body, and also, perhaps, because no one could be
certain that the testator's wishes were actually carried out. Hasted's
work required thousands of facts to be discovered, transcribed, and
checked, calling for monumental dedication and patience. Like every
other historian, he must often have wished he were a novelist.
Hasted's History poses a further problem, since, as John Boyle has
shown, the first edition was his work, but not all of the second, which
was much revised and rearranged by others. Yet, the second edition is
the most readily available, and the first edition relatively rare. Close
reading of the second edition produces self-revealing sentences, which
have to be checked in the first edition to see if Hasted really wrote
them. In the account of Waldershare church in Eastry Hundred, for
example, judgment is passed on an altar tomb, with figures of a man
and woman described as being 'out of all proportion and conspicuously
absurd', while in the east window appear 'several female figures, which
seem singularly indecent, at any rate very improper for the place'. Was
this Hasted's observation, or someone else's? It proves to have been
Hasted himself, though in the first edition the sentence appeared less
conspicuously in the footnotes. In the second edition it was given the
more prominent position in the main text, perhaps in a deliberate
attempt to awaken the reader from an otherwise dull narrative.7 But to
attribute even those words to Hasted is a bold conjecture for, as John
Boyle has shown, Hasted incorporated whole passages that were
contributed by others, and in this Hundred he was especially indebted
to William Boys and William Boteler for their help.8 So while such
unusually outspoken comments were inserted by Hasted, they may not
have been his original ideas.
The pure and unadulterated Hasted, even in the first edition, is an
elusive character. Nevertheless, to dwell overmuch on this point
involves distortion, for a great deal of the first edition survives in the
second. At the parish level, however, the two texts need to be read with
some care, in order to collect all the factual information available.
Statements in the first edition were omitted in the second, sometimes to
economize in length, sometimes because they were no longer true.
favourably judged, in G.H. Burden, 'A Critical Appraisal of Edward Hasted's View of the
Geography of Kent, 1797-1801, in the Light of other Material relating to eighteenthcentury
Kent', M.Phil. Arts thesis, London University, 1973. But the survey does not
distinguish between the contents of the first and second editions. Robert Pocock, the
historian of Gravesend, 1760-1830, claimed to have found 2,000 errors. - Everitt,
Introduction, op. cit., p. xviii.
7 Boyle, 92-101; Hasted, 0-X, 59-60; F-IV, 193.
s Boyle, 18-24, 98.
3
J. THIRSK
Wives' names and identities were frequently omitted, the editors of the
second edition brushing them aside more readily than did Hasted. At
Waldershare a long list of rectors and vicars going back to the
thirteenth century in the first edition was omitted in the second edition,
where the list of vicars only started in the early eighteenth century. On
the other hand, a noticeable addition was made in the second edition,
namely, the number of poor supported constantly, or casually, in each
parish. The acquisition of new information, coupled with a certain shift
of interest, allowed the inclusion of these figures in the second edition,
whereas Hasted's analysis of the social classes in the first edition had
not acknowledged the existence of poor in Kent.9
Although an assessment of Hasted as a historian rests squarely on his
published work, his manuscripts reveal him also as the failed historian
of a History of Sequestrations in the Civil War. His notes contain a
large quantity of transcribed documents on Parliament's sequestrations
of the property of royalists in the 1640s, covering many counties of
England, and not only Kent. The Hasted manuscripts, bought by the
British Library, include the text of the work he intended, with an
Introduction, and interspersed comments as Hasted set out the
documents relating to different counties. If this work had been
published as it exists in manuscript, it would not have enhanced
Hasted's reputation as a historian of judgment. It shows him to have
been a diligent transcriber, but lacking in the skill needed to weave the
documents into an integrated history of the whole subject, and to make
a judicious, objective assessment at the end. His introduction to the
sequestrations is obsessed with the notion of plunder. 'The many
actions of these men', he wrote, 'are the subject of the following sheets,
which are transcribed from their own papers, wherein it will be seen
how much they abused their trust, how difficult it was to bring them to
account, how often they were changed, what immense estates most if
not all of them acquired by this plunder, and the whole of their
iniquitous proceedings wil be laid open'. The text then begins with
many pages of the sequestration ordinances, followed by random
documents county by county. One of these, which Hasted intended to
print in full, was an inventory of the goods of the Earl of Cleveland at
Toddington, Bedfordshire, in 1644. It is a revealing list of a nobleman's
possessions, but not relevant to a history of sequestrations.10
It would be unjust, however, to judge Hasted on the basis of a
9 Comparing the wives' names, see, e.g. Hasted, O-V, 179-81, with F-II, 312, 314-5;
for names of rectors and vicars, see O-X, 61 with F-IV, 193-4. For poor relieved, see e.g.
O-V, 194. For Hasted's silence on the existence of poor, see O-I, 301-3.
10 BL Add. MS 5491, ff. 2ff, and Add. MSS 5494, 5497, 5508.
4
HASTED AS HISTORIAN
manuscript which he may have regarded only as a preliminary draft.
Moreover, it was doubtless a work planned in his younger days. But the
absorption in documents for their own sake, and a one-sided view of the
subject as a whole recurs in a modified form in the History of Kent.
There, however, both characteristics are more acceptable, since the
history of a county on the eighteenth-century model called for documents
to be assembled in mass, and in all such cases authors were inspired with
the same fierce local pride that Hasted expressed for his native county of
Kent.11 In describing sequestrations during the Civil War, however, no
scholar who dismissed them at the outset, and without qualification, as
plunder could claim to be a balanced historian of sound judgment.
The History of Kent was the product of Hasted's riper years, and, as
he explained, resulted from the encouragement he received when
meeting Dr L ittleton , Bishop of Carlisle and President of the
Antiquarian Society, and Dr Ducarel, librarian at Lambeth Palace. His
many friends, and the many helpers who subsequently supplied him
with documents and summaries, led him to arrive at more mature
conclusions. The fact remains, however, that the final work was of a
kind calling more for the diligent collection of documented facts than
for spacious, long-considered judgments. Hasted is best judged,
therefore, on the task to which most of his energies were devoted,
namely, the collecting and presenting of documentary evidence. With
this agenda, the following remarks are divided among three headings:
first, under literary style; second, under content; and, finally, under
absent content, where regard is paid to what one might reasonably
expect to find in Hasted's work, but which is missing.
Style is a major attribute in the writing of history, for a narrative can
make dull reading, or can bring a subject to life in a phrase. Hasted
does not emerge well from this test. His style is flat and virtually
colourless. Occasionally, a sardonic remark creeps in, but only
furtively. Referring to Archbishop Cranmer's surrender to Henry VIII
of some of the best church lands, Hasted explained that it was by way
of exchange, 'if it could be called so', he added.12 He would, doubtless,
have liked to call it plunder, as did W.G. Hoskins in the title of his book
on Henry VIII's reign, The Age of Plunder. 13 But perhaps maturity in
his later y ears restrained him. The remarks already quoted about
Waldershare church briefly light up another narrative, but such occasions
11 Pride in Kent is at its most fulsome in F-1, dedicated to William Pitt in 1798, and
describing Kent as 'the county which stands foremost in the rank of all others, so
deservedly proud of its preeminence in every respect'. Hasted, F-1, Dedication.
12 0-VI, 66.
13 W.G. Hoskins, The Age of Plunder. The England of Henry VI/I, 1500-1547, London,
1976.
5
J. THIRSK
are rare. In other parishes, the family descents proceed unrelentingly (in
Sevenoaks, for example), and on page after page fact is piled on fact
without a stirring of curiosity, or an aside expressing interest in an
individual, to break the boredom. In the account of Sevenoaks Hasted
referred to 'some famous silkmills' at Bradbourne of Peter Nonaille.
Plainly a Frenchman, Nonaille's identity stirred no questions, not even a
brief reference to the association of the French with silkmaking in Kent.14
The Earl of Dorset circa 1612 sold Sevenoaks manor and Knole, with its
park and more besides, to Henry Smith, citizen and alderman of London.
Smith was astonishingly generous in his benefactions to the poor in many
Surrey parishes, as Hasted made clear.H e recited all the money sums and
many of the names of the parishes, taken (one assumes) from his will.
Yet, no questions are asked about the origins, the career, or even the trade
of this unusual man.si
Not only is Hasted's style flat; his descriptions of people are formal.
Even when they are more discursive, even florid, they are in
conventional language, showing no personal engagement in depicting
the character of a breathing, human being. Mentioning the Sackvilles,
Hasted referred to Sir Richard and his son, Thomas Sackville, first
Lord Buckhurst at Knole. Thomas he described as having been 'a very
fine gentleman as well in his person as in his endowments both natural
and acquired. He was in his youth without measure lavish and
magnificent'. The description continues in the same vein, and it does
not sparkle. In fact, Hasted is paraphrasing a contemporary description
of Lord Buckhurst and his family, which is found in Sir Robert
Naunton's Fragmenta Regalia. But Naunton's language was infinitely
livelier. Naunton reported Richard Sackville's nickname as Fillsack
because of his great wealth and vast patrimony. Thomas, in his turn,
was excellent with his pen, and, wrote Naunton, 'his secretaries did
little for him . .. [for] he was so facete (sic) and choice in his phrases
and style.' Naunton offered a yet more colourful anecdote. Thomas was
unusually decorous in handling his suitors; his attendants kept a roll of
their names with the date of their first approaches to him. Thus, they
received a hearing in strict order 'so that a fresh man could not leap
over his head that was of a more ancient edition except in the urgent
affairs of the state.' Here is a lively, memorable thumbnail sketch, far
superior to Hasted's lump of lead. Yet, Hasted must have known
Naunton's text for one of his volumes of manuscript notes was the
whole text, now preserved in the British Library.16
14 O-III, 61.
IS 0-Ill, 71-2.
16 Sir Robert Naunton, Fragmenta Regalia, (Ed.) J.S. Cerovski, Washington, 1985,
78-9; Hasted O-III, 77; BL Add. MS. 5499.
6
HASTED AS HISTORIAN
On content Hasted scores a far higher mark. It is plain from John
Boyle's book and from Hasted's own notes that he scoured such
documents and catalogues as were then available in the British
Museum, in the Tower of London, at Lambeth Palace, in the cathedral
archives at Canterbury, in private collections, and in printed books. He
engaged in personal correspondence with landed families, as well as
relying heavily on professional informants and searchers.17 The pages
of information on the descents of property readily reveal the quantity of
facts which he unearthed and managed to weld together into an orderly
narrative. In west Kent where his knowledge and sources o f
information were weaker than in east Kent, h e found material from a
multitude of scattered sources, and, through his manuscript notes, it is
possible to see how he welded disparate facts together to make a
continuous narrative, refraining, frequently, from drawing attention to
the gaps of many years, perhaps a century and a half between each fact.
In Hadlow, for example, he followed the ownership of its many small
manors by diligent search in the Exchequer and other public records,
and a neat filing system in his finely-written notebooks, arranged
alphabetically by parish, reminded him of the source for every fact. It
may be called scissors and paste work, but that is nine-tenths of the
task involved in compiling a county history.18
With regard to content, it is sometimes said that Hasted was obsessed
with the genealogies of landed families and with the church.1 9 But it
was the convention of the age, and Hasted depended on the gentry to
buy his books. Since these families fed him with a mass of valuable
information, he needed their co-operation, and was obliged to requite
them with a certain prominence in· his text. It is true that he spread
himself on the well-known and influential families, and was content to
throw in a name and move on when meeting the l esser known
landowners. But two hundred years later, when we have access to far
more documents, the problems remain of uncovering the identity of the
modest families who did not spawn a great kindred, or survive over
many generations. Historians still skirt around the task, even though
current interest in the social structure of village communities makes it a
more urgent necessity. At least, Hasted offers the family name to start a
further search.
Hasted's obsession with landed families seems less of an obsession
when all his manuscripts are surveyed. The British Library has only 62
out of 122 volumes, but they suggest other interests which never
17 Boyle, passim.
1s See e.g. Add. MS. 5537.
19 Everitt, 'Introduction', p. xviii.
7
J. THIRSK
emerged as publications. He collected documents on several themes,
not only on the sequestrations of the Civil war, but on the seizures by
the Commissioners for Prizes taken in the Dutch war, and on stores and
ammunition sent to Ireland in the Commonwealth period.20 One might
reasonably describe him as obsessed with certain aspects of the Civil
war and Commonwealth period. But they were not some of the central
political issues, as seen at the time or since. Rather, they were
eccentric, outside the mainstream of current interests among his
contemporaries, and in the end no book emerged.
In the late twentieth century historians may welcome, rather than
criticise, Hasted's minute concern with landed families. Some of his
information was readily available to him then, which we do not find so
readily now. But another stronger reason lies in the shifting sands of
current historical concerns. A common complaint was directed in the
1950s-1970s at the format of the Victoria County History, that it shed
the brightest light on the landowners and their genealogy, and on the
church, leaving economic life and the other social classes out of sight.
But a significant change of attitude is becoming discernible. When
economic and social development receives attention nowadays, a
deeper understanding is shown for the influence which landowners
exerted, in the short and long term, over the social structure, and
economic organisation of individual parishes. From the very beginning
of any study of an individual parish, therefore, it is essential to know
the principal landowner. The family network is the bedrock of primary
information on which to build an understanding of the shape, structure,
and development of the village community. If the owner was nonresident,
he usually exercised a fairly slack oversight over the tenantry.
Though this was not always true of ecclesiastical owners, nor of all lay
landlords, an absentee could never control matters as closely as a
resident. If non-residence persisted over many generations, it could
leave a permanent stamp on the settlement pattern and structure of the
parish. Similarly, a change from a non-resident to a resident manorial
lord could produce a dramatic transformation.21 A new book by
Lawrence Biddle on the village of Leigh in Kent, 1550-1900, well
illustrates this turn of events. Hasted in 1778 believed that 'the village
(of Leigh] hath nothing worth notice in it'. At the time of writing, he
could perhaps have justified this drab description: it was a poor village,
20 BL Add. MSS. 5500, 5501, 5508.
21 For recent work, see B.A. Holderness, 'Open and Close Parishes in England in the
eighteenth and nineteenth Centuries', Agricultural History Review, 20, ii, 1972, 125-39;
D.R. Mills, Lord and Peasant in nineteenth-century Britain, London, 1980; S.J. Banks,
'Nineteenth-century Scandal or twentieth-century Model? A new Look at "open" and
"close" Parishes', Economic History Review, 2nd Ser., XLI, i, 1988, 51-73.
8
HASTED AS HISTORIAN
the centre of a number of farms occupied by tenants who paid rent to
non-resident owners. But soon afterwards a gentleman moved in, the
old manor house was pulled down, a new Georgian manor house was
built, and the poor hamlet became a Victorian estate village. In short, a
radical change was wrought in the appearance and the social structure
of the place.22
Viewed more broadly still, landowners can be seen to have
influenced the sizes of farms, the farming specialities on their estates,
the numbers of labourers, the numbers of poor, and the presence or
absence of industries. The significance of studying the gentry when
considering the development of local resources is further underlined if
their fluctuating numbers are taken into account. A historian of
Somerset has counted the numbers of gentry in the county at different
dates, showing 150 families in 1569, and 352 in 1623. These are rough
and ready figures only, but they imply profound changes in those
villages which acquired a resident gentleman where none had lived
before. Others even acquired a cluster of gentry at this period, either
living in different hamlets in the same parish, or competing for power
in one village. More counting of this kind remains to be done in the
future, but already interest in this subject has produced a study of
Norfolk and Suffolk showing significant change in the numbers of
gentry in those two counties, rising to a peak in the middle seventeenth
century, and declining after 1700.23 Hasted, in short, laid an essential
foundation for the late twentieth-century historian of economic and
social development: one of the first questions to be asked in any parish
concerns the identity of the landowners in shaping its development.
In another respect, Hasted offers information which falls into line
with rising current interests. He gives long lists of the incumbents of
the churches in Kent. These offer invaluable raw data for the study of
pluralism in the church, a subject which has not hitherto attracted
research, even though the computer offers a fine opportunity to
measure its scale statistically. It could shed much fresh light on the
religious and educational consequences in individual parishes of an
incumbent's absence. Now the opportunity is being seized at Leicester
University: a large investigation into pluralism is starting, and the
computer can devour the information in Hasted, which has lain inert for
so long.24
22 Lawrence Biddle, Leigh in Kent, 1550-1900, Leigh, 1992.
23 The subject is discussed in Joan Thirsk, 'The Fashioning of the Tudor-Stuart Gentry',
Bulletin John Rylands Library, 72 (1), 1990, 73-5. For the Norfolk and Suffolk gentry,
see Nigel Wright, 'East Anglian Gentry Homes', Newsletter of The Centre for East
Anglian Studies, University of East Anglia, July 1988, 2-3.
24 Newsletter of Friends of the Department of English Local History, no. 4, 1991, 7.
9
J. THIRSK
The absence of certain themes from Hasted's History of Kent, when
set against the background of his age, yields further insights into his
personality, and the breadth of his historical concerns. Cer tain
omissions are conspicuous and regrettable. Every local historian
nowadays is expected to start the history of a parish with a description
of its location, soils, farming specialities, industries, and, if possible, its
social structure. An account of the whole population is required, giving
some guide to the size of farms, numbers of husbandmen, cottagers,
and poor as well as the landowners. Hasted gave an expansive account
of the whole county in volume I, written in a mood of county pride, and
claiming that Kent had everything. He described the main regions in
general terms, obviously basing his remarks on careful enquiry, but he
offered only the briefest words to describe the agricultural or
geographical situation of individual parishes. Similarly, his discussion
of Kent's social structure is couched in general terms, and not parish by
parish; it is thus curiously lacking in balance. Gregory King in 1695
divided the lower ranks of the population (below the gentry) into
freeholders of £50 per annum, freeholders of £10 per annum, farmers,
cottagers, day labourers and paupers, and (separately in the towns).
tradesmen and professions. Hasted described a much leaner structure
which was at odds with the real world of his day. He considered
yeomen, common yeomen (we would call them husbandmen), and
labourers, but the labourers were the sons of y eomen, who by
gavelkind would one day inherit family land. There ended his listing of
the classes in society. He emphasised furthermore the social harmony
between gentry and yeomen, 'the good will and kindness from the one
sort to the other', as he phrased it, and he did not take even a first look
at the poor. Plainly, he was deeply interested in gavelkind, and it
received ten full pages of discussion, showing that Hasted had read as
fully as possible on the matter. He even listed all the private acts
disgavelling the lands of individual landowners, prompting in the
reader the question, though Hasted did not raise it himself, why fortyfour
Kent landowners were gathered together in one act in 2-3 Ed. VI
to disgavel their lands, when usually such acts were procured singly.25
But in his view of the agricultural situation and the social composition
of Kent villages Hasted was plainly out of line with some of his
contemporaries, and out of line with some earlier writers whose books
lay before him as he prepared his own. From the very beginning of his
work he had among his models Robert Plot's Natural History of
::s Hasted 0-1 • .:!65-11 • .:!93-30.:!. 311-::?l. Hasted e,idently reminded himself to take
n\ltes cm soil. situation. and husbandry. See Boyle, I 07. On social structure, compare
Greg.:>!)' King. in Sewntunth-Cent'w!')· Economic Doc.iments, (Eds.} Joan Thirsk and J.P.
Cthlper. Oxford, 19?. 768.
10
HASTED AS HISTORIAN
Oxfordshire (1677), and A Natural History of Staffordshire (1686).
Plot, moreover, had a special claim on Hasted's attention, for he came
of a Kentish family, of Sutton Barn, in Borden, and had himself
planned to write a Natural History of Kent. Hasted had the benefit of
his MSS which lie in Hasted's own collection.26
Plot in his work had announced firmly: 'I intend not to meddle with
the pedigrees or descents either of families or lands'. Instead Pliny's
Natural History was his model, with the result that he had chapters on
waters, earth, stones, plants, and antiquities. Plot sent out questionnaires
in order to gather local information, asking about soils, grains, crop
rotations, farm implements, minerals, and industries, and his approach
was so much in the same tradition as that established, and accepted, by
members of the Royal Society from its foundation in 1660, that Plot was
elected a Fellow of the Society after his Oxfordshire volume appeared.
Indeed, he became the Society's Secretary in 1682.27
Plainly, Hasted did not move in a circle which included members of
the Royal Society. If he had, it is likely that his plan for Kent would
have been modified to accommodate more of what was called at the
time the natural history of the county. He was not unaware of this
alternative viewpoint. John Thorpe of Bexley sent him several pages on
rare plants found in Kent, explaining exactly where each grew. But the
information went unused.28
So while Hasted must have seen many of the newly published works
on agriculture and natural history as he scanned the libraries for books
which he did read, like Somner or Robinson on gavelkind, they plainly
did not engage his particular interest. Yet, Kent was in the forefront of
improving agriculture; the very first farmers' club known to historians
was the Faversham Farmers' Club, set up in 1727. And when John
Banister, a gentleman farmer of Horton Kirby, Kent, published his
Synopsis of Husbandry in 1799, he mentioned the spate of treatises on
agriculture issuing from the press. It is almost as if Hasted read Plot's
announcement that he was concentrating on natural history and not
pedigrees, and Hasted resolved to do exactly the reverse.29
::ti BL Additional MS. 5537; 0-VI, 69-71, esp. 70 footnote; Everitt, Introduction, op.
cit., p. xvi; D.A. Baker, 'A Kentish Pioneer in Natural History: Robert Plot of Borden,
1640-96', Trans. of Kent Field Club, Ill, part 4, 1971, 213-24.
27 R.A. Bullin, 'Plot's Natural History of Staffordshire: an Appraisal', North Staffs.
Journal of Field Studies, vol. 2, 1962, 89 .
:is BL Additional MS. 5490, f.2v.
29 Agrarian History of England and Wales, V. ii, 1640-1750,