( ^ )
MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
BY RALPH GRIFEIN, F.S.A.
ST. JAMES (OLD CBTJECH), DOVER.
IN this church Haines notes one brass as in S.C. It is still
in the church, but has been taken up from the floor, and the
slab is now mural against the south wall of an annexe to the
church which is called a vestry hall. The brass itself
originally consisted of effigies of a man and woman, an
inscription under them, on a plate 6 inches by 19 inches (now
lost), and a plate above the heads of larger size (8£ inches by
18£ inches), oh which are two verses, each of four Latin lines,
the first elegiacs bearing the initials I. G., the second
hexameters with the initials W. E . These verses make it clear
that the person commemorated was in holy orders and named
Vincent Huffam. They run thus:—
IN CHRISTO VINCENS MORTEM VINCENTIVS HVFEAM
MVTATO MORIENS NOMINE, VICTOR ABIT
DOCTI LOQVVS VIVENS CHRISTI, VERBIQ3 MINISTER,
ET PIVS ET DIGNVS, MORTVVS ASTRA COIIT
I G
QVI SEMEL IN TERRIS VIXIT VINCENTIVS HviTAM
MORTWS -EST, DVRO ET JACET HIC SVB MARMORE TEOTVS
DOCTEINA, VITA, EIDE, MVNDO SP1ENDIDVS OLIM
IN OiEItfS EJ5MX CVM CHRISTO VIVIT IN JBYVM
WE.
The male effigy is in the usual doublet and knee breeches,
with the gown with short hanging sleeves temp. James I.
2S MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN RENT.
Bound the neck, falling in front like a stole, is the scarf as
worn at this date by the clergy and graduates. A small ruff
is round the neck. The hair is short, and a beard and
moustache are worn. The little boy standing in front is
blessed by his father's left hand, while the right hand is
extended in the attitude of prayer, as the wife's left hand
is, a pleasing indication of united prayer by the father and
mother for blessing on their children. The boy is in a gown
with a large collar turned back.
The lady wears a curious cap, apparently of net work
with side lappets. She wears a ruff, a peaked bodice, and
a gown with close sleeves and turned back cuffs. She has a
skirt and plain petticoat. In front stands her daughter, the
mother's right hand resting on the daughter's French hood.
The child is more elaborately dressed than her mother
with a large " s t a r " ruff and a gown not like her mother's,
open in front, but gathered and bunched up below the
waist.
Haines assigns to the brass the date circa 1600. Haines'
assignment of date can now be confirmed, for Mr. T. S.
Frampton, F.S.A., one of our Vice-Presidents, has been good
enough, with his usual kindness, to furnish information
which enables the account now given to be written.
The name Hougham (pronounced Huffam and often so
spelt) is well known in Kent. A full account of the family
of that name, which resided at Ash, and of its connections
is to be found in Planche's Corner of Kent.
Stephen Hougham of Weddington in Ash next Sandwich
(who died about Dec. 1555) married Bennet Brooke of Brooke
House in that parish (she was buried 9 June 1560). Their
second son was Eichard, who settled at Eastry and married,
27 Nov. 1558, according to the Ash Eegister (Planche, p. 398),
Jane Ford (called Joan Foad at p. 394). The second son of
this latter marriage was Vincent Hougham, baptized at Ash
26 July 1566, and married there, 1 Jan. 1590-91, to Elizabeth
Pynnock. Vincent's first child Magdalen was baptized there
3 Oct. 1591. When he took orders does not appear, but he
was appointed, on the presentation of the Dean and Chapter
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PETER BE LACY, RECTOR, 1376.
NORTHFLEET, KENT.
(Prom a Drawing by Thomas Eisher, E.S, A.)
I
WILLIAM LYE, EECTOB, 1391.
NOKTHFLEET, KEKT.
(Inscription and Shields lost.)
NORTHELEET. 45
especially with John Piel, citizen and alderman. Immediately
after Peter's death his brother and heir Nicholas, who was
also in orders (Clericus), by a deed now in the British
Museum (Harl. Ch. 52, H. 51), given at Nustede on Monday
next after the feast of St. Nicholas the bishop, 49 Edward III. ,
transferred to this John Piel an estate which Peter had
bought of Thos. Coleshurst, rector of Nustede. This gives
the impression that Peter was only concerned in these
transactions as a feoffee to uses. The will of Peter de Lacy
is at Lambeth (Reg. Sudbury, fol. 83b), and is very short.
I t was made at London on St. Michael's day 1375, and was
proved on the fifth kalends of November in that year in the
church of St. Katherine within the churchyard of Holy
Trinity, London, by Dns. Nicholas Lacy, rector of Bradwell,
dioc. Norwich, and Eobt. Waudon, clerk, two of the executors
named in it. The other two, viz., Dns. Wm. de Fulborne,
rector of the church of Fulbourne, and John Wysshell,
clerk, did not prove. The will simply directs burial in the
chancel at Northflete, and the expenditure of 100 shillings
at the burying, and leaves the residue to the executors.
But Wm. de Fulborne, though he did not prove, seems to
have acted, for in 1376 under date 22 June is an entry on
the patent rolls that he and Eobt. Waudon, ex'ors of the
will of" Peter de Lacy, prebendary of Swerdes, staying in
England, had letters nominating Eobt. Crull and John
Gryffyn, clerk, as their attorneys in Ireland. Eobt. de
Crull appears to have succeeded to the prebend, for he is
described as king's clerk and prebendary of Swerdes in the
same rolls, under date 24- June 1376, when he has licence
to ship from any port in Ireland all the fruits of his
prebend and bring them to England or Wales to make a
profit of them.
In conclusion two points may be mentioned. There is in
the Eecord Office what is probably the only piece of writing
in the hand of the Black Prince. In it is the name of Peter
de Lacy. Secondly, one of his last acts seems to have been
to give a messuage in St. Elphege, Canterbury, to John
Styward and Nicholas de Lodynton, chaplains in the chantry
4 6 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
new founded by Edward, Prince of Aquitaine and Wales,
and their successors, evidenced by an inquest ad quod
damnum in 1372.
II.
On the other side of the chancel at Northfleet is another
paving-stone in which has been inserted (1) the half effigy
in Eucharistic vestments, all that remains of the brass of
William Lye, rector of Northfleet, who died in 1391, and also
(2) the mutilated effigy of William Eikhill, eldest son of
Sir William Eikhill, in armour (legs gone). Alongside is
the effigy of his wife Katherine (see No. VI., post). All three
effigies are head to the east. As to the first of these there
is a reproduction of the half effigy and of the slab in
Custumale. The inscription ran, according to Reg. Roff.,
p. 751, $%it jutt Bonumts astflfeftrnts %ijot tjtutmBam xtttov
Be fHovfyfLttt (fiti abiit ix Bte JFamtaru amto Domtm mil*
lestnto Mta IXXXXB prtmo. Thorpe has probably expanded
the contractions, as he usually does.
At the date of the Custumale the inscription was gone, as
were the shields, which had borne a lion rampant (p. 136),
no doubt Or, a lion rampant gules, for Legh of Cheshire.
Plate xxix shews the indent of the inscription and of the
lost shields, which were close up to the lower border of the
inscription, with their tops touching it, one being at each
end as if they formed brackets to support it.
The half effigy, as it now is (shewn in the illustration),
has been slightly restored, as an old rubbing shews that
small portions had been broken off from the top of the head
and from the amice. It does not need description, as there
is no important variation from the vestments shewn in No. I.
The arrangement, however, of the vestments at the wrist is
peculiar, and not very clear. No apparel is shewn on the
albe, a somewhat remarkable feature. It will be observed
from the reproduction that shading, which has such a bad
effect on later brasses, is here introduced boldly and
judiciously.
NORTHELEET. 47
William Lye, according to Mr. Fielding, was rector of
Adisham 1386—90 and of Northfleet from 1389. It is stated
(Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XIV., p. 163) that he was rector
of Haseley in the diocese of Lincoln, and exchanged that
rectory for Adisham with Dr. John Prophet (brass at Eingwood,
Hants), chaplain to Archbishop Courtenay. William
Lye also held a canonry and prebendal stall at Wingham.
He came to Northfleet also by exchange with Eeginald de
Cobham (brass at Cobham), who had held Northfleet since
1378-9 (or 1375, according to Mr. Fielding). William Lye
made his will (P.C.C., 3, Bous) on the 9th Jan. 1391, and
begins by stating that he only makes it " by licence of my
master the Abp. of Canterbury," so that he was probably
closely connected with Archbishop Courtenay and his
chaplain Dr. Prophet.
William Lye commends his soul to his patron St. Botolph
(the church of Northfleet is dedicated to St. Botolph), and
directs his burial in the chancel of Northfleet " coram stallo
Rectoris ejusdem." He goes on to provide for use in
celebrating divine service of one chest bound with iron, and
he leaves to the church vestments, a thurible of silver " eum
swagis deauratis," and a new chalice of silver, well gilt. The
will goes on, "Item lego unum pannum sericum bonum ad
tegendum corpus d'ci Will'i et remanebit penes Eccl'iam." The
testator also leaves the church two surplices and a missal.
All this he says he leaves to induce the churchwardens to
keep his anniversary solemnly and with ringing of the bells.
He makes further provision for his funeral expenses, and
then leaves his better horse to the Archdeacon of Canterbury,
Magr. de Mottroun (Adam Mottrum). He also leaves a large
mazer with cover silver gilt for use in the refectory of the
priory of Canterbury. He leaves Magister John Prophete
a silver covered cup, and he leaves the same to his executors
Godfrey Maston, rector of " Wythlesh'm " (P Wittersham),
and Walter, rector of Staplehurst. It may be that the
magnificent chest still in Northfleet church is the one
bequeathed by Master Lye.
La 1383 Wm. Lye, clerk, has a conveyance to himself and
48 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
his heirs of the reversion of the manor of Sellynges, for which
he gave 200 marcs (Feet of Fines, Eichard II., No. 457).
This seems to have been the manor of Sellinge by Monk's
Horton, as it is stated to be held for life by Wm. Bonevill,
"chivaler," of the inheritance of Cecily de Turbervill the
transferor. Though there is a warranty against the heirs of
Cecily this is possibly only a conveyance to uses.
I I I .
This is reproduced from Add. MS. 82,369, fol. 46. Fisher
found it in the north chapel, and it was on a slab 5 feet
by 2 feet, while the top line of the shield of arms was
4£ inches long. Reg. Roff., p. 752, notes it as in the north
isle, though at the end, at p. 756 (where appear some
inscriptions apparently not then in the church, but copied
from Weever), appears this : Hie jacei Alicia quondam uxor
Willelmi Wangdeford que obiit die Lune prox' post diem
dominicam in ramis pialmarum 1421. See Custumale, p. 136.
The arms are copied by Philipot, and he assigns them
to William Wandeford, esq., who deceased anno 1420, and
Alice his wife. The arms do not appear to be recorded in
any of the printed books of reference usually consulted, and
an enlarged illustration of them is here given, prepared
from Fisher's original "dab. " He carefully notes that the
field and mullets are white, being no doubt in lead. The
other colours, as well as the kind of bird which is delineated,
must await further investigation; they cannot at present be
determined. They may be wagtails, for which a local name
in the north is " wang." These arms are carved on a boss
of the roof of the cloisters at Canterbury. See Archaeologia,
vol. Ixvi., plate xli., and p. 480.
The matter is of interest from the Kentish point of view,
because this, so far as at present noted, is the only memorial
remaining of a member of a family which flourished in the
fifteenth century, but of which little definite is known.
In the foundation charter of the perpetual chantry erected
by Sir John de Cobham, one of the founders of the new
1 •
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ALICE WANGDEFOBD, 1421.
NORTHFLEET, KENT.
(JVOIV lost. From a Drawing by Thomas Fisher, F.S.A.)
ARMS OF WANGDEFOBD, FHOM THE BRASS TO AXICE WANGDEFOBD, 1421.
NOETHFLEET, KENT.
(Pull size, from an old rubbing.)
NORTHFLEET. 49
bridge at Eochester circa 1393, the chaplains are directed to
pray for the benefactors of the bridge, as well those living
as those dead, and amongst the names of those living
specially mentioned appear William Wangford and Eleanor
his wife, and in the list of estates vested in the wardens and
commonalty of Eochester Bridge, temp. Henry VIII., appears
" His place at London in Cornhil] at the Shafte was given
and mortyzed by William Wainford to the value of 12 marcs
above all reprises." He appears to have had a country seat
at Northfleet at the manor of Derndale. Hasted, copying
Philipot, says it had come before the latter end of the reign
of Edward HI. into the possession of William Wangdeford
or Wainford, whose son William Wangdeford was serjeantat-
law and a benefactor of Eochester Bridge. The latter
is said to have sold it in 1436, but this is a little difficult to
assent to, as by the will of Wm. Wangeforde of Northfleet,
made 20 Jan. 1458 and proved 30 April 1459 (P.C.C.,
16 Stokton, fol. 125"), the testator after directing his burial
in Northfleet church leaves his manor of Derendale to John
Clifton, who was evidently a minor, as he is to be governed
by the executors till he is of full age and discretion. Thomas
Wombwell was one of the executors. The will does not
state that the testator was learned in the law, but it may be
inferred because he makes a specific bequest of his law
books to Eichard Burke, and this fact is confirmed by certain
documents now in the Eecord Office (Early Chancery Proceedings,
Bundle 28, No. 430), which shew that John Heel,
master of the Hospital of St. Thomas of Acres, and Gregory
Byrkes sue Thomas Wombwell, their co-executor under the
will of William Wangford, serjeant-at-law, for lands in
Gravesend devised by the will to establish a priest to singin
St. Botolph's, Northfleet.
At a later date (Bundle 69, No. 62) Margaret, daughter
of William Wangford, late citizen and draper of London,
sues John Eous as a feoffee to uses for a messuage in
Waterdale, Northfleet.
In 1390 Wm. Wangford, citizen and clothier of London,
appears as a feoffee, it would seem, of John Brikbelle,
VOL, xxxii, E
50 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
citizen and clothier of London, in a fine (Feet of Fines,
13 Eichard II., No. 680) of land in Northfleet.
In 1448 the Pope grants a licence to have a portable altar
to Wm. Wangford, lord of the place of Serondald, diocese
Canterbury.
In 1484 Thomas Wombwell, by his will, directed prayers
to be said for Margaret Clifton and John Clifton.
IV.
This is reproduced from Add. MS. 32,369, fol. 46. Each
of the upper shields was 4 | inches across at top. Fisher
found it in the chancel and so did Waller in 1837. The
inscription was gone in Fisher's time, but Reg. Roff., p . 7513
preserves it. It ran : " Hie jacet Willelmus Hesill quondam
unus baronum de scaceario domini regis qui obiit ix° die
Aprilis anno domini millesimo cccc0 xxv° et Agnes uxor ejus
Quorum," etc. Custumale (p. 136) notes the plate with the
inscription as lost.
The arms are noted by Philipot, but he does not explain
the impaled coat, which does not correspond to the recorded
arms of the Kentish branch of the house of Appleton. It is
no doubt intended for Argent, a bear sable, crowned or, the
coat assigned by Papworth to the family of'Apleton in co.
Lancaster. The shields above bear Hesill, Argent, a chevron
sable between three trefoils slipped vert.
Some particulars of the Appleton s of Kent are given by
Major Heales, F.S.A., in Archaologia Cantiana, Vol. XVIII.,
p. 328. They no doubt originally came from Lancashire.
The lady, mentioned on the brass was Agnes, daughter of
John Appleton, and after the death of her husband, the
Baron of the Exchequer of Henry the Sixth, she married
again Eobert Molyngton, a brother of Sir Thos. Molyngton,
Baron of Wemme, and she was buried at Dartford at her
death in 1454. A brass was laid down to her at Dartford,
the effigy of which still remains, shewing her in her widow's
dress. The inscription has gone, but its purport is preserved.
The William Hesill commemorated is first heard of as
u
WILLIAM HESSIL, 1425, AND WIFE AGNES.
NORTHFLEET, KENT.
(Now lost. From a Drawing by Thomas Fisher, F.S.A.)
s-'s g
MS
MAEGABET BABON, 1429.
NORTHFLEET, KENT.
Now lost. From a Drawing by Thomas Fisher, F.S.A.)
NORTHELEET. 51
auditor of the Exchequer, of which he became a baron in
1421. Foss, vol. iv., p. 326, says he retired in 1424, probably
from ill-health, as he died soon afterwards. There was a
family of the name of Hesill at Beverley in Yorkshire at the
end of the fourteenth century, and the baron may have
come from thence.
There are constant entries on the patent rolls shewing
that Wm. Hesill was in important commissions in Kent and
elsewhere, and in 1421 is an entry of his appointment as
Baron of the Exchequer.
In 1388 is an entry on the patent rolls that Wm. Hesill
and others are to keep safe Elizabeth the daughter and heir
of William son of William son of Thomas Playce until the
Court determines whether her marriage belongs to the king
or to Thomasia de Fumy vale, and Margaret her daughter.
In 1396 there is on the patent rolls evidence of a grant
for 200 marcs to Wm. Hesill, one of the auditors of the
Exchequer, and his wife Agnes and his heirs, of rents in
Dartford and elsewhere in Kent, forfeited by Nicholas
Brembre, knight. Part of these rents were held for life as
thirds by Margaret, late wife of Thos. de Graunson, knight,
the inheritance only being in the said Nicholas.
In 1412 there is a fine (Feet of Fines, Henry IV., No. 608)
about lands and a rent of a half quarter of wheat in Northfleet,
Southfleet and Horton [Kirby], by which the property,
being that of Margaret the wife of Wm. Baroun, citizen
and dyer of London, is transferred by them to Wm. Hesill,
Eiehard Appelton, and Gilbert Anlaby, clerk, and the heirs
of Wm. Hesill for 100 marcs.
V.
This is reproduced from Add. MS. 32,369, fol. 48. It was
in the chancel on a slab 5 feet by 2 feet 9 inches, and the
inscription was on a brass plate 26£ inches by 4^ inches.
Reg. Rqff., p. 751, notes it as in the chancel, and Waller
notes the slab as in the chancel, but the inscription as loose
in the clerk's house.
E 2
52 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
The inscription is for Margaret the wife of William Baron,
citizen and dyer of London. She died in 1429. The inscription
is also for her son Master Nicholas, whose will is probably
the one at Somerset House (P.C.C., 5, Luffenham), proved
on the 1st June 1425, though it was made in July 1424. In it
he is described as " clericus," and he desires to be buried in
the chancel of the church of St. Botolph, Northfleet, before
the image of the Blessed Mary. He leaves the vicar a gown
(jupa) doubled with " bokeram." He also mentions the
parish clerk Wm. Cosyn, and leaves his residue to his father
Wm. Baron, dyer, whom he makes executor. He makes no
mention of any clerical preferment. A Nicholas Baron was
at Harbledown in 1422 and at Cuxton- from 1422 to 1425,
but whether it is the same Nicholas cannot be decided on
present materials, though it seems somewhat probable.
The family of Baron was long resident in the neighbourhood
of Dartford. The name of Eobert Baron appears on
the patent rolls in various important commissions in that
neighbourhood from 1360 onwards. Thus in 1361 he is
appointed with Simon de Kegworth and John Beer to take
in the county of Kent carpenters, masons, and other workmen
for the king's works at Dartford Priory.
In 1378 a pension is given to William Baron, groom of
the poultry in the late king's household. In 1389 is a grant
for life to Eobert Baron, homer of London, whom the king
has retained to serve him with horns and other things pertaining
to his mystery, of the king's livery of clothing every
year in the great wardrobe as other homers of his condition
have been wont to receive, and he has a writ in aid for taking
servants and horns.
In 1417 there is a pardon to John Lovekyn of Cirencester,
tanner, for not appearing to answer William Baron, citizen
and dyer of London, of a debt of 45 shillings, and in 1420
another to one Eye of Gloucestershire, but the debt is
£6 18s.
In 1428 a William Baron is appointed controller of the
petty custom in the Port of London. He is to write his
rolls with his own hand, to abide at his post, do nothing by
"NORTHELEET. 53
deputy, and have the custody of one part of the seal called
" coket." This William Baron is much employed and has
many grants down to 1461, and in 1445 he appears as teller
of the Exchequer. In 1437 he gets a grant of the manor of
Whitchurch, Oxon. It is of course quite impossible to say
that these entries all relate to the same person.
In 1449, when Eichard, Duke of York, and his wife
Cecily are settling their property in feoffees, these feoffees
include William Cantlowe and William Baron. The property
includes some in Kent, viz., f manor of Kyngesdowne and
the manor of Erith (Feet of Fines, Div. Counties, Nos. 343,344).
In the Ancient Deeds preserved in the Eecord Office are
three, dated 1362 to 1368, by which Eobert Baron'of Dartford
acquires property in Dartford, which Joan, daughter of Eobert
Boleyne or Boloyne of Clyff, had inherited after the death
of her mother Maud.
In the Early Chancery Proceedings (Bundle 16, No. 421)
is a proceeding by Katherine late the wife of Eobert Baron,
and Gerard Eede and Agnes his wife, the ladies being
daughters of Eobert Myrfyn, esq., late of Southwark, to
establish their title to the manor of Wynvale in Northfleet
and land at Newington in Surrey against Wm. Falam,
Eoger Byrkes, and George Myrfyn, and in a later proceeding
(Bundle 19, No. 461) Eobert, son of Eobert Merfyn, sues
Eoger Byrkkes and Eobert Baron, mercer of London, as
feoffees for the manor of Wyndwall. The Eecord Office
index suggests this is Wombwell, but there is difficulty in
accepting this ascription.
In 1356 Eobert Baroun of Dartford and his wife Alice
are found selling her property in Earde (Crayford) for £20
to Simon de Kegworth, his wife. Avice, and the heirs of
Simon (Feet of Fines, No. 1119).
In 1402 Eichard Baroun and his wife Alice sell half of
one messuage and of 3£ acres of land in Northfleet which
was her property. . The inference is that she had a sister
who owned the other half (Feet of Fines, No. 105).
Eeference may further be made to the fine noted in the
last paragraph of the note on No. IV., supra.
54 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
VI.
This is reproduced from Add. MS. 32,369, fol. 37. The
scale can be gathered from the shields, which are 4 | inches
across at top. Reg. Roff. notes it (p. 753) as on a stone in the
north-east corner of the north isle, and at p. 756 copies from
Weever (p. 332) the inscription, which he has thus: Hie sub
pede ante altare jacent Willelmus Rihhill ar. filius Willelmi
Rikhill militis primogenitus et Katherina uxor ejus que obiit
27 Aug. 1433 qui quidem Willelmus obiit . . . . die . . . . 1400
quorum, from which it would seem that the wife died first,
and the date of the husband's death was never filled in.
Philipot notes the arms. The brass as laid down had
" schedules " from the mouths of the effigies to a (?) Trinity
above. These were gone in. Fisher's time, and he only found
the effigies, a small portion of the inscription, and two
shields above. The male figure was in the full-plate armour
of the period, which may be compared with John Cosington
at Aylesford and Valentine Baret at Preston. The lady is
in a houppelaude or long gown with surplice sleeves, with
a dog with bells sitting on the folds at her feet. She has a
deep collar and a necklace, and is very like the ladies at
Aylesford and Preston. The remains of the brass now in
the church, viz., the male effigy (legs lost) and the female
effigy, are fixed as stated above in the same paving stone as
No. II. These portions are shewn in Belcher's Kentish
Brasses, vol. L, p. 89. Two shields from this brass, now in
private possession, were shewn at the Exhibition of British
Heraldic Art, held at the Burlington Fine Arts Club in
1916. They are reproduced at p. 60.
The person commemorated belongs to a family which,
appearing in Kent about the end of the fourteenth century,
is constantly met with in the County records for some hundred
years, and then almost entirely disappears. It may be
useful to collect all that is known about it.
The name of the family occurs spelt in many ways, but
as the way of spelling the name once on the brass is as short
as any it will be adopted throughout. The family may have
NORTHELESiT. 55
eome originally from Ireland, as suggested by Weever.
The earliest member of the family to appear in Kent is
William Eikhill, a serjeant-at-law 1384 and a Judge of the
Common Pleas 1389. He was afterwards knighted, and is
said to have bought the manor of Eidley, which is traced by
Hasted through the Wattons to Augustine Waleys who died
seized in 1354. But from other sources it seems clear, as
will be shewn below (p. 58), that the Judge had no property
at Eidley, which in 1382 was transferred to Sir John de
Cobham and Eichard Vaughan and the heirs of Sir John,
quit of the life interest of Isabel wife of John Wareson (Feet
of Fines, 5 Eichard II., No. 227).
That the Judge held the manors of Ifield and Esliugham
in Frindsbury is certain. There is an amusing story of his
being taken at the dead of night from his house at Esliugham
and carried to Calais to examine the king's uncle
Thomas of Woodstock, the Duke of Gloucester. See further
the Dictionary of National. Biography, s.v., and also s.v.
Thomas of Woodstock; see also Archceologia Cantiana,
Vol. XXVIIL, p. 229.
As to Ifield manor, that seems to have been recovered in
1391 by Nich. de Weston and his wife Joan, she makingtitle
to it as heir-general of Ealph de Hever, who was living
temp. Edw. I. See the De Banco Roll, Mich., 14 Eich. II.,
m. 139. The Judge probably bought the property from the
successful claimants, though there is nothing at present
found which establishes this.
The Judge's will, made at Eslyngham the day of
St. German the Bp. 1407, and proved on the 27th June in
that year, is at Lambeth (Eeg. Arundel, i., 243). The provisions
of it and those of the will of his widow Eose as to burial
in Eochester Cathedral are quoted by Sir Wm. Hope in his
article on the cathedral (Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XXIIL,
p. 295). The will does not mention his eldest son William,
whose brass is at Northfleet. This is open to two interpretations.
The Judge had been married before, as appears
from the pedigree in Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XXVIII.,
P. 228, to Joan Etchingham, and it may be that the eldest
56 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
son was by her. On the other hand the second wife Eose
mentions William as her son in her will in 1418, and he is
her feoffee and principal executor, so the explanation may
be that the eldest son had already been provided for by
a settlement on his marriage.
The Judge was executor of Sir "William Walworth, and
had a legacy under his will. To John Kyngesfold was
appar ntly due the Judge's possession of an estate in Surrey,
and mindful of his obligations to these two persons he directs
that for their souls and for the souls of Thos. Median, his
wife Maud and their son John, large sums should be distributed.
He also directs his feoffees Wm. Serene and
Wm. Chercbesey to sell all his tenements in Eochester, half
the proceeds to go to the guardians of Eochester Bridge,
they finding a priest "to celebrate for my soul" in the
chapel at the end of the bridge, In passing it may be
observed that the Judge's good state was already prayed
for there (Reg. Roff., p. 555). He further leaves legacies to
the Prioress of Eusper in Sussex and to each house of
brethren in Kent, in the City of London, and the county
of Essex.
There is no disposition of landed property except that
mentioned above, but the Judge mentions his manors of
Eslingham, Ifield, Ditton Camoys (Cambs), and Mokynden
Hall, and he speaks of John Botild, chaplain, " rector of
my chapel of Eslingham," and Eobt. Fulborne, vicar of
Frindsbury. The widow Eose is principal executor with
Wm. Cheyne, son of Wm. Cheyne, some time recorder of the
city of London; John Hoke, clerk; and John Martyn of
Dartford, possibly the John Martyn who was afterwards a
judge of the C.P., and is buried at Graveney.
The Judge in his will mentions the manor of Mokynden
Hall. This is no doubt Mokelton or Mugden Hall in Ulting
and Hatfield Peverel, Essex. In an inquest ad quod damnum
in 1389 (13 Eichard II.) it is stated that he then held this
manor, so could be allowed to join in a transfer of land in
Barking to the abbey there. This manor after the Judge's
death went with Eslingham. Another manor mentioned as
NORTHELEET. 5^7
his by the Judge in his will is Ditton Camoys. This was in
Wood Ditton in Cambridgeshire. In 1393 there is an entry
on the patent rolls of a licence for £10 paid by Wm. of
Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester, and John de Pekbrugge,
for them to grant this manor held in chief to John de
Cobham, knight, Wm. Eickhill, Wm. Brenchley, Wm.
Makenade, Wm. Skrene, and the heirs of Wm. Eickhill.
The manor had previously been the property of John de
Pulteneye, who in 1347 settled it, as well as the manor of
Ospringe, Kent, and the manor of Shenley, Herts, on himself
for life, with various remainders over (Feet of Fines, Div.
Counties, No. 413). In 1363 there was a resettlement on
Nicholas de Lovayne, knight, and his wife Margaret (Ibid.,
No. 628). After the Judge's death the manor passed to his
third son Nicholas, as will be mentioned below (p. 68).
The widow Eose, who survived, paid a contribution to
the subsidy in 1413 on an estate of £30 per annum in the
hundred of Shamel, so she cannot have had any interest in
property at Eidley, Ifield, or Northfleet. She survived till
1419, making her will on 28 April 1418, which was proved
on 27 Aug. 1419 and is at Lambeth. She makes it with the
licence and by the wish of Wm. Eikhill " my son," Eich.
Gill, and Hen. Boydon of Kent, to whom, by a writingbearing
prior date, she had given all her " mobilia." She
leaves bequests to the hospitals of Whitchurch and of
St. Bartholomew in the co. of Kent. The three persons
above mentioned are her executors. She mentions her sons
William, John, Thomas, and Nicholas, and gives a bequest
to her grandchild Elizabeth (daughter of her daughter Maud)
at marriage.
From the two wills a good deal of family history can be
ascertained, and it may be well to take the sons in order
first.
1. The eldest, William, is the one here commemorated.
He was a godson of Sir Wm. Walworth. He was Knight of
the Shire in 1420. Mr. Cave Browne (Archceologia Cantiana,
Vol. XXL, p. 221) says he was of Estlingham in Frindsbury
and Sheriff in 1424. Both statements are probably erroneous.
58 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN RENT.
This eldest son seems to have inherited Ifield. Hasted makes
two manors of Ifield, one in the parish of that name and the
other in Norcfifleet. They may have been different, but in
the will of the Judge there is nothing to indicate this.
I t shews, however, that he owned the manor of Ifield, so
that Philipot's account, copied by Hasted, is wrong, whichever
of the two it may have been, for the accounts differ.
As to the manor of Eidley (Eidelegh) in 1382 (Feet of
Fines, 5 Eichard II., No. 227) this was dealt with by a fine
which quitclaimed the life interest of Isabel the wife of
John Wareson to John de Cobham and Eichard Waghan
and the heirs of John de Cobham. The Judge is silent about
this manor in his will, and considerable doubt is thrown on the
Philipot account adopted by Hasted by a fine in 1438 (Ibid.,
16 Henry VI., No. 462), which transfers the manor from
William Idele and his wife Eose to Wm. Eikhill, John
Felippe, clerk, and John Whyte, and the heirs of Wm.
Eikhill for 100 marcs. A warranty is given of title binding
the heirs of Eose, which suggests that it was her property.
Following this, in 1441, is a fine (Feet of Fines, 19 Hen. VI.,
No. 534) by which William Eykhull quitclaims to Sir Thos.
Echingham, knight, Eichd. Cordon, clerk, Eichd. Bruyn,
Wm. Garnet, and Eobt. Saveray, clerk, and the heirs of
Eobt. Saveray, the manors of ShyngLidwell and Eydle, and
the advowson of the church of the manor of Shynglidwell.
There is a warranty from Wm. Eykhull and his heirs, and
the price is £300. This is interesting, as it introduces a new
manor, which is not mentioned by Hasted. It seems to be
Shinglewell in Ifield. It adds another difficulty in the way
of accepting Philipot's account of the descent of the manors,
though no doubt the persons who thus became seized of these
manors were merely feoffees to uses. That there was such
a manor as Shinglewell seems to be confirmed by an entry
in the collection at the Eecord Office of Early Chancery
Proceedings (Bundle 16, No. 329), in which Wm. Eykhill
sues John Eouse for a deed connected with this manor.
John Prophete, in his will (1415), refers to the chapel at
Shingildwell near Ifield.
NORTHFLEET. 59
The knight of the shire of 1420, on pajdng a fee of
xii grossi to the Pope of the date, had with his wife an
indult in 1421 to have a portable altar, they being described
as William RykiL nobleman, and Katherine his wife. He
appears to have married an heiress, Katherine Coventry,
whose arms, argent, a chevron sable between three columbines
azure, stalked vert, were impaled on the brass. William
Rikhill died soon after 1441, when his name disappears
from the commissions of the peace.* He was a prominent
man in the county during his life. His will has not been
traced. It may be here observed that Thorpe, who deals with
the Eikhill pedigree in Bibliotheca Topographica Britannica,
No. VI., pt. 2, p. 40, increases the difficulty he was in from
the then limited knowledge of the records by assuming that
William Eikhill died in 1400, whereas the date was not
filled up on the brass as he survived his wife. They left an
only daughter and heiress Eose, who married John Lymsey
and had a son whose monumental brass was once complete
at Hackney (Haines' Introduction, p. 231, and vol. v. Transactions
of the Monumental Brass Society, p. 66 ; see also
Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica, New Series, vol. ii.,
p. 309). There seems no doubt of the descent of Ifield to
the Lymsey's, but they were involved in litigation about it,
and there seems no doubt that Edward IV., when king,
bought the manors of Ifield, Welles and Cossington. They
seem to have continued in the crown up till 14 Henry VEIL,
when John Parker and John Lymsey had a grant of them
from the king, whose cofferer John Parker then was. He
married Susan, daughter of the. painter Gerard Hornebolt.
I t is not necessary here to pursue the descent of the manor
further, but it is clear that Hasted's account cannot be
trusted implicitly.
The arms of Eikhill are still preserved in the windows
of Nettlestead Church, where they are shewn as Gules, kvo
bars gemelles between three annidets argent. These arms are
* The date suggested for his death (1433) in Archceologia Cantiana,
Vol. XXVIII., p. 211, is oertainly too early.
6b MONUMENTAL BRASSES l'N KENT.
also on the font at Frindsbury. Two shields have a mullet
between the bars for difference and the letters J. E., no
doubt for John Eikhill. Another has a martlet in the same
position for difference and the letters N. E., no doubt for
Nicholas Eikhill. In a collection of arms of Kentish Gentry,
temp. Henry VLT., printed in Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XL,
p. 394, No. 163 is "William Eekell g. 2 barres or, voyded s.
betweene 3 owles ar." It may be that the owls were used
to differentiate the houses, but it is more likely that the
arms were correctly noted by drawing annulets, which were
taken for a word beginning with the letter o and made owls.
*
*•* «
'•»
L J C 4w-;**
RIKHILL AND COVENTRY. RIKHILL.
2. The second son John was Knight of the Shire in 1423
and Sheriff in 1424. He inherited Eslyngham as well as
Mugden Hall in Essex. The descent of the Kentish manor
as traced by Hasted (following Philipot) in his first volume
(at p. 544) appears to be inaccurate, and being interesting
may be dealt with in some detail.
In 1325, on the death of Aymer de Valence, Earl of
Pembroke, it is by inquisition found that this manor was
held under him by Eeginald de Swafham and Walter Neel
as of the honour of Talebot, pertaining to the manor of
Swanscombe by service of three quarters of a knight's fee
and by suit at the Court of Gravesend.
In 1348 there is a fine (22 Edward III., No. 811) settling
the manor and the advowson of the chapel of the manor as
well as some 300 acres of land in the neighbourhood on
i.ftkfttrmr^FiBismiB?
WILLIAM RIKHILL AND WIFE KATHERINE, 1433.
NORTHFLEET, KENT.
(From a Drawing by Thomas Fisher, F.S.A.)
FISHER'S SKETCH OF ORIGINAL SLAB OF RIKHILL BRASS.
NORTHFLEET, KENT.
NORTHFLEET. 61
Walter Neel, citizen of London, and his wife Alice for life.
The settlor is one John Wythorn, chaplain, and he reserves
a rent of £20 a year to himself. There are no less than five
remainders over. Hasted commits himself to the statement
that " Wm. de Halden died possessed of this manor in the
51st year of that reign" (Edward III.). For this he cites in
his note " Rot. Esch. ejus an." He does not seem to have
consulted the original inquisitions, but relied on a manuscript
list which he had acquired. In this case it led him wrong.
The inquisition on inspection turns out to be of 50 Edward III. ,
and is an enquiry what damage will ensue if certain lands
are granted in mortmain by certain persons to the Charterhouse
in London. The lands certainly include the manor of
Eslingham, about which there is found that it is worth
10 marcs per annum ; that three quarters of it were held of
the Bishop of Eochester by the service of two-thirds of a
knight's fee; that the Bishop held of the Archbishop of
Canterbury and he of the King; that the residue of the
manor was held immediately of the Earl of March as of his
manor of Swanscombe by service of a fourth part of a
knight's fee; and that the Earl held of the King. It seems
clear that the transfer to the Charterhouse in prospect in
1376 was never made, and that the applicants were apparently
feoffees to uses. Their names are given in the inquisition,
and number fourteen, Wm. de Haldenne being the first and
Wm. de Walleworth the second. Others are Wm. de Home,
Wm. Makenade, Thos. Chicche of Goodneston, and Thos.
Garwinton of Welle (Ickham). It is observed above that
Wm. de Walleworth was closely allied with Judge Rikhill.
The situation is clearly shewn by an entry on the close rolls
in 1380, where is entered the transfer in 1375 by Eobt.
Neele, cousin and heir of Walter Neel, of the manor to some
of the fourteen feoffees, and in 1380 the same Eobert quitclaims
the same property to Wm. Eykhill and others and
their heirs with warranty, the grantor stating that he had
it by feoffment of Wm. Stowe and Thos. Swanton, feoffees
under the previous deed, and in the same year 1380 there
is a fine (3 Eichard II., No. 153) transferring this property,
62 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
described exactly as in the fine of 1348 (but without
the advowson), from Eobt. Neel and Alice his wife to
Wm. Eykhill and Gilbert Melchebourn and the heirs of
William in consideration of 200 marcs. The warranty is
from the heirs of Alice, and in 1383 is another fine
(6 Eichard II., No. 298) transferring the manor and nothing
else to Will. Eykyll and Eose his wife and the heirs of
William, quit from John Lovekyn and his wife Mabel and
the heirs of Mabel in consideration of 200 marcs. In 1395
there is another fine (18 Eichard II., No. 897) transferring
the property (including the advowson), described exactly as
in the fine of 1348, to Wm. Eykhill, Wm. Skreyn, and Wm.
Makenade and the heirs of Wm. Eykhill, in consideration
of 200 marcs paid by them, and they get a quitclaim of the
whole from Eoger Curteys of Dounton (? Dunton) and his
wife Agnes and her heirs.
The exact legal effect of these various transactions
is rather hard to determine, but it may be suggested that
the Judge, having regard to the settlement of 1348, was not
quite certain of the validity of the transfer by Eobert Neel
and proceeded to get in the outstanding interests from the
remainder men under the fine, and so obtained a clear title
to the manor, advowson, and the rest of the property, which
is consistent with a fine of 1404 (5 Henry IV., Divers
Counties, No. 77), which settles the manor and other property
(the advowson is not named) as well as the manor of Patynden
in Surrey in feoffees, who are Sir Wm. Brenchley
(a well-known Kentish Judge), William Skrene, Wm. Makenade,
and Wm. Cherteseye of the county of Essex. It is to
be observed that Sir Wm. Eykhill in his will mentions the
survivors as his feoffees. The manor of Patynden may be
dealt with hereafter.
In 1415 a pardon is entered on the patent rolls to John
Eykhyll of Frindsbury for not appearing in an action, and
in 1417 with Nicholas Eykhill and others for purchasing
certain property without licence. He seems to have died
before 1438, leaving an only daughter and heiress Joan, wife
of Eichard Bruyn. She is mentioned in her grandfather's
NORTHFLEET. 63
will, under which she gets 200 marcs to her marriage.
Eichd. Bruyn was a prominent man and in the commission
of the peace for the county.
This second son John may be the John, son of Wm.
Eikill, who in 1386 by the king's command proceeds to
Spain in the suite of John of Gaunt, and has a protection.
Again in 1399 John Eikhill alias Van Eikhill has protection
when going in the king's suite to Ireland. In 1428 John
Eikhill is sworn junior master of the Linenweavers' Company
of London, and in 1433 is senior master. These facts come
from the City Letter Books. He must have been dead before
Easter Term 11 Henry VI. (1434), as there is an entry in the
Tear Boole for that term (No. 26) relating to the pleadings in
an action of debt by I. D. and Isabel his wife against C. and
A., executors of the will of John Eykhill (son and heir of
.the late Wm. Eykhill, chivaler, of Eslyngham) late of
Eslyngham, esquire.
No will has been found of John Rikhill. It is suggested
by Mr. Ball (Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XXVIIL, p. 212)
that he married a Buckland, and he founds this suggestion
on the shield of Eikhill impaling argent, an eagle displayed
sable, in Nettlestead Church. But it may be observed that
Bruyn also bore this coat and that the shield may have been
reversed in replacing it in the window, and that in fact it
was put there for Eichd. Bruyn and his wife Joan Eikhill.
Litigation seems to have been plentiful about the manor
of Eslyngham. In 1438 there appears on the De Banco
Eolls an action by Stephen Andreu claiming it under the
settlement by the fine in 22 Edward III. against Eichard
Bruyn and his wife Joan, and in 1456, on the same rolls, is
an action against them joined with Sir Thomas Kyriell, knt.,
and Thomas Hoo, esq., and others, by Thomas Dalton, clerk,
claiming as heir of one John Fulham, who had been seized
temp. Edward II.
Joan Bruyn died in 1463, to judge by her will made in
Latin at London 8 June 1462 and proved at Lambeth
18 Dec. 1463 (P.C.C., 3, Godyn). She describes herself
therein as the wife of Eichard Bruyn of Eslyngham in the
6 4 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
county of Kent, esquire, and states that the will is made with
his licence. In it, while professing to dispose of all and
singular her manors, lands, etc., in Kent and Essex, and in
the city of London, she only in fact directs her feoffees to
make an estate for life to Eichard Bruyn her husband in
them all with one exception, and that exception is some
property at Lamberteshill in the parish of St. Mary Magdalen
" i n veteri piscaria" (Old Fish Street), London, which
excepted property is to go to Wm. Gaynesford, esq., for life.
He is also overseer of the will, the executors proving being
Wm. Pellycan and John Peek, while the witnesses include
Master Edward Story, S.T.P., rector of All Hallows the
Great (London Wall), in which church the testatrix desires
to be buried. Another witness is Thos. Swynford, " Gentilman,"
of Eccleshall, Staffordshire. The testatrix leaves
legacies (1) for priests to celebrate at All Hallows the Great,
Frindsbury and Eslingham ; (2) 6s. 8d. to repair Frindsbury
church and 3s. 4>d. to the vicar there; (3) 3s. 4d. to the
chapel of the blessed Mary in the monastery at Eochester,
and the same sum to the vicar of St. Margaret's, Eochester;
(4) 20s. to the chapel of St. Peter of Eslingham; (5) to Dom.
Agnes Chestre, a nun at Mallyng, and to the image of the
B.V.M. in that monastery. There are legacies to various
persons, including Elizabeth the wife of Wm. Pellycan.
Taking the will altogether it may be gathered that the
testatrix had no children living at her death.
3. Thomas, the third son of the Judge, is mentioned in
the wills of the Judge and of his widow Eose. He seems to
have inherited the manor of Patynden and to have died
before 1441, leaving a daughter Joan, who was his heiress.
She seems to have married twice at least.
The manor of Patynden is identified in the Victoria
County History as Paddington Bray in Abinger, and
according to the account there found, it was held by the
Judge in succession to the John Kyngesfold, who is mentioned
in the Judge's will (supra, p. 56). By a Surrey Fine of
1385 Kyngesfold appears to have acquired it of Thos. Elriche
and his wife Alice. In 1441 it was sold by Henry Pevensey
NORTHELEETV 65
and his wife Joan to Wm. Lee of Aston and John Bykerton,
clerk. This fits in very well with a fine of 1467 (7 Edward IV.,
Divers Counties, No. 51), where the grantors are Eichard
Ayssheby of Stratton upon Dunnesmore, co. Warwick, and
his wife Joan. She is described as late the wife of Hen.
Pevensey and as daughter and heir of Thos.. Eikhill, and as
kinswoman and heir of Joan, late wife of Eichard Bruyn,
the daughter and heir of John Eikhill, son of the Judge.
The fine includes the manors of Mokilton Hall in Essex,
and Eslyngham, as well as property in Kent described
very much in the same way as in the fine of 1348, though
the advowson is not mentioned. The whole is quitclaimed
to John Worsop, citizen and clothier of London, who gives
£500 for it and gets a warranty by the grantors and the
heirs of Joan against George Abbot of Westminster and
his successors.*
The fine gives some interesting genealogical details, but
at first sight is very difficult to fit in with the other facts, and
especially with an inquisition in 1476 (16 Edward IV., No. 61)
on the death of Thos. Eykels, who is found to have died 26 Jan.
16 Edward IV. (1475) seized of Eslingham manor and the
advowson of the chapel of that manor and of the manor of
" Mekeltonhall" in various parishes in Essex, including
Ulting. Thomas, it is found, had married Joan, daughter
of John Worshop, and John their son and heir was 4 years
old and more.
Luckily this last finding seems to give a clue to the fine
of 1467, which conveyed the property to this same John
Worshop, who may have settled it in feoffees to preserve it
for his daughter's posterity. No one who has read the
Paston Letters will be surprised at the litigation about the
manor or the. various blots on the title thereto which turn up
in the course of investigation.
* It may be explained that this form of warranty was adopted to exolu.de
any suggestion that there was any implied warranty of title. Conveyancers of
the time of Henry VI- seem to have invented this form of warranty against the
claim of an abbot who had no connection whatever with the property, in order
that by inserting a valueless express warranty the possibility of any warranty
being implied should be destroyed.
VOL XXXII. F
6 6 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
Following this inquest the next record that remains is
in the De Banco Eoll for 1482 (Trim., 22 Edward IV.,
mem. 339), which gives particulars of a suit by one John
Andrew, the descendant of Eoger Andrew and Isabel his wife,
who were the fourth in the remainders over in the fine of 1348.
The claim is for the manor of Eslyngham against John
Eykkyll. The pedigree setting out the descenttothedefendant
starts with the Judge and proceeds to his son Thomas, who
had a daughter and heir Joan who had a son and heir
Thomas, the father of the defendant. The action was brought
when John the son of Thomas was still under age, as he
appears by Thos. Acton as bis guardian, and indeed in 1482
(on the finding of the above inquisition) John would be 12.
The defence of the guardian to the action divides the property
into two parts, and alleges that the greater part was granted
by Thos. Echyngham, esq., Nicholas Gaynesford and David
Everard, who were seized of the manor of Eslyngham to
Eichard Bruyn, esq., for life, remainder to Thos. Eykhill
(the father of the ward) and his heirs. It is alleged that
Thomas survived Eichard Bruyn and died seized. This
makes a clear title in John (the ward) to the manor.
The title of the other portion is much more involved.
I t was apparently in feoffees, Wm. Cheyne, Alan Kynton
and Wm. Ponder, and this part of the case involves the bit
of pedigree making Joan the mother of a Thomas Eikhill
and so grandmother of the defendant John. Now Joan, as
has been shewn, married Henry Pevensey and afterwards
Eichard Ayssheby, so either Thomas, the defendant's father,
changed his name to Eikhill or was son of Joan by a husband—
of whom nothing is known—of her own surname. It cannot
be assumed that the pleading in the action would be wrong
in so material a point, and indeed the whole record is so
interesting as to be almost worth printing at length, though
it is believed that the above extract contains all material
facts. The action seems to have been compromised, for, by
a fine of 1485 (Feet of Fmes, 1 Hen. VII.), John Andrew
and his wife Agnes for 200 marcs transfer the manor, the
advowson of the chapel of the manor, and upwards of
NORTHELEET. • 67
200 acres of land in the neighbourhood to Thos. Graunt,
elk.; Hen. Cantlowe and John Castell. Hen. Cantlowe was
the minor's guardian, for in 1478 there is a document
(Reg. Roff., p. 372) by which John, Bishop of Eochester,
guardian in right of the Cathedral Church of St. Andrew,
Eochester, of the body of John Eikhill, son and heir of
Thos. Eikhill, late of Eslyngham, Kent, now dead, and of
his lands, grants the ward and the lands to Thos. St. Leger,
knt., Hen. Merlande, and Hen. Cantlowe. The wardship
seems subsequently to have passed to Sir Jas. Crowmer of
Tunstall, who married his daughter Margaret to the ward, as
is stated in an inscription in brass still remaining in Tunstall
church recording the death of this Margaret in 1496. She
is described as Butfum UXOV 3fQf>'i8 3£t£*gte ijmBis manefti
tit Sssljjttgl/ttt, so the conclusion is that their married life was
short, and that the heir died before he came of age, which
is consistent with an action by the heir's sister Elizabeth,
who had married Eoger Tylden, against Sir James Crowmer,
seeking an account of the profits of the manor of EsLingham
received by the defendant during the minority of John, son
of Thomas Eykkyls. The brass inscription at Tunstall was
" in the quire" on a slab, at each corner of which was
a shield of arms. Philipot records one of Eykhill impaling
Crowmer (A chevron engrailed between three crows). The
shields are all now gone, but in Eowe Mores' History of
Tunstall it is recorded that they then all remained, but too
much defaced to be made out completely. He says the top
shield towards the right hand bore Crowmer impaling Argent,
a squirrel gules for Squerry of Westerham, while the bottom
towards the left bore three shields in pale, and he gives an
illustration of it. In the centre is Crowmer (Argent, a chevron
engrailed sable between three crows proper). The dexter is
Eikhill and the sinister Ermine, on a chevron three leopards'
faces. The engraving makes the faces on the chevron
exactly like leopards' heads jessant de Us, and this is
very probable, as Ermine, on a clievron gules three leopards'
heads jessant de Us or were the arms of Cantelo of London,
and the pedigree of Crowmer, given by Eowe Mores, shews
a 2
68 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
a connection between Crowmer and Cantelo of London.
The shield then may be explicable in two w7ays. Either
Margaret was widow of a Cantelo when she married Eikhill
or the Cantelo shield came from her grandmother.
4. Nicholas, who was apparently the fourth son of the
Judge, seems to have married Isabel, widow of John de Boys,
and to have had with her the manor of Chadwell in Essex,
to the church of which he presented in 1422. He accounts
as sheriff for Essex from Michaelmas 1429. He may be the
father of Geoffrey Eikkyll, who was sheriff of that county
in 1434 and 1449, but Philip Malpas, citizen and draper,
appears to have bought Chadwell, as he presented to the
church in 1450. In old St. Paul's Cathedral, London,
Dugdale records an inscription asking for prayers for the
souls of John de Boys, esq., of county Essex, of Nich.
Eikhill, esq., and of the lady Isabel " uxoris eorum." It
seems then that she survived both, dying in 1443. It
may be added that Nicholas Eykhill was a feoffee in an
important resettlement of the Cobham estates in. 1428,
evidenced by a fine of 6 Henry VI. (Diverse Counties, No. 76).
Nicholas appears to have inherited his father's manor of
Ditton Camoys in Cambridgeshire, for in 1428 it is recorded
in the Feudal Aids for Cambridgeshire that Nicholas Eykhill
holds one knight's fee in Cheveley which John de Pulteney
formerly held. Now John de Pulteney, as is established
above (p. 57), held the manor which is in Cheveley hundred,
and as no one answers for the manor by name in the record
of 1428, it seems to follow that the one knight's fee was
the manor of Ditton Camoys.
Having dealt with the Judge's sons it is now necessary
to turn to the daughters.
5. Both the Judge and his widow in their wills mention
a daughter Maud. The Judge mentions her daughter Margaret
and the widow mentions Elizabeth, "the daughter of
Maud my daughter." She had married one Eichard Gille,
" draper " of London, before 1397, in which year there is
entered on the patent rolls a grant to Eichard Gylle, who
has stayed continuously in the king's service in the office
NORTHFLEET. 69
of second chamberlain of the exchequer of the said office
during good behaviour with the usual fees. This grant is
made at the supplication of Wm. Eikhill, one of the
justices of the Common Bench, whose daughter it is recited
Eichard has married.
In the City Letter Booh, under date 17 June 1418, it is
noted that Nicholas Eykhill and Hen. Boydone delivered to
the chamberlain John Hille one hundred marks which Eose
Eikhill bequeathed to Elizabeth the daughter of Eich. Gille,
draper. If Elizabeth died before marriage 50 marks was to
go to the said Eichard and Maud his wife. But (from the
same souree) under date 20 June 1420, Eichard Gille and
Nic. Eykhill, the father and uncle of Elizabeth, came before
Eichard Whityngton, the Mayor, and the Aldermen and
obtained leave to have the hundred marks delivered out to
them from the Chamber. It may be assumed that Margaret
died before her grandmother Eose, and Elizabeth died
between 1418 and 1420.
6. The Judge makes no mention of the names of his
daughters other than Maud. He only speaks of my daughters
and their husbands. Dame Eose's will is quite silent as to
any other daughters than Mand. From other sources it is
found that one was named Ann and married William Skrene.
He was one of the Judge's feoffees, as appears from the
will of the Judge. William Skrene was a serjeant-at-law
(10 Henry IV.), and Ann's son Sir William had a manor in
Chadwell, Essex, called Long House, and in consequence the
family is fully dealt with by Morant, though his account in
his first volume does not quite tally with that in the second
which is correct according to a pedigree which can be constructed
from the documents in the Eecord Office relating
to some litigation about a manor of Onehouse in Suffolk
(Early Chancery Proceedings, Bundle 55, Nos. 159 seq.), after
the death in 1474 of Sir John Skrene, Ann's great-grandson.
7. In the same Chancery proceeding another of the Judge's
daughters, Isabel, is mentioned. She is there called mother
of Eichard Ayston, but the christian name of the Ayston she
had married is not given,
70 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
No other daughter of the Judge has at present been
identified, but other persons of the same name who cannot at
present be connected with the Judge have been noted. In
the wiUs at Somerset House are those of Eichard Eykkyllys,
1493 (1, Vox), and Agnes his widow, 1502 (20, Blamyr).
They were of the parish of St. Edmund, Lombard Street, in
the city of London. Her first husband was Thomas Wellis,
and her brother John Saunder, citizen and sherman of
London, is mentioned by both. They do not seem to have
had any children. The husband makes Eobt. Weston, mercer,
one of his executors, and speaks of his land in Kent, which
he directs to be sold, and also mentions his brother John
Eykhill (whose widow Juliana had married again to one
Gwynne) and John Eykhill's younger son Eichard.
A Eichard Eykhill is found (Early Chancery Proceedings,
Bundle 38, No. 31) suing for land in Cliffe, and in 1495
there is amongst the ancient deeds preserved at the Eecord
Office a release by Eichard " Eykkyliss," kinsman and heir
of Eichard Eykhill of London, viz., son of John, brother of
the said Eichard, deceased, transferring all his rights to land
in Cliffe and Higham to Eobert Weston and others. Observe
that Eobert Weston is also executor of the will cited above
from 1, Vox. In connection with the name Gwynne, above
referred to, it may be mentioned that in a Surrey fine of 1493
Thomas Gwynne and his wife Juliana, late wife of John
Eikhill the elder of Wandsworth, and Eichard Eikhill, son
of John Eikhill, are parties.
VII.
This is reproduced from Add. MS. 32,369, fol. 46. Fisher
notes it as in the north chancel, and the only remnant, the
shield, measured 4 | inches along the top. Reg. Roff., p. 755,
notes it as in the north isle, and states that another shield
remained charged with a chevron between three swans. These are
the arms, doubtless, of Swan of Southfleet, which, as quartered
by Eoper, are Azure, a chevron or between three swans argent.
On the brass there is on the chevron a mullet for difference.
f
:
• *
EEMAINS OF A BRASS TO A MAN IN ARMOUR AND WIFE, C. 1440.
NORTHFLEET, KENT.
(From a Drawing by Thomas Fisher, F.S.A.)
I
^~^"N
THOMAS BRAMPSTON, 1511, AND WIFE JOAN.
NORTHFLEET, KENT.
(Now lost. From a Drawing by Thoniiis Fisher, F.S.A.)
NORTHFLEET. 71.
Up to the present the arms on the Baron side of the shield,
a chevron between two cross-crosslets fitchy in chief and a rose
in base, have not been traced, so it is impossible to conjecture
who was buried under this slab. The indents suggest a date
circa 1440.
VIII. and IX.
Reg. Rqff., p. 751, notes, " on a brass plate in the space is
this coat," viz., a saltier botony between four demy eaglets displayed,
erased, and in the north isle (p. 753), on a brass plate
the inscription, Wtit in tumfoa wjjtmscit mjnts 3&icarBt laatoj?
aim et Jftavgeria \txox ejm quonBam custos jofalittm Domini
wgts $ieuvici &exti outt't #ti ifttarti fflcccclxxxxi, and also
$taj> fox tfje sotole of J&atoBe Batoa?
Wftt&t cofjis %m rotter Botlj X%t
%l)t toas fyt Sfotogijtn* of ©Stilltam IBaog
©n toijose sotole Jfesu fjaoe ntercj?
K jirag JJOU all for djerite
Say a pater ttost«r an» an &toe. &nmt.
Custumale notes (p. 136) the inscription and others of that
family lost. It may be surmised that the Latin inscription
has been " extended" inaccurately, as it does not seem
grammatically quite accurate.
The shield no doubt belonged to this family. Bapworth
gives (p. 632) Or, a cross botonny in saltire between four eagles
displayed as the arms of Davis of Kent, and Philipot notes
these arms as on the monument of Eichard Davy on a shield
impaling on a bend three bougets. He tricks the eagles as
whole birds. On the other hand the arms of Davy as
quartered by Parker in the visitation of 1619 are given
as, Or, a saltorelle patonce between four demi eagles couped,
displayed sable. The impaled coat noted by Philipot may
be Argent, on a bend azure three water bougets or, the arms
of Joce. A family of this name was connected with Northfleet,
and a place called "Joces" in Dartford occurs in the
Early Chancery Proceedings (Bundle 70, No. 12, and 10,
No. 273). Probably it was the place where lived a family
72 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
called Joce, a member of which, Adam Joce, paid a tax of
5s. Id. in Dartford in 1302 (Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. IX.,
p. 298).
In Palgrave's Antient Kalendars, etc., of the Exchequer,
published in 1836 by the Commissioners of Public Eecords,
there is an entry under the year 1457 that certain jewels
formerly in the custody of Simon Eyre, alderman of London,
were on the 15th December delivered under a writ of privy
seal to Eichard Davy, clerk of the king's jewels, as appeared
by the said Eichard's indenture in the hanaper (vol. ii.,
p. 233). The writ of privy seal given at Coventry, which
is in English, is printed in full, ibid., vol. iii., p. 387.
Further, in 1461 the rich crown, which had been taken
from the Treasury for the coronation of Edward IV., was on
the 12th August delivered up to Eichard Davy in a box,
" de correo " (? of leather, Fr. cuir), which had three locks, the
keys of which remained with the king. (Ibid., vol. iii., 1.)
The will of Eichard Davy is at Somerset House (P.C.C.,
41, Milles). It was made the 1st March 1490 and proved
on the 26th March 1491. It is in Latin. The testator is
described as " armiger." He is to be buried in the church of
St. Botolph, Northfleet, in the chapel of the B. Mary before
her image there. He leaves the friars preachers of London
20s., and the friars minors of London 13s. 4d. to celebrate
for his soul and the soul of his wife. He leaves several
small legacies to various persons, including the wife of
Christopher Blyndres, late relict of Eichard Mawtyn. The
residue goes to his son William Davy, and he is sole executor.
In the Early Chancery Proceedings is one in which William
Philip, citizen and goldsmith of London, seeks to stay an
action of debt before the mayor of Canterbury, brought by
William, son and executor of Eichard Davy of Northfleet.
X.
This is reproduced from Add. MS. 32,369, fol. 48.
Fisher notes it as in the south chancel, and it was on a slab
7 ft. 2 inches by 3 ft. 2 inches. The width of the brass at
the foot of the figure was 7| inches, and the height of the
NORTHFLEET. 73
headless figure was 20 inches. Fisher suggests that it is
identical with the one referred to by Reg. Roff., p. 752, as in
the south isle—" on a gravestone are three brass plates; on
two the effigies of a man and woman and on the third the
following inscription : . . . . of QtyomM 3Bra'tO aitJJ Jtone ljj)S
toyfe toyijelj Stomas Beeesyu the yere of our HorD JWXft
@tt to*)OS SOUS IfljeStt Ijaoe mercy " Custumale (p. 136) notes
this inscription as then lost. Waller found in the chapel
in the south aisle a headless figure about temp. Henry VIII.,
and refers to Harl. MS. 6587. This, it may be explained, is
the original collection of inscriptions in churches afterwards
printed with additions in Reg. Roff. At fol. 97 the entries
as to Northfleet begin. But part of the MS. refers to
churches in Canterbury diocese, and has not been printed.
The testament of Thomas Brampston (P.C.C., 2, Fettiplace)
was made on the 28th May and proved the 9th July
1511. He directs his body to be buried in the church of Northfleet.
He leaves 40s. to the high altar and £6 13s. 4d. to the
churchwardens and parishioners "towards the reparations
and other necessaries towards the same, church." He leaves
legacies of 40s. each to Eichard Brampston, Henry Brampston
and John Brampston, but he does not say what
relationship they had to him. There is an extraordinary
number of small pecuniary legacies, and the names must
include nearly all the parishioners at the time in Northfleet.
He mentions his daughter Elizabeth, who is to have 100
marcs to her marriage and promotion. His wife Joan has
the residue, and is executrix with John Eooper, gent., as
overseer. By the last will which follows, some tenements in
the high street in Northfleet, bought of Woomewell, and all
his houses in Stepneth in the shire of Middlesex are left to
the wife for life (" she finding my daughter till she comes of
the age of 18"), with remainder to John "my son" and
Elizabeth " my daughter." The rest of his lands go to his
son John, with remainder to his daughter. The son was young,
as he is to be "founde to school." William Brampston is
to have "the Chauntre which I purchased of . . . . Fright."
In the collection of rubbings of brasses belonging to the
74 MONUMENTAL BRASSES IN KENT.
Society of Antiquaries is one of an inscription on a brass
plate 24§- inches by 3£ inches, which runs :—
pr'j? for tije soules of JToij'n Bramstone $c &lgs bis togfe
flje tobgclj § olm
BeeesiB tije xiii Baie of ifebruarg tije yere of our lorD
ml v* xxxnm
®n toljos Soules anD all ©rysten Soules S!)'u Ijaoe
marey, 3J8S4L
This inscription is not noticed in Reg. Roff. or in
Custumale, or any other authority, as being in Northfleet
church, and it was in private possession when the rubbing
was made. But it was very probably under the seats, and
was uncovered at the "restoration" and then removed.
This probability is made almost certainty by the terms of
the will of John Bramston, 1532 (P.C.C., 24, Thower), who
desires to be buried in St. Andrew's chancel in Northfleet
church. The will was made the 12 Feb. 1532 and proved
20 Feb. of that year. The John Bramstone of the inscription
died the 13th Feb. 1533. The difference in the year is
easily explained. There- are points in the will which tend,
however, the other way. The testator makes his wife Mary
his executor, and speaks of William Atwood, " son of my
sister Margaret Atwood," and of her daughters, one of them
being named Agnes. He also leaves his tenement at Market
Hill to John Bramston for life, and then to Thomas
Bramston, son of the said John Bramston.
If the John Bramston of the inscription and the testator
are one and the same, he must have had a first wife Alice,
which of course is quite probable. It must not be concluded,
however, that he was son of the Thomas Brampston who
died in 1511. Some of the provisions of the will are printed
in Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XXIV., p. 145, and in Testamenta
Cantiana.
XL
Weever notes an inscription for Eichard Hunt, late
servant to my Lord of Canterbury Wm. Warham, and Joan
his wife. Eichard died in 1518 and his wife in 1531.
NORTHELEET. 75
This is copied (Reg. Roff., p . 756), but that record does
not say it was on brass, but Custumale, at p. 136, implies
that it was, and that it was then lost.
Nothing is known of Eichard Hunt, but the lady must
have had two memorials in the same church, for she was the
relict of Thomas Brampston, as appears by her will (P.C.C.,
13, Thower) made the 25th Aug. 1531 and proved the
27th Jan. 1531. She describes herself as a widow, and
desires burial in the parish (? church omitted) of Northfleet,
next to the grave of Thomas Brampston "my late husband."
She leaves money for the repair of the road from Windfall
cross to Windfall street, and various pecuniary legacies.
Her son John Brampston gets the residue and is sole
executor, while Wm. Wodd of Gravesend is supervisor.
Eobert Baron is a witness. See Testamenta Cantiana, West
Kent, p. 56.
XII.
See under No. X., at p. 74.
XIII.
Iii Fisher's time this was in the nave on a slab 3 feet by
3 feet. Waller, in 1837, still found it there, and took a
" dab " of the brass plate, which was 17 inches by 7^ inches.
I t bore, in Eoman letters, this inscription :—
Hie JACET HENEICVS BEYCE YEOMAN QVI
DVXIT IN VXOEEM MAEGEEIAM ELCHAEDI
LAMING GENEEOSI EIMAM QVI BONA
OBIIT SENECTVTE OVEIIB IPIELD IN
COMITATV' KANTIJE DVODECIMO DIE
OCTOB : A0 2ETATIS SVIE SEXAGESSIMO
SEXTO ANNOQ' DOMINI 1638°.
See Reg. Roff., p. 751.