PLANS OF, AND BRIEF ARCHITECTURAL NOTES ON, KENT
CHURCHES
PART IV. TROTTESCLIEFE, SS. PETER AND PAUL, BISHOPSBOURNE,
S. MARY, AND ADDITIONAL NOTES ON BEARSTED
By F. C. ELLISTON-ERWOOD, F.S.A.
TROTTESOLIFEE. SS. PETER AND PAUL (Plan 15)
TROTTESOLIFEE (or Trosley) Church is a small simply planned bufiding,
consisting of a nave and chancel without any chancel arch, to which
has been added on the south-west corner, a late tower. I had always
regarded it as an early Norman church without any peeuHar or unusual
features and it was, therefore, somewhat of a shock when a sheaf of
papers, sketch plans, measurements and photographs was handed to me
for study, for therein was propounded the theory that the eastern
portion of the building was the earher, to which at a later date had been
added the present west part of the church, now the nave. This in
itself would not be an impossibility, but the manner in which it was
suggested the addition had been made was certainly unusual. A study
of the accompanying plan (No. 15) shows that the exterior of the church
is devoid of any noteworthy features except the two projecting angles
(a' below) in the middle of each of the north and south walls. One
of the sketches in the coUection above referred to was something Hke
this:
FIG. 1
The purport of it was that the eastern part had been first built and
later its west wall had been removed, and the two ends of the lateral
waUs inserted into a new extension westwards in the manner shown,
which was held to account for the position of the various angle projections.
Such a method of church extension was unknown to me,
so in view of the forthcoming visit of the Society to the church (May,
1949) I determmed to investigate the problem. I made a plan, and
in this case I took unusual precautions to ensure the correctness of my
measurements, especiaUy regarding the position of " a " and " a',"
99
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
b
I
8
100
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
and the result was as I suspected, the exterior and interior coins were
in a straight line and not as shown in the sketch above. That point
being settled, the history of the fabric becomes much easier to read.
It is that of a simple early Norman church, merely differing from the
more usual plan in the greater length of its chancel, of which there are
several examples, notably Darenth (Arch. Cant., LXI (1948), Plan 11).
I cannot discern any factors that would differentiate in date between
the eastern and western parts of the church. The coins aheady
mentioned and those at the east end of the church are all of tufa, and
save where obvious repairs have taken place, they are indistinguishable
one from the other. The factor that might have helped would have
been the character of the western angles, but these have been completely
destroyed, and the west wall (in itself a good piece of knapped flint
technique) with its coins is modern work. The position of the chancel
arch, now removed, may give rise to some doubt. I should have
preferred it east of the interior coins but a window of twelfth century
date, which to my mind is in situ, precludes its being placed there,
so there is no alternative but to place it as on my plan. The notes
aheady mentioned recognized the same difficulty, and got over the
problem by stating that the window in question had been moved from
further east, opposite a similar one on the north, and where now a
Decorated window takes its place, but I can see no evidence for this,
and I doubt very much whether there would have been in the fourteenth
century much soHcitude for a small and no doubt weathered Norman
window. The thirteenth century saw the insertion of windows and
a doorway in the nave, but the great building period was the fourteenth
century, when in addition to other windows and a small piscina, a
somewhat massive tower was erected at the south-west angle. In the
early church there was no provision for a tower, so when one was needed
it was built with its thick walls up against the south-west corner of
the nave with the result that the church is entered through some
7 feet of wall. The floor space is very small and now it is divided
into halves by a wooden screen to form a small vestry. There does
not appear to have been any means of access to the upper part of this
tower from within, but on the interior nave wall, above and to the west
of the existing door, is a blocked-up opening that suggests a door and
an ascent by a ladder inside the church The only other feature of
note is a large insertion of recent brickwork that may probably indicate
a window (or a chancel door) now removed, and the place patched up
with brick.
BISHOPSBOURNE, S. MARY (Plan 16)
Bishopsboume is a smaH, rather obscure village situated in a
vaUey below Barham Downs, and is famous for its literary associations
101
NOTES ON KENT CHURCHES
with such diversities as the sainted Hooker and Joseph Conrad rather
than with architecture, but both Bourne House and the church are
not without interest. Unfortunately the latter has undergone one
or two rather drastic restorations with the result that though the
fabric is to-day in very good condition, any vestiges of early structures
are almost non-existent. It would be too much to expect anything of
the pre-conquest church that almost certainly stood here, but of its
successor, the twelfth century church, I failed to detect a single stone,
and my suggestion for the building of this period, as shown on my plan
in a stippled tint, while almost certainly correct, finds no confirmation
in existing fragments. But taking it as a foundation, it is clear that
the church was considerably enlarged in the thirteenth century by the
addition of aisles to the nave and by a widening and extension of the
chancel. Architectural features belonging to this time are : The north
door in the north aisle with an external Holy Water stock, the nave
arcades (though the arches themselves have certainly been rebuilt)
and practically the whole of the chancel and its windows, except that
in the east. It is highly probable that the arcades each had an extra
bay to the west; traces of the arch on the south still remain, though
that to the north had entirely disappeared. Fourteenth century work
is negHgible, and is confined entirely to the east wall, where a larger
window was inserted and buttresses added. The following century
was, however, a very busy one, the chief addition being the western
tower. Till this time there was no tower and probably this feature was
due to the Hawte family, who then held the manor. The whole of the
west end of the church was taken down, together with the two western
arches, the tower was built in its entirety with four large angle
buttresses and then it was united with the body of the church by
new waUs on the Hne of the arcades, and new west ends to each aisle,
which were thereby reduced to their present dimensions.
Further additions belonging to this period were the two chapels to
the north and south of the chancel. That to the north, now occupied
by the vestry and the organ, still preserves enough of its fittings to
be certain that it was intended for a chapel, probably dedicated to
St. Nicholas. That to the south may be the chapel of St. Catherine
but is now, and for some time has been, known as the Bourne Pew and
bears no traces of piscina or altar fittings. This, of course, is not
unusual as such things were often removed at reformations or restorations.
This is in brief the architectural history of the church, though
the Hooker Library and monument, the window near the rood loft
doorway (designed in all likelihood to give more light to the rood
loft), the glass of several periods, some woodwork in the Bourne Pew,
the brasses, plate, beHs and the ancient font lying neglected near the
newer and meretricious specimen of 1850, are all worth examination.
102
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