
Church Plate in Kent. Parochial Inventories: Acrise to Canterbury
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Rochester Bridge in A.D. 1561
Expense-Book of James Master, Esq. Part III., A.D. 1658-1663
( 241 )
CHURCH PLATE IN KENT.*
BY OANON SOO'l'T ROBERTSON.
PART II.
PAROCHIAL INVENTORIES.
ACRISE.
F.nol! information furnished by the Rev. Edwa.rd N ewenha.m Hoa.re~
Rector of Acrise, I lea.rn that the Communion V easels used in St.
Martin's Church, a.t Acrise a.re (i.) An Eliza.betha.n Cup (1562) of
Silver, with Cover; (ii.) A Silver Fa.ten (1700) ; (iii.) An old A1mspla.
te of Pewter; (iv.) A modern Fla.gon of Gia.as; a.nd (v.) a. modern
Alms-dish of Wood.
The CUP is 6 inches high, a.nd 8½ inches in diameter a.t the,
mouth. Upon its bell-sha.ped bowl a.re engraved two horizon ta.I belts,
ea.ch formed of sprigs of woodbine runnin~ between two fillets
which interla.ce three times, a.t points equi-dista.nt from ea.ch other.
The fillets a.re filled with pla.in W:like cha.sing. The stem ha.a a. knop,
formed of one la.rge round moulding between two sma.ller ones.
Immediately a.bove a.nd below the stem is a. moulding of sma.11c ontiguous
lozenges. The foot is simply moulded. N ea.r the mouth
of the cup, in the upper belt of engraving, a.re four HALL..xAJJXS(
i.) ba.dly impressed; perha.ps a. sta.r; (ii.) leopard's hea.d crowned;
(iii.) lion pa.ssa.nt; (iv.) da.te letter e for A.D. 1562-3.
The COYER to this cup ha.ab ut one Jt.111ur,w hich a.ppea.rs u_pon
its rim. It seems to be L.O. with a. sma.11c ross or mullet benea.tli it.
The cup and cover to$8ther weigh 9½ ounces avoirdupois.
The PATEN, 5½ mches in diameter, is of the purer qua.lity of
silver called New Sterling, a.nd sta.nds on a. central conica.l foot. Its
upper surface ha.a a. ca.ble moulding a.round the rim, a.nd baa.rs four
l1ALL-lf.41lKS-(i.) In a. aha.pad escutcheon, Pa., with a, pellet below,
a.nd a.covered cup above the letters l the ma.rk of Humphrey Pa.~e,
whose house sign, in Gutter La.ne, LOndon, wa.s a. Golden ~ ; (ii.)
Britannia.; (iii.) Lion's hea.d era.sad; (iv.) Court hand ca.pita.I G, the
da.te letter for l '102-8. On the foot is a sma.11c a.ble moulding and
the ma.rk of Humphrey Pa.yne. This Pa.ten weighs a.lmost 6 ounces
a.vojrdupois.
The PEWTERA LMS-PL.A.T9E½, i nches in diameter, ha.a the na.me
ACRIS stamped into it. Embossed upon the metal a.re two ova.I
shields, ha.ving on one the figure of a. bee or fly, a.nd a.round its
edge the na.me .A.Q.UJl'JAD AOX:OMBE; on the other a. crown. a.nd a.round
• Oontinuedtrom Vol. XVI., p, 439.
VOL, XVII, u
242 CHURCH PLATE IN KENT.
the edge LONDON. In a rectangular shield we read, in three lines,
"A. D.A.CKOMBE I WITHOUT ALDG.A.TE I London. Four marks, counterfeiting
Hall-marks, are (i.) a crab ? (n.) a lion's head erased;
(iii.) Britannia; (iv.) A.D.
ADDINGTON (M.A.IDSTONE).
The Rev. J. A. Boodle kindly examined the Sacred Vessels here.
They consist of a Cup with Paten-cover (1664), a Flagon (1721),
and a Paten (1718). I. This CUP is 8 inches high, and 4 inches
across foot and mouth. On the bowl, which is 4! inches deep, are
punctured the initials I C. The stem is plain. The H.ALL-M.ARKS
are (i.) a scipt capital R in a shaped escutcheon, with a pellet
beneath the letter; (ii.) leopard's head crowned; (iii.) lion passant;
(iv.) date letter much worn, may be a black-letter capital 6-, indicating
1664-5.
II. There is a P .A.TEN-COVER to this cup upon which the date
letter is clearly the black-letter capital (!S'.- of 1664-5. As the
other HALL-MARJCS are similar to those upon the cup we may fairlJ
assign both cup and cover to the year 1664 5. The diameter of
the cover is 4¾ inches, and its height is ¾ of an inch.
III. The FLAGON is made of the purest silver, called New
Sterling, and stands 11½ inches high (from the foot to the top of
the rounded lid) ; the diameter of its mouth being 4¾ inches. It was
made £or Addingt on Church in 1721, and presented by the Rev.
John Boralston, who was then the Rector. 'l'his we learn from the
following inscription upon its face:-" Glorim Dei. Opt'. Max'. In
usum Ecclesim Parochialis de Addington Dat Dicat Dedicatque
Johannes Boralston A. M. Predictm Ecclesim Rector Anno Dom'.
1721." Above this appear the shield and crest of the family of
Boraston, of Worcestershire and Herts :-Quarterly arqent and sable,
on a bend between 2 cotises gules, 8 crosses £ormy :fitchy or. Crest,
out of a mural coronet sable, a griffin's head or (gorged with a fess
between 2 bars gemel gules). Hasted says that the Rev. John Boralston
was instituted to Addington Rectory on the 6th of August,
1702, died on the 9th of June 1741, aged 78, and was buried in this
church. The H.ALL-M.ARKS upon the :flagon are (i.) WA; (ii.) F, the
date letter £or 1721-2; (iii.) a lion's head erased; (iv.) Britannia.
Beneath the foot is scratched the weight 49.18.
IV. There is a PATEN, on central foot, 2 inches high, and 5¾
inches in diameter. The H.ALL-M.ARKS upon it are much worn, but the
lion's head erased is discernible, and the date letter seems to be 0,
£or 1718-9.
ADI8H.A.M.
The Rev. J. H. Carr, Rector of Adisham, has carefully examined
the Sacred Vessels of bis church, and £urnished me with the main
facts contained in the following description.
There are 3 Communion Cups ; 8 Patens ; 2 Flagons ; and 1
Alms-dish. Two of the Cups are silver, of the years 166, and 1862,
ADISHA'M. 243
each accompanied by a Paten made, for use with it; in the same
year by the same maker; the third Cup is of plated· metal, but the
third Paten is of silver, 200 years old. The Flagons and Alms-dish
are of baser metal.
I. The oldest CUP and PATEN were made in A.D. 1663-4,
and seem to have reJ>laced some vessel or vessels, which bore the
date 151717. Perhaps they contain the metal of an Elizabethan Paten.
These inferences we draw from the fact that upon the existing P .A.TEN
two dates, 15717 and 1663, are both inscribed; while the HALL-MARKS
shew that the Paten was made in 1663, by H.N, wl10 made the
Cup also. The date letter is a black-letter capital§; the HALL-MARKS
are those of London (a lion passant and a crowned leopard's head).
The maker has placed, beneath his initials, "H.N.," a bird, with a
rose-branch in its beak. These letters probably indicate Henry
N elthorpe, a London goldsmith and banker, whose shop in Lombard
Street bore the sign of the Rose, in the year 16177.* The maker's
mark is the only one legible upon the bowl, but the lion passant is
legible beneath the foot.
Both Cup and Paten have engraved upon them the Royal arms.
On the Cup (not on the Paten) the royal shield is encircled by the
Garter, with its motto, Honi soit qui maZ y pense, upheld by the
Lion and the Unicorn, as supporters; and beneath is the royal
motto, IJieu et rnon IJroit. The quarterings are those used by
the Stuart sovereigns, from James I. to James II., viz.-1 and 41
France and England quarterly ; 2 Scotland ; 3 Ireland. Why these
arms appear on the sacred vessels it is difficult to say, unless they
were, in some sense, presented to the Vicar by a member 0£ the
Royal Family. The Rev. Dr. Peter Du Moulin, Prebendary 0£
Canterbury, was Vicar of .A.disham in 1663, and he was also one 0£
the Chaplains in Ordinary to King Charles II. I have therefore,
myself, little doubt that King Charles II., at the request 0£ Dr. Du
Moulin, defrayed the cost 0£ replacing old Elizabethan vessels at
.A.disham by these, which were made in 1663. I would especially draw
attention to Dr. Du Moulin's conservative sense 0£ justice, in causing
both dates, 151717 and 1663, to be inscribed upon the new paten .
Beneath the foot 0£ the cup are engraved the initials 0£ the Churchwardens;
probably those who were in office during the year 1663-4;
thus, in 2 lines, "*W* .A.* I R*R* Ohur' Ward'." The CUP is 17¼
inches high, 3i inches across the bowl, 3i inches across the foot, and
weighs 10 ounces. Its shape is very plain; it has no ornamental
mouldings ; no knop. The stem is trumpet-shaped. The PATEN is
41 inches in diameter and weighs 4 ounces.
II. The modern CUP and PATEN of silver were made in the
year 1862-3, They were presented to a former Rector 0£ Adisham,
the Rev. Henry Montagu Villiers, by two friends, in .A.pril, 18172.
The Cup is a good specimen 0£ modern work, 17½ inches high. The
bowl's mouth is 3f inches in diameter; its base springs from a nestlike
wreath of ivy leaves, in silver applique work. The moulded stem
* Little London JJirectory, 16'7'7, quoted by William Ohaffers in his Gilda
.tl.u1ifabrorum, p. '70.
n2
244 CHURCH PLATE IN KENT.
bas a hand.some knop in its centre. The octo£oiled. foot, 4i- inches
in diameter, is inscribed with a cross 0£ St. Andrew and the words
" H. M. V. £rom I. H. C and M. A. C. April 4, 1872." The H.t1LLMARKs
are (i.) Victoria's head; (ii.) lion passant; (iii.) black-letter
small g; (iv.) T.P. in a rectangular shield. The Cup weighs 13¼
ounces. The PATEN bears a St. Andrew's cross. Its aiameter is 6½
inches ; its weight 5 ounces.
III. The third PATEN, 0£ silver, was made in 1686-7. It is
one of a pair which Archdeacon John Battely, Rector 0£ Adisham,
purchased £or the two churches 0£ his benefice. One he gave to
Adisham Church, and the other to Staple, which was then attached,
as a chapelry, to Adisham. They are almost exactly alike, and were
made by a goldsmith P.M., whose work is now rare. A tankard,
made in 1682, now at Trinity College, Oxford, and some plate of
the Corporation 0£ Chester, are examples known to Mr. Cripps.
This Paten is 6f inches in diameter ; it stands on a central foot 2½
inches in diameter, and weighs 6½ ounces. On its £ace are engraved
(in two lines) the words Deo Servatori I S. Beneath the foot are
these words, in five lines, Ecclesire l De Adisham l J oannes Battely l
S.T.P. I D.D. The HALL-M.ARKS on the £ace 0£ the Paten, near its
rim, are-(i.) leopard's head crowned; (ii.) lion passant; (iii.) small
black-letter f; (iv.) illegible. The last mark appears again upon
the foot, where it is legible, thus :-in a shaped escutcheon, P.M.,
with a mullet above and a fieur-rle-lis below the initials. As Dr.
Battely was collated to the Archdeaconry of Canterbury on the
23rd of March, 1687, it is probable that these Patens were then
dedicated by him as a thankoffering to God. He was Rector 0£
Adisbam-cum-Staple from 1684 until he died, in October, 1708,
aged 61.
The third CUP is 0£ Plated metal. Its height is 9 inches ; the
diameter of its mouth 4 inches, and its weight 14½ ounces.
IV. Of the FL.A.GONs, one is 0£ Pewter, the other of Plated
metal. The PEWTER FLAGON is inscribed" .Llrlisham 1772." It is
9½ inches high ; its lid is conical and it weighs 2 pounds 10 ounces.
The PL.A.TED FL.A.GON, with conical lid and splayed foot, stands 15
inches high, and weighs 3 pounds 8 ounces. On it is engraved the
sacred monogram I.H.S, en soleil.
V. The ALMS-DISH is 0£ brass. It was given, in 1869, by
the Rev. Cyril Randolph, when he was Rector of Staple. Embossed
upon its centre, is a representation of the Spies 0£ Israel carrying
home a bunch 0£ grapes from Eshcol. The border is deeply embossed
with a pattern formed of ovals large and small.
ALDINGTON.
The Rev. G. J. Blomfield, Rector 0£ Aldington, kindly supplied
materials £or the following description, and also a drawing (made
by his son) 0£ the Cup (1662) and Paten of Aldington (engraved in
Part I., p. 69, and in Archmologia Oantiana, Vol. XVI., p. 393).
The COMMUNION CUP has a conical or trumpet-shaped stem of
ALDINGTON; ALKRAM. 245
beat.en silver, which Mr. Blom.field believes to be earlier than the
bowl, which is not of hammered work. The soldering of these two
par/2 together is evident. Upon the foot and st.em there is no dat.e
letter, but the lion-passant IllLI,,,M.d.RK is seen inside the hollow
stem. Around the top of the foot are engraved these words: " Pais