
Plans of and Brief Architectural Notes on Kent Churches - Part III
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Canterbury Excavations Christmas 1945 and Easter 1946
Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Inventories
PLANS OF, AND BRIEF ARCHITECTURAL NOTES ON, KENT
CHURCHES
PART HI. DARENTH, STAPLEHURST, BEARSTED, AND HORTON
KJRBY
By F. C. ELLISTON-ERWOOD, F.S.A.
THE CHURCH OF ST. MARGARET, DARENTH (Plan 11)
DARENTH church consists of a pre-conquest nave, a large and unusual
early Norman chancel, traces of a transitional addition to this chancel
and a thirteenth century aisle and tower, but the nave arcade has been
several times modified.
Pre-Conquest work
The nave of the church, originaUy 36 feet 9 inches by 19 feet is
undoubtedly of this period and though only two of its waUs and part
of a third remain (and one of these, the west, unpardonably mutilated
by the building of a modern vestry that could easily have been placed
elsewhere) it possesses some definite pre-conquest features. The
three existing coins, the NE, NW, and SW, this last visible in the
corner of the afore-mentioned vestry, display the tile technique in
re-used Roman material1 which, while in itself is no criterion of preconquest
construction (similar work exists at St. Pauhnus' Cray, which
is certainly post-conquest) can certainly be regarded as indicative of
early bmlding. This dating is confirmed by the existence of a double
splayed window, open inside the church, but partly concealed by the
roof of the wooden porch. The head of this window is turned in
tile, and the opening preserves the remains of the original
perforated oak plank that served as the framework for a closing
shutter. This window may be compared with those at Swanscombe2
and West Peckham (to be described later in this series). About
sixteen feet east of this window and on the same level, are the
unmistakable traces of a second window, now completely blocked.
In the centre of the west waU was originaUy an opening of semicircular
headed form, but it was blocked tiU 1922, when it was opened
out to form an entry to the new vestry. I was able to be
1 This material is almost certainly derived from the Darenth " Villa " or
" Dye Works " which was uncovered by the late George Payne, P.S.A., in 1894.
The overgrown and indistinguishable ruins are in a field some half-a-mile south of
the Church. See Arch. Cant., XXII (1897), p. 49.
2 Arch. Cant., XLIII (1931), p. 242.
46
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