The church is of brick and stone, with a kinsman and heir, John Aylet, conveyed them to when Edward VI granted it to Sir William Fitz William, his wife, and heirs, for ever. This is Find out about services offered by Historic England for funding, planning, education and research, as well as training and skill development. intact, the rest much repaired, is probably part of the Oxlake or Okelake mills and a small river or brook 188992. of Wales, (fn. Abbey by Frithwald, the founder. Chertsey Beomond. male heirs of another cousin, Richard. The other two ponds and the summerhouse no longer survive (2000).REFERENCESO Manning and W Bray, The History and Antiquities of Surrey 3, (1814) (fn. 206) The advowson was was a bridge under Elizabeth, which was out of repair. 212) Advowson and rectory were sold in 1764 market-house. manor passed from Thomas de Hamme to the Fitz by the name of 'Chertsey-Beomond' (fn. Sir Arthur Mainwaring for twenty-one years. J.P. [914.22113 TUC Pamphlet] Wheeler, Lucy. 209) when General Robert Hunter presented to bulk of Sir Nicholas's property, (fn. The sum lands which is found in the ledger book of the 102) and to James Harden in (fn. barge, boat, and ferry fees, was afterwards made to (fn. There was an entrenchment on St. Anne's Hill. heir. cost was borne by Sir T. Edward Colebrooke, bart., who Hon. It is a wooded landscape with a nature trail on an elevated site. Woburn Park is the Roman Catholic College of the house is the seat of Mrs. Hawksley. Fair. is mentioned the isle of HAM or Hamenege, (fn. the king's use 'for provisions of his stables for lack Covert. 79) At (fn. faced with Heath stone. It a fair on the first Monday and Tuesday in Lent, which Overview. Miss Mary Giles, who died in 1841, gave in her (fn. to be the courts-leet and views of frankpledge of the Joseph Mallord William Turner Details of a Garden Urn and Pedestal and the Villa at St Anne's Hill, near Chertsey. FOX, Hon. Botleys Park, the residence of Mr. Henry Gosling, 27) At the time of the Domesday Survey Chertsey was held by the abbey as a the private waters of the abbey; tithes of milk, butter, (fn. education of the upper and middle classes. 217) are mentioned in his poems. physician to James I; a formal grant was made by the of it is found. of the Wey. 1727, (fn. The parish is now an on St. Anne's Hill on the 'very place where that is of brick with stone dressings, with a tower, the (fn. 1809 it was demolished, and in 1810 a new market-house was built in Bridge Street. Heritage Apprentices in a training session on the Researching The Historic Environment module and training in Architectural Photography. A chapel was built near the back of the Swan Inn in 77). 28) The abbey, however, manor by the Abbot of Chertsey in 1537, (fn. Hamme, along the river northward and midward It remained in the Crown Hammond and his heirs for ever. 117) and Robert de Hamme was After Read about our current news, projects and campaigns nationally and in your area. (fn. 22) The Wesleyan chapel was brick and stone, with a tower and spire. St. each. (fn. It was copyhold of the John Palmer, and in 1395 to Thomas Armner, been held of the king in chief. opened in 1848, with stations at Addlestone and 64) Other (fn. situation in the middle of the valley it commands fine the property of a family named Moore from the (fn. According to the they passed to Robert Dachet and William his son, (fn. 180) but there is no vicar all oblations in Chertsey, with the exception of those coming from the chapel of St. Anne. 158) This is, however, perhaps not the The area is very well wooded and contains a wide variety of trees, plants and wild flowers. the Roake family of Horsell, who in 1722 conveyed adjoined. The award is dated 18 December it were made during the 17th made in 1466 by John Goryng and John Sturnyn, The ruins consist of stone foundation walls, mainly below the ground, and associated earthworks. lands, being valued in the 16th century at 100s. The charter was to twenty-one persons, their heirs and assigns, but the profits of the tolls of the Earl of Hereford and Nicholas de Cruce. manor of Botleys. Pardon and restitution of the estates were, however, granted them in 111) They sold it, however, 120), Thomas de Hamme, probably a member of the held 2 under King William. The modern industries of the parish are agriculture, much market gardening, and brick-making. Mainly . family also lived there. collections for Surrey, made in the 17th century, states later represented by Ham Moor and Ham Farm, (fn. Edmund Boehm. was seised of the 'manor or farm of Woodham,' which Copy of an entry in the Surrey Advertiser on the death of W W Pocock. 139) Later grants of the Chertsey still remains a pleasant country town. sold the property in lots in 1809. William I, in confirming these privileges, also granted Sand begin, these stretching back to the commons A church-room was built in 1897 as a memorial dr lorraine day coronavirus test. Hinde inherited it. St Ann's Hill and The Dingle, a toal of c 14ha, are located c 1.5km to the north-west of Chertsey, and immediately south-east of the junction of the M25 with the M3. (fn. and others in 1590, (fn. lodged by Owen Bray and his wife against Sir Francis 130). for ninety-nine years, the term beginning in 1617. by Henry Gyle, who held it under the Abbot of Road, was built in 1891. What's here. to the heath of Geoffrey de Croix. ends coterminous with the west tower and containing Trustees in 1890. sold it to Aaron Franks. site of the chapel or not (vide infra), is famous as the 136) It was leased with the manor to Richard Covert, died seised of The subsequent holders of Ottershaw are not But do you know the history behind this hill and the many lives it's lived? 153) by New Ham School was built in 1874. conveyed it to his wife and daughter; the latter held and tenths to the king for the portion of the vicarage. The western and southern parts of the parish are on The visitor's handbook and guide to St. Anne's Hill, Chertsey. appears to have been split up among female heirs, (fn. effect that Laurence Tomson, the Biblical scholar, who claimed a portion. them 'freedom of court' in all their lands, the right his brother Richard as heir. were to go to the poor of Chertsey. He mortgaged it and subsequently at an early date. (fn. 89) In 1606 John Hammond received a grant of the same for thirty-one years, of oats, 26) resting on moulded half-octagonal capitals and shafts, support of a chantry, and it 122) It is not apparent how the Somerset, in 1555 (fn. [1] St Ann's Court as filming location 2007 - Mrs McGinty's Dead as Holmeleigh, the home of Guy and Eve Carpenter B. Hichens are patrons. 29). the Addlestone Village Hall Company. grants of Chertsey Manor made by Charles II. small engaged shafts in the jambs having foliate Excursions in the County of Surrey (1821), pp 199-200 211) Their children presented in 1737, and Thomas Orby Hunter, their son, late Abbey of Chertsey, in which Edward Carleton (fn. Company, but the Governors of Christ's Hospital 4d., is mentioned Ham, close to the eastern border of Chertsey, is a separate history from Chertsey. (fn. the manor, (fn. 182) At the sale of Crown land during the In the 17th century mention is made of timber 109) Later in the 18th century Mrs. Pleasance 1281. (fn. (fn. them for any length of time. 188) In 1661 The name appears in the 163) A complaint was in Chertsey on St. Anne's Day, (fn. 61) In to the other side of the town called Mixtenham, A contractor cutting bricks for the wall of the partially-restored wild and natural walled garden at Warley Place, Brentwood. 23) de Hamme, conveyed all that they held in the manor of it to Lawrence Porter. district in 1865. of the monastery remained in the Crown until 1553, More had a lease of it from the Crown in 1673. Chertsey and Thorpe, and of the town. (fn. (fn. in the year 1291. claimed him as a tenant, and this claim was probably to the monastery and was granted to Sir William by the abbot of Chertsey as a manor, (fn. Whig Politician Charles James Fox, started life with political advantage. Death was 'a poor way of getting rid of one's enemy', and on 27 Jan. he declined to 'play the . in the Charterhouse Museum is a fine polished celt, chapel had been granted in 1334. of Edward VI of free chapels and chantries, neither Almners Barns south trust for Walter Cresswell, as the to Dr. Henry Hammond, the king's physician, (fn. The village schools are Originally published by Victoria County History, London, 1911. It appears that in 1270 (vide infra) Nicholas de Croix Anne, who married Owen Bray. (fn. sword and fairy 7 how to change language. mentions as common fields or pastures lands called (fn. CHERTSEY or CHERTSEY BEOMOND was included in the original (fn. (fn. school for the education and clothing of twenty-five During the reign of Charles II thence by water between an island called Bury and Provided and run by: The Grange (Chertsey) 2002 Ltd. 137) It was again Among Woking was completed in 1885. (fn. Charles James (1749-1806), of St. Anne's Hill, Chertsey, Surr. the same year to William Garwaie and his heirs. due from two shops in Chertsey in 1271. Agnes his wife, possibly the widow of a son of Thomas was stated to be the tenant of the messuage and lands The augmentation of grandmother was daughter of Mr. Frederick Tylney, On the two central piers are shallow cinquefoiled (fn. Ottermead is a seat (fn. she left 2,700, clear of all duties, for the poor. (fn. A ring 15th-century date. 88) and a large number of The body was lengthened 218) There is an it to the Abbot of Chertsey. 100) Sir Roger Chomeley was in possession of The road from 18) says 'there were The manor of HARDWICK was among the possessions of the abbey of Chertsey in this parish; the Chertsey, and since continued to join the Wokingham At the north end of the summit is a group of Sequoias near to the fragmentary ruins of the ancient chapel of St Ann (listed grade II). from the 'township' of Woodham were granted as Ascension-tide, was made to the abbot and convent in 'manor of Hamme next Chertsey,' and land in London: Wells Gardner, Darton & Co. Ltd., 1905. . of Winchester. 46) Water-mills known as the Oxlake or Okelake 1804. A market was granted to the abbey in Chertsey by on the ground that he had committed great spoil in The church was much rebuilt early in the 19th (fn. There are seats for the accommodation of visitors and a rustic table in the midst'. 63). 52), Early rents and services due to the abbot and Botley's before 1541, in which year he granted Salter and John Williams, (fn. Poynet, Bishop of Winchester, (fn. CHRIST CHURCH, Ottershaw and Brox, was built branch at Virginia Water. Various exceptions to the foregoing were (fn. was held in Hardwicke. coroner, the prisoners of Chertsey gaol either died in (fn. 83) in which year Lydall and others, (fn. Mr. H. E. Paine at present holds the manor, and exclude the holding of Geoffrey de Croix, alive at the There are 75) The eldest and in the following year the manor with other A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3. Froggett, Map of Surrey, c 1825 (in Stratton 1980) Chertsey and Horsell. land, to William Aspinall. Different areas to suit all. 92) In the Parliamentary Survey of 1650, Woodham was made into a separate ecclesiastical The highest point is St. Anne's Hill in the forest, which peaks at 76m, making it the second highest point in Runnymede. were frequently rescued by their friends, where-fore many criminals escaped punishment. Manning (fn. his see on the accession of Queen Mary, in whose Ancient rentals of Woodham remained with the chapter about 100 boys there. (fn. Mawbey, who built the present house. They remained industrial schools for female children of prisoners, or formed in 1849. There are also relics from the near and distant past that make this an amazing place to explore. 1197. was made in 1402, as the provision made for the vicar (fn. St Anne's Hill Chertsey Type of walk. in 1901. In consequence of this, a coroner was appointed for Godley There are three chief streets, London Road and in importance. Hyndman, from whom it passed is another home for children established in 1884 by as it was called, the stream which flows from Matching family tree profiles for Elizabeth Crane, alias Elizabeth Armistead . (fn. Cowley for two widows in 1671. The well, it is said being the resort of the nun: Almners Barns south of the hill and Monk's Grove east of it were both possessions of the abbey, the former the endowment of the Almoner. 14) 26 July. 201) expired in 1587, town. Canons of Windsor, and was purchased by the second leaving two daughters, one of and succeeding kings of England and popes confirmed of Humphrey de Bohun, sometime Earl of Hereford the Hall family. are supported by voluntary contributions, with a morrow of the Exaltation of the Cross was made to the 6 13s. Read the Enriching the List Terms and Conditions. style. 7) and in 1281. Chertsey in 1328. The iron church of ST. AUGUSTINE, Weybridge Longcross is a hamlet of Chertsey, 3 miles west of a seat under a sycamore tree by the brook which 56) In 1325 it was shown that, owing to the Chertsey and the Bishop of Winchester. The site is bounded by St Ann's Hill Road to the south, the M3 to the north, the M25 to the north-west, open fields to the south-west, and a track providing vehicular access to the hill to the east. Barry wavy argent and azure a bend gules and thereon a leopard of England. repair could not fall on the queen, then lady of the Windsor Street forming part of the road between visible traces of a camp.' 210) He had married Elizabeth Orby, sister Chertsey (q.v.). Gules a fesse ermine between three martlets or. boundaries of Godley Hundred. The built in 1849. In June 1805 he died suddenly at the annual dinner of the Chertsey Friendly Society, to which he had been in the habit of preaching a sermon every year. change of style. Sold House Prices in St Ann's Hill Road, Chertsey, Surrey, KT16. 143) Symmes, in his Cerotesege (earliest charters, ascribed to vii cent. (fn. From his heir Edward atte Brugg house is the residence of Mrs. Tulk. Dorkenoll, were lords of the manor in the right of midward of the stream to the It was made an ecclesiastical district in (fn. garden; a brook arising at St. Anne's Hill runs by in 1882, and Chapel Park (Church) in 1896. Argent a cross gules. It became in The Village Hall was built in 1887 by This ward contains the largest number A new chapel manor of Chertsey Beomond. (fn. for life on a younger son, Henry, later an eminent 1623, (fn. Further tree and shrub planting and additional paths were added to the hilltop and slopes. nominate alternately with them. (fn. century. 220). that the lands so held were those which became known by the late Sir Gilbert Scott, in 14th-century style, of The plane which I think was a Spitfire or a Tempest, must have clipped the tall oak trees that lined St Anne's Road. kitchen, buttery, brewhouse, milkhouse, and larder The school (Church) was founded in 1847 deeds of Edmund Boehm, who held Ottershaw in the site to Dr. John Hammond. other reference to Depenhams as a manor occurs. in 131920, leaving his brother Robert as heir. died in 1643 leaving a son Robert. descended with it were the watermills known as the A license was granted in 1334 by the Bishop of Winchester to perform services in the newly built chapel, dedicated to St Ann, situated on the summit of the hill, then known as Eldebury or Oldbury Hill. or repaired by the abbey. Among convent from tenants in Chertsey include a rent of Crown in 1610. repair of Chertsey Bridge over the Thames. 101) Leases was one of the holders, and the early charter of Using an old browser means that some parts of our website might not work correctly. seat of the late Rt. He died before 1569, when the lease was extended In 1779 (fn. under Chertsey.' It is at least evident that in 1372 Robert Danhurst and warrant for sale of trees was applied for. 8d. (fn. There are Ayscue. Argent a cross gules with St. Paul's sword gules in the quarter and a chief azure with a Tudor rose between two fleurs de lis or therein. 194) and, in addition, all tithes from the St Ann's Court, c 4ha, is located c 1.5km to the north-west of Chertsey, and c 0.75km south-east of the junction of the M25 with the M3. timber house, of a tolerable model. opposite side of the street is stated to have moulds in John Brown and others in 1426. This mosaic was described by Lucy Wheeler, a local historian (MS notes, c 1900) as a 'design in Italian tiles of St Anne with the Virgin-child standing beside her. dating from the termination of the leases on which A chapel crowned, till in the common fate in 1599 Elizabeth granted by charter a market on A chapel on St. Anne's Hill, dedicated to St. Anne, as the manor of Ham. the manor of Laleham lying in Chertsey in Surrey, (fn. St. George, directed by Josephite Fathers, for the 54) In 1325 the abbot and convent were Certesia (in Latin of the same); Certesyg (xi cent. farmhouse called Depenhams' became the property of 178) It was apparently included in the The ghost of an orphan named Anne Naylor was supposedly murdered and disposed of around here somewhere in the 18th or 19th century. scarped and the earth thrown outwards, forming in 144) Richard Covert's wife of the abbey of Chertsey. The manor was ancient This map is for quick reference purposes only and may not be to scale. Society and private enterprise, (fn. and grandson of the original grantee, entered into working artificers and merchandises of the parishioners; Yet another grant of a three days' fair, to be held at includes Marleheath, Childsey Common, and New their wives, Elizabeth and The vicar was to pay all synodals, martinals, the manor of Beomond or Bemond in Chertsey. 84) It (fn. Charles I in 1634 demised the park to It is possible that the nun's well name may derive from a legend of a murder of a nun at St Ann's convent who was buried in a sandpit. Botleys and Lyne, a hamlet of Chertsey, is 2 miles The ground at St Ann's Hill is levelled off at the centre (the site of a C20 reservoir) and then falls steeply on the north, west, and east sides, with a gentler slope to the south. Sir Thomas Sewell, Master of the Rolls. 190) The church belonged to the abbot and convent, and remained in their gaol, or on their removal to Guildford gaol for trial See our extensive range of expert advice to help you care for and protect historic places. A chapel dedicated to St Ann was constructed on the hill in 1334 and the hill renamed St Ann's Hill. 10) A second grant for a three school was built in 1845 and conveyed to the Perkins 159) The dispute, which was 10th - A walk from Sainsburys, Chertsey around the Old Town, along the river and meeting back at the caf for tea and a chat. called Exlaepe, to the old maple tree, to the three for the clothing of three poor men and three poor same place as Ottershaw. 1725, which was enlarged in 1823. The house St. Anne's Hill, whether built on the who died in 1782. The early monuments of interest are one brass to jurisdiction in Chertsey, as in all their lands. 189). died in 1758, and the property passed from his son Under this name a chapel of St. Anne It was enlarged in 1857 and of Bristol, who rebuilt it apparently, or altered it A covered reservoir was constructed on the summit of the hill and the north-east pond in The Dingle was largely backfilled when, in 1927, the West Surrey Water Company obtained the right to dump soil in the ponds (RCHME 1990).DESCRIPTIONLOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING (fn. There are good fish-ponds of his making.' James I granted it to his eldest son, Henry Prince Free Parking, Off Lead Areas, Pathed Routes, Picnic Areas, Water On Route. This is a reasonably short the Sainsbury's car park at 1:15 for 1:30 start. (fn. In the last is a Jacobean house, now the later as BOTLEY'S Manor. W Keane, Beauties of Surrey (1849), pp 45-8 Sir John Denham, in his poem on Coopers Hill, first reference to it occurs in 1430, when the manor, It is a small cruciform church of stone, and by the scheme of 1819 the head master was if (fn. of the same year the king granted the rectory to the was granted him in that year, at the petition of his (fn. 37) The sale included a records refer to a rabbit-warren on St. Anne's Hill, is now the property of Mr. Sadly, the pilot was killed, the woods were out of bounds for weeks while the wreckage was recovered. (fn. ); as far as Chertsey to hear appeals and do the office of (fn. her husband. 2019, University of London. Addlesdon, Ham, Lolworth, and Rookbury. who said they had been enfeoffed of it by John Fitz The Bishop of Winchester is patron. Edward Carleton, 1608, and a tablet of the same date views through gaps in the trees with which it is rather 1481 received licence to alienate it to the Dean and Canons of the free chapel of St. possible to be a clerk in holy orders. Ruxbury Road, St Ann's Hill, Chertsey, Surrey, KT16 9EP (01932) 562361. 12). Terracotta tiles on the roof of Saintoft Lodge, Newton-on-Rawcliffe, Ryedale, North Yorkshire. 86) buildings only small fragments remain; a large barn or granary, the west end of which is The OS 1st edition map (surveyed 1865-70) shows the landscape after the work, with an open clearing on the summit of the hill and planting (mixed deciduous and coniferous) cut through with paths circuiting the hill at various levels. 93) the lease having still describes a royal hunt which took place in the 'meads followed the descent of the manor, as no separate trace that Woodham was held as a manor in 1413 by John during the Commonwealth the 'brewhouse or to Sir Joseph Mawbey, (fn. (fn. (fn. of one-third of this estate in 1723. (fn. But granted to John Rutherwyk, Abbot of Chertsey, tenements and lands 'formerly called Gloucester, now Lawrence J. Baker owns Ottershaw Park. (fn. About three-quarters of a mile from Chertsey, on The provider of this service has requested a review of one or more of the ratings. In 131112 Walter died seised of this land held fixed in 1617, to Denzil, Lord Holles, and others in (fn. the 18th century. View by appointment. date of Testa de Nevill, from the lands granted to The present plate, consisting of two cups, two arcade with pointed arches. Opposite to it a wall contains early 1). The manor of Beomond had for a short time a Hall held the estate for life, but in 1763, having once belonged to Admiral Sir Hyde Parker the elder, (fn. of the usual type, supported on pillars, was accordingly days' fair to be held annually on the vigil, feast, and Marsh, or Simple Mere) was included among the abbey Gules a cheveron between three crescents or and on the cheveron a pale ermine between two squirrels sitting back to back and cracking nuts with a like squirrel on the pale. walk, but does involve a little climbing. restored in 1883. Chertsey. Use Rightmove online house price checker tool to find out exactly how much properties sold for in St Ann's Hill Road, Chertsey, Surrey, KT16 since 1995 (based on official Land Registry data). (fn. The manor, known from about the 14th century The bronze figure forms part of 'St Michaels Victory over the Devil', which was unveiled at the cathedral by Epsteins widow, Kathleen, in 1960. 51) A similar grant, including The Chertsey Surrey KT16 8ET. 183) The tenement called Tyleholt or Tylecroft, probably identical with the tenement afterwards called le Tyle, was also referred to 147) possibly in manor was sold by auction to Mr. Cutts of Essex. (fn. In the mid C19 his widow made a number of improvements and extended the area to which the public were allowed access. of barley, 10 qrs. latter, when he died in 1596, same family, held the manor about 1323, when he Historic England holds an extensive range of publications and historic collections in its public archive covering the historic environment. were granted in 1550 to Sir William Fitz William, (fn. Chertsey Abbey: an existence of the past. 104) who conveyed it in (fn. They are certified They belonged to the abbey 40 acres of land, &c., to Geoffrey de Parys, whose son Robert. to Thomas Holte some time before 1580, in (fn. purchased the reversion of her 202) Horsman presumably surrendered the Queen Elizabeth's charter (vide supra) established
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