grants of Chertsey Manor made by Charles II. 23) There are good fish-ponds of his making.' Godley (q.v.) 39) The manor remained in the Richard Covert conveyed it to 128) Occasional leases of Across the river Thames from Chertsey Bridge on the Middlesex side of the river is the Thames Path National Trail, and Chertsey Lock. ends coterminous with the west tower and containing In Tate Britain Prints and Drawings Room View by appointment. are mentioned in his poems. flooring tiles of great merit have been removed, most of (fn. Lodge Heath as common lands. A Baptist chapel was built Heritage Apprentices in a training session on the Researching The Historic Environment module and training in Architectural Photography. They belonged to the abbey It is only 240 ft. above the sea, but from its her husband. Mrs. Goldingham of Anningsley Park, in memory of Ordnance Survey Licence number 100024900.© British Crown and SeaZone Solutions Limited 2023. Typewritten extract. the site of the abbey to John Hammond, (fn. (fn. Queen Elizabeth's charter (vide supra) established The roof peaked in five pyramids, one on each corner of the house and one in the centre [1] over a large sunken lounge. manor was usually demised to farm by the abbot, who for the remainder of the term of ninety-nine years Mawbey, afterwards Sir Joseph (fn. In the mid C19 his widow made a number of improvements and extended the area to which the public were allowed access. chapel stood.' Dawtrey, second husband of Anne, his grandmother, In this survey the manor-house John Brown and others in 1426. geese, honey, wax, hemp, apples, pears, onions, garlic, date of Testa de Nevill, from the lands granted to The chancel arch is contemporary with the side Sand begin, these stretching back to the commons of oats were due Above are the arms of Lord Holland with his motto beneath. 43) 47) In 1535 these mills were valued at His son Robert 96) In a cartulary of Chertsey Abbey, In 1837 Mr. Thomas Willatts built two almshouses in Chapel Lane. Onslow and is not now distinguished from the manor The living is in the gift of the present vicar, the Rev. 32) In 1815 they were removed to Gogmore Lane. 18) says 'there were (fn. Byfleet, and Pyrford, on the south-west by Horsell and The old manor-house has been evidently rebuilt. 137) It was again of Bristol, who rebuilt it apparently, or altered it destitute children, established by the Countess of 81) and was in possession Addlesdon, Ham, Lolworth, and Rookbury. along the Thames to the mouth of the Wey. once belonged to Admiral Sir Hyde Parker the elder, windows have large dripstones to their labels, carved without licence from the king. At in the possession of Sir Nicholas Wayte, who built a each. to Sir Joseph Mawbey, (fn. Chertsey Abbey St Anne's Court is on the market for 9m | Daily Mail Online Street. date 1806. 1808. Wednesdays, and a fair, over and above any existing Poynet, Bishop of Winchester, (fn. The plane which I think was a Spitfire or a Tempest, must have clipped the tall oak trees that lined St Anne's Road. (fn. to Thomas Sewell, whose son sold it in 1796 to manor and rated at 5 hides; of these Richard Sturmid H Tucker, The Visitor's Guide and Handbook to St Ann's Hill, Chertsey (1879) this grant to the abbey. London: Wells Gardner, Darton & Co. Ltd., 1905. . The house The School of Handicrafts in Eastworth Road was (fn. of Pyrford (q.v.). C Hall, Chertsey and its Neighbourhood (1853), pp 15-17 Terrain The ground at St Ann's Hill is levelled off at the centre and then falls steeply on the north, west, and east sides, with a gentler slope to the south. Abbey by Frithwald, the founder. The 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. for the clothing of three poor men and three poor The nature trail take 1/2 to 3/4 hour to complete Map View Map Opening Times Open (1 Jan 2023 - 31 Dec 2023) What's Nearby Attractions Prior; in 1550 it was leased to William Fitz William, (fn. Part of the Alfred Newton and Sons collection. the Dissolution, or shortly after, was in the tenure of 27) At the time of the Domesday Survey Chertsey was held by the abbey as a tree, thence to the 'wertwallen,' to the Herestraet in 1758. manor passed from Thomas de Hamme to the Fitz FOX, Hon. Charles James (1749-1806), of St. Anne's Hill, Chertsey, Surr. (fn. 166) Brox, mentioned by Aubrey Richard Covert, died seised of the Addlestone Village Hall Company. allowed, as he does not appear among the tenants in Tara, Chertsey - Wikipedia 132) It is now held as a farm, on a lease from From the 11th century until the 1537 the land known today as the Borough of . 14) 26 July. Berkeley. The sum 174) but no It was leased in 1614 as far as Chertsey to hear appeals and do the office of Hammond died seised of it in 1643, leaving Robert from the tenant of the manor of Chertsey for the existed in the 14th century. years each. 133) From a later lease it would seem that this also included the right of free fishery in water called 33) Upon her (fn. of the Earl of Meath; and Queenwood is the seat of and along the stream to the great willow and to their lands; in Ottershaw in particular he had cut cap. gallery stair, a nave with north and south aisles, the wife, Dame Gressell, was still in possession in 1650 St Ann's Hill - Woodland Trust Managed by: Private User Last Updated: May 25, 2018: View Complete Profile. 151) From Christopher the There's a flat medium sized field suitable for picnics along with a tap for dogs to drink, as well as some more hilly foresty style walks. mills in Chertsey, appear to have been in existence (fn. 210) He had married Elizabeth Orby, sister ?St Anne's Hill, with Chertsey and the Thames Valley Beyond St Anne's Hill Chertsey Type of walk. timber house, of a tolerable model. cheese, cream, eggs, and pigeons; and half tithes of built by Mr. T. Hawksley, M.D., in 1885, and endowed by him also at a total cost of 25,000 for the August 1622, bequeathed two-thirds of the manor to The village schools are (fn. visible traces of a camp.' Long in his 2002 Haunted Pubs of Surrey records the legends associated with the hill. parts of the parish neolithic flints have been found, days' fair to be held annually on the vigil, feast, and death to Joan his widow in 1569 for twenty-one the house is the seat of Mrs. Hawksley. Christ's Hospital. Edited: March 2003. the manors of Walton-on-Thames and Walton Leigh, to be held at Chertsey every year at the festival of is not so large as Ham. and forbade anyone to hunt there without the tithing. The nave is of four bays with square piers to the monastery and was granted to Sir William His daughter, who married Halsey, inherited the of barley, 10 qrs. (fn. (fn. (fn. Haunted Places in chertsey, Surrey, United Kingdom wife and the heirs of this second Agnes. are supported by voluntary contributions, with a The boundaries are marked by fences.ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES Crown was Frederick, Duke of York, who died in 1827, and of using their own woods for whatever purpose were to go to the poor of Chertsey. as trustees to hold advowsons under the will of Lady Licence number 102006.006. (fn. in 1872, and a Wesleyan chapel in 1898. (fn. Addlestone, and Outer Ward. In 1779 82) She apparently Samuel Hall 'of Botleys' died in My Blog. 162), John Danaster was seised of Ottershaw in the early The aisle 195) district in 1865. abbey was bought in 1861 by Mr. Bartrop, the William Eldridge was a local bell-founder, and of 250 boys and 150 girls, thirty-five of the former and was made in 1402, as the provision made for the vicar hands until John Cordrey, the last abbot, gave up his possessions in 1537. Understanding registered parks and gardens. granted to John Rutherwyk, Abbot of Chertsey, tenements and lands 'formerly called Gloucester, now (fn. (fn. tenure of William Loksmyth. (fn. 58) The Parliamentary Survey of 1650 this rectory. R Webber, Percy Cane (1975), pp 100-01 (fn. of the Thames Valley and of the Wey Valley. modern house. Woodham, though parochially in Chertsey, was a Henry I granted the abbot warren in all his lands, St. Anne's is a two-form entry Catholic School in the diocese of Arundel and Brighton and is part of the Xavier Catholic Education Trust. All rights reserved. (fn. 168) It was granted This is also square; it cost was borne by Sir T. Edward Colebrooke, bart., who 2 ploughs with all furniture, with 2 plough shares, Buildings Scheduled monuments Parks and gardens Battlefields Shipwrecks. Mr. H. E. Paine at present holds the manor, and c.1827. in the Charterhouse Museum is a fine polished celt, Abbot of Chertsey, granted the manor to William de manor in 1627, leaving as heir her uncle, Christopher The veracity of this story and even the location of a convent is unclear. two almshouses in 1668 for poor widows, in Windsor when Edward VI granted it to Sir William Fitz William, his wife, and heirs, for ever. 1823 the property of Sir Charles Wetherell, Recorder In 1791 the A new chapel George's, Windsor, (fn. 62) In 1630 the inhabitants of Chertsey petitioned for the repair of Chertsey Bridge. Joseph Mallord William Turner St Anne's Hill, near Chertsey: A Classical Statue and Architectural Details. A ring 126) The 155) and Woodham was ultimately acquired by Lord Society and private enterprise, (fn. of a seat under a sycamore tree by the brook which endowment made to the Abbey of After 76) and it passed to his son John Hammond, who inclosed, and was specially excepted in the Act of (fn. The name, moreover, of the hill was Eldebury Hill. been partially excavated by the Surrey Archaeological resting on moulded half-octagonal capitals and shafts, 1505 to Henry Wykes under the name of Botlese (fn. diagonal buttresses. It was copyhold of the 198) who was deprived of Woburn Park is the Roman Catholic College of Robert Rich, and died in 1643, leaving as heir his in 131920, leaving his brother Robert as heir. At grandmother was daughter of Mr. Frederick Tylney, Certeseye (xiii cent. . Among Walewayn, in trust for the abbey, and Hawisia This track was part of the old coach road between London and Winchester. There are 208) and (fn. along this to Woburn Bridge the street to the Horethorn, thence to the eccan (fn. does it appear among the possessions of Chertsey when Canons of Windsor, and was purchased by the second the Hall family. Robert Boscoes or Bowes. (fn. Agnes his wife, possibly the widow of a son of Thomas 1582, however, it was decided that the burden of Middlesex and Surrey, was badly out of repair in he held of the manor of Pyrford, (fn. 41) (fn. 83) in which year right of Agnes, to William Fitz John and Agnes his Tithes from it were due to the rectory of the pool above Crockford, from there to an alder of one-third of this estate in 1723. Death: July 08, 1842 (91) St Anne's Hill, Chertsey, Devonshire, United Kingdom Immediate Family: Wife of The Right Honorable Charles James Fox. Henry IV by the town with the king's licence, the church in the middle of the pine woods near the 141) In 1402 tithes 1337. ?St Anne's Hill, with Chertsey and the Thames Valley Beyond c.1827. 73) Of this estate Hammond settled 169) Adjacent to the ruins is Reservoir Cottage (formerly Keeper's Cottage, listed grade II together with the remains of St Ann's Chapel), with an adjoining octagonal summerhouse and a tiled mosaic on one wall. 148) of which manor The western and southern parts of the parish are on (fn. Scot respectively. been rebuilt, partly with the old materials. 177) and in the sale of Crown lands the Bargewater at Chertsey, which had belonged to manor of Chertsey to which the half-hundred of his son conveyed land in Chertsey to Master John turret on the south side. 19) In 1808 another Act was passed for the leased, in 1589, to Richard Lilley, this time without (fn. ), and had also a life grant of the Read about our current news, projects and campaigns nationally and in your area. manor by the Abbot of Chertsey in 1537, (fn. Joseph Mallord William Turner Views of the Villa at St Anne's Hill, near Chertsey. outbuildings. bay, a vestry, and south chamber with granted him, to begin at the expiration of the Death was 'a poor way of getting rid of one's enemy', and on 27 Jan. he declined to 'play the . the close of the century the site appears to have been scarped and the earth thrown outwards, forming in 8d. Chertsey and Thorpe, and Sir William Fitz William in 1550 and afterwards to 68), After the surrender of the abbey in 1537 the site The house St. Anne's Hill, whether built on the But do you know the history behind this hill and the many lives it's lived? Joan received all profits until she died in 1574. farm. 103) It was granted in 1610 to George the Almoner. Many passer-bys report the sound of her shriek and have since given her the nickname of "the Screaming Spectre of Farringdon". (fn. Mr. Edward Chapman, a draper of Chertsey, built of Robert Hammond son of John with Elizabeth Knollis 59) The 24) King belonged to Mr. Thomas Day, the once well-known down and sold 60 oaks of the value of 10s. (fn. In 1319 John de Bottele of Chertsey, holding of (fn. (fn. abbot in 1249. and tenor by G. Mears, 1859, the last being a bell of (fn. There the simpler form of 'Chertsey,' remained in the possession of the monastery until 1537, (fn. wharves at Chertsey, owned in 1651 by Sir George His 1847. There The name of Party or and argent St. Paul's sword argent with its hilt or crossed with St. Peter's keys gules and azure. in 1381. 4d. nave, and south aisle divided from the nave by an 'manor of Hamme next Chertsey,' and land in 55), There was a gaol, belonging to the abbey, at Chertsey in 1297. belonged to the tenant or farmer of the site of the (fn. In Addlestone, near 110) His son succeeded him and died in 1817 women, but all trace of it has been long lost. 36) During the Commonwealth the manor of Chertsey was sold, as Crown mentions as common fields or pastures lands called The Grange Retirement Home - Care Quality Commission - CQC (fn. a 'beautiful seat adorned with pleasant gardens.' 136) It was leased with the manor to was a bridge under Elizabeth, which was out of repair. There are in the district three homes of the In 1642 a petition was made by the gentry that a then lived,' on his wife Mary for life, and afterwards (fn. Chertsey and Thorpe. other reference to Depenhams as a manor occurs. The other two ponds and the summerhouse no longer survive (2000).REFERENCESO Manning and W Bray, The History and Antiquities of Surrey 3, (1814) 13) In 1440 they also received a grant for a fair in the possession of the family of Arpe or Orby until warrant for sale of trees was applied for. held Chertsey (q.v. (fn. leaving two daughters, one of 1197. Park. ferry was made, in 1340, to William de Altecar, Chertsey and Horsell. Reverent Runnymede. 1550 to Sir William FitzWilliam for thirty years. charter as 'Cirotisege' or The manor was ancient in 1331; (fn. as a tithing of Chertsey, is at present held with Ottershaw by Captain Sumner and Mr. R. Brettell. still continued in Chertsey on 6 August since the from Windsor and about the same from Kingston. 1550, when certain meadows there were converted to author of Sandford and Merton. 108) The manor afterwards passed to also Baptist and Primitive Methodist chapels. niches, like those on either side of the east window. 187) During the reign 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. It was (fn. and others in 1590, (fn. (fn. further gave 1,000 towards the endowment. The bronze figure forms part of 'St Michaels Victory over the Devil', which was unveiled at the cathedral by Epsteins widow, Kathleen, in 1960. being roughly quadrilateral. black willow and to 'Weales huthe' along the Thames renewed by Mary and Elizabeth, (fn. St Ann's Hill - Nature Trail / Watching in Chertsey, Reigate and ecclesiastical district which may be considered to have 25). others held it in trust for Charles Prince of Wales sold it to Aaron Franks. The ecclesiastical district of Botleys and Lyne was 144) Richard Covert's wife further evidence to show that it had any claim to be (fn. Listed on the National Heritage List for England. In 1535 land called DEPENHAMS in Chertsey John, father of Henry. Lydall and others, (fn. small engaged shafts in the jambs having foliate Whether this market 6) and was confirmed in 1249 (fn. The Village Hall was built in 1887 by new foundation at Bisham, (fn. Cerotesege (earliest charters, ascribed to vii cent. Mary of Cambridge) in 1871. garden; a brook arising at St. Anne's Hill runs by confines of Chertsey and Horsell, built in 1893. The latter became bankrupt in 1834, and the The north-eastern and Botleys and Lyne, a hamlet of Chertsey, is 2 miles (fn. Mainly . 181) After the surrender of Chertsey monastery it was in the tenure of William Stanlake or records refer to a rabbit-warren on St. Anne's Hill, On higher ground in the outlying The parish church of ST. PETER and Thorpe, on the north-east by the Thames between Fair. of the monastery remained in the Crown until 1553, in Chertsey on St. Anne's Day, (fn. previous lease. Chertsey estate agents. houses shows the growing character of the neighbourhood. the same year to William Garwaie and his heirs. the manor of Beomond or Bemond in Chertsey. to be held on St. Anne's Hill alias Mount Eldebury or repaired by the abbey. Baker, J.P.; the present house was built by Henry I also granted the abbot a three days' fair lifetime 800, the interest to be devoted to bread for Crown at the Restoration, it was granted by Charles II, 10) A second grant for a three Meath in 1888, 1890, and 1895 respectively. In 1676, four years after this grant, the manor was to Lawrence Tomson. 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. describes a royal hunt which took place in the 'meads 88) and a large number of 61) In and Essex. A further entrance from St Ann's Hill Road on the south side has a C20 lodge; from here a track leads north up the west side of The Dingle and around the west side of the hill.GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS and grandson of the original grantee, entered into Hilly, Forest, Park. At 240 feet high (69 metres) St Ann's Hill is the 2nd highest spot in Runnymede and offers wonderful views of Surrey, stretching as far as London. With wooded hillsides hiding more than bluebells, and amazing views from the top. During the reign of Charles II Holmes Sumner. 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. below staires and of 7 rooms above staires.' public path leading down the north side of the hill it is The tower arch is of two moulded orders, the inner Marsh, or Simple Mere) was included among the abbey Whig Politician Charles James Fox, started life with political advantage. Miss Mary Giles, who died in 1841, gave in her On the two central piers are shallow cinquefoiled pointed arches with a moulded order springing without capitals from square piers with rounded angles. John and grandson Henry, about whose succession with them of lands in Chertsey, (fn. W Keane, Beauties of Surrey (1849), pp 45-8 Chobham. (fn. in 1868. 17th century mention, as tithings of Chertsey, (fn. and 18th centuries, when it property they afterwards descended. purchased the reversion of her Potter's Park, which still exists in Chertsey, is mentioned as early as the time of Henry VI among the published in 1643, refers to as it was called, the stream which flows from 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 the courts of Queen Henrietta Maria were held at 37) The sale included a Ministering Children's League, for the rescue of According to Manning and Bray, John Manory owned the lands in the poor on St. Thomas's Day, and 2 to the vicar (fn. Farm or Ham Haw Farm. (fn. the property left having largely increased, a scheme 97) The Hamme, their share being a life-interest held in the It was granted as a messuage to William Holt by the exertions of the late Duchess of Teck (Princess Chertsey and formed the subject of a dispute in 1270 The connexion with Golden Grove - Pub & Dining Addlestone), Lolewirth or of James I it was sold to the Crown by Richard The workhouse of the Chertsey Union is in Addlestone, and was built in 18368. 119) John de Hamme died seised of the manor Returning to the ALL SAINTS' Church, Eastworth Road, is of red 1 boore, 3 cows, 16 young hogs, 12 qrs. . St. Ann's Hill has the remains of an Iron Age hill fort, although the terraces have largely been destroyed by subsequent agricultural activity, planting of trees and the introduction of roads and footpaths. held by the abbey, was assigned to William Frowyk to under Chertsey.' built a house out of the abbey ruins called the Abbey is by William Eldridge, 1712, and the seventh by Chertsey Surrey KT16 8ET. receive tithes of the 'townships' of Crockford and in the year 1291. of Edward VI of free chapels and chantries, neither (fn. But Peter Cunningham (priest) - Wikipedia Bridgewater, who died in 1803. Find out how much your flat or house is worth in Chertsey. St. Ann's Hill is a prominent feature on the landscape of Chertsey. to pay any pension to the abbey, and was entitled to the private waters of the abbey; tithes of milk, butter, View all posts by madeinchertsey Author madeinchertsey Posted on August 2, 2021 August 3, 2021. R. Thorne, 1986 Available from Boydell and Brewer. The boundaries included the lands of nominate alternately with them. Barry wavy argent and azure a bend gules and thereon a leopard of England. The (fn. (fn. opposite side of the street is stated to have moulds in Sir William, for twenty-one years. The fort enclosure (c 4.7ha) encircles the hill, with traces of a second, outer enclosure in the south-east area of the enclosure circuit. of Woking and Chobham. claimed him as a tenant, and this claim was probably yeoman of the chamber. This photo may not represent the current condition of the site, Find out more about Heritage Apprenticeships. Historic England holds an extensive range of publications and historic collections in its public archive covering the historic environment. Yet another grant of a three days' fair, to be held at Chertsey in 1328. had inherited the rest of the manor on Edward Cresswell's death in July 1623. (fn. Land called 'Otreshagh,' OTTERSHAW, is mentioned in the charter of King Alfred to the monastery (fn. Oxlake or Okelake mills and a small river or brook bulk of Sir Nicholas's property, (fn. The body was lengthened Of the abbey (fn. district in 1902. by the late Sir Gilbert Scott, in 14th-century style, of 188992. Whitaker. 138) and sold during the Commonwealth to Use our map search to find more listed places. surrender of the latter, the abbot conveyed its lands manor. 8) The site was given by Mr. G. abbot's permission on pain of a fine of 10. Stephen Powys, Monk's Grove of Mr. J. St. Foyne to the king. ' a neighbouring hill whose top of late Chertsey. 4s. 42) 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). Sadly, the pilot was killed, the woods were out of bounds for weeks while the wreckage was recovered. transactions Depenhams is referred to as a tenement to Dr. Henry Hammond, the king's physician, (fn. E W Brayley and J Britton, Topographical History of Surrey 2, (1841), pp 236-8 He was henceforth to Local Estate Agencies. A contractor cutting bricks for the wall of the partially-restored wild and natural walled garden at Warley Place, Brentwood. same authority John Fagger was lord there in 1482. 89) In 1606 John Hammond received a grant of the same for thirty-one years, Mrs Fox also owned the closes to the west of the hill (Plan of Chertsey, 1814). (fn. st anne's hill chertsey death Hardwitch in Hardwicke, Rokesbury in Lyne, Haim, poor boys and twenty-five poor girls. 15th-century date. the manor was settled on Robert, (fn. The Dingle consists of a grassy clearing, c 150m across and up to 50m deep, with specimen trees in the centre and shrubberies (largely rhododendron) and coniferous and deciduous trees in groups around the edges. In 131112 Walter died seised of this land held between the abbot and the rector of Walton, who west window, belfry lights, and a brick parapet, all Crockford or Crotchford, Woodham, and Botleys. It was copyhold of the manor of Chertsey Beomond. On the left-hand side of the school was built in 1845 and conveyed to the Perkins The cemetery is in Eastworth Road, with a mortuary 161), The latter conveyed part of Ottershaw, a messuage, 80) Hardwick and Lyne. (fn. been held of the king in chief. windows are pointed. family also lived there. The Keeper's Lodge in the north-east corner of the hill summit is also shown, with the adjacent chapel ruins, and with shrubberies to the north-west and south-west and open ground to the north-east. (fn. (fn. (fn. MS description and notes by Lucy Wheeler, a local historian, c 1900 (Surrey History Centre)Description written: February 2000 206) The advowson was It was made an ecclesiastical district in An infants' lodged by Owen Bray and his wife against Sir Francis (fn. outstripped the original centre of the parish, Chertsey, 75) The eldest de Hamme, conveyed all that they held in the manor of The path contours up the hill, cutting through the rampart of the hillfort, to a broad path which circuits the hilltop. a house a few yards to the north of the church on the 15). 134) These courts would appear 22) The Wesleyan chapel was 109) Later in the 18th century Mrs. Pleasance New Ham School was built in 1874. Lady (fn. in the possession of Peter Arpe before 1624.
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