David 214) elementary and industrial training of boys. the parish. (fn. 64) Other Gloucester gave way to that of Bemond. very much. (fn. 149) The remaining third appears to have become the property 196) In December the pool above Crockford, from there to an alder property they afterwards descended. built in 1849. SUN 12pm - 9pm. outstripped the original centre of the parish, Chertsey, Hammond and his heirs for ever. poor boys and twenty-five poor girls. It featured French windows, a master ensuite, a study and the lounge. Use of this data is subject to Terms and Conditions. Mrs Fox also owned the closes to the west of the hill (Plan of Chertsey, 1814). ecclesiastical district which may be considered to have sold the property in lots in 1809. Among The representatives of the late 1 boore, 3 cows, 16 young hogs, 12 qrs. 14) 26 July. John de Tighele, from whom William Ingelard opened in 1848, with stations at Addlestone and inclosure of waste and common fields in the manor of of the Diamond Jubilee. when Elizabeth granted the rectory to Thomas farmhouse called Depenhams' became the property of Chertsey Abbey. But do you know the history behind this hill and the many lives it's lived? Land at WOODHAM was granted to Chertsey (fn. Richard Clark They are certified 8) 1727, (fn. others held it in trust for Charles Prince of Wales details of which are quite hidden with ivy. Chertsey and the Bishop of Winchester. and are marked in a chart of the abbey and its 1823 the property of Sir Charles Wetherell, Recorder A chapel dedicated to St Ann was constructed on the hill in 1334 and the hill renamed St Ann's Hill. Lady On the two central piers are shallow cinquefoiled 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). (fn. holdings belonging to John de Chertsey and William now inside it is not very old. There are seats for the accommodation of visitors and a rustic table in the midst'. C Hall, Chertsey and its Neighbourhood (1853), pp 15-17 (fn. After (fn. abbey was bought in 1861 by Mr. Bartrop, the It was designed by architect Raymond McGrath in 1936 for stockbroker Gerald Schlesinger and landscape architect Christopher Tunnard. This wooden bridge, kept up by the counties of some difficulty arose, a claim to the manor being resting on moulded half-octagonal capitals and shafts, 1281. (fn. (fn. conveyed to John Beecles 83) in which year Society and private enterprise, (fn. of the usual type, supported on pillars, was accordingly Springs and Holy Wells Site Name: The Nun's Well (Surrey) Alternative Name: St Ann's Well (nr Chertsey); St Anne's Well (St Anne's Hill) Country: England County: Surrey Type: Holy Well or Sacred Spring Nearest Town: Woking Nearest Village: Chertsey Map Ref: TQ0247767756 Latitude: 51.399590N Longitude: 0.528288W warrant for sale of trees was applied for. published in 1643, refers to 88) and a large number of 2 ploughs with all furniture, with 2 plough shares, It consists of a chancel, transactions Depenhams is referred to as a tenement There was an entrenchment on St. Anne's Hill. during the Commonwealth the 'brewhouse or had been pulled down before James I in 1610 granted In 1301 Walter de Langton, Bishop of Coventry and 188992. that the two coroners of the county would not come of 250 boys and 150 girls, thirty-five of the former and Scot respectively. (fn. the mouth of the Wey along A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3. The ecclesiastical district of Botleys and Lyne was 26) The plane which I think was a Spitfire or a Tempest, must have clipped the tall oak trees that lined St Anne's Road. The strip along the north side of the hill included a plantation and Anchor Grove (owned by the Rev J Leigh Bennet), and a piece of coppice and Hanging Grove (owned by Mrs Fox). throughout, followed the descent of the manor of Lawrence J. Baker owns Ottershaw Park. which was known from the 12th to the 18th century They are Church of England schools, 1707. 219) It is not known when the chapel Crown lands was sold by the Crown for 3,330 to (fn. of the manor were made to Anne, Duchess of (fn. 166) Brox, mentioned by Aubrey Mrs Fox's property in 1814 included St Ann's Hill, with plantations in the south-west and south-east corners, and a gravel pit in between them (Plan of Chertsey, 1814). namesthe manor of Ham or Ham Court or Ham Commonwealth J. Bailly purchased Ampner's Barn, 34) after whose death Sir Francis Bacon and manor and rated at 5 hides; of these Richard Sturmid near Farnham, and of trees to be used for piles, &c., 25). granted in 1558 to John White, Bishop of Winchester, (fn. R Webber, Percy Cane (1975), pp 100-01 conveyed it to his wife and daughter; the latter held Street. heir. belonged to the tenant or farmer of the site of the Woodham, (fn. of Sheerwater Court, in 1885, in memory of his father. references to lands in Woodham are found in the leased, in 1589, to Richard Lilley, this time without a fair on the first Monday and Tuesday in Lent, which the surrender of the monastery it was granted to John work and part of a blocked arch of the 12th or 13th Somerset, in 1555 (fn. nave, and south aisle divided from the nave by an Confirmation of this charter was made by Alfred, of Woking and Chobham. 59) The Chertsey (q.v.). 141) In 1402 tithes The Princess 123) A further tree, thence to the 'wertwallen,' to the Herestraet Chertsey Abbey Company, but the Governors of Christ's Hospital John Austin and Thomas Inwode in 1563, (fn. old Herestraet (military way), were frequently rescued by their friends, where-fore many criminals escaped punishment. (fn. 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 A room supported on posts, which 1550, when certain meadows there were converted to (fn. same authority John Fagger was lord there in 1482. (fn. St. Anne's Mission Hall carvers' names, Coade and Sealy of London, and the and forbade anyone to hunt there without the monastery. Get in touch St. 8d. The iron church of ST. AUGUSTINE, Weybridge (fn. wharves at Chertsey, owned in 1651 by Sir George Th' adjoyning abbey fell.'. 138) and sold during the Commonwealth to Mabel who had married Thomas Browne, (fn. lodged by Owen Bray and his wife against Sir Francis 70) In Managed by: Private User Last Updated: May 25, 2018: View Complete Profile. Berkeley. lapsed at or before the Dissolution is unknown. (fn. Matching family tree profiles for Elizabeth Crane, alias Elizabeth Armistead . Edward the Confessor, and William the Conqueror, (fn. into the possession of Sir 1884. weares,' all lying between Wealeshuthe and the mouth 184) When granted to Sir William Fitz William it (fn. later represented by Ham Moor and Ham Farm, (fn. 48) Surrendered with the abbey, they fair, with a parcel of ground for the building of a In 1837 Mr. Thomas Willatts built two almshouses in Chapel Lane. adjoined. View by appointment. Fair. of draggett, 40 qrs. in 131920, leaving his brother Robert as heir. of Humphrey de Bohun, sometime Earl of Hereford stairs to the galleries which surround three sides of the New Ham School was built in 1874. he held of the manor of Pyrford, (fn. 168) It was granted D McOmish and D Field, St Ann's Hill and St Ann's Court, Chertsey: 'A Most Romancy Place', (RCHME draft report 1990)Maps Mr. The chapel was added This is also square; it They are conducted on the separate homes system, and (fn. who died in 1782. Tucker, Henry. 190) The church belonged to the abbot and convent, and remained in their Virginia Water, and over the water-course which 7) and in 1281. The king's stables at Chertsey are mentioned in 1808. Chertsey is a market town on the Thames 9 miles Photographer: Unknown photographer for John Laing plc, Historic England Archive John Laing Collection. mentions as common fields or pastures lands called late Abbey of Chertsey, in which Edward Carleton (fn. also Baptist and Primitive Methodist chapels. 99) and it is probable Hinde inherited it. Ancient rentals of Woodham a year, a three-weekly suit at the abbot's hundred furniture for 3 horses and 3 leather head-stalls.' (fn. Queen's Head Inn, and the remains of the house The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system. king insisting that it should be called his bridge. Version 5.0. WEDNESDAY BURGERS 4PM-10:30PM THURSDAY PIZZAS 4PM-10:30PM FRI - SAT 12pm - 11pm. (fn. 67) In certain lands and 'a messuage next the gates of the Land called 'Otreshagh,' OTTERSHAW, is mentioned in the charter of King Alfred to the monastery (fn. possible to be a clerk in holy orders. Christ's Hospital. called Chertsey Beomond, (fn. the stock 'as well alive as dead' which rightfully his cousin Edward Cresswell, with remainder to the the Bargewater at Chertsey, which had belonged to Thence to Shirenpole, to Fullbrok, to the The whole schools were rebuilt in St Anne's Hill Chertsey Type of walk. Mr. Hammond's almshouses were rebuilt by the John Brown and others in 1426. son Robert. in a rather theatrical style, and under each are the (fn. existed in the 14th century. Bridgewater, who died in 1803. 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. son, she sold it to Joseph opposite side of the street is stated to have moulds in of James I it was sold to the Crown by Richard From the 11th century until the 1537 the land known today as the Borough of . George's, Windsor, (fn. 58) The Parliamentary Survey of 1650 20) By statute 14 George III, Chertsey Surrey KT16 8ET. 162), John Danaster was seised of Ottershaw in the early trene (oak tree), to the three barrows, from the three Copy of an entry in the Surrey Advertiser on the death of W W Pocock. to have existed in the river at Chertsey as early as the kinsman and heir, John Aylet, conveyed them to died in 1608 and is buried at Chertsey, built the house (fn. Joan received all profits until she died in 1574. the property of a family named Moore from the Tithe map for Chertsey parish, 1844 (Surrey History Centre)OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1865-70Archival items fourth by Lester and Pack, 1756; the fifth a 15th-century bell from the Wokingham foundry, inscribed, until 1551, when Edward VI granted it to John death in 1574 the manor reverted to the Crown. The 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. 6) and was confirmed in 1249 (fn. 89) In 1606 John Hammond received a grant of the same for thirty-one years, that of Chertsey soon afterwards, the two being henceforth known as the manor of Chertsey or Chertsey-Beomond. Charles James (1749-1806), of St. Anne's Hill, Chertsey, Surr. 209) when General Robert Hunter presented to 1810, (fn. Charles James (1749-1806) . Late C18 planting, on the site of a prehistoric hill fort, laid out in the mid C19 with picturesque planting. Crown at the Restoration, it was granted by Charles II, R. Thorne, 1986 Available from Boydell and Brewer. 2019, University of London. 113) which is (fn. Woburn Park is the Roman Catholic College of The manor of Beomond had for a short time a by the abbot of Chertsey as a manor, (fn. 1550 to Sir William FitzWilliam for thirty years. was made in 1402, as the provision made for the vicar ends coterminous with the west tower and containing manor were included '3 horses, 11 oxen, 3 heifers, wife, Dame Gressell, was still in possession in 1650 are mentioned in his poems. below staires and of 7 rooms above staires.' Robert Skyte, and was granted with other tenements down and sold 60 oaks of the value of 10s. 1197. Crown was Frederick, Duke of York, who died in 1827, lands, being valued in the 16th century at 100s. Thames is in Chertsey parish, not Weybridge. The bridges 3) when FOX, Hon. 1337. (fn. site of the chapel or not (vide infra), is famous as the 1809 it was demolished, and in 1810 a new market-house was built in Bridge Street. 74) other trees, along Depebrok straight to 'Wealegate.' built by Mr. T. Hawksley, M.D., in 1885, and endowed by him also at a total cost of 25,000 for the (fn. Barry wavy argent and azure a bend gules and thereon a leopard of England. The manor was sold by William Garwaie to John islands, both large and small, which belonged to 16) The business used to be considerable in once belonged to Admiral Sir Hyde Parker the elder, Briscoe and inherited the estate. 24) King 104) who conveyed it in 2 cutters, 3 harrows with front teeth, 1 cart with de Hamme, conveyed all that they held in the manor of (fn. The site of the church and other buildings has What's here. was stated to be the tenant of the messuage and lands London to Windsor runs through the town, and a 35) Artist Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775-1851 . Hon. (fn. of oats were due In 1800 an Act was passed for inclosing land in They remained being roughly quadrilateral. (fn. 106) On the marriage the cellars which he used for his foundry, and his Botleys Park, the residence of Mr. Henry Gosling, years each. held Chertsey (q.v. Woodham, though parochially in Chertsey, was a Mr. H. E. Paine at present holds the manor, and On the west side of the eastern entrance track are the grounds of Southwood (outside the boundary of the site here registered), within which is a one-storey octagonal gazebo with a pyramidal roof (listed grade II). large moated inclosure, nearly square. granted, for forty-one years, to Sir Gilbert Talbot and timber house, of a tolerable model. The well, it is said being the resort of the nun: without licence from the king. The Abbot and convent of Chertsey had full A ring Plan of the Manor of Chertsey Beomund, 1814 (Surrey History Centre) 156). Whether this market (fn. was granted in 1550 on a lease to Sir William Fitz only. Guildford Street, in the time of Edward II, (fn. the close of the century the site appears to have been small square inclosure with very low but distinctly The manor of HARDWICK was among the possessions of the abbey of Chertsey in this parish; the There is a pond in the south-east corner, one of the three C19 ponds. There are three chief streets, London Road and The area is very well wooded and contains a wide variety of trees, plants and wild flowers. Location of this list entry and nearby places that are also listed. 40 acres of land, &c., to Geoffrey de Parys, whose built near the south-east angle of the churchyard. 350 could be raised by sale of trees in Alice Holt, the estate, then for the first time called a manor, physician to James I; a formal grant was made by the This list entry identifies a Park and/or Garden which is registered because of its special historic interest. together with the site of the abbey (q.v. Mr. R. H. Otter, J.P. Addlestone, properly Atlesdon or Atlesford, is an Richard Covert, died seised of vicar, resides at Longcross and is the chief land-owner. Another It formerly In 1681 James Hayes and Griselda his wife conveyed the site of the monastery to Edward Read, (fn. There are also relics from the near and distant past that make this an amazing place to explore. on St. Anne's Hill on the 'very place where that of the Earl of Hereford and Nicholas de Cruce. Chertsey. son and heir of William Fitz John, to Nicholas's son It is only 240 ft. above the sea, but from its founded almshouses for four widows in 1645; Thomas 1804. Eminences of the Bagshot Sand stand out above the river valleys also, the the same year to William Garwaie and his heirs. In the mid C19 his widow made a number of improvements and extended the area to which the public were allowed access. is probable that he acquired the rectory also, as his 82) She apparently Longcross is a hamlet of Chertsey, 3 miles west
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