Tandridge

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Tandridge
Surrey
Tandrige main street - geograph.org.uk - 47422.jpg
Tandridge main street
Location
Grid reference: TQ372506
Location: 51°14’20"N, 0°2’6"W
Data
Population: 663  (2011)
Post town: Oxted
Postcode: RH8
Dialling code: 01883
Local Government
Council: Tandridge
Parliamentary
constituency:
East Surrey

Tandridge is a village in Surrey. Its nucleus is on a rise of the Greensand Ridge between Oxted and Godstone. The parish includes, a hamlet named Crowhurst Lane End.

The village has one of the oldest yew trees in the country, a Grade I-listed church and the tomb of the church's main benefactor Sir George Gilbert Scott's wife, Lady Scott who lived in the parish.

The village gives its name to the Tandridge Hundred, covering the south-easternmost parts of Surrey.

Geography

Tandridge is a clustered village partly surrounded by its own steep woodland otherwise by fields, the parish is largely on the lowest land of a noticeable ridge. It stretches as a long, thin parish south of the ridge towards Lingfield and Burstow. The north of this ridge close to the church is Beechwood Hill (525 feet), part of the Greensand Ridge which breaks up around this area.[1]

Hamlets

Only one named hamlet is within the parish bounds, Crowhurst Lane End, approximately mid-way between the cluster of almost all of the homes of villagers who are not smallholders or large-scale farmers, and the centre of Crowhurst, Surrey. A footpath connects the village to the latter village and it is served by the local roads.

Parish church

The parish church is Str Peter’s. Its nave is much of the late 11th century, with a wall and carved priest's door in the north of the chancel of the same date. The tower and spire form a rare example of timber construction, and one of the earliest of its class in Surrey, dating, in fact, from the end of the 13th or the beginning of the 14th century.[2]

In the churchyard are tombs/headstones/vaults to several noteworthy people, including Charles Pepys, 1st Earl of Cottenham and Lord Chancellor and the rest of his Pepys family of around 1845[3], Edward Hawkins, Keeper of Antiquities in the British Museum, 1829, Sir James Cosmo Melvill KCB, 1861, malacologist, Lady Scott, wife of Sir George Gilbert Scott RA, who restored the church. The monument to this lady, who died in 1872, is an elaborately sculptured tabletomb to the west of the church, of white marble.

History

Middle Ages

Tandridge appears in Domesday Book of 1086 as Tenrige. It was held by the wife of Salie from Richard Fitz Gilbert. Its domesday assets were: 2 hides; 1 mill worth 4s 2d, 14 ploughs, 5 acres of meadow, woodland and herbage worth 51 hogs. It rendered £11 a year.[4]

Variant spellings found in the Middle Ages in such records as feet of fines include Tenrige; Tanerig, Tanerigge, Tanrich, Tenrig and Tenrugge . Godstone until the 19th century cut off a detached part, Tillingdon, which lay between Godstone and Caterham and became part of the latter community.[5]

Tandridge Priory

This small house of Austin canons was founded, Tandridge Priory in the time of King Richard I. At the Dissolution of the Monasteries it had possessions valued at £86. 7. 6. per annum. In the grounds of the priory are the lids of two stone coffins dug up here. In 1828 some silver and copper coins of Julius Caesar and other Roman emperors were found.[6] In about 1610 the property parted from a when period held as part of the manor.[5]

Manorial descent (reversion) and rebuilding

Gilbert de Clare died in 1314 which triggered the division of his lands between his sisters and co-heirs: Eleanor wife of Hugh Despenser the Younger succeeded to the knights' fees belonging to (i.e. flowing yearly from) the manor. Tandridge's overlords remained (granting long tenancies of the manor) the Despensers and their descendants, the Beauchamps, thus over a century later, with mass property accumulation by holders of the Earldom of Warwick, it settled on the childhood prize of wealth in the country Anne de Beauchamp, 16th Countess of Warwick. Due to the Wars of the Roses she became widow of Warwick the king-maker and was finally compelled to convey her enormous estates to the ultimate victor, Henry VII. In 1499 George Puttenham, who was afterwards knighted, was lord of the manor, as which he held courts in 1509 and 1527. He was succeeded at his death by his son Robert, who sold Tandridge in 1542 to John Cooke, a goldsmith of London, whose interest became assigned by mortgage (and default of payment) to Richard Bostock, who died without heirs. The manor became known by the name which it has since borne, Tandridge Court, to distinguish it from the manor of Tandridge Priory which had also become the property of Richard Bostock in the early 17th century. He left it to nephew Bostock Fuller, justice of the peace of Surrey who died in 1626.[5]

William Clayton, nephew and heir to the manor at Bletchingley bought this supplemental manor in 1712 from Francis Fuller, he started a line of Clayton baronets by royal favour and the property was described as sold 'lately' by Sir William Robert Clayton to Walpole Greenwell, in 1912.[5]

Tandridge Court was rebuilt in the 20th century and is not a listed building.

Sir Robert Clayton who owned the manor and the Priory granted the latter with Priory Farm (perhaps thus really only the latter) to Robert Graeme, his steward, and his heirs in return for the valuable services rendered by Graeme and because he had relinquished the profession for which he had been educated in order to become his steward. In 1817 Robert Graeme and Mary his wife conveyed the manor to Charles Hampden-Turner, in whose family it remained in 1912.[5]

Industries post-Dissolution

In John Rocque's map of 1761 'Woodcock's Hammer' is denoted what was the far south of the parish,[5] near Hedgecourt (in Felbridge), showing that an iron forge stood there or had once done so.

In 1912 the parish was "chiefly agricultural, but there [we]re brick and tile works in it."[5]

Yew tree

In the churchyard of Tandridge church is an ancient yew tree, of a size to indicate it is over 1,500 years old. It was measured as 32 feet 6" in 1912, quite hollow but "full of life with four great limbs above about four feet in height".[5]

Outside links

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about Tandridge)

References

  1. Database of British and Irish Hills Retrieved 2015-03-06
  2. National Heritage List 1189811: St Peter's Church, Tandridge
  3. National Heritage List 1294076: Pepys (Cottenham) vault
  4. 'Domesday Map'
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 Parishes: TandridgeA History of the County of Surrey - Volume : {{{2}}} (Victoria County History)
  6. Tamerton-Folliott – Tapton - A Topographical Dictionary of England