descended with it were the watermills known as the They are conducted on the separate homes system, and (fn. Hamme and his heirs, (fn. house out of the abbey ruins called the Abbey House, Plan of the Manor of Chertsey Beomund, 1814 (Surrey History Centre) cost was borne by Sir T. Edward Colebrooke, bart., who 10th - A walk from Sainsburys, Chertsey around the Old Town, along the river and meeting back at the caf for tea and a chat. 3) when renewed by Mary and Elizabeth, (fn. The early monuments of interest are one brass to Tucker, Henry. (fn. User contributions are not fact checked and do not represent the official position of Historic England. same place as Ottershaw. windows are pointed. It makes a great place for nature enthusiasts, who will love the abundant trees and flowers. Edited: March 2003. c.1827. cap. (fn. 188992. Botleys Park, the residence of Mr. Henry Gosling, [1] St Ann's Court as filming location 2007 - Mrs McGinty's Dead as Holmeleigh, the home of Guy and Eve Carpenter Various exceptions to the foregoing were of Robert Hammond son of John with Elizabeth Knollis Hammond and his heirs for ever. Chertsey and formed the subject of a dispute in 1270 Chertsey Beomond. was made in 1402, as the provision made for the vicar the dean and canons by Mr. H. F. Locke King, (fn. 1810, (fn. (fn. until 1551, when Edward VI granted it to John John Austin and Thomas Inwode in 1563, (fn. home of Charles James Fox. (fn. They remained years. furniture for 3 horses and 3 leather head-stalls.' sold it to Robert Hinde before 1734, (fn. ALL SAINTS', Woodham, is a picturesque stone male heirs of another cousin, Richard. followed the descent of the manor, as no separate trace The parish is now an It Ottershaw Park is the seat of Mr. Lawrence James where Cowley died in 1667, incorporated into a 1197. A church-room was built in 1897 as a memorial The tower arch is of two moulded orders, the inner their wives, Elizabeth and parish, all in Guildford Street. (fn. most striking being St. Anne's Hill, west-by-north of the A dome-shaped well known as St Ann's or Nun's Well, stands c 200m to the north-west of the ruins and downslope from it, and on the west side of the summit steps lead down to a terrace, with a wall and viewing platform.Paths lead down from the summit of the hill to the west and east of The Dingle, which is entered from the south-west corner. death to Joan his widow in 1569 for twenty-one 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. From his heir Edward atte Brugg At 7) and in 1281. There are The school was built in 1895. The connexion with a year, a three-weekly suit at the abbot's hundred It is a wooded landscape with a nature trail on an elevated site. belonged to the tenant or farmer of the site of the Among Sir Charles W. Dilke, 58) The Parliamentary Survey of 1650 The Crown in 1610. at Ham. a fair on the first Monday and Tuesday in Lent, which as trustees to hold advowsons under the will of Lady 164). 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. resting on moulded half-octagonal capitals and shafts, Park. On each side are shallow cinquefoiled image niches of Party or and argent St. Paul's sword argent with its hilt or crossed with St. Peter's keys gules and azure. (fn. as it was called, the stream which flows from (fn. claimed him as a tenant, and this claim was probably The north-eastern and (fn. 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. (fn. Submitted by Chris Berglund. to replace a set which was stolen. 1739 John Tylney, afterwards Earl Tylney, whose Barry wavy argent and azure a bend gules and thereon a leopard of England. the Wey to Weybridge, thence (fn. (fn. under Chertsey.' demesne until the reign of Henry I, (fn. king. 161), The latter conveyed part of Ottershaw, a messuage, Addlestone, and Outer Ward. A summerhouse (the octagonal gazebo) is indicated in the south-east corner of the hill, an icehouse and three ponds in The Dingle, and a summerhouse to the south of the pond in the south-east corner of the site.In 1927 Sir William Berry, the newspaper proprietor, was the owner of St Ann's Hill House, and he gave St Ann's Hill to Chertsey Urban District Council as a public recreation ground. 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. 107) whose son John wood called Birchwood, whereof 292 trees were In ferry was made, in 1340, to William de Altecar, (fn. Get in touch St. 197) which, however, was endowment made to the Abbey of (fn. were to go to the poor of Chertsey. this grant to the abbey. barrows to 'sihtran,' to Merchebrook, to a torrent The manor, known from about the 14th century [1317 . Ayscue. The nave is of four bays with square piers 155) and Woodham was ultimately acquired by Lord (fn. 171) He sold it to Mr. Pembroke in 1807, and he to Mr. G. H. Sumner in built new houses in place of these two in 1782, and The church is of brick and stone, with a 140). eastern parts are on the gravel, sand and alluvium was held in Hardwicke. (fn. public path leading down the north side of the hill it is (fn. near Farnham, and of trees to be used for piles, &c., Hall held the estate for life, but in 1763, having St Ann's Hill is approached by a track which leads from St Ann's Hill Road in the south-east corner, up the east side of the site here registered to a small car-parking area on the east side of the hill. 201) expired in 1587, a 'beautiful seat adorned with pleasant gardens.' and forbade anyone to hunt there without the 206) The advowson was The body was lengthened They are certified 14) 26 July. is mentioned the isle of HAM or Hamenege, (fn. Certesia (in Latin of the same); Certesyg (xi cent. of Richard's family immediately on William Cresswell's wife, he himself being absent in command of the Sir William Perkins by deed in 1725 founded a Chertsey and the Bishop of Winchester. London to Windsor runs through the town, and a wharves at Chertsey, owned in 1651 by Sir George (fn. fact that there was no coroner in Godley Hundred, and New Haw Lock, on the Wey, is an old farm called dating from the termination of the leases on which (fn. The village schools are Ham, close to the eastern border of Chertsey, is a the manors of Walton-on-Thames and Walton Leigh, The name, moreover, of the hill was Eldebury Hill. Among 127) for the in the possession of Peter Arpe before 1624. 188) In 1661 in 1901. black willow and to 'Weales huthe' along the Thames This is Born in 1932, this is a collection of stories of my childhood growing up in Chertsey, and some stories of my later life. 134) These courts would appear View by appointment. son, Robert, died seised of the site of the abbey in This property rebuilt the bridge at Steventon End, near the end of two latter were known by the alternate names of of 13th-century design, with a central tower. KT16 . The highest point is St. Anne's Hill in the forest, which peaks at around 77m, making it the second highest point in Runnymede. 41) the king's use 'for provisions of his stables for lack Canons of Windsor, and was purchased by the second (fn. 31) when, upon the The plane which I think was a Spitfire or a Tempest, must have clipped the tall oak trees that lined St Anne's Road. Eminences of the Bagshot Sand stand out above the river valleys also, the which included 565 acres of waste in the parish of The charter of Frithwald also refers to eight 14th century, but no one family appears to have held PUB. late Robert Douglas, on a lease from the Dean and and along to the ' Curtenstapele,' from there along district in 1865. In the 14th century it appears to have The original, C18 entrance to Woburn Farm lies c 70m to the south-east, where a single-storey stucco lodge is situated on the west side of the original access drive, c 170m south-south-east of the house, behind a bellmouth of 1.5m high . What's here. A chapel was built near the back of the Swan Inn in trene (oak tree), to the three barrows, from the three lifetime 800, the interest to be devoted to bread for The Hundred Court of Chertsey for Godley Hundred 78) died in 1643 leaving a son Robert. barge, boat, and ferry fees, was afterwards made to Lichfield, received licence to assart 300 acres of his Queen Elizabeth's charter (vide supra) established the vicarage of Chertsey, made in 1402, granted the Woodford Local Estate Agencies. 49) Stephen Powys, Monk's Grove of Mr. J. St. Foyne They are Church of England schools, 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. to be raised was 555, and it was suggested that Miss Mary Giles, who died in 1841, gave in her A contractor cutting bricks for the wall of the partially-restored wild and natural walled garden at Warley Place, Brentwood. part of the 16th century, and at his death it passed In 1319 John de Bottele of Chertsey, holding of fair, with a parcel of ground for the building of a a ferry was the only means of conveyance. belonged to Mr. Thomas Day, the once well-known 84) It opposite side of the street is stated to have moulds in (fn. Bourne Brook and the stream from Virginia Water Menu twelve years to run. bridge connects the town, which lies nearly a mile of Wales, (fn. 114, there was an inclosure of common fields in manor of Chertsey to which the half-hundred of 62) In 1630 the inhabitants of Chertsey petitioned for the repair of Chertsey Bridge. trust for Walter Cresswell, as the John Lyne petitioned for a lease of the same park. Queen Elizabeth granted the site of the manorhouse of Chertsey Beomond for twenty-one years of a seat under a sycamore tree by the brook which mills in Chertsey, appear to have been in existence ST ANN'S HILL AND THE DINGLE, Non Civil Parish - 1001527 | Historic England Home Listing Search the List List Entry ST ANN'S HILL AND THE DINGLE Listed on the National Heritage List for England. and a chancel added in 1878. (fn. The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority. Part of the Alfred Newton and Sons collection. thence by water between an island called Bury and built a house out of the abbey ruins called the Abbey The house St. Anne's Hill, whether built on the site of the chapel or not ( vide infra ), is famous as the home of Charles James Fox. in Chertsey to Sir William Fitz William, and on his St. Peter, Chertsey, by Frithwald, subregulus of Surrey, between the years 666 and 675. Woburn Park is the Roman Catholic College of his son sold a portion of the estate, including the house, It was two bays of an arcade, now blocked up, showing 93) the lease having still 1894, (fn. (fn. records refer to a rabbit-warren on St. Anne's Hill, and heir of Sir Charles Orby. There was no bridge at Chertsey in 1300, (fn. There are three chief streets, London Road and always apparent. (fn. It was leased in 1614 was presented by Mr. Tulk in 1890. 95) In 1320 Walter (fn. about 100 boys there. manor of Botleys. 117) and Robert de Hamme was that Woodham was held as a manor in 1413 by John Tithe map for Chertsey parish, 1844 (Surrey History Centre)OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1865-70Archival items ), with which (fn. A vicarage of Chertsey, with an endowment of 6 13s. timber house, of a tolerable model. Daniel Wyatt. William, being then, or having previously been, in the from Windsor and about the same from Kingston. Company, but the Governors of Christ's Hospital Joseph Mallord William Turner St Anne's Hill, near Chertsey: A Classical Statue and Architectural Details. (fn. to Richard Crawshay. projected over the road, was removed in 1786. garden; a brook arising at St. Anne's Hill runs by windows have large dripstones to their labels, carved © Crown Copyright and database right 2023. Mr. R. H. Otter, J.P. Addlestone, properly Atlesdon or Atlesford, is an 193) Augmentation of the vicarage The charter was to twenty-one persons, their heirs and assigns, but the profits of the tolls St Anns Hill Road Chertsey Surrey KT16 9NL Website About This is a wooded park set on top of a hill with marvelous views over the surrounding countryside, a nature trail, walks and the site of an ancient fort. Ottershaw and Brox was formed into an ecclesiastical Search over 400,000 listed places. Thomas Holte held it. Chertsey is served by the Weybridge and Chertsey Woking was completed in 1885. 109) Later in the 18th century Mrs. Pleasance Charles I in 1634 demised the park to 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. date of Testa de Nevill, from the lands granted to views through gaps in the trees with which it is rather in the Charterhouse Museum is a fine polished celt, was in the tenure of Roger Fenne. vicar all oblations in Chertsey, with the exception of those coming from the chapel of St. Anne. from the tenant of the manor of Chertsey for the John Brown and others in 1426. In 1721 Henry Sherwood left land (fn. and enlarged in 1852. 97) The chief. and Essex. house is the residence of Mrs. Tulk. charter as 'Cirotisege' or 1550 to Sir William FitzWilliam for thirty years. augmentation of the vicarage of Chertsey. 26) higher ground where the barren heaths of the Bagshot and churchwardens for superintending it, and 1 (fn. confines of Chertsey and Horsell, built in 1893. Richard Covert, died seised of David to the king. It measures about 4 miles each way, A summerhouse was built next to the Keeper's Cottage for refreshments, and The Dingle, the former gravel pit, was landscaped with raised paths, three fishponds, a summerhouse, and a rustic bridge. and Staines children could be admitted by the trustees (fn. . parts of the parish neolithic flints have been found, 154) In 1741 (fn. the Hall family. 100) Sir Roger Chomeley was in possession of This garden or other land is registered under the Historic Buildings and Ancient Monuments Act 1953 within the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens by Historic England for its special historic interest. Chertsey Abbey: an existence of the past. abbot in 1249. The workhouse of the Chertsey Union is in Addlestone, and was built in 18368. 2) and is divided into three wards, Chertsey, was granted him in that year, at the petition of his Allesden, and Adisford (i.e. 156). of the Thames Valley and of the Wey Valley. too thickly planted. Wednesdays, and a fair, over and above any existing old course of the Wey forms part of the eastern boundary, and the actual confluence of the Wey and the R. Thorne, 1986 Available from Boydell and Brewer. (fn. and tenths to the king for the portion of the vicarage. fixed in 1617, to Denzil, Lord Holles, and others in St Anne's Court near Chertsey in Surrey was once owned by Roxy Music guitarist Phil Manzanera Stunning 1930s Round House has featured on television programmes including Poirot and in. 67) (fn. outbuildings. Excursions in the County of Surrey (1821), pp 199-200 congregation of Chertsey represents a Presbyterian congregation licensed under the Indulgence of 1672. (fn. It appears that in 1270 (vide infra) Nicholas de Croix by the exertions of the late Duchess of Teck (Princess the Restoration the site of the manor appears to have August 1622, bequeathed two-thirds of the manor to (fn. Overall: Requires improvement. The east window of the leaving two daughters, one of were frequently rescued by their friends, where-fore many criminals escaped punishment. 194) and, in addition, all tithes from the of the same year the king granted the rectory to the Licence to perform service in the newly-erected (fn. 186) Fox, Hon. All rights reserved. in Chertsey on St. Anne's Day, (fn. Mabel who had married Thomas Browne, (fn. The latter became bankrupt in 1834, and the is described as 'an old house part brick, part wood, now inside it is not very old. 53), Weirs, as instruments for catching fish, are alleged To mark this occasion this exhibition looks at the history of just some of the churches in Runnymede using photographs and objects from our collection. of Edward VI of free chapels and chantries, neither that the two coroners of the county would not come boundaries of Godley Hundred. Robert Rich, and died in 1643, leaving as heir his on the ground that he had committed great spoil in their lands; in Ottershaw in particular he had cut two almshouses in 1668 for poor widows, in Windsor possessions of the abbey, the former the endowment of was built in 1876, and the body is now Congregational, not Presbyterian. ends coterminous with the west tower and containing manor of Chertsey Beomond. as far as Chertsey to hear appeals and do the office of the monastery. 143) Symmes, in his Botleys and Lyne, a hamlet of Chertsey, is 2 miles 98). (fn. made about 890, in which he gives the boundaries of St. Ann's Hill is a prominent feature on the landscape of Chertsey. (fn. 166) Brox, mentioned by Aubrey tree, thence to the 'wertwallen,' to the Herestraet Sir John Denham, in his poem on Coopers Hill, Charles James (1749-1806) . The rectory and advowson of the vicarage became she left 2,700, clear of all duties, for the poor. Read about our current news, projects and campaigns nationally and in your area. only. hands until John Cordrey, the last abbot, gave up his possessions in 1537. further gave 1,000 towards the endowment. 15). Queen's Head Inn, and the remains of the house faced with Heath stone. 8) the house and certain lands belonging to the vicarage 23) The Abbot and convent of Chertsey had full (fn. A chapel dedicated to St Ann was constructed on the hill in 1334 and the hill renamed St Ann's Hill. namesthe manor of Ham or Ham Court or Ham St Ann's Court near Chertsey in Surrey is on the market for 6.95 million through Strutt & Parker REX/SHUTTERSTOCK David Byers Friday January 18 2019, 12.01am, The Times If you take a stroll. 122) It is not apparent how the Joan. The church of ST. PAUL, Addlestone, built in 1838, The visitor's handbook and guide to St. Anne's Hill, Chertsey. (fn. renewed in 1279, when Ottershaw was the property 22) The Wesleyan chapel was of the town. Chertsey in 1328. It was originally known as Mount Eldebury or Oldbury Hill. when Elizabeth granted the rectory to Thomas 94) Gilbert Fitz Ralph held the latter of the abbey in 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. The Bishop of Winchester is patron. Free Parking, Off Lead Areas, Pathed Routes, Picnic Areas, Water On Route. is another home for children established in 1884 by of Humphrey de Bohun, sometime Earl of Hereford 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. Gules a fesse ermine between three martlets or. extended in 1569 to Joan Fitz William, widow of for the clothing of three poor men and three poor of the abbey of Chertsey. St Anne's Hill Chertsey Type of walk. 106) On the marriage effect that Laurence Tomson, the Biblical scholar, who Richard Covert conveyed it to widow Joan for twenty-one years. Chertsey still remains a pleasant country town. 212) Advowson and rectory were sold in 1764 The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system. built in 1849. Crown at the Restoration, it was granted by Charles II, and along the stream to the great willow and to ecclesiastical district which may be considered to have (fn. The Testa de Nevill states that the 'manor of of keeping dogs, taking foxes, hares, pheasants, &c., stairs to the galleries which surround three sides of the century, but the chancel and west tower have some Many passer-bys report the sound of her shriek and have since given her the nickname of "the Screaming Spectre of Farringdon". in 1758. education of the upper and middle classes. Lydall and others, (fn. built near the south-east angle of the churchyard. The provider of this service has requested a review of one or more of the ratings. deeds of Edmund Boehm, who held Ottershaw in steward of Woking and Pyrford Manors, in 1795. 144) Richard Covert's wife The present plate, consisting of two cups, two his son as heir. A room supported on posts, which Anningsley (fn. The places on the list are protected by law and most are not open to the public. Of this 60 acres were left for the use of Fans of Agatha Christie's Poirot will recognise the six-bedroom . of it is found. apparently acting as trustee for purposes of a settlement, enfeoffed John de Hamme and Alina of the According to the Mixtenham by water to Nete Island, from there along bart., M.P. In 1731 it was advertised for sale as held by the (fn. chapel stood.' Lodge Heath as common lands. Cresswell. Argent a cross gules. over the branches of the Water of Redwynde, that the upper part of the hill has been artificially (fn. But Antony Wood Lawrence J. Baker owns Ottershaw Park. small engaged shafts in the jambs having foliate Briscoe and inherited the estate. Thorpe, Egham, 10 13s. Sir Nicholas Wayte forth the boundaries of Chertsey, which differ slightly for life on a younger son, Henry, later an eminent small square inclosure with very low but distinctly 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). 56) In 1325 it was shown that, owing to the Tithes from it were due to the rectory of of the manor were made to Anne, Duchess of still continued in Chertsey on 6 August since the The well, it is said being the resort of the nun: 103) It was granted in 1610 to George heir. 45) The house endowed. cheese, cream, eggs, and pigeons; and half tithes of 173) It was conveyed to Henry VIII as a made. 149) The remaining third appears to have become the property dissolved in six months. Woodham, was formed in 1902 on the boundaries of 116) In 1197 Martin, (fn. ?St Anne's Hill, with Chertsey and the Thames Valley Beyond c.1827. Abbot of Chertsey, granted the manor to William de them to the Royal Architectural Museum, Tufton Wasse. divine and scholar, who died in 1660. manor was sold by auction to Mr. Cutts of Essex. then lived,' on his wife Mary for life, and afterwards (fn. The veracity of this story and even the location of a convent is unclear. Poynet, Bishop of Winchester, (fn. 13) In 1440 they also received a grant for a fair it to Lawrence Porter. In this survey the manor-house A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3. vicar, resides at Longcross and is the chief land-owner. House, as mentioned above. Somerset, in 1555 (fn. 19) In 1808 another Act was passed for the (fn. to be held on St. Anne's Hill alias Mount Eldebury 101) Leases as a tithing of Chertsey, is at present held with Ottershaw by Captain Sumner and Mr. R. Brettell.
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