In 1671 Elizabeth Hodsoll, widow,
of the parish of Stansted, widow of William Hodsoll of South Ash
in the Parish of Peters Ash refers to "my house called Bakers
(at Stansted) wherein I now dwell".
In 1770 we know that William Hodsoll Gent., owned the
Manor of South Ash, 4 houses, 8 barns, 8 stables, 8 gardens, 4
orchards, 370 acres of land, 10 acres of meadow, 20 acres pasture
and 55 acres wood in Ash, Kingsdown, Stansted, Wrotham and
Kemsing, and when he died in 1778 he left all to his cousin Mr
Charles Hodsoll of Ash. Difficulties arose and on 20th December
1831, we have the printed particulars of sale of the Manor House
and Manor, sold "with the concurrence of the mortgagees of Mr
Hodsoll". There were 4 farms totalling 577 acres in all, and
named South Ash, Little Ash, Crowhurst in Kingsdown, and Bakers
Farm in Stansted.
The final tragedy of the Hodsoll’s came on January
26th 1847 when there appeared the advertisement of a sale by
auction of "Valuable Modern Household Furniture and Effects
at South Ash Farm by order of the assignee of William Hodsoll, a
bankrupt." The list of articles would make any antique-dealer
envious, for they must have been collected through several
centuries.
There was a map of the estate, apparently about
1831,"The Manor of South Ash of which John Wild and William
Wild are Lords." The Wilds were vintners of London, and their
descendants resided at South Ash up till 1926.
Beneath the stone slabs in the Hodsoll Chapel of Ash
Church, and in the churchyard near to that Chapel, lie the remains
of many a Hodsoll.
The Court Rolls of South Ash Manor, which remained in
the possession of the Wild family have the name Rogers frequently
mentioned in them. |
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HALYWELL MANOR alias HODSOLL
The Manor of Halywell took its name from the
Benedictine Nunnery of Halywell, situated on the west side of the
street running from Bishopsgate to Shoreditch in London, and later
from the Hodsoll family who became the lessees of the priory
during the 14th century. After the dissolution of the sisterhood
in the reign of Henry VIII, this Manor was granted by the King to
Sir Martin Bowes since which time it has had the same owners as
the Manor of Ash.
ST JOHN’S ASH
This manor anciently belonged to the Latimer family,
one of whom, William de Latimer senr. obtained a grant under
Edward I for a market on Thursday and a fair on the feasts of
Saint Peter and Saint Paul. It later became the property of the
Knights of St John of Jerusalem. This famous military and monastic
order originated as a hospital for Christian Pilgrims in
Jerusalem, during the years of the First Crusade. In time it
spread throughout Europe, and was established here during the
twelfth century, with its headquarters at the Priory of St John,
Clerkenwell. The gate of this ancient priory, largely rebuilt in
1504, still stands. The Order possessed much land in Kent, and at
the time of the document dated 13th February 1207, which is
concerned with the purchase of the advowson of Ash ( the right to
elect the Rector) by the Knights of St John, they had already
built a priory at Sutton-at-Hone on the banks of the River
Darenth. Parts of this house and chapel still survive in "St
Johns", the residence of Sir Stephen Tallents, K.C.M.G.,
which since 1943 has belonged to the National Trust. The Manor of
St Johns, Ash, was built as an appendage, or sister house, to the
Sutton-at-Hone headquarters, and from these |