A HISTORY OF SURREY 



Arundel, son of his sister Alice and Edmund, late 

 Earl of Arundel. Richard accordingly inherited the 

 manor, 18 a settlement being made in 1 349 on his 

 younger son, Sir John de Arundel, in tail male. 19 

 Sir John perished at sea in 1379, ant ^ was succeeded 

 by his son John, 10 who received during his minority 

 an annual grant of 40 marks for his maintenance from 

 Richard Earl of Arundel, ' being the amount of his 

 farm for the manor of Bokeland, Surrey, in the king's 

 hands by reason of the said minority.' " Eleanor 

 widow of the first Sir John married Reginald 

 Lord Cobham as her second husband, 2 * and he at his 

 death in 1402-3 was seised of a third of the manor 

 of Buckland in the right of his wife. 83 The major 

 part of the manor continued to be held by the second 

 Sir John de Arundel, and at his death passed to his 

 son John, who became twelfth Earl of Arundel." 

 The latter died in 1421." His widow Eleanor 

 married Sir Richard Poynings, who was assessed for 

 the manor in 1428 ;*" after his death she married 

 Sir Walter Hungerford, and died in 1455, when 

 William, her second son by the twelfth earl, 

 inherited the manor." He 

 had become fifteenth Earl of 

 Arundel in 1438," and the 

 manor appears to have re- 

 mained in the hands of suc- 

 ceeding earls until 1564. 

 Henry Earl of Arundel settled 

 the manor on his daughter 

 Jane, who had married John 

 Lord Lumley.** In 1 5 67 Lord 

 Lumley and Jane conveyed 

 the property to Herbert Pel- 

 ham and Roger Dallender. 30 



Pelham quitclaimed his right to Dallender in 1569," 

 and the latter held until his death in 1599," when 

 his son William inherited his lands, a settlement 

 having been made in 1589 on the marriage of 

 William with Margaret Leigh." William died in 

 1618, and his son Ralph succeeded him. 34 Ralph 

 Dallender in 1654 joined with several other members 

 of the family in a sale to George Browne, 36 who 

 married a daughter of Sir Ambrose Browne of 

 Betchworth. Ambrose and John Browne, sons of 

 George, held the manor successively. 36 On the death 

 without issue of John Browne in 1736 his estates 

 passed to the family of his sister Philippa, who had 

 married William Jordan of Gatwick ; their son 

 Thomas Jordan died unmarried in 1750, when his 

 sisters Elizabeth wife of William Beaumont and 

 Philippa wife of John Sharp became his heirs." The 

 manor of Buckland became the property of the former, 

 Philippa and John Sharpe having released their 

 claim to her in I753-* 3 From that time until the 



present the manor has been held by descendants of 

 William and Elizabeth Beaumont, remaining usually in 

 the younger branch of the family. 39 Mr. F. H. Beau- 

 mont is at present lord of the manor. 



FITZ ALAN, Earl of 

 Arundel. Gules a lion 



BROWNE. Sable thru 

 lions passant bend-wise be- 

 fween two double cotises 

 argent. 



BIAUMONT. Azure 

 powdered vilth jleurs de 

 Us argent and a lion ar- 

 gent. 



A mill in Buckland is recorded in the Domesday 

 Survey, when its value was stated to be 6/. 40 It was 

 probably identical with the mill in Hartswood, parcel 

 of the manor of Buckland, of which later record is 

 found (vide infra). In 1268 John de Wauton and his 

 heirs received a grant of free warren in his demesne 

 lands in Buckland and elsewhere. 41 Guy Ferre re- 

 ceived a grant of free warren in his demesne lands of 

 Buckland in 1291," nearly two years before the formal 

 grant of the manor was made him by John de Wauton. 

 In 1350 a complaint was made by the Earl of 

 Arundel that his free chases and warrens at Buckland 

 had been entered by trespassers who hunted and took 

 away the deer, hares, rabbits, pheasants, and part- 

 ridges. 4 * In 1390 it was found that the manor was 

 charged with a payment of 2</. yearly, then due to 

 Richard Chamberlayn, who was custodian of the 

 warren there. 44 



HJRTSfPOOD, lying in the ecclesiastical parish 

 of Sidlow Bridge, originally formed part of the 

 manor of Buckland. The name occurs early in the 

 1 3th century, when John de Wauton, lord of the 

 manor of Buckland, granted to Robert de Harts- 

 wood, for his homage and service, a field called 

 Rudene lying between the mill of ' Herteswode' 

 and a field called Pegesull. 45 There is no further 

 mention of this mill, which apparently fell into dis- 

 use. In 1379 Jhn de Arundel, lord of Buckland,, 

 received licence to inclose his wood of ' Herteswode,' 

 and to impark 360 acres of land adjacent thereto. 4 ' Aa 

 extent of the manor of Buckland made in 1380 includes 

 100 acres of land there among the appurtenances. 47 

 Hartswood remained part of the manor until 1569, 

 when it seems to have been conveyed by Roger Dal- 

 lender, as lands in the parish of Buckland, including 

 300 acres of wood, to John Skinner 4S ; the latter died 

 in 1583-4 seised of the manor, park, and demesnes of 



18 Chan. Inq. p.m. 2 1 Edw. Ill (istnos.), 

 no. 58 ; Cal. Pat. 1348-50, p. 517. 



19 Chan. Inq. p.m. 50 Edw. Ill (ist 

 DOS.), no. 52*. 



*> Ibid. 3 Ric. II, no. I. 



Cal. Fat. 1377-81, p. 564. 



w Dugdale, Baronage, ii, 31625. 



88 Chan. Inq. p.m. 4 Hen. IV, no. 34. 



94 Ibid. 14 Ric. II, no. i. 



85 Ibid. 9 Hen. V, no. 51. 



86 Ibid. ; Feud. Aids, v, ill, 



*7 Chan. Inq. p.m. 33 Hen. VI, no. 

 35 ; Feet of F. Div. Co. East 26 Hen. VI. 

 49 G.E.C. Complete Peerage. 

 M Ibid. ; Feet of F. Surr. Hil. 6 Eliz. 



80 Feet of F. Surr. East. 9 Eliz. j 

 Pat. 9 Eliz. pt. ix, m. 34. 



81 Pat. ii Eliz. pt. vii, m. 30. 



89 Chan. Inq. p.m. (Ser. 2), cclvii, 48. 



88 Ibid. ; Pat. 3 1 Eliz. pt. xiv. ; Feet of 

 F. Surr. Mich. 31 & 32 Eliz. 



84 Chan. Inq. p.m. (Ser. 2), ccclxxii, 

 142 ; Recov. R. Trin. 19 Jas. I. 



84 Feet of F. Surr. East. 1652 ; Hil. 

 1654 i Mich. 1654. 



86 Berry, Surr. Gen. 29, 82 ; Feet 

 of F. Surr. Mich, i Jas. II j Recov. R. 

 Mich, i Jaj. II, rot. 7. 



8 " Berry, Surr. Gen. 29, 82. 



88 Feet of F. Surr. Mich. 27 Geo. II. 



'74 



89 Recov. R. East. 1 2 Geo. Ill, rot. 

 260 ; Manning and Bray, Hist, of Surr. 

 ii, 218 j Burke, Peerage and Baronetage and. 

 Landed Gentry, 



V.C.H. Surr. i, 316. 



41 Cal. Chart. 1257-1300, p. 88. 



48 Chart. R. 19 Edw. I, 43, m. 10 \. 

 Cal. Chart. 1257-1300, p. 389. 



48 Cal. Pat. 1348-50, p. 517. 



44 Inq. p.m. 14 Ric. II, no. I. 



Add. Chart. 24586. 



48 Cal. Pat. 1377-81, p. 380. 



4 ? Chan. Inq. p.m. 14 Ric. II, file 62,. 

 no. i. 



48 Feet of F. Surr. Hil. 1 1 Eliz. 



