A HISTORY OF SURREY 



On the south face of the transept and chapel wall 

 is the mark of the barrel-vault of the passage to the 

 cemetery, 1 2 ft. wide, part of the east wall of which 

 j remains : the gable line of the dorter range also shows 

 on the transept wall, but except for this all traces of 

 the priory buildings have disappeared. 



The north transept has entirely gone, and the only 

 part left on that side is the north chapel to the east 

 of the transept ; of this much of the three outer walls 

 still stands, but they possess no details of note. 



The only part of the nave still left is a length of 

 the south aisle wall, and this has now fallen ; the 

 toothings where it came against the transept wall 

 remain in place, but for a space of 24 ft. the wall is 

 missing, the remaining portion running thence west- 

 ward for 34ft. On the transept wall are the marks 

 of the lean-to roof of the aisle ; it cuts across the 

 north-west lancet window to the transept. 



The dimensions of the church were : Presbytery, 

 43 ft. by 246. 4 in. ; quire, 40 ft. by 26 ft. ; north 

 and south transepts, 30 ft. deep by 25ft. 4 in. 

 wide ; north-east chapel off the south transept and 

 south-east chapel off the north transept, 26ft. by 

 I o ft. 6 in., the other two chapels 1 2 ft. by I o ft. 6 in. ; 

 nave length uncertain, width probably that of the 

 quire, and south aisle 1 2 ft. wide. 



In the south transept lies a heavy 14th-century 

 cross slab of very rough work, being made of 

 the intractable crystalline stone which occurs in 

 isolated blocks in various parts of the county and 

 elsewhere. 



The so-called manor of PAPWORTH (Pappeworth, 

 xiv cent.) may have been the holding of Walter or of 

 Hubert in 1086. In 1271 Ruald de Calva granted the 

 'hamene of Papworth' to Newark Priory." The 

 priory granted it to the Westons of West Clandon, 

 for in 1331 William de Weston had land in Send," 

 and in 1363 Margery widow of William de Weston 

 died seised of a ' tenement called Papworth,' which 

 she held of Newark." 



Papworth followed the descent of West Clandon 

 Manor (q.v.) until the beginning of the I yth century, 

 when Edmund Slyfield, lord of West Clandon, 

 conveyed it to Henry Weston of Ockham." The 

 Westons held it until 1711, when John Weston sold 

 it with Ockham to Sir Peter King." Early in the 

 i gth century Lord King, a descendant of Sir Peter, 

 exchanged it with Lord Onslow for the manor of 

 Wisley." 



The reputed manor of DEDSffELL (Dodswell, 

 Dadswell, xvi cent.), possibly the other small holding of 

 Domesday, received its name as land held of John de 

 Tregoz by John de Dedeswell for the service of one- 

 third of two knights' fees. 1 * This service was in 

 1290 granted by John de Tregoz to the Prior of 

 Newark." 



In 1351 Thomas de Weston of Albury married 

 Joan daughter and heiress of John Dedswell of Send. 4 ' 

 This Thomas was of a younger branch of the Westons 

 of Send. At the death of William de Weston without 

 issue in 1485 4I Dedswell passed to his sister Margaret, 



who married first William Welles of Buxted in Sussex 

 and second John Appesley. She died in 1512 leaving 

 a son and heir John Welles." In 1539 Thomas 

 Welles son of John conveyed the manor to Sir 

 Richard Weston of Sutton in Woking. 43 It remained 

 with the Westons of Sutton until 1 66 1, when John 

 Weston conveyed it to Arthur Onslow. 44 The Ons- 

 low family has retained possession until the present 

 day. 



The reputed manor of JURT~in Send is mentioned 

 among the lands lately belonging to Newark Priory 

 which were granted to Sir Anthony Browne at the 

 Dissolution. 44 Probably it represents the grant of a 

 messuage with I oo acres of land made to the Prior and 

 convent of Newark in 1331 by William Diry, " whose 

 name was apparently attached to the holding, and 

 became corrupted into Jury in process of time. This 

 tenement descended with the manor of Send. 



The Domesday Survey of Send (q.v.) mentions a 

 mill, which in the 1 3th century appeared as a water- 

 mill in the possession of Thomas and Alice de Send. 47 

 This mill, which they granted to the priory, was 

 Newark Mill. The grant to Sir Anthony Browne (q.v.) 

 mentions a mill in Ripley which may refer to the 

 same. There was another mill on one of the smaller 

 holdings. 



The church of ST. MART THE 

 CHURCHES riRGIN, SEND, is a small building 

 consisting of a chancel 1 7 ft. 6 in. by 

 24ft. 9 in. and an aisleless nave 38 ft. 3 in. by 31 ft. 

 2 in. with a west tower I oft. by 9 ft. 3 in., and a 

 south porch. 



The chancel seems to have been built about the 

 year 1240, and is the oldest part of the church. The 

 whole nave was rebuilt late in the I4th century, being 

 unusually wide for its length, and the tower was added 

 somewhat later. The south porch, xvhich is of timber, 

 was probably added late in the 1 5th century, and the 

 church was restored in 1847. 



The east window of the chancel was inserted appa- 

 rently in old jambs in 1 8 1 9. It has three cinque- 

 foiled lights and tracery of a curious semi-gothic 

 character in a two-centred head. The north wall 

 of the chancel has two original lancets, the eastern- 

 most one having chamfered and rebated jambs and the 

 other plain rebated jambs. 



In the south wall are two lancets of 1 3th-century 

 date like those in the opposite wall, the easternmost 

 one in this case having unchamfered jambs, while all 

 have external shafts. At the west end of this wall 

 is a small coeval low side window. 



Near the east end of the north wall of the chancel 

 is a plain projecting corbel, which was probably 

 intended to support a figure. Opposite this in the 

 south wall is a piscina with stop-chamfered jambs and 

 pointed head. The basin was circular, but the pro- 

 jecting portion has been lopped off. Between the 

 first and second windows of the south wall is a small 

 13th-century priest's doorway which has chamfered 

 jambs of sandstone, and a four-centred head. The 

 ashlar elsewhere, except in some of the lower quoins, 



M Dugdale, Man. Anfl. vi, 383. 



88 Winton Epis. Reg. Stratford, foL 

 55*. 



84 Chan. Inq. p.m. 36 Edw. I, pt. ii 

 (ist nos.), 75. 



86 Close, Jas. I, pt. xxxix, m. 2. 



88 Feet of F. Surr. Hil. 9 Anne. 



" Manning and Bray, Hilt, of Surr. Hi, 

 109. 



88 Chan. Inq. p.m. 28 Edw. I, no. 43. 



89 Chan. Inq. a.q.d. file 14, no. 30. 



40 Harl. Sue. Publ. xliii, 28, 216, and 

 Weston Genealogy ; Brayley, op. eit. ii, 

 82. 



41 Chan. Inq. p.m. (Ser. 2), xxvii, 61, 



368 



Ibid. 



43 Feet of F. Surr. Mich. 31 Hen. 

 VIII. 



44 Ibid. Trin. 13 Chas. II. 



46 Pat. 36 Hen. VIII, pt. xxvi, m. 20. 



46 Chan. Inq. a.q.d. file 213, no. 24; 

 Pat. 5 Edw. Ill, pt. ii, m. 24. 



47 Chan. Ir.q. a.q.d. file 14, no. 30. 



