Local History of Wonersh & Blackheath (Surrey )
Acknowledgements and source material from :-
“Our Village” by Wonersh History Society and “History of Blackheath” by Brigadier Dick Hume.
Victoria History of Surrey Parishes 1911
The records of Wonersh & Blackheath churches.
History of England (1708), John Aubrey visited Wonersh circa 1690.
Manning & Bray Vol. II pages 108-116.
Very many letters and documents are summarised and published online in the Surrey History Centre Archives, It has not been found possible to link specific documents directly, however the document may be found by paging down manually in a relevant collection or else from the ADVANCED SEARCH page (note - deselect all except the SHC Collections box). These collections include :-
Norton Family – Deeds of Surrey Estates, Collection Refs: G24, G60, G1275, 1229
Loseley papers, Collection Section LM.
Wonersh Collections WON Part 1 and WON Part 2
Vision of Britain - Parish of Wonersh
Wonersh and Bramley History Societies & Bramley Parish Council's History
Wonersh History Society was established in 1993 to preserve and build on a quantity of material gatered togher by the late Anthony Fanshaw.
Information can also be found on the folllowing pages:-
Local Villages
Wonersh Church History
St Martin's Blackheath
Wonersh Registers & Vicars
Patronage
Old Wonersh Families
Events may be put into wider context by clicking Timeline
Scientists say the age of the earth is some 4.5 billion years; a truely huge number. Stretch out your arms and imagine that the span from the tips of each hand represents this period. If we start from the fingertip of one hand as the beginning, all complex life would be contained on the span of the other hand. A manicure would represent man's presence on earth and a shave of a nail file would obliterate our history in Wonersh. Evolution or creation, or somewhere in-between, God's world is a wonderful place.
Early History to the Conquest
Humans have inhabited this area for many years. Pre-historic remains are abundant: Paleolithic flints and Neolithic implements and burial mound have been found at Blackheath and around Chinthurst Hill.
Timeline The early history of Surrey indicates that this part of England was sparsely populated with little evidence remaining of much before the Norman Conquest. Christianity arrived in Britain in Roman times and took root in both the new culture and the indigenous Celtic people. At Farley Heath, on the edge of Blackheath, is the site of a Roman Temple and the largest Romano-British settlement in Surrey, situated off Stane Street. After the Romans withdrew from Britain in 410AD Saxons and Jutes invaded and largely displaced the native population. The Saxons divided their state into Shires and Hundreds, with the Hundreds Courts administering justice and collecting taxes. The hundred of Blackheath, or Blackfelde, had its own representative body from local villages. Tax was dependant on “hides” and the number of plough teams in each estate. A “hide” was a unit of land measurement, said to be some 30 acres, based on the amount a team could plough in a year. Originally this area was part of the Saxon Kingdom of Mercia, but changed allegiance to Wessex around 685. It was one of the last areas to be converted to Christianity. The Saxons introduced their own system of church organization of Bishops, Monasteries and parishes, with parish boundaries largely related to those of the local squire. The oldest church in the Diocese is St Mary’s, Stoke d’Abernon founded in 673AD. In 1011
The coming of Christianity to our village was earlier than 1000 for, by then, there was a thriving parish that could both plan and build the first Saxon chapel of flint before the Norman invasion, and traces of this are still to be seen. The church was in the parish of Shalford however by 1295 the church of St John the Baptist was known as a parish church.
Almost all the names of
Lords of the Manor
Timeline Surrey History Centre Manoral Records describes a Manor as an estate with a court (Court Baron and Court Leet, also known as View of Frankpledge). Court records are a great source of information.
The title Lord of the Manor of Bramley was granted by William to his half brother Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, but on William’s death 1087 it was forfeited when he proved himself disloyal to William Rufus. In 1107 Henry I gave the Manor to his daughter Juliana, as a wedding portion, however it soon reverted to the Crown. Timeline In 1155 King Henry II granted it to Raoul de la Fay, the uncle of his Queen Eleanor of
Timeline They passed through her daughter Alice who married Richard de Breus, and then their descendants to Thomas Cokesey (Greville). Timeline On his death the estate was divided with the Surrey part including Bramley passing to the Thomas Howard Earl of Surrey and later Duke of Norfolk
Great Tangley was a parcel of the Manor of Bramley East and until the 20th century Wonersh and Tangley were separate settlements. It is sometimes difficult to establish if documents refer to Bramley or Tangley. The tradition of the countryside is that the old house at Great Tangley was supposedly used by King John as the starting point of the chase in the Forest of Anderida (which in those days covered much of southern
Following the purchase of the Manor by Richard Carill in 1559 the house where he lived at Great Tangley became more important with considerable alterations carried out in 1582 to improve its' status as the manor house . It is mentioned in old documents dated 1554 as a Court of Justice held in Bramlie, with jurisdiction (view of frankpledge) containing the tithings of Shalford, Great, Middle and Little Cranleigh, West Clandon, Dunsfold, Wonersh, Bramley and Smithbrook (see SHC 892/5/... ). George Duncombe is named as Steward at the Court of Bramley from 1617 until his death in 1646. John Carill, his great grandson, mortgaged all his property heavily, and in 1649 the Manor was granted, probably as security, for life to another George Duncombe d1677. Timeline On the death of John Carill in 1656 his “moiety” (half of the original Bramley manor) was divided between his daughters (SHC Ref G24/7/4 & 892/5/4): Lettice Ramsden (East Bramley SHC Ref 892/6 to 10/ ), Margaret Ludlow (West Bramley, including Little Tangley(SHC Ref 892/11/ ) and Elizabeth Fermor (the other third). John’s widow, Hester, remarried to Sir Francis Duncomb and they continued to reside at Tangley (SHC G123/2/1) until his death in 1670:-
Great Tangley (East Bramley) was sold in 1673 by Lettice to Leonard and John Child (Childe), both freeman of Guildford and probably non resident (noted by Aubrey circa 1690 that Leonard Child of Guildford held court at Tangley). Timeline It passed to John's son, Charles Child (d1754), and then to his sister’s son Charles Searle (of Waverley Abbey). Great Tangley was sold in 1759 to Fletcher Norton but he lived elsewhere in Wonersh House.
Elizabeth sold her portion in 1674 to Richard Gwynn; rather dubiously he assumed a role of Lord of his Manor and this too eventually passed down to Fletcher Norton. The 2nd Lord Grantley in 1805 purchased the other half (Bramley West) of the original Bramley Manor from Lord Onslow and for the first time since 1241 there was again a single Lord of the Manor of Bramley.
All this division and reuniting caused much confusion, which even the surveyors and legal profession eventually admitted was beyond fathom. The 5th Lord Grantley sold his
Other Manor Houses
The Manor of Chinthurst (Chilthurst) together with part of Loseley. was a dower in 1452 for Tomasine, widow of William Sidney, and passed through various hands to the Sparkes family in 1791 (SHC Ref 5368 and G106).
Little Tangley was part of Elizabeth Ludlow's portion of Bramley East. It was sold to William Hammond, then c1866 to William Seth-Smith and later to Cowley Lambert (SHC Ref 5368)
Losterford House was also called a Manor House in 16th century when in 1547 John Scarlet held it as the Manor of Shalford Bradestan Bradestone), then Thomas Paston and in 1579 Willian Tycknor (Tickner), whose family held it for many years.
Rowleys is another reputed Manor House, bought in 1508 by Robert Harding, which then descended to the Onslow family (SHC 892/4/1). In 1806 the Earl sold it to Richard Sparkes. John Aubrey noted circa 1690 that Edward Nicholas of
Halldish (Aveldershe) was a farm in Shamley Green owned by Bartholomew Haveldersh and wife Joan; they are buried in Wonersh churchyard. In 1626 it passed to George Duncombe (SHC Collection 1322/13/..), remaining with the family until 1841.
The Cloth Industry
In the 14th century there was the beginnings of a cloth industry in this area which goes back to the settlement of Flemish weavers and dyers during Edward III’s reign. The neighborhood attracted the trade, for sheep could be farmed on the
This once thriving cottage industry, probably involving most of the village, was languishing before the end of Elizabeth’s reign (1600 ish), and by the end of 1630 there was serious unemployment in the area (including
Other Things
The parish is in what is today prosperous
Those not willing or able to work relied upon charity of the parish which since the 16th century was administered by the Parish Vestry, what would be called the PCC today, with the Vicar & churchwardens having prominent roles. During the 19th century these responsibilities were evolved to Civil Parishes geographically similar to their ecclesiastical counterparts.
Wonersh Mill dates from the 15th. Today it is hidden beside Wonersh Park (TQ023 445). The Mill house is understood to have been one of the houses featured in the film "The Holiday".
Many people drank Ale, a light fermentation of hops which was less risky than drinking contaminated water. Wonersh had at least three “ale houses”: one in
The historic Pilgrim’s Way between
Timeline The Napoleonic War brought concerns for shipping in the Channel and plans to create an overland connection between
William Colebrook, whilst renting Tangley Manor from 1852, started religious servicse in the kitchen then later in Tangley Barn, and this led to the foundation of Wonersh Congregational URC Church (Ref SHC 1717) (see also William Seth-Smith - Architect),
The School
There is an interesting pamphlet held by the Wonersh History Society (and at the Surrey History Centre) setting out "A history of parochial schooling in Wonersh and
Blackheath
Blackheath village traces its’ roots back to 1833, before which there is no record of a rate paying inhabitant, when the census of that year records just 12 occupants(see also SHC Ref 892/13/ ). It consisted of only a few cottages, including those occupied by workers from Chilworth gunpowder factory. In 1864 the Illustrated London News recorded the visit of Queen
These are independent websites so please be discerning in how you use the information.
Useful websites for history:-
British History Online
Parishes: St Martha's or Chilworth | British History Online
Victoria County History: Surrey
University of Portsmouth Census 1800-2004
1837online.com - The place to start tracing your family history
Britannia: British History
British History
Spartacus Educational - Home Page
British History for tourism, education and research
BBC - History
Surrey History Service - Archives Database - Search
List of Listed Houses in Wonersh
1841 Census - Enumerators Report Wonersh - Cranley-Hambledon
