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    Sissinghurst, an Unfinished History

    Page 31
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      Bramston was far from contrite, swaggering around the prison that morning saying ‘If he had killed more it would not have given him any uneasiness.’ In the general shouting and commotion after the shootings, another Frenchman, Claude Hallet, was wounded by a militiaman with a bayonet, and the artist shows that outrage too.

      Nicholas Cooper thinks the picture may have been painted by a Frenchman, or perhaps by an opportunist Englishman as a form of visual journalism. Certainly the architectural details are made to look a little more French than they appear in other pictures made by Englishmen at the same time. The lanterns on posts are eighteenth-century security lighting; the little building by the moat with steps up to it is the ‘necessary house’ or privy; and the wheeled carts attached to the barns in the bottom left of the picture are for the night soil.

      NOTE ON SOURCES

      For the early history of Kent, articles in the volumes of Archaeologia Cantiana are invaluable. Many are now online at www.kentarchaeology.org.uk

      Frans Vera’s Grazing Ecology and Forest History, CABI Publishing 2000, provides a new and fascinating perspective on the early environmental history of the Kentish forest. Oliver Rackham’s Woodlands, HarperCollins 2006, ties Vera’s suggestions into a more traditional English frame. William Anderson, in The Green Man, HarperCollins 1990, is a source of rich speculation on the meaning and significance of that near-universal wood symbol and G. H. Garrad, A Survey of the Agriculture of Kent, Royal Agric. Soc., 1954 provides a detailed account of the Kentish farmer’s response to his environment. Henry Cleere and David Crossley, The Iron Industry of the Weald, 2nd ed., Merton Priory Press, 1995 speculates fascinatingly on the Weald under Roman occupation and gives a full description of the early modern iron industry.

      J. K. Wallenberg’s study of The Place-Names of Kent, Uppsala, 1934 and K. P. Witney’s The Jutish Forest: A Study of the Weald of Kent 450–1380 AD, Athlone Press 1976 are the classic accounts of the early medieval penetration of the Wealden forest around Sissinghurst. K. P. Witney’s edition of The Survey of Archbishop Peacham’s Kentish Manors 1283–85, Kent Arch. Soc., Maidstone 2000, takes that movement up into the high Middle Ages.

      For Sissinghurst’s social environment in the 16th century, see Michael Zell’s Industry in the countryside: Wealden society in the sixteenth century, Cambridge 1994 and a volume of essays edited by him, Early Modern Kent 1540–1640, The Boydell Press 2000. Maurice Howard, The Building of Elizabethan and Jacobean England, Yale 2007 and Malcolm Airs, The Tudor and Jacobean Country House: A building history, Sutton Publishing 1995, combined with Caroline van Eck, British Architectural Theory 1540–1750, Ashgate 2003 describe the philosophical, political and practical world in which the new Sissinghurst was made. For the use and aesthetics of the park around it, see the essays in Robert Liddiard, editor, The Medieval Park: New Perspectives, Windgather Press, 2007. Descriptions of Sir John Baker’s murderous behaviour can be found in Foxe’s Book of Martyrs which is online in a variorum edition at www.hrionline.ac.uk/johnfoxe/. Early modern histories of the Weald are William Lambarde, A Perambulation of Kent, London 1570, John Philipott, Villare Cantianum or Kent surveyed and illustrated, 1659 and the great Edward Hasted’s History of the County of Kent, 1790. The three-volume History of the Weald of Kent by Robert Furley, Ashford 1871, although often muddly, is full of fascinating sidelights. Nigel Nicolson’s short Sissinghurst Castle, An Illustrated History, National Trust, 1964 has remained in print for over 40 years. Contemporary accounts of Elizabeth’s progresses were gathered by John Nichols in the late 18th century. Many, including the list of those who came to stay at Sissinghurst in 1573, are now online at www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/ren/projects/nichols/progresses/

      Papers of the Mann estate, including many relating to Sissinghurst, are kept in the Centre for Kentish Studies in Maidstone (U24). Quarter Session Records, detailing the Elizabethan park invasions, are there too. Accounts of the plot to destroy the ironworks at Hammer Mill are in the Staffordshire County Record Office. References are all available on www.a2a.org.uk

      A printed copy of the sermon by Robert Abbott, vicar of Cranbrook, The holinesse of Chrisian [sic] Churches, or a Sermon preached at the consecration of the chappell of Sr. Iohn Baker: of Sussing-herst in Cranbrooke in Kent, Baronet, London 1638, is in the library of St John’s College, Cambridge. For papers relating to the sequestration of the Baker estates in the Civil War, see SP/19, 20, 23 and 28 in the National Archives in Kew. The probate Inventory of Dame Elizabeth Howard’s possessions at Sissinghurst in 1694 is also there under PROB 5/3715.

      Sissinghurst as an eighteenth-century prisoner-of-war camp is described in Francis Abell, Prisoners of War in Britain 1756–1815, Oxford UP 1914 and referred to by Edward Gibbon in his Journal, ed. D. M. Low, Chatto & Windus 1929. The Admiralty files in the National Archives contain the long and fascinating transcript of an ‘Examination of complaints of prisoners at Sissinghurst’ (ADM 105/42) held in 1761 and under ADM 97/114/2 ‘Letters to and from French prisoners held in England 1756–63’, many of them at Sissinghurst.

      C. C. R. Pile’s short leaflet on The Parish Farm at Sissinghurst Castle, Cranbrook and Sissinghurst Local History Society, 1952 remains the best account of Sissinghurst Castle Farm as Cranbrook’s ‘Old Cow’. MAF 32/1022/101 in the National Archives contains the 1941 Farm Survey Records for Cranbrook in which Captain Beale’s farm is revealed in all its perfection.

      The Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson years at Sissinghurst have been written about more than any other. Vita herself wrote Country Notes, Michael Joseph 1939, and many collections of her Observer articles have been in print since the 1950s. Anne Scott-James’s Sissinghurst: The Making of a Garden was published by Michael Joseph in 1975. Jane Brown’s Vita’s Other World: a gardening biography of V. Sackville-West, Viking 1985 set Sissinghurst in a wider context. Tony Lord, Gardening at Sissinghurst, Frances Lincoln 1995 focused tightly on the garden here, bed by bed. Nigel Nicolson edited Harold Nicolson’s Diaries and Letters, in 3 volumes, Collins 1966–8 and in 1973 published Portrait of a Marriage (Weidenfeld & Nicolson), about his parents’ marriage and homosexual infidelities. His own autobiography Long Life, Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1997, describes among much else his own deep attachment to Sissinghurst. Two biographies of Harold (James Lees-Milne, Harold Nicolson, 2 vols, Chatto & Windus 1980–81 and Norman Rose, Harold Nicolson, Pimlico 2006) match two of Vita (Michael Stevens, V. Sackville-West, Michael Joseph 1973 and Victoria Glendinning, Vita, Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1983). Susan Mary Alsop, wrote about Vita’s mother in Lady Sackville, Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1978.

      Most of the manuscripts on which these books were based are now to be found in the Lilly Library in Indiana (Harold’s and Vita’s letters – www.indiana.edu/~liblilly) or Balliol College, Oxford (the three million words of Harold’s diaries).

      ILLUSTRATIONS

      Page

      1 View of Weald from the Tower (National Trust/Penny Tweedie)

      2 1950s: Guernseys on the Plain

      3 Flowering polyanthus amongst Kentish cobnuts

      4 One of the maps included in a large-scale 1903 sale of the Cornwallis estate

      5 James Stearns transporting faggots (Mary Stearns)

      6 Plaque by Reynolds Stone to VSW under the Tower

      7 2006: Chestnut coppice, oaks and young beeches in Birches Wood (Peter Dear)

      8 September 2007: Remains of the bank which once carried Sissinghurst’s Park pale along the Biddenden road

      9 Sir John Baker (c.1488–1558). A print of a painting which has now disappeared, last heard of in Norwich in 1820

      10 1760s: Francis Grose, the back of medieval Sissinghurst

      11 1760: Sissinghurst ‘Castle’ – so named for the first time, in an engraving by James Peak of a drawing made by one of the Militia officers

      12 1820s: The entrance gateway as it appeared when Sissinghurst was rented by Cranbrook parish as the parish farm. Pen and wash drawing by T. D. W. Dearn

      13 1828: The Tower and a thatched South
    Cottage beyond it (P. Andre)

      14 1917: Vita with her parents, Ben and Nigel

      15 1934: Harold and Vita in her work room in the Tower

      16 1932: Sissinghurst from the north-east

      17 1940s: Cattle show on the Plain

      18 Oxen at Sissinghurst c.1900

      19 1930: Harold in front of Sissinghurst on the day he first saw it

      20 2008: Sissinghust (National Trust/Penny Tweedie)

      21 2009: Adam Nicolson planting trees

      22 Amy Covey with Sissinghurst produce (National Trust/Penny Tweedie)

      INTEGRATED IMAGES

      Page

      29 27 July 1986: Tom, Adam and Nigel Nicolson

      55 1940s: The Stearns family at Bettenham (Mary Stearns)

      87–90 April 2008: 14th-century roof bosses in Cranbrook church

      92 April 2008: Oak sack hoist, trusses and rafters of the Elizabethan barn

      98 Map by Peter Wilkinson of the early Weald around Sissinghurst, drawing on a map of droves in K. P. Witney, The Jutish Forest: A Study of the Weald of Kent 450–1380 AD, Athlone Press 1976 and place-name research in J. K. Wallenberg, The Place-Names of Kent, Uppsala, 1934

      191 Guess-plan of Elizabethan Sissinghurst by Peter Wilkinson on the basis of a drawing by Peter Rumley, laid over a plan of the 20th-century garden

      199 Map by Peter Wilkinson showing the relationship of park and mansion at Sissinghurst in the 1570s, on the basis of investigations and a plan by Nicola Bannister

      244 Sheep at Bettenham (Mary Stearns)

      269 1932: Harold, Nigel, Vita and Ben under the Tower

      275 Plan of Sissinghurst, 1930s–90s, drawn by Peter Wilkinson

      283 October 1959: Letter from Vita to Harold

      292–3 The Farm at Sissinghurst: map by Peter Wilkinson on the basis of a drawing by Peter Dear, integrating the new ideas for the farm landscape

      INDEX

      A N indicates Adam Nicolson.

      Entries in italics indicate photographs or illustrations.

      Abbott, Robert 211

      Abery, Claire 116–17, 119, 162

      Acts and Monuments (Foxe) 181–2, 183, 185

      Addcock, Alice 151

      Addcock, Simon 151

      Admiralty 219, 221, 228–9, 230, 232

      Æthelmod 122, 131, 137, 138

      Æthelwulf 122, 123, 131, 137–8

      agriculture: change in mid-20th century (the ‘locust years’) 27, 38; early Weald 122–37; eighteenth century 199, 233; fifteenth century 171; industrialised, modern 27, 33, 61, 308–9, 310, 312, 313, 326–7; medieval 137–48; 19th century 233–8; organic 60, 68, 112, 158, 167, 194, 302, 306–13; sixteenth century 172–5, 197; twentieth century 27, 38, 239–40, 242–8 see also Sissinghurst Castle Farm

      Allin, Edmund 183–5

      Allin, Katherine 184–5

      Amherst, Earl 101

      Amiel, Barbara 109–10

      Angley 128, 131, 136

      Anglo-Saxon age 131, 134, 135, 136, 139

      Archaeologia Cantiana 101

      Ashford market 243, 245

      Askew, Anne 182

      aurochsen (wild cows) 80

      Ayleswade 133

      Bachelard, Gaston 162

      Baker family 153, 175–218, 231, 259

      Baker, Anne 216

      Baker, Catherine (daughter of Sir John Baker) 216

      Baker, Catherine (wife of Sir Henry Baker) 210

      Baker, Cecily see Sackville, Cecily

      Baker, Chrysogna 202

      Baker, Elizabeth (daughter of Sir John Baker) 181, 187, 216, 217

      Baker, Sir Henry 210

      Baker, John (son of Sir John Baker) 215

      Baker, Sir John (son of Sir Richard Baker) 201, 202, 213, 215

      Baker, Sir John (Bloody Baker) 175–81, 182–3, 184–7) 190, 193, 218, 238

      Baker, Mary (daughter of Sir John Baker) 181, 187

      Baker, Mary (daughter of Sir Richard Baker) 217

      Baker, Mary (wife of Richard Baker) 202, 212

      Baker, Richard (son of Thomas Baker) 175

      Baker, Sir Richard (son of Sir John Baker) 178, 187–200, 201, 202, 205, 207, 208, 218, 225

      Baker, Thomas 175

      Bannister, Nicola 197–8

      Bassuck, William 226–7

      Battle, Sussex 138

      BBC 280, 303

      Beale, Captain A. O. R. 14, 56, 57, 58, 60, 61, 68, 144, 240, 242, 243, 243, 244–6, 248, 250, 259, 278

      Beale, Donald 240

      Beale, Dorothy 240

      Beale, John 246

      Bedgbury 172, 203

      Benenden 4, 132

      Bentley, Richard 218

      Beowulf 130–1, 136

      Berger, John 37–8, 328

      de Berham, Elisia 150–1, 152, 153

      de Berham, Richard 150

      de Berham family 90, 148–9, 150, 132–3, 154, 177, 178, 179, 184, 190

      Berry, Wendell 327

      Berryingden 133

      Bethersden 146

      Bettenham farm 3, 5, 10, 18, 45, 49, 51, 55, 54, 56, 57, 58, 59, 75, 101–2, 106–7, 124, 127, 132, 133–4, 135, 144, 146, 199, 237, 240, 242, 243–4, 245, 246, 270, 278, 313, 314

      Beult, River 4, 5, 81

      Bexley 145–6

      Biddenden 4, 126, 135, 201, 243

      Bikenorre, John de 149

      birds: ancient 82; crow 123; cuckoos 114; house martins 8; jackdaw 123, 125; kestrel 33, 34; kingfisher 7–8; nightingale 10–11, 304, 321, 323; pigeon 34, 144, 270; swallow 8; willow-warblers 304

      Blackberry Lane 100, 126

      blackthorn 82, 84

      Bletchenden 141

      Bloomsbury Group 24, 255, 256, 273

      Bodiam Castle, Sussex 267

      Boles, Jack 52

      Boleyn, Anne 176

      Book of Hours 152, 153

      Boorde, Andrew 202–3

      Boys, Captain Edward 213

      Bradbrege, Joan 185

      Branden 127, 133

      Brissenden Farm 49, 106–7, 127, 135, 141, 245, 278, 313, 313–16

      Bromfield, William de 149

      Brown, Capability 217–18

      Brown, Jane 273, 284

      Browning, Helen 112, 113, 114, 116

      Bubhurst 133, 141

      Buckhurst 128, 131–2, 135

      Burghley, Lord 132, 204, 205, 206

      Bushel, Sally 65, 103–4, 107, 111, 112, 156, 253

      Butler, Sam 296–7

      Butz, Earl 309

      cadaca hrygc 122–3, 124, 138

      Caesar, Julius 6

      Camden farm 127

      Campaign to Protect Rural England 165

      Cannadine, David 40

      Canterbury 97, 99, 122, 138, 141, 146, 149, 150, 151, 180, 254

      Canterbury Cathedral 76, 122

      Cardarker Ridge 123, 124, 125, 128, 130

      Carew, Sir Francis 207

      Carluccio, Antonio 164

      Catholicism 177, 182, 200, 202, 210, 211, 212–13

      Celtic jewellery 101–2, 124

      Charing 138, 146, 150, 197

      Chart Hills 126, 127, 135, 150

      Cheeseman, Barton 239

      Chelsea Flower Show 156

      Chilham, Nicholas de 149

      Chittenden 132

      Civil War, English 213–15, 233

      Clare, John 147

      de Clare, Gilbert 149

      Clifford, Linda 58

      Clinton, Lord Admiral, Edward 204

      cloth-making 174, 175, 182, 197, 201

      Cobbett, William 233

      Codrington, Ursula 45

      Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 318–19

      Combewell 140

      Comenden 127

      Compton Wynyates 178, 179

      Conran, Priscilla 164

      Connolly, Cyril 265

      Coombes, Ginny 156, 166, 298, 300

      Copden (formerly Copton) 127, 133, 140, 141, 146, 177

      Copper, Jack 12, 15–16, 29, 44, 45, 49, 52, 58, 245, 276, 277, 278

      Cornwallis, earls of 234–5, 237, 239 see also Mann, Edward and Mann, Sir Horatio

      Couert, R
    obert 151

      Covey, Amy 290–1, 295

      Cranbrook 87, 131, 133, 136, 140, 144–5, 153, 171, 172, 174, 182, 183, 185, 186, 188, 189, 197, 198, 200, 201, 208, 210, 211, 212, 219, 221, 233, 234, 235, 238, 239, 243, 323, 324, 326; church and parish 87–90, 101, 149, 151, 152–3, 193; cloth-making in 174, 175, 197, 201; poor-relief scheme 233–5; Swing Riots, avoids trouble during 234; wooden bosses 87–91, 87, 88, 89, 90, 100, 152–3

      Cranbrook Common 138, 141, 198

      Cranbrook Museum 96–7

      Cranbrook School 97

      Creyse, Alice 151

      Cromwell, Thomas 176, 177

      Culpeper family 172, 203, 208

      Culpeper, Sir Alexander 203, 208

      Dalton, Hugh 41

      Dark Ages 98, 122–37, 139, 246, 313

      Darwin, Charles 81

      Datta, Alexis 117–18, 119, 156

      Dear, Peter 116, 167–8, 291, 295

      Domesday Book 139

      Don, Montagu 164

      Dudley, Robert 205

      Duffy, Eamon 152

      Edward I, King 149–50

      Edward VI, King 177

      Edward VII, King 262

      Edward, Prince of Wales 149

      Elizabeth I, Queen 15, 16, 74, 183, 188, 203–8

      Escombre, Paul 226

      Esher, Viscount 42

      Exhurst 132

      Fairley, Jo 164

      Farm Survey Record, 1941 56–8

      farming see agriculture

      Farris, Gordon 36

      Faversham 126

      Fearnley-Whittingstall, Hugh 166

      Fifield, Peter 285

      First World War 238, 242

      Flishinghurst 128

      Food Group, The 301

      Fowler, John 42

      Foxe, John 181–2

      Fraser, Simon 119–20

      Friezley 128, 133

      Frittenden 75, 78, 79, 126, 127, 133, 183, 185, 198, 199

      Frittenden brickworks 75, 78, 79, 234, 237

      Frittenden school 291, 294

      Furley, J. M. 82

      Galton, Sir Francis 81

     


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