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Three
dates stand out in Speldhurst's history. In 1412, during
the Hundred Years War, the leading landowner, Richard
Waller, was given charge of a young French prince. He
stayed a hostage for 30 years. Waller was well rewarded
for his service and became an important benefactor to
Speldhurst church, in need of rebuilding. Other houses,
which still stand, were put up nearby.
Most
of the parishioners lived in scattered hamlets. In the
mid-sixteenth century the total was 475 persons, about
one to every nine acres. The second date was 1606, when
Lord North drank the water of a roadside spring. So
impressed was he by the curative powers of its iron
salts that the Stuart court got to hear of it. Tunbridge
Wells, a summer holiday
resort for the well-to-do, sprang up around this Speldhurst
spa.
The
presence of iron had had another result. For over 200
years to
1770, less than a mile from Speldhurst church, a blast
furnace and forge
worked to make cannon and other hardware.
The
third date marked a disaster. In 1791 the medieval church
was destroyed by fire. Fourteen years would pass before
a service could be
held there again. The nineteenth century brought renewed
growth to Tunbridge Wells and more changes to Speldhurst.
The
Powells built a new manor house. They helped J.J. Saint,
rector for
59 years, to set up a school and take down the poorly
built church. He replaced it with a fine Gothic Revival
one, now famous for its Morris & Co. windows. And
he built churches and schools in two populous hamlets.
In
1901 the church parish, greatly reduced in area, housed
about 1,300 people. Speldhurst had long since become
a proper village. It had
stayed decidedly rural, despite the growth from nothing
of the town a
half-hour's walk away.
There
was an independent chapel, a post office, two inns and
a handful
of shops. The Powells would give Speldhurst its first
hall. Both the sons
of the manor house were killed in the Great War. 39
other Speldhurst
men lost their lives, and 13 in World War Two. The village
has 27 listed buildings (three of them are shown here)
and 76 listed gravestones.
Guy Hitchings, Parish Archivist.
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The
George and Dragon, next to the church. First built
around 1500. |
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The
Old Rectory opposite the lich-gate. Rebuilt in the
1600s. |
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Old
Post Office Cottage, dated to about 1720. |
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