Buxted
This village underwent the sort of trauma that could so easily have shattered
its identity. In the early years of the 19th century it abandoned its roots and
moved to a new site approximately one mile away, leaving only its church in the
middle of a private park.
The ancient settlement of Bloc Stede (Place of Beeches) was grouped around the
Church of St Margaret the Queen, with a parsonage, an inn, a shop, a forge,
stocks and a whipping post serving the cottages. Lord Liverpool became the owner
of Buxted Place and wished to remove the village from its ancestral site so he
could make his park larger and more exclusive. He offered to build new houses
for the inhabitants anywhere in the parish if they would move but not
unnaturally, they turned him down.
Lord Liverpool then refused to carry out any repairs to the properties and they
gradually fell into decay. The occupants were forced to leave, the houses were
demolished and by 1836 there was nothing left to be seen of the old village.
Only an old print in the church serves as a reminder of how things used to be.
Buxted Place itself has had a colourful career, surviving a disastrous fire in
1940 to later become a health farm and later still thehome of an Arab Sheik. The
park is famous for its herd of deer and the large artificial lake which is home
for many exotic birds.
The new settlement grew up with the railway line to become a thriving place,
popular with commuters and with more than 20 clubs and organisations to keep the
locals amused. A legacy of the old days lives on in Upper Totease, the
clergyman's house which was rebuilt on its present site after the migration from
the Park, with a mounting block still at its gates.
Of the scores of East Sussex villages that made a living out of the iron
industry, Buxted demands a special claim on our attention for it was here that
Ralf Hogge (or Huggett) perfected gun production in 1543 and became weapon maker
by royal appointment:
'Master Huggett and his man John, They did cast the first cannon.'
The Hogge House, complete with a pig emblem and the date 1581, stands at the
entrance of Buxted Park.
The village was also a centre of the silk-weaving industry, introduced and
taught by refugee Flemish weavers, and for the growing of hops. They were still
being produced at Howbourne Farm in the 1940s in fields that have now been
swallowed up by the Manor Park Estate, part of the town of Uckfield but lying
within Buxted parish. The oast houses survive as homes and the hops themselves
grow wild in the hedgerows, an open invitation for people to put to the test the
belief that the surest way to a good night's sleep is a pillow full of hops.
The unfortunate Nan Tuck was treated with less than civility by her
contemporaries but won immortality in Buxted: 'Nan Tuck's Lane' proclaims the
roadsign, though it was the scene of her terror and despair.
Old Nan, lived here in the 17th century, not a good time for old ladies who
lived on their own. Through eccentricity or senility they stood the chance of
being called witches and this was the accusation that fell upon Nan. She fled
down the lane with her persecutors in full cry behind, disappearing into a wood
never to be seen again according to one climax of the story, or to be found
hanged in Tuck's Wood according to the sadder version. Nan'sghost is said to
haunt the lane and when efforts were made to restock the wood with trees after
the Great War there was one patch on which no sapling would ever grow...
A note in the parish register records the tragedy of Mary Relfe and James
Atkinson who were due to be married in December 1742. Mary suddenly fell
dangerously ill and despite the constant nursing of her fiance died one Sunday
evening, James took to his bed, heartbroken and praying for death. He died the
following Sunday at the same hour of the evening as Mary, and was buried beside
her in the churchyard on the day they were to have been married.
Village idiots used to be an essential ingredient of the rural landscape. Buxted
was no exception, but in George Watson they had an extraordinary character who
made many people think again about this much-maligned segment of society. George
was born in the village in 1785 and according to Hone's Table Book was 'ignorant
in the extreme, and quite uneducated, not being able to read and write.' Yet he
was a mathematical genius and could perform amazing feats of memory, solving the
most difficult calculations and recalling the events of every day in his life
from an early age -'Upon being asked on what day a given day of the month
occurred, he immediately names it, and also mentions where he was and what was
the state of the weather.'
George's powers made him something of a celebrity and he was taken on several
tours and proclaimed as a wonder. Mark Antony Lower, who said George's portrait
depicted 'a middleaged man, of gentle though half idiotic expression', wrote: 'I
never saw George Watson but once: he was trudging up Malling Hill, eastward to
Lewes, and his hat, considerably the worse for wear, was chalked all over with
figures, apparently the result of some arithmetical feat he had recently
performed, and which he had forgotten to rub out.'
A great deal more information about Buxted, it's environs, history, genealogy
etc etc can be found at an excellent website called http://thesussexweald.org/home.htm
If you know of any interesting local history, and would like to share it
with fellow villagers via this WebSite, then please e-mail them to me
p.coxon@btopenworld.com,
or post them to me at
Heath House,
St. Raphaels,
Buxted,
East Sussex,
TN22 4JS
or bring them round.
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