Place House

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Venue Type & Location

Private Residence

Site Name: Place House
Location: near Canterbury
County: Kent
Location Type: Town - near town at determined location

Overview

The fine Elizabethan residence of the Manwood family was located next to the churchyard in the small village of Hackington on the outskirts of Canterbury. It appears to have had a walled courtyard surrounded by a number of outbuildings. These buildings featured large chimney stacks and generous, wide multi-paned windows, while the main portion of the house included decorative crenellated towers and an arched doorway.

Performance History

A trumpeter patronized by Sir Roger Manwood appeared at Canterbury in the 1580s but no entertainers who may have performed for him at Place House have been discovered.

Current Status

Demolished.

History of the Venue

1227 Archbishop Stephen Langton built a residence for his brother, Simon, archdeacon of Canterbury, next to St Stephen's Church. Used by successive archdeacons until the Dissolution.

1530s Sought after and likely granted to Sir Christopher Hales (Hasted, History of Kent 9.46).

ca. 1550 Reverted to the Crown.

1563 Queen Elizabeth granted the manor to Sir Roger Manwood who rebuilt the house, probably on the same site.

1642 John Manwood sold the property to Sir Thomas Colepepper, former lieutenant of Dover Castle.

1675 Sold to Sir Edward Hales of Tunstall.

1759 Edward Hales pulled down Manwood's residence and built a new house, called Hale's Place, on a different site to the NE of St Stephen's Church.

1880 The estate came into the hands of the Jesuits and was known as St Mary's College.

1928 College closed and buildings demolished. The former manor is now a housing complex.

Record Source

REED Kent: Diocese of Canterbury 1.218

Patrons who owned this venue

Name Dates Titles
Hales, Christopher 1488-1541 Knight
Manwood, Roger 1532-1592 Knight

Bibliographic Sources

  • Buckingham, Christopher. 'The Hales of Hales Place, St Stephen's, Hackington.' Bygone Kent 8 (December 1987): 703–9.
  • Gardiner, Dorothy. Historic Haven: The Story of Sandwich. Derby: Pilgrim Press Ltd., 1954.
  • Hasted, Edward. The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent. 1st ed [1778]. 12 vols. Canterbury: Printed for the author by Simmons and Kirkby, 1778.
  • Igglesden, Charles. A Saunter Through Kent with Pen and Pencil. 38 vols. Ashford: Kentish Express, 1900–194x.
  • Jones, K.H. 'Hales Place at Hackington and Its Predecessors.' Archaeologia Cantiana 45 (1933): 201–4.
  • Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII [1509–47]. 21 vols and Addenda (2 vols). London: HMSO, 1864–1932.
  • Newman, John. North East and East Kent. The Buildings of England. Harmondsworth and New York: Penguin, 1983.
  • Philipott, Thomas [and John Philipott]. Villare Cantianum: Or Kent Surveyed and Illustrated. 1659. London: William Godbid, 1664.
  • Somerville, P.P. A Short Account of the Parish of Hackington, alias St Stephen's Near Canterbury. Canterbury: Gibbs and Sons, 1915.
  • 'Two Hitherto Unknown Views of Sir Roger Manwood's Great House at Hackington, Canterbury.' Archaeologia Cantiana 48 (1936): 238–40.
  • Father Whatmore of St. Thomas's Burgate. "Hales Family and Place".