Showing posts with label Kent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kent. Show all posts

Friday, 23 May 2025

(603) Betenson of Scadbury Manor and Bradbourne Hall, baronets

Betenson of Scadbury
The Betenson family (the name is also spelled Bettenson and Bettison with occasional more exotic variants) are said to have originated in Staffordshire, but Richard Betenson (d. 1579), with whom the genealogy below begins, was a lawyer in London, and over several succeeding generations the family remained closely associated with the law. Like so many upwardly mobile middle-class professionals of the time, they invested their profits in property, and over time developed a second income stream from their rental portfolio. Richard Betenson himself lived in Old Jewry in the city of London, and through his wife acquired Tyle or Tiled Hall at Latchingdon (Essex), a substantial farm house which survives, although much rebuilt and enlarged in the 18th and 19th centuries. Richard died when all his children were still minors, but his eldest son, Richard Betenson (c.1563-1624) was sent to Cambridge and then to Grays Inn. There seems to be no record of his being called to the bar, but his will makes it clear that he was in legal practice. He and his wife had only two known children, sons who both followed the family legal tradition, but with very different results. The elder, Sir Richard Betenson (c.1601-79), was knighted in 1625 and took the parliamentary side in the Civil War. He was a member of the County Committee for Surrey in 1644-46 and High Sheriff of Surrey in 1645-46, but he seems to have had no difficulty reconciling himself to the restored monarchy, for he was made a baronet in 1663 and was High Sheriff of Kent at the time of his death. During his life he accumulated property at an accelerating rate, culminating in his purchase of the Scadbury Manor estate in Kent in 1660. Although Scadbury was already an old and an old-fashioned house, it would have been regarded as a country house at the time, being taxed on fifteen hearths in 1664 and on 18 hearths in 1675. Sir Richard's younger brother, Thomas Betenson (d. 1653), was much less fortunate. His father bequeathed him an estate at Chaldon (Surrey) and he also had property at Willey Green (Surrey), but he was obliged to sell the former to his elder brother in 1640 and by 1649 was confined in a City of London debtor's prison, from which he may never have been released.

Eagle House, Wimbledon, purchased by Richard Betenson in 1647. 
Sir Richard Betenson, 1st bt., had two sons: Richard Betenson (1632-77) and Edward Betenson (1633-1700), both of whom were bred to the law, although it is not certain that Richard ever practiced; if he did, it was probably under the aegis of his father. He bought Eagle House at Wimbledon in 1647, a relatively new and quite grand suburban villa, which still survives today. In 1662 he was made a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, so he will have spent some of his time at court. In the 1670s his health gave way and he was obliged to move abroad in search of a healthier climate, but he died in France in 1677. His widow and children remained abroad for some years after his death, and were at least occasionally at the French court. His eldest daughter was married in England in 1681 and his widow remarried in England the following year, but his daughter Dorothy was still in France in 1685, when she died unmarried (some accounts say she was poisoned). Richard Betenson's only surviving son, Sir Edward Betenson (1670-1733), 2nd bt., inherited Eagle House from his father in 1677 and the baronetcy, together with Scadbury Manor and most of his grandfather's property, in 1679, but did not come of age until 1691. He grew up in a female-dominated household and there is no record of his having attended university or the inns of court where he might have acquired polished manners. Perhaps as a result, he seems to have developed a misogynistic streak, repeatedly declaring to his uncle that he would never marry.  He also became addicted to gambling, and in 1700 sold Eagle House. By the time of his death in 1733 his estates were mortgaged for more than £6,000, the main house at Scadbury had not been kept in repair, and he had probably been forced by its increasing dilapidation to move into a nearby farmhouse or his lodgings in Covent Garden.

At the 2nd baronet's death, his estates passed to his three surviving sisters (Albinia Selwyn, Theodosia Farrington and Frances Hewett) as co-heiresses, and they came to an arrangement by which they all sold or gave their shares to Albinia's eldest son, Col. John Selwyn (1688-1751), who paid off the mortgages, and sold the scattered estates to his relatives. The baronetcy could not pass with the estates, being limited to heirs male of the body of the 1st baronet, and was inherited instead by the 2nd baronet's cousin, Sir Edward Betenson (1691-1762), 3rd bt., who in the eyes of the world was the only child of the 1st baronet's younger son, Edward Betenson (1633-1700) of Lincoln's Inn. However, in his will (which of course was in the public domain), Edward Betenson had left ample evidence that his son could not be legitimate as he and his wife had been separated - and had ceased to have marital relations - nearly a year before the son was born, and that the son must be the result of one of his wife's several adulterous liaisons of which he had evidence. We know the evidence to support these claims was in the hands of the 2nd baronet's sisters, and it is remarkable that the 3rd baronet's succession was apparently never challenged. No doubt a desire to avoid scandal disinclined the family to oppose his claim, and the passage of more than thirty years since Edward Betenson's death may have dimmed other memories. At all events, the 3rd baronet did succeed to the title. He was a long-serving officer in the 1st Foot Guards, who had risen no higher than a lieutenancy but was still on the strength in 1740. He was no doubt one of the many older officers encouraged to retire during George II's army reforms of the 1740s, and he lived thereafter in Bloomsbury. He had married the daughter of an English merchant in Madras in 1719, and they had just two children: a son and a daughter.

The son was Sir Richard Betenson (1721-86), 4th baronet, who lived in Queen Square, Bloomsbury alongside his father. Nothing is known of his career - if he had one - until 1762, when he not only inherited the baronetcy but acquired from a kinsman, Henry Bosville, a life interest in Bradbourne Hall, Riverhead (Kent). Following quickly on this improvement in his fortunes he was made High Sheriff of Kent, 1765-66. Both the grounds and the house at Bradbourne were improved in the second half of the 18th century, but on balance it seems likely that the work on the grounds was carried out for Bosville before 1762, and the work on the house for his successor, Thomas Lane, after 1786. Sir Richard married, in 1756, a daughter of the president of the Royal Society, but they had no children, and on his death the baronetcy became extinct.

Scadbury Manor, Chislehurst, Kent

A probably 13th century moated site with a complicated development history, clarified in part through extensive archaeology over the last forty years. The site was continuously occupied until 1738, when the main house was pulled down. A former gatehouse building which had been converted into a farmhouse survived that demolition and was subsequently enlarged into a new 'mansion', but this was severely damaged by a 'V1' flying bomb in the Second World War and burnt in 1976, with the ruins being pulled down in 1984.  Unfortunately no visual evidence of the house pulled down in 1738 has yet come to light, although a reconstruction of the house at the time of Queen Elizabeth's visit in 1597, based on the archaeological evidence, has been attempted.

Possible reconstruction of the moated Scadbury Manor in 1597, based on the brick foundations still in existence.
Reproduced with kind permission of the Orpington and District Archaeological Society. © ODAS, 2016-2025. All rights reserved.

Scadbury Manor: aerial view of the site from above in 1934, showing the Victorian house (top) and the re-excavated moat (below),
from a damaged glass plate negative. Image: Britain from Above.
Amateur archaeological work on the site of the original house in the 1920s led to the construction of a pseudo-medieval 'manor hall' in 1936 on the site of the former great hall, reusing genuine medieval timbers from Manor Farm in St Mary Cray, which were thought at the time to have originated in the house at Scadbury pulled down in 1738. After persistent vandalism, the 'manor hall' in turn was taken down in 1987, when the medieval timbers were sent to the Weald & Downland Open Air Museum in Sussex. 

Scadbury Manor: the interior of the 'manor hall' recreated in 1936 with timbers from a farmhouse in St Mary Cray, and removed in 1987.
Although there is evidence of the occupation of the site from the 13th century, the archaeological evidence suggests a complete - but possibly phased - rebuilding of the house in the late 15th and early 16th century. In the late 19th century it was remembered that an archway was formerly dated 1540, which may be evidence for when at least some of the rebuilding was carried out: the client was presumably either James Walsingham or his son, Sir Edward Walsingham, who inherited in that year. The new house was timber-framed, with brick infill.

In 1660 the estate (comprising the manors of Scadbury, Chislehurst, Dartford, Cobham and Combe) was sold to Sir Richard Betenson. Four years later the house at Scadbury was taxed on 15 hearths, but by 1675 there were 18 hearths, so Betenson evidently commissioned some additions or improvements to the house. It was a large house, but not in the first rank of gentry houses in Kent, and, indeed, was not even the largest house in Chislehurst (which had 24 hearths). 

Probably around 1700 the former gatehouse was enlarged and converted for use as a farmhouse, which became known as Scadbury Farm. Sir Edward Betenson may have moved into it before his death in 1733, as in 1734 the main building was evidently unfit for occupation, being described as 'a large Old Timber Building of no value more than as old materials', and by 1738 demolition of the Tudor mansion was in progress. By 1778, ‘the ancient mansion of Scadbury has been many years in ruins, and there remains now only a farm house, built out of part of them’. In 1804, Jeffrey Wyatt (later Wyatville) made plans for the redevelopment of the farmhouse, but these were never executed.

Scadbury Manor: the house as enlarged in 1870. Image: Historic England
Scadbury Manor: interior in 1921. Image: Historic England 
Scadbury Manor: drawing room in 1921. Image: Historic England
















A further enlargement of the farmhouse into a new 'mansion' is said to have been carried out for the 1st Earl Sydney in 1870; this was no doubt intended to make it a suitable residence for the agent managing the estate rather than there being any thought of the Earl using it himself. It continued to be occupied by agents for the estate until c.1921, when Hugh Marsham-Townshend moved into it, his seats at Matson House (Glos) and Frognal House, adjoining Scadbury, having been sold. 

Scadbury Manor: the remaining ruins on the site from the south in 2020. Image: Ethan Doyle White. Some rights reserved.
In 1945 the house was badly damaged by a 'V1' flying bomb, but it remained in use by the family until the death of the last resident owner in 1975. Soon afterwards, in 1976, the empty house was badly damaged by fire and the ruins were demolished in March 1984. Following extensive vandalism the 'manor hall' building of the 1930s was demolished in November 1987 and the genuine medieval timbers in it were given to the Weald & Downland Museum in Sussex. 

Descent: James Walsingham (c.1462-1540); to son, Sir Edward Walsingham (c.1480-1550), kt.; to son, Sir Thomas Walsingham (c.1526-84), kt.; to son, Edmund Walsingham (1557-89); to brother, Sir Thomas Walsingham (c.1561-1630), kt.; to son, Thomas Walsingham (c.1589-1669); sold 1660 to Sir Richard Betenson (c.1601-79), 1st bt.; to grandson, Sir Edward Betenson (1670-1733), 2nd bt.; to sisters and co-heiresses, Theodosia (d. 1749), wife of Maj-Gen. William Farrington, Albinia (d. 1737), wife of Maj-Gen. William Selwyn (d. 1702) and Frances, wife of Sir Thomas Hewitt, kt., of Shireoaks Hall (Notts); who in 1736 sold or transferred their shares to Col. John Selwyn (1688-1751) of Matson (Glos), who sold 1742 to Thomas Townshend (1701-80); to son, Thomas Townshend (1733-1800), 1st Viscount Sydney; to son, John Thomas Townshend (1764-1831), 2nd Viscount Sydney; to son, John Robert Townshend (1805-90), 3rd Viscount & 1st Earl Sydney; to widow, Emily Caroline, Countess Sydney (d. 1893) for life and then to nephew, Hon. Robert Marsham (later Marsham-Townshend) (1834-1914); to son, Hugh Marsham-Townshend (d. 1967); handed over estate c.1946 to son, John Marsham-Townshend (1905-75); to nieces, June and Susan Marsham-Townshend; sold 1983 to Bromley London Borough Council.

Bradbourne Hall, Riverhead, Kent

There was a medieval or Tudor house here, of which almost nothing seems to be known. It was replaced about 1720 by a new three-storey house with a five-bay west-facing entrance front and seven-bay east-facing garden front. The new house was built for William Bosvile (d. 1740), although it is said that because his wife died before it was finished he never moved into it, preferring to live in a smaller property on the estate. 

Bradbourne Hall, Riverhead: view of the entrance front and south wing from the south-west. Image: Matthew Beckett.


Bradbourne Hall, Riverhead: the garden front and south wing from the south-east. Image: Matthew Beckett.

Towards the end of the 18th century, a two-storey neo-classical wing was added to the south side of the existing building, which had a full-height curved bow facing over the views to the south. The date of this addition is uncertain, but it was probably the work of Thomas Lane (d. 1805) after he inherited the estate in 1786. The grounds are said to have been laid out for Henry Bosvile (d. 1762), who inherited in 1740.

The mildly eccentric Francis Crawshay, who owned the house for a short period in the 1870s, and who had the immense resources of his south Wales ironworks behind him, commissioned the casting of a massive bell in Lyon (France) in 1871, which he hung from a tripod on the lawn of the house. Known as 'the Great Bell of Bradbourne', it was the second largest bell in Kent (after Great Dunstan in Canterbury Cathedral), and its regular sounding was audible for miles around. It survived until 1918, when it was sold as scrap metal to a bellfounder.

The house and estate were sold in 1927 for housing development, but the house survived for another decade, being finally pulled down in 1937, when a sale of the building materials was held.

Descent: Crown sold 1555 to Ralph Bosvile, clerk to the Court of Wards; to son, Henry Bosvile; to son, Sir Ralph Bosvile (d. 1635); to son, Lennard Bosvile (d. 1639); to sister, Margaret (d. 1682), wife of Sir William Boswell; to first cousin once removed, William Bosville (d. 1740); to son, Henry Bosville (d. 1762); to kinsman, Sir Richard Betenson (1721-86), 4th bt. and then to Thomas Lane (d. 1805); to son, Henry Thomas Lane (b. c.1793); to son, who sold 1840 to Henry Hughes (d. 1865); sold 1870 to Francis Crawshay (1811-78); to son, who sold 1896 to Multon Lambarde (d. 1896); to son, Maj. William Gore Lambarde, who sold 1927 to Ideal Home Estates for redevelopment.

Betenson family of Scadbury Manor


Betenson, Richard (d. 1579). Son of William Bettenson, and said to have been born in Staffordshire. Lawyer. He married, 1562 (licence 20 September), Elizabeth, daughter and co-heiress of John Osborn of Tyle Hall, Latchingdon (Essex), and had issue, perhaps among others:
(1) Richard Betenson (c.1563-1624) (q.v.);
(2) Elizabeth Betenson (1564-1607), baptised at St Olave, Jewry, London, 16 July 1564; possibly married 1st, 31 July 1585 at St Giles Cripplegate, London, Tristram Palfreyman, and 2nd, soon afterwards, [forename unknown] Furner; will proved in the PCC, 11 December 1607;
(3) Peter Betenson (1568-1603), baptised at St Olave, Jewry, London, 7 May 1568; living in Halstead, 1601, when he was mentioned in his stepfather's will; died without issue; will proved in Essex archdeaconry court, 1603;
(4) Edward Betenson (1569-1616), of Colne Engaine (Essex), baptised at St Olave, Jewry, London, 16 September 1569; married [forename unknown], daughter of Richard Lance of Truro (Cornwall) and had issue one son and two daughters; will proved in Essex archdeaconry court, 1616;
(5) Mary Betenson (1578-1636), baptised at St Olave, Jewry, London, 15 February 1577/8; married Samuel Colman (1572-1653) of Brent Eleigh (Suffk), and had issue at least two sons and one daughter; buried at Brent Eleigh, 23 May 1636.
He lived in the parish of St Olave, Jewry, London, but acquired Tyle Hall, Latchingdon (Essex) in right of his wife. He also had lands at Wandsworth (Surrey), a house at Finsbury Bridge (Middx) and other property in London.
His date of death is unknown; his will was proved in the PCC, 14 December 1579. His widow married 2nd, 1580 (licence 11 August), Arthur Breame (d. 1602) of Gosfield and Halstead (Essex), and had further issue one daughter; her date of death is unknown.

Betenson, Richard (c.1563-1624). Eldest son of Richard Betenson (d. 1579) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter and co-heiress of John Osborn of Tyle Hall, Latchingdon (Essex). Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1579), Barnards Inn and Grays Inn (admitted 1582). Lawyer. He married Catherine, illegitimate daughter of George Tuke of Layer Marney (Essex), and had issue:
(1) Sir Richard Betenson (c.1601-79), 1st bt. (q.v.);
(2) Thomas Betenson (d. 1653), of Willey (Surrey); educated at Grays Inn (admitted 1623); evidently fell into debt as when he wrote his will in 1649 he was a prisoner in the Wood Street Compter, London; married Anne, daughter of Henry Lovell (1576-1653) of Bletchingley (Surrey) and had issue two sons and two daughters; will proved in the PCC, 27 June 1653.
He lived at Layer de la Hay (Essex) and later at Feering (Essex). In 1613 he purchased the manor of Chaldon (Surrey) which he bequeathed to his younger son.
He died 12 July and was buried at Feering, 14 July 1624; his will was proved in the PCC, 22 September 1624. His widow's date of death is unknown.

Betenson, Sir Richard (c.1601-79), kt. and 1st bt. Elder son of Richard Betenson (c.1563-1624) and his wife Catherine, illegitimate daughter of George Tuke of Layer Marney (Essex), born about 1601. Educated at Lincoln's Inn (admitted 1621). Barrister-at-law. A County Commissioner for Surrey, 1644-46. He was knighted at Royston (Herts), 28 February 1624/5* and raised to a baronetcy, 7 June 1663**. High Sheriff of Surrey (appointed by Parliament), 1645-46 and for Kent, 1679-80. He married, 9 December 1624 at St Benet, Paul's Wharf, London, Anne (d. 1681), daughter of Sir William Monyns of Waldershare (Kent), and had issue:
(1) Jane Betenson (1627-39), baptised at St Peter-le-Poer, London, 30 July 1627; died young, 5 May 1639 and was buried at Wimbledon (Surrey), where she was commemorated by a monument (now lost);
(2) Anne Betenson (1628-66?), baptised at St Peter-le-Poer, London, 7 July 1628; died unmarried 29 July 166?*** and was buried at Wimbledon;
(3) Richard Betenson (1632-77) (q.v.);
(4) Edward Betenson (1633-1700) [for whom see below, Betenson family of Bradbourne Hall].
He inherited his father's property at Layer de la Hay (Essex) in 1624. In 1640 he bought the manor of Chaldon (Surrey) from his younger brother and in 1660 he purchased the manors of Chislehurst and Scadbury from Thomas Walsingham, from whom he had previously bought property in the city of London.
He died 29 August 1679 and was buried at Chislehurst (Kent); his will was proved in the PCC, 23 September 1679. His widow died 19 February and was buried at Chislehurst, 23 February 1680/1; her will was proved in the PCC, 3 March 1680/1.
* He was the last knight dubbed by King James I.
** The date is often wrongly given as 7 February 1666/7.
*** Date on floor slab illegible when recorded in the 19th century.

Betenson, Richard (1632-77). Elder son of Sir Richard Betenson (c.1601-79), kt. and 1st bt., and his wife Anne, daughter of Sir William Monyns of Waldershare (Kent), baptised at St Peter-le-Poer, London, 6 March 1631/2. Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1649) and Grays Inn (admitted 1650). Appointed a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, 1662. At the end of his life he moved to France for health reasons. He married, 21 September 1656 at St Andrew, Holborn (Middx), Albinia, daughter of Sir Christopher Wray, kt., of Ashby (Lincs) and granddaughter of Edward Cecil, 1st (and last) Viscount Wimbledon, and had issue (with two other children who died young):
(1) Albinia Betenson (1657-1737), of Carshalton (Surrey); a friend of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu; married, 26 May 1681 in Westminster Abbey (Middx), Maj-Gen. William Selwyn (1655-1702) of Matson House (Glos), MP for Gloucester, 1698-1701 and briefly governor of Jamaica, 1702, and had issue four sons and three daughters; buried at Matson (Glos), 4 January 1737/8; her will was proved in the PCC, 5 January 1737/8;
(2) Richard Betenson (c.1660-76); born about 1660; died young and was buried at Chislehurst, 23 May 1676;
(3) Ann Betenson (b. 1661), born 30 September and baptised at St James, Clerkenwell (Middx), 7 October 1661; died young;
(4) Theodosia Betenson (c.1663-1749), born about 1663; married, 18 August 1687 at Chislehurst, Lt-Gen. William Farrington (1664-1712) of Chislehurst (Kent), MP for Malmesbury, 1705-12, and had issue one son and two daughters (the elder of whom married Robert Bertie (1660-1723), 1st Duke of Ancaster); died 25 November 1749; will proved in the PCC, 1 December 1749;
(5) Dorothy Betenson (1664-85), baptised at Chislehurst, 11 November 1664, a noted beauty who King Louis XIV of France thought bore a strong resemblance to his favourite, the Duchesse de la Vallière; she died unmarried in France and is said in some accounts to have been poisoned; will proved 8 February 1684/5;
(6) Thomas Betenson (b. 1667), baptised at Chislehurst, 6 October 1667; thought to be the subject of a portrait by Sir Peter Lely; died young, probably in the late 1670s;
(7) Frances Betenson (1669-1756), born in Hatton Garden, London, 1 January, and baptised at St Andrew, Holborn, 6 January 1668/9; a friend of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu; married, 7 September 1689 at Geneva (Switzerland), Sir Thomas Hewett (1656-1726), kt., of Shireoaks (Notts), amateur architect, Captain of the Guard to King Charles II, and Surveyor-General of Woods to William III and George I; died in London, and was buried with her husband at Wales near Sheffield (Yorks WR), 11 February 1756; will proved in the PCC, 24 February 1756;
(8) Sir Edward Betenson (1670-1733), 2nd bt. (q.v.).
In 1647 he purchased Eagle House, Wimbledon (Surrey) from John Dawes. He also had leased houses in Hatton Garden and York Buildings, London. After his death, his widow remained in France with her family for some time, and they were well known at the French court.
He died in the lifetime of his father, at Montpelier (France), and was buried at Wimbledon (Surrey), 30 March 1677, where he is commemorated by a floor slab in Lord Wimbledon's chapel; his will was proved in the PCC, 8 May 1677. His widow married 2nd, 11 May 1682 at Holy Trinity, Minories, London, Samuel Oldfield (d. 1722) (who m2, Elizabeth (d. 1732), daughter of William Cavendish of Doveridge (Derbys)); she died between 1700 and 1705.

Sir Edward Betenson, 2nd bt. 
Image: Richard Selwyn Sharpe.
Betenson, Sir Edward (1670-1733), 2nd bt.
Third, but only surviving, son of Richard Betenson (1632-77) and his wife Albinia, daughter of Sir Christopher Wray, kt., baptised at Chaldon (Surrey), 11 September 1670*. He may have been educated at Clare College, Cambridge, as he later presented a pair of candlesticks to the college, but his name does not appear in the Alumni Cantabrigiensis. He succeeded his grandfather as 2nd baronet, 20 August 1679, and came of age in 1691. High Sheriff of Kent, 1705-06. He was addicted to gambling, sold much of his patrimony (including the trees from Scadbury Park) and left substantial debts. In 1718 he was involved in an affray in Chislehurst Church, when he attempted to prevent a collection being taken for poor children in Aldersgate (London), fearing that this was a covert attempt to raise funds for the Jacobite cause. He was unmarried and without issue.
He inherited Eagle House, Wimbledon from his father in 1677, and the Scadbury Manor estate, lands in Greenwich (Kent), the manor of Chaldon (Surrey), the Lamb Inn, Cornhill and other house property in London, and several estates in Essex from his grandfather in 1679. He sold Eagle House in 1700. At his death he had lodgings in Covent Garden, and his remaining property, burdened with a mortgage of £6,045, passed to his surviving sisters as co-heiresses. A family arrangement in 1736 conveyed all the property to Albinia's son, Col. John Selwyn, who discharged the mortgage and sold the estates, chiefly to relatives. 
He died 17 October 1733 and was buried at Chislehurst, where he is commemorated by a monument erected by his sisters; administration of his goods was granted to his sisters, 5 December 1733.
* A child of this name with the correct parents was so baptised, but his monument says he died in his 58th year, implying a date of birth in 1675. No baptism corresponding to that has been found, however, so it may be the monument which is in error.

Betenson family of Bradbourne Hall


Betenson, Edward (1633-1700). Younger son of Sir Richard Betenson (c.1601-79), kt. and 1st bt., and his wife Anne, daughter of Sir William Monyns of Waldershare (Kent), baptised at Bekesbourne (Kent), 30 December 1633. Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1650) and Lincoln's Inn (admitted 1653; called 1666). Barrister-at-law. He married, 21 May 1685 at Temple Church, London, Catherine (1666-1713), eldest daughter of Sir John Rayney (1627-80), 2nd bt. of Wrotham Place (Kent), but they were separated in 1689 though never divorced. According to his will she subsequently had multiple sexual partners, including Theophilus Boughey, the two sons of Sir Roger Twisden, and a Frenchman lodging in Wimbledon*. Her exploits resulted in the birth of a child, whose illegitimacy was never publicly acknowledged, but was asserted in his putative father's will:
(1) Sir Edward Betenson (1691-1762), 3rd bt. (q.v.).
He lived at Lincoln's Inn, London.
He was buried at Chislehurst, 12 March 1699/1700; his will, proved in the PCC, 19 March 1699/1700, declared the illegitimacy of his putative son, set out claims about his wife's adultery, and alleges that she and her mother twice attempted to poison him. His widow was buried at Wrotham, 31 Deember 1713.
* The will presents a dossier of evidence of his wife's adultery, and was backed up by witness statements, which were preserved by the family.

Betenson, Sir Edward (1691-1762), 3rd bt. Publicly, he was the son of Edward Betenson (1633-1700) and his wife Catherine, eldest daughter of Sir John Rayney, 2nd bt., of Wrotham (Kent), but he was probably the illegitimate son of his mother, born 14 February and baptised at St Peter-le-Poer, London, 26 February 1690/1. An officer in the army (Ensign, 1713; Lt., 1727*; retired after 1740). He succeeded his first cousin as 3rd baronet, 17 October 1733, though his illegitimacy should have prevented that. He married, 24 September 1719 at Westminster (a clandestine marriage), Ursula (c.1698-1763), daughter of John Nicks of Fort St George (i.e. Madras) (India), merchant, and had issue:
(1) Helen Betenson (c.1720-88), born about 1720; executrix of her father's will; died unmarried aged 68 and was buried at Wrotham, 18 November 1788; by her will, proved in the PCC, 26 November 1788, she bequeathed £10,000 for the building of ten new houses in Bromley College to house poor widows;
(2) Sir Richard Betenson (1721-86), 4th bt. (q.v.).
He lived in the parish of St George, Bloomsbury.
He died 24 November 1762 and was buried at Wrotham (Kent); his will was proved in the PCC, 15 December 1762. His wife died 11 June 1763 and was buried at Wrotham.
* However he is described "Capt Edward Bettenson" in the parish register for the baptism of his son.

Betenson, Sir Richard (1721-86), 4th bt. Only son of Sir Edward Betenson (1691-1762), 3rd bt., and his wife Ursula, daughter of John Nicks of Fort St George (India), baptised at St Andrew, Holborn, 13 October 1721. He succeded his father as 4th baronet, 24 November 1762. High Sheriff of Kent, 1765-66. He married, 23 June 1756 at St Mary Magdalene, Richmond (Surrey), Lucretia (1721-58), daughter and co-heiress of Martin Folkes of Hillingdon (Norfk), president of the Royal Society, but had no issue.
He rented a town house in Queen Square, Bloomsbury from Lord Scarsdale. He inherited the Bradbourne Hall estate at Riverhead (Kent) in 1762 from his kinsman Henry Bosville, under whose will it passed, on his death, to Thomas Lane (d. 1805). 
He died 15 June 1786, when his baronetcy became extinct, and was buried at Wrotham (Kent), 24 June 1786, where he is commemorated by a monument; administration of his goods was granted in June 1786.  His wife died 26 June 1758 and was buried at Wrotham, where she is commemorated by a monument attributed to Roubiliac or Nicholas Read; her will was proved in the PCC, 16 June 1758.

Principal sources

Burke's Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies, 2nd edn., 1841, p. 60; E.A. Webb, G.W. Miller & J. Beckwith, The history of Chislehurst, 1899, pp. 111-69; Sevenoaks Chronicle and Kentish Advertiser, 30 April 1937, p.2; Orpington & District Archaeological Society, A Scadbury Manor chronology, 2014;

Location of archives

Betenson family of Scadbury, baronets: estate papers, 14th-20th cents [Bromley Historic Collections, 857, 1080]. Some further papers remain with their Selwyn descendants.
Betenson family of Bradbourne Hall: deeds and papers, 1422-18th cent. [Canterbury Cathedral Archives, U92]. 

Coat of arms

Argent, a fess gules in chief a lion passant, within a bordure engrailed ermine.

Can you help?

  • Can anyone provide photographs or portraits of the people whose names appear in bold above, for whom no image is currently shown?
  • If anyone can offer further information or corrections to any part of this article I should be most grateful. I am always particularly pleased to hear from current owners or the descendants of families associated with a property who can supply information from their own research or personal knowledge for inclusion.

Revision and acknowledgements

This post was first published 23 May 2025 and was updated 24 and 31 May 2025. I am grateful to Richard Selwyn Sharpe for his assistance with this article.

Sunday, 27 April 2025

(600) Best (later Best-Shaw) of Boxley and Chilston Park

Best of Boxley and Chilston 
The Best family were established in Kent as minor gentry from at least the 16th century. John Best, who rented Allington Castle in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, added a semi-timbered gabled storey to the east and west wings of the house as a replacement for parts of the castle which had been damaged by fire. He was evidently a Catholic, as he maintained a chapel in the house and created a priest hole in the gatehouse. It may also have been John Best who acquired a Crown lease of a house known as St Lawrence, on the outskirts of Canterbury, held later by his son Richard Best (1597-1633) and grandson, John Best (d. 1666). This house, which although it was demolished in the early 19th century is known from a drawing on an 18th century estate map, was a low two-storey L-shaped manor house, which was the successor to, and perhaps incorporated parts of, a medieval leper hospital dissolved in 1538. At the time of Richard Best's death in 1633 the house contained a hall, parlour, study, kitchen, buttery, bakehouse, gallery and a chamber over the hall. His son, John Best, sold the estate to William Rooke in the 1650s and evidently spent his latter years in the city of Canterbury itself. The genealogy below begins with Thomas Best (1657-1740), who is said to have been John's fourth son, but who was perhaps the second eldest to survive his father. He became a brewer at Chatham (Kent), and may have inherited brewing interests there, for the probate inventories of Thomas Best (d. 1665) and his wife Dorothy Lott of Chatham show that they owned brewing implements. It was, however, Thomas (1657-1740) who 'converted some small tenements, part of Dame Agrippina Bingley's house [in Chatham High Street] into a brewhouse and set up the business of a brewer in a small way'. His marriage in 1681 to 
the widowed daughter of a wealthy local merchant, John Mawdistly, provided the funds to enable him to expand the business, and laid the foundations of the family's later fortune. Later in life, probably after he handed over day-to-day control of the brewery to his son, Mawdistly Best (1682-1744), he rented Cooling Castle.

It was Mawdistly Best who took the next step up the social ladder, when he bought the Park House estate at Boxley near Maidstone in 1720. Park House was probably not, at that time, particularly large, but it was a freehold property, and coupled with the family's income from the brewery, was sufficient to see Mawdistly appointed as High Sheriff of Kent in 1730-31. Mawdistly, who continued to buy scattered lands in west Kent, died in 1744, only four years after his father. He left two surviving sons: Thomas Best (1713-95) and James Best (1720-82). Thomas was educated as a gentleman and became MP for Canterbury in 1741. He inherited most of his father's lands at Aylesford, Headcorn and elsewhere, though not the Park House estate, and his marriage to Carolina Scott, an heiress of the gentry family of Scott's Hall (Kent), perhaps provided the means for him to purchase Chilston Park near Lenham (Kent) in 1746. Thomas and Carolina had no children, so at his death in 1795, Chilston passed to his nephew George Best (1759-1818), who was the youngest son of his brother James.

Chatham House and the brewery as shown on the 1864 town plan
Chatham House: the frontage to High Street in 1849.
Mawdistly's younger son, James Best (1720-82), inherited the Chatham brewery, his father's house there, and the Park House, Boxley property. His father had intended to rebuild his house in Chatham but died before doing so. James realised his plans, although work seems to have proceeded slowly, beginning in the 1740s but only being completed in 1758, and the result was the imposing Chatham House, which stood on the High Street at the front of the brewery site. The brewery seems to have been his principal focus of interest, and during the forty years when he was the proprietor, the firm greatly expanded, investing in new technology and improved brewing techiques, and achieved its greatest prosperity. At the end of his life, he was planning to embark on overseas exports of the firm's beer, but although his sons put this plan into action after his death it was not a success and was quickly abandoned.

James married a daughter of Richard Shelley of Michelgrove, and they had ten children, including five sons, one of whom died young. The eldest son, Thomas Best (1753-1815), inherited Park House, Boxley. He was educated at Eton and Cambridge, and became an officer in the West Kent militia, but he was not left a share of the brewery.  That was divided among the three younger sons: James (1755-1828), Richard (1757-1801) and George (1759-1818), despite the fact that James, who had became an officer in the army 'wanted nothing to do with it'. George inherited the Chilston Park estate from his uncle in 1795, and withdrew from the brewery partnership soon afterwards. George continued to live at Chilston until his death in 1818, when it passed to his son, Thomas Fairfax Best (1786-1849). He sold the estate in 1824 and moved to the smaller Wierton Place at Boughton Monchelsea, then a modest Georgian house which was subsequently remodelled by his son-in-law, Maj. William Henry Archer (1815-91).

James and Richard continued to manage the concern until 1801, when the family's solicitors - one of whom was also their brother-in-law - raised concerns about the amount of money the partners were taking out of the business. Not only would it become bankrupt if they continued to do so, but the business needed an immediate injection of capital. To address the problem, the solicitors took over the management of the business as trustees for the Bests until 1809, paying the partners a minimal allowance, and only when it was on a sound footing once more did they return it to James, the sole surviving partner, who ran it until his death in 1828. As he had no children, it then passed to his nephew, James Best (1781-1849), the elder son of his brother Thomas of Park House.

James Best (d. 1849) was educated as a gentleman and had inherited Park House from his father in 1815, before becoming involved in the brewery. He combined his role in the business with being a senior officer in the militia, and was often referred to as Colonel Best. Under his management, the firm seems once more to have been very profitable, and in the 1840s the brewery was said 'to have no competitor in the county', implying that the other Kentish breweries were much smaller concerns.
Rome House, Chatham
The income from the brewery seems to have allowed James to buy a property called Boxley Lodge, which stood next door to Park House, and he also occupied Rome House in Chatham, a substantial urban villa on which the family had held a mortgage since the 18th century. James's intention was probably that his eldest son, James Best (1822-45), should inherit the brewery and his estates, but the younger James died at the age of 22, while an undergraduate at Oxford. By this time, James's other sons, Mawdistly Gaussen Best (1826-1906) and Thomas Charles Hardinge Best (1828-87), had already embarked on careers in the army, and were evidently disinclined to give them up to take over the management of the brewery. In these circumstances, the family and its advisers decided to lease the brewery to Messrs. Winch & Co., who much later, in 1891, bought the business altogether.

Mawdistly Gaussen Best remained in the army until 1860, achieving the rank of Major, but inherited the Boxley estates from his father in 1849. Both Boxley Lodge and Park House seem to have been let while he was serving in the army, but after the tenants of Boxley Lodge left in 1862, he undertook a remodelling of that house and moved in. A decade later, when Park House also became vacant, he pulled it down and undertook a further and more extensive enlargement or rebuilding of Boxley Lodge, to which the name Park House was transferred. While the work at Boxley Lodge was in progress, Major Best himself rented Boxley Abbey, a third large house in the same parish. Some years later, in 1890, it came up for sale, and he bought it, presumably with a view to extending the estate. Since Major Best and his wife had no children, the combined property passed on his death to his sister's daughter, Harriet (1867-1951), and her husband, the Rev. Charles Edmund Waller Dalison (later Best-Dalison) (1858-1955). Their only son, Thomas Maximilian Best-Dalison, predeceased his parents in 1947, and so when Harriet died four years later the estates passed to her sister's son, Sir John James Kenward Shaw (later Best-Shaw) (1895-1984), 9th bt., who moved into Boxley Abbey. When the Rev. Charles Best-Dalison died in 1955, Park House - the unfashionable Victorian Italianate style of which, coupled with wartime damage, made it particularly vulnerable - became vacant and was pulled down soon afterwards. Sir John left Boxley Abbey and the estate to his youngest son, Stephen Bosanquet Shaw (later Best-Shaw) (1935-2000), who was in turn succeeded by his son James Robert Hawley Best-Shaw (b. 1965), who put the property on the market in 2023.

Park House, Boxley, Kent

The house should not be confused with Park House, Maidstone, which lies less than a mile to the south-west. Both estates were carved out of the lands belonging to the medieval Cistercian Boxley Abbey. The Park House at Boxley was called 'ancient' by Hasted in 1798. It was acquired by Thomas Best of Chatham as a country retreat in 1720, and at this time was probably no more than a 'village gentry' house, which fronted onto the village street. In 1838, James Best (d. 1849) bought the adjoining property, known as Boxley Lodge, which seems to have been built in the late 18th or early 19th century, and may have moved there, as Park House was certainly let in the 1840s, when the poet, Alfred, Lord Tennyson visited his sister there. After Mawdistly Gaussen Best inherited the estate in 1849, both properties seem to have been let, but the tenants at Boxley Lodge gave up their lease in about 1862, and Best seems to have embarked on a process of refurbishment and improvement before occupying the house himself.

Park House and Boxley Lodge depicted on 6" OS map, 1865
Park House, Boxley, depicted on 6" OS map, 1898




















Both houses were standing, side by side, when the Ordnance Survey 6" map was surveyed in 1865, and a newspaper report in the same year mentions 'large alterations and additions having just been completed' at Boxley Lodge. That was not the end of the matter, however, for a decade later Best pulled down the original Park House and transferred its name to Boxley Lodge, which he either rebuilt or further extended on a significantly larger scale in a loosely Italianate style in 1875-76. The architect on this occasion was Robert Wheeler (1828-1901) of Brenchley and Tunbridge Wells (Kent), about whom little is known, although his practice seems to have been mainly involved in church restoration and public buildings. The works were executed by Wallis & Clements of Maidstone, contractors, whose accepted tender for the works was £7,284. Either at the same time or soon afterwards, the road leading south from Boxley village was diverted to the west, allowing the enlargement of the grounds around the new house, which seems to have stood on the site of Boxley Lodge. It is not known how much of the Lodge was incorporated within it, nor how much of the house as it later appeared was due to the works of 1865 or those of 1875-76. The map evidence shows that the house was 'turned around' so that it was entered on the north side whereas the old house had been approached from the south. 20th century photographs show the house had a complex layout, with a thin tower at the junction between the main block and a large service wing, which in turn connected to the stable court. Nothing is known of the plan or the interiors.

Park House, Boxley: entrance front, probably c.1900. Image: Matthew Beckett.

Park House, Boxley: aerial photograph in 1930. Image: Britain from above.

Park House, Boxley: the house from the south-west in the early 20th century.
While the rebuilding work of the 1870s was taking place, Best rented Boxley Abbey, and when Lord Romney put the Boxley Abbey Estate up for sale in 1890, Best decided to add it to his estate, buying the abbey and attached farm for £15,450. Park House seems to have remained the family's principal residence into the mid 20th century, but it is said to have been damaged during the Second World War, causing the elderly owners to move to Boxley Abbey. Their successors at Boxley preferred the abbey, and Park House was demolished in 1955, although the coach house and stable block were converted into houses.

Descent: Paulet St. John sold 1720 to Mawdistly Best (d. 1740); to son, James Best (d. 1782); to son, Thomas Best (1753-1815); to son, James Best (1781-1849); to son, Mawdistly Gaussen Best (1826-1906); to niece, Harriet Emily Hardinge Best Bosanquet (1867-1951), wife of Rev. Charles Edmund Waller Dalison (later Best-Dalison) (1858-1955); to kinsman, Sir John James Kenward Best-Shaw, 9th bt., who demolished it in 1955.

Boxley Abbey, Kent

This house has been described in a previous post.

Chilston Park, Boughton Malherbe, Kent

The house, which was a seat of the Hussey family from the 13th century until 1545, has a long and multi-layered history which is not yet fully understood. The earliest view of the building which is known is Badeslade's engraving of 1719 for Harris' History of Kent, which shows a quadrangular house with a tower over the entrance porch and projecting two-bay wings on the entrance front. 

Badeslade's engraving of Chilston Park in 1719, from Harris' History of Kent
This house probably dated from the early 16th century, as the inner faces of the projecting wings on the north-facing entrance front still have diapered brickwork. Christopher Hussey thought the porch tower might be a little earlier, of the late 15th century, but there seems no compelling reason to suggest a more complex sequence than a straightforward rebuilding in the early 16th century. By the date of the engraving, however, most identifiably pre-classical features of the house apart from the tower had been smoothed away in a fairly comprehensive remodelling, which left the house with plain elevations of two storeys under a hipped roof with dormers. The brick of the east and west elevations shows no diapering and may therefore have been wholly replaced, but the low proportions of the elevations no doubt imply that parts of the 16th century house survive inside. The remodelling was apparently carried out for William Hamilton after he inherited the estate in 1709, as Hasted says 'he made great additions' to the house, but stylistically it could easily be forty years earlier.

Chilston Park: engraving of the house in 1780, from Hasted's History of Kent

Chilston Park: the entrance front, as remodelled in 1728, photographed in 1952. Image: Country Life.
Not long after Badeslade's view was drawn, the house was altered again, with a pedimented three-bay breakfront dated 1728 replacing the porch tower, and completing the external modernisation. The entrance hall has a character consistent with this date too, including the slightly over-scaled Palladian chimneypiece It seems likely that this was the work of John Hamilton and had been completed before the house passed to the Best family, in 1746.

Chilston Park: the entrance hall in recent years. Image: Trip Advisor.

Chilston Park: the mid 18th century first-floor saloon, now a bedroom. Image: Trip Advisor
Most of the rest of the interior of the house has been redecorated in later times. Hasted reported in 1782 that the Bests had 'rebuilt the mansion and made other very considerable improvements to the park, waters and adjacent grounds' in the mid 18th century. The screen in the entrance hall seems to belong to this phase, with the columns each made from a single tree trunk. The rooms in the east range were also remodelled. The ground floor was occupied by a parlour and dining room, placed either side of a Chinese Chippendale staircase, while on the first floor is a saloon with a coved and coffered ceiling, perhaps of the 1750s, and a canted bay window. The staircase was removed in the 19th century (Christopher Hussey reported that fragments of the staircase balustrading were still to be found in the outbuildings in 1952), although its sunburst ceiling is still in position on the first floor. 

Chilston Park: the inner hall and Victorian staircase.
Further major changes were made to the house for Aretas Akers-Douglas, 1st Viscount Chilston, in 1882-83, to the designs of George Friend. The front porch was created, reusing the original doorcase, and the central courtyard was roofed over to provide a new top lit inner hall, with a grand imperial staircase rising around the walls. On the east wall of the inner hall is mounted panelling of c.1540, with the symbols of the Passion and kings' heads, set under Renaissance arches. This was almost certainly made for the lost Royton chapel at Lenham, and was moved here in about 1900 from the nearby farmhouse (formerly Royton Manor). 

Chilston Park: the combined drawing room and morning room (now the dining room) in 1952. Image: Country Life.
The creation of a new main staircase allowed the Georgian staircase to be taken out, and the ground floor rooms of the east wing to be thrown into a single long drawing room and morning room (now the dining room), divided by a screen of columns, and leading at the south end into a conservatory. This is the survivor of several spaces in which the existing Georgian decoration was emulated in the new decoration. The panelling and chimneypieces of the long drawing room are evidently original, but the papier mâché ceiling must be Victorian, and fits well enough, although its small-scale repetitive decoration is not something the Georgians would ever have created in such a large space. 

Chilston Park: the former dining room (now demolished) created in 1882-83. Image: Country Life.
On the other side of the house, a new dining room (now lost) was built out, extending the entrance front to the west, with new service accommodation beyond it. The dining room also had Georgian-style decoration, with a Kentian ceiling and decorative plasterwork swags and picture frames on the walls. The final major change was the reconstruction of the south front of the house, with the two bays at either end of the facade raised into gables, and a new two-storey centre which again is in keeping with the Georgian elevations, but which is constructed of a hot red brick toned down by the application of spots of distemper across the surface.

The house was converted into an hotel after 1983, and on the whole the conversion and subsequent alterations have been handled sympathetically, although inevitably there is some loss of the 'visual charm and historic atmosphere' on which Christopher Hussey remarked in 1952. The most grevious change in that time, however, has been the construction of the insistently noisy M20 across the park to the north. The house was from the 16th century at least surrounded by a small park, which Evelyn in 1666 called 'a sweetly watered place'. Badeslade's view shows a formal garden with an elaborate system of rectangular ponds on all sides of the house, but this seems to have been naturalised by the Bests in the mid 18th century, when the informal lake was created at a little distance from the north front. 

Descent: Henry Hussey sold 1545 to John Parkhurst... Sir William Parkhurst, kt.; sold to Richard Northwood... sold 1650 to Edward Hales (d. 1696); to daughters, who sold 1698 to the Hon. Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton (d. 1709), widow of Col. James Hamilton; to son, William Hamilton (d. 1737); to son, John Hamilton, who sold in 1746 to Thomas Best MP (1713-95); to nephew, George Best (1759-1818); to son, Thomas Fairfax Best (1786-1849), who sold c.1824 to George Douglas (d. 1833); to James Douglas Stoddart (later Stoddart Douglas then Douglas) MP (1793-1875); to kinsman, Aretas Akers (later Akers-Douglas) (1851-1926), 1st Viscount Chilston; to son, Aretas Akers-Douglas (1876-1947), 2nd Viscount Chilston; to son, Eric Alexander Akers-Douglas (1910-82), 3rd Viscount Chilston; to cousin, Alastair George Akers-Douglas (b. 1946), 4th Viscount Chilston, who sold 1983 for conversion into an hotel.

Wierton Place, Boughton Monchelsea, Kent

The oldest of several gentlemen's seats in a scattered hamlet on the eastern side of Boughton Monchelsea parish, and anciently known simply as Wierton or Wiarton. 

Wierton Place: the Jacobean house of the St Leger and Powell families, engraved by Badeslade, 1719.
The L-shaped Jacobean house of the St Leger and Powell families recorded by Badeslade in 1719 was replaced by a new, classical house on a different site in about 1760 for John Briscoe of London. No view of this house seems to be known before it was remodelled in the Gothic style in 1857, presumably for Maj. William Henry Archer. It was sold in 1898 to the Kleinwort banking family and remodelled again, although this time the work had little impact on the exterior and was concentrated on creating a new suite of interiors. The house is now gabled, and mainly of two storeys above a basement, with irregular fenestration, mixing sashes with some mullioned windows, some of which have leaded lights.

Wierton Place: the 18th century house as remodelled in 1857 and 1899.

The internal remodelling of 1899 was in a mixture of the Jacobean and 18th century styles. The entrance hall, billiard room and former music room were decorated in the Jacobean style, with panelling, overmantels and plaster cornices, and the hall has a strapwork ceiling with pendants. The main staircase is in early 18th century style, with elaborate cast iron scrollwork balusters and a mahogany handrail. The two drawing rooms have more Adamesque decoration, with plaster ceilings and cornices, 18th century style fireplaces, and painted wooden doors, and there is a sitting room on the first floor in the same taste.

Descent: built c.1760 for John Briscoe; sold c.1790 to John May of Holborough; sold to Thomas Fairfax Best (1786-1849); to daughter, Frances (1823-88), later wife of Maj. William Henry Archer (1815-91); to son, Major Henry Best Fairfax Archer (1858-1927), who sold 1898 to Herman G. Kleinwort (1856-1942); sold after his death to [fu] Hubble; sold 1967 to Francis Stone (c.1944-2005), who operated it as a night club; to brother Aaron Paul Stone (b. 1948).


Best family of Boxley


Best, Thomas (1657-1740). Fourth son of John Best (d. 1666) of St Lawrence, near Canterbury (Kent) and his wife Katherine, daughter of John Allanson of Norwood (Middx), baptised at St Paul, Canterbury, 2 June 1657. Brewer at Chatham. He married 1st, 13 September 1681 at St Botolph, Aldgate, London, Elizabeth (d. 1702), daughter of John Mawdistly of Chatham (Kent) and widow of Matthew Thurston (d. 1680), and 2nd, 30 December 1703 at Stepney (Middx), Elizabeth (d. 1736?), widow of William Nurse, and had issue:
(1.1) Mawdistly Best (1682-1744) (q.v.);
(1.2) Elizabeth Best (1683-1764), baptised at Chatham, 29 November 1683; married, 30 March 1717 at St Swithin, London Stone, London, as his second wife, Thomas Pearse (d. 1743), MP for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis, 1722-26, 1727-41, of Tower Hill, London and Witchampton (Dorset), chief clerk of the Navy office to 1726; a commissioner of the Navy, 1726-43 and a director of the South Sea Company, 1721-24, and had issue two sons; lived latterly at Hatley St George (Cambs); buried at Hatley St George, 8 July 1764; will proved 26 July 1764;
(1.3) Mary Best (1685-1760), baptised at Chatham, 1 October 1685; married, 17 August 1704 at Stepney (Middx), John Tyhurst (c.1678-1753) of Chatham, brewer, and had issue at least two daughters; buried at Chatham, 23 February 1760; will proved at Canterbury, 1760;
(1.4) Dorothy Best (b. 1687; fl. 1737), baptised at Chatham, 26 May 1687; married Capt. John Mihell or Myhell (fl. 1737; d. by 1746) and had issue one son and four daughters; death not traced;
(1.5) Matthew Best (b. & d. 1691), baptised at Chatham, 20 May 1691; died in infancy and was buried at Chatham, 21 July 1691;
(1.6) John Best (b. & d. 1694), baptised at Chatham, 15 August 1694; died in infancy and was buried at Chatham, 20 November 1694;
(1.7) Sarah Best (1699-1756), baptised at Chatham, 31 May 1699; married, 15 July 1729 at St Clement Danes, Westminster (Middx), Admiral Edward Vernon (1684-1757) of Nacton (Suffk), MP for Penryn, 1722-34, Portsmouth, 1741 and Ipswich, 1741-57, second son of Rt. Hon. James Vernon, secretary of state 1696-1700, and had issue three sons; buried at Nacton, 19 May 1756;
(1.8) Ann Best (1702-84), baptised at Chatham, 2 July 1702; married, 8 December 1725 in London, Charles Taylor (1692-1762), barrister-at-law, a bencher of the Middle Temple and deputy remembrancer of the Court of Exchequer, and had issue several sons and one daughter; died 23 March 1784 and was buried at Diptford (Devon), where she and her husband are commemorated by a monument.
He lived next to the brewery at Chatham and later at Cooling Castle (Kent), where he was presumably a tenant. In 1735 he bought a mortgage on Rome House, Chatham, which he settled on his son-in-law, John Mihell.
He died 22 August and was buried at Chatham, 31 August 1740; his will was proved in the PCC, 25 August 1740. His first wife was buried at Chatham, 3 November 1702. His second wife is said to have died in 1736.

Mawdistly Best (1682-1744) 
Best, Mawdistly (1682-1744).
Eldest and only surviving son of Thomas Best (1657-1740) and his first wife, Elizabeth, daughter of John Mawdistly of Chatham 
and widow of Matthew Thurston, baptised at Chatham, 19 October 1682. Proprietor of Best's Brewery in Chatham, 1740-44. High Sheriff of Kent, 1730-31. He married, 15 August 1710 at Frindsbury (Kent), Elizabeth (1690-1753), daughter of Thomas Fearne, and had issue:
(1) Elizabeth Best (1712-28?), baptised at Chatham, 14 December 1712; died young and was probably the woman of this name buried at Boxley, 20 October 1728;
(2) Thomas Best (1713-95) [for whom see below, under Best of Chilston Park];
(3) Dorothy Best (1715-16), baptised at Chatham, 2 September 1715; died in infancy and was buried at Chatham, 25 July 1716;
(4) Mawdistly James Best (b. 1717), baptised at Chatham, 4 November 1717; died young;
(5) James Best (1720-82) (q.v.);
(6) Mawdistly Best (c.1724-37), born about 1724; died young, 16 January, and was buried at Boxley, 20 January 1736/7;
(7) Dorothy Sarah Best (1726-50), baptised at Boxley, 27 October 1726; married, 18 July 1749 at St James, Piccadilly, Westminster (Middx), as his second wife, Robert Fairfax (1707-93), 7th Baron Fairfax, of Leeds Castle (Kent); died without issue and was buried at Broomfield (Kent), 23 May 1750;
(8) Frances Best; probably died young as she is not mentioned in her father's will.
He lived at Park House, Boxley (Kent), which he purchased from the St. John family in 1720. He planned to build a new house in Chatham but died before work could start.
He was buried at Boxley, 10 January 1743/4; his will was proved in the PCC, 20 January 1743/4. His widow died in 1753, but her burial has not been traced; her will was proved in the PCC, 27 March 1753.

James Best (1720-82)
Image: Maidstone Museum & Art Gallery  
Best, James (1720-82).
Second surviving son of Mawdistly Best (1682-1744) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Fearne, baptised at Chatham, 20 March 1719/20. High Sheriff of Kent, 1751; JP for Kent; Receiver-General for Kent, Surrey and Sussex, 1777-82. Succeeded his father as owner of Best's Brewery in Chatham and greatly expanded the business, investing in new technology and improved brewing techniques, on which he sought guidance from the leading London porter brewers. At the time of his death he was just beginning an attempt to develop an overseas trade in his beer, but this proved unsuccessful and was abandoned in 1786 by his sons. The portrait shown here, by an unidentified artist, is very probably of James Best, although the identification is not certain. He married, 13 January 1752 at St Martin-in-the-Fields, Westminster (Middx), Frances (1732-1808), daughter and co-heir of Richard Shelley of Michelgrove (Sussex), and had issue:
(1) Elizabeth Best (1752-1812), born 7 October, and baptised at Chatham, 8 November 1752; married, 18 June 1790 at Boxley, Rev. Maurice Lloyd (1763-1810), vicar of Lenham (Kent), son of Maurice Lloyd of Oswestry (Shrops.), and had issue one son and two daughters; buried at Lenham, 31 October 1812;
(2) Thomas Best (1753-1815) (q.v.); 
(3) James Best (1755-1828), born 9 January, and baptised at Boxley, 10 January 1755; an officer in the army, who was also a partner in Best's Brewery in Chatham from 1782 (though he 'wanted nothing to do with it') until his death, with his brothers George (to 1795) and Richard (to 1801); from 1801-09 it was in the hands of the Twopenny brothers, solicitors, as trustees for the family, as James and his brothers had been drawing larger dividends from the business than it could afford and it was at risk of bankruptcy; after 1809 James was the sole proprietor; married 1st, 17 May 1782 at St Luke, Old St., Finsbury (Middx), Hannah Middleton (c.1751-1816) and 2nd, 20 December 1817 at Chatham, Elizabeth Halliday (1753-1832), but had no issue; died 10 December and was buried at Boxley, 19 December 1828; will proved in the PCC, 19 December 1828;
(4) Frances Best (1756-58), baptised at Boxley, 30 January 1756; died young and was buried at Boxley, 12 April 1758;
(5) Richard Best (1757-1801), baptised at Boxley, 27 June 1757; partner in Best's Brewery in Chatham from 1782, in partnership with his brothers George (to 1794) and James; married 1st, 1784 at Christ Church, Southwark (Surrey), Martha Boorman (1763-87), and had issue one son and one daughter; married 2nd, 28 March 1789 at St George-in-the-East, London, Mary Townson; died 4 April 1801; will proved in the PCC, 27 June 1801;
(6) John Best (b. 1758), baptised at Boxley, 26 October 1758; died young but burial not traced;
(7) George Best (1759-1818) [for whom see below, under Best of Chilston Park];
(8) Frances Best (1760-1837), baptised at Boxley, 19 November 1760; married, 4 June 1779 at Chatham, Rev. Henry Hardinge (c.1754-1820), rector of Stanhope (Co. Durham), son of Nicholas Hardinge (1699-1758), and had issue five sons and one daughter (including Rev. Sir Charles Hardinge, bt., of Bonds Park (Kent) and General Sir Henry Hardinge, 1st Viscount Hardinge of Lahore); died at Darlington (Co. Durham), 27 October 1837;
(9) Dorothy Best (1761-1822), baptised at Boxley, 8 February 1761; married, 9 January 1785 at Boxley, William Twopeny (1755-1826) of Woodstock Park, Tunstall, Sittingbourne (Kent), solicitor, but had no issue; died 23 April 1822 and was buried at Tunstall (Kent), where she is commemorated by a monument;
(10) Charlotte Best (1764-91), baptised at Chatham, 1 October 1764; died unmarried and was buried at Boxley, 10 August 1791; will proved in the PCC, 17 August 1791
He inherited his father's plans for a new house in Chatham, which he realised as Chatham House on the front of the brewery site in the High St. Although begun in the 1740s, Chatham House was only finally completed in 1758. He inherited Park House, Boxley, from his father in 1744.
He was buried at Boxley, 7 February 1782; his will was proved in the PCC, 7 March 1782. His widow died 30 October, and was buried at Boxley, 7 November 1808; her will was proved in the PCC, 28 January 1809.

Thomas Best (1753-1815) 
Image: Victoria & Albert Museum
Best, Thomas (1753-1815).
Eldest son of James Best (1720-82) and his wife Frances, daughter of Richard Shelley of Michelgrove (Sussex), born 14 November and baptised at Boxley, 22 November 1753. Educated at Eton and St John's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1772). An officer in the West Kent Militia; JP for Kent. The portrait shown here is a low-relief wax portrait of him by Samuel Percy, 1807, now in the Victoria & Albert Museum. He married, 12 November 1778 at St Maurice, Winchester (Hants), Elizabeth (1753-1832), daughter of Dr Irwin MD, and had issue:
(1) Frances Julia Best (1780-1842), baptised at Bishops Stortford (Herts), 1 March 1780; lived with her sisters at Maidstone (Kent); died unmarried, 5 December, and was buried at Boxley, 16 December 1842; her will was proved in the PCC, 29 December 1842;
(2) James Best (1781-1849) (q.v.);
(3) Thomas Best (1784-1813), born 10 January and baptised at Thurnham (Kent), 13 January 1784; an officer in the army (Ensign, 1801; Lt., 1801; Capt., 1804), who in 1803 accidentally shot a civilian; married, 1806 (licence), Anne (d. 1834) (who m2, 4 June 1818 at St Mary's R.C. Pro-Cathedral, Dublin, Coll Deane (c.1777-1837) of Dublin, solicitor), eldest daughter of William Kearney of Tuam (Co. Galway), and had issue two sons (one of whom married his cousin, Caroline Georgina (d. 1900), daughter of Thomas Fairfax Best (1786-1849) [for whom see below under Best of Chilston Park]; died of a fever in the lifetime of his father at Gibraltar, 8 October 1813, and was buried in the Trafalgar Cemetery there, where he is commemorated by a monument;
(4) Elizabeth Charlotte Best (1786-1861), baptised privately 1 September and again at Boxley. 5 October 1786; lived with her sisters at Maidstone (Kent); died unmarried, 6 January, and was buried at Boxley, 14 January 1861; will proved 12 February 1861 (effects under £4,000);
(5) Dorothy Best (1792-1871), baptised at Boxley, 15 February 1792; lived with her sisters at Maidstone (Kent); died unmarried, 20 April, and was buried at Boxley, 25 April 1871; her will was proved 27 May 1871 (effects under £5,000).
He inherited Park House, Boxley from his father in 1782, but did not have a share in the brewery business, which was left to his brothers.
He died 27 May 1815; his will was proved in the PCC, 12 July 1815. His widow died 22 April 1832.

Best, James (1781-1849). Elder son of Thomas Best (1753-1815) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Dr Irwin MD, baptised at St Maurice, Winchester, 26 December 1781. Educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford (matriculated 1799; BA 1803). JP for Kent. An officer in the West Kent Militia (Lt-Col.). Manager of Best's Brewery in Chatham, 1828-49, in which role he succeeded his uncle James; in 1851, after his death, the business was leased to Messrs. Winch, who bought it outright in 1891. He married, 23 September 1817 at Boxley, Harriet Susannah (1795-1875), daughter of Samuel R. Gaussen of Brookman's Park (Herts), and had issue:
(1) James Best (1822-45), born 27 October and baptised at Boxley, 4 December 1822; educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford (matriculated 1842); died at Boxley in the lifetime of his father, 10 June, and was buried there, 18 June 1845;
(2) Thomas Henry Best (b. & d. 1825), baptised at Boxley, 15 July 1825; died in infancy and was buried at Boxley, 21 September 1825;
(3) Mawdistly Gaussen Best (1826-1906) (q.v.);
(4) Thomas Charles Hardinge Best (1828-87), born 22 May and baptised at Boxley, 3 July 1828; an officer in 72nd Foot (Ensign, 1847; Lt., 1850; Capt., 1854; Maj., 1862; retired 1863), who saw service against the Indian Mutiny; lived in retirement in London; died unmarried at Tunbridge Wells, 21 September and was buried at Boxley, 26 September 1887;
(5) Emily Dorothy Best (1829-99) (q.v.);
(6) John Aylmer Best (1831-32), baptised at Boxley, 20 May 1831; died in infancy and was buried at Boxley, 6 February 1832;
(7) Elizabeth Caroline Ann Best (1836-85), born 18 May and baptised at Boxley, 28 June 1836; died unmarried, 17 August, and was buried at Boxley, 24 August 1885.
He inherited Park House, Boxley from his father in 1815 and purchased Boxley Lodge in 1838. From 1820 he also lived at Rome House, Chatham.
He died 20 June and was buried at Boxley, 28 June 1849; his will was proved in the PCC, 21 August 1849. His widow died 21 January 1875; her will was proved 2 March 1875 (effects under £60,000).

Mawdistly Gaussen Best (1826-1906) 
Best, Mawdistly Gaussen (1826-1906).
Third son of James Best (1781-1849) and his wife Harriet Susannah, daughter of Samuel R. Gaussen of Brookman's Park (Herts), born 23 August and baptised at Boxley, 22 September 1826. An officer in the army (Ensign, 1843; Lt., 1846; Capt., 1851; Maj., 1859; retired 1860), who served in the Crimean War and in the Indian Mutiny. JP for Kent; High Sheriff of Kent, 1881-82. Master of the Boxley Harriers. He married, 14 April 1864 at Newington-next-Hythe (Kent), Katherine Annabella (1843-96), eldest surviving daughter of Rev. Tatton Brockman of Beachborough (Kent), but had no issue.
He inherited Park House, Boxley and Boxley Lodge from his father in 1849, and remodelled the latter to from a new house in 1876, pulling down the original Park House at the same time. The new house was thereafter called Park House. In 1890 he bought Boxley Abbey, which he let.
He died 14 July 1906 and was buried at Boxley; his will was proved 6 September 1906 (estate £177,044). His wife died 18 June 1896 and was also buried at Boxley; her will was proved 27 August 1896 (effects £40,216).

Emily Dorothy Best (1829-99) 
Best, Emily Dorothy (1829-99).
Elder daughter of 
James Best (1781-1849) and his wife Harriet Susannah, daughter of Samuel R. Gaussen of Brookman's Park (Herts), born 15 December 1829 and baptised at Chatham (Kent), 29 January 1830. She married, 25 April 1864 at Boxley, as his third wife, James Whatman Bosanquet (1804-77), banker and writer on biblical chronology, son of Samuel Bosanquet, banker, of Forest House (Essex) and Dingestow Court (Herefs), and had issue:
(1) Harriet Emily Hardinge Best Bosanquet (1867-1951) (q.v.);
(2) Elizabeth Louisa Whatman Best Bosanquet (1868-1961) (q.v.);
(3) Aylmer Adela Mawdistly Best Bosanquet (1870-1921), born 13 May and baptised at Enfield (Middx), 18 June 1870; emigrated to Kenaston, Saskatchewan (Canada), 1915 and worked as a teacher and missionary; died unmarried in Pasadena (California), 8 February 1921, and was buried there; will proved 2 August 1921 (effects in England, £25,949).
She and her husband lived at Claysmore, Enfield (Middx). As a widow, she lived latterly at Pennenden, Maidstone (Kent).
She died 23 December 1899; her will was proved 26 January 1900 (estate £75,538). Her husband died 22 December 1877; his will was proved 21 January 1878 (effects under £30,000).

Bosanquet, Harriet Emily Hardinge Best (1867-1951). Elder daughter of James Whatman Bosanquet (1804-77) and his third wife, Emily Dorothy, elder daughter of James Best (1781-1849) of Park House, Boxley (Kent), born 23 April and baptised at Enfield, 30 May 1867. Awarded Order of Mercy and the Belgian Medaille de la Reine Elisabeth, presumably for nursing services in the First World War. She married, 12 April 1899 at Boxley, Rev. Charles Edmund Waller Dalison (later Best-Dalison) (1858-1955), rector of Bletsoe (Beds), 1897-99, and curate of Boxley, 1899-1909, son of Maximilian Hammond Dalison, and had issue:
(1) Thomas Maximilian Best-Dalison (1905-47), born 18 February 1905; educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford; honorary attaché at British legation in Vienna, 1925-28; JP for Kent, 1934-47; served in Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve, 1940-46; member of Kent County Council, 1946-47; Governor of West Kent General Hospital; died unmarried in the lifetime of his mother, 10 July 1947.
She inherited Park House, Boxley and Boxley Abbey from her uncle in 1906. Park House was damaged in the Second World War and as a result she moved to Boxley Abbey. After her husband's death, Park House was sold and demolished.
She died 12 April 1951; her will was proved 30 July 1951 (estate £99,301). Her husband died aged 96 on 20 January 1955; his will was proved 12 May 1955 (estate £57,580).

Bosanquet, Elizabeth Louisa Whatman Best (1868-1961). Younger daughter of James Whatman Bosanquet (1804-77) and his third wife, Emily Dorothy, elder daughter of James Best (1781-1849) of Park House, Boxley (Kent), born 27 June and baptised at Enfield (Middx), 25 July 1868. She married, 1 June 1893 at Boxley, Rev. Sir Charles John Monson Shaw (1860-1922), 8th bt., of Eltham (Kent), curate of Bexley (Kent), 1884-90, vicar of Swanley (Kent), 1890-1902, Margate (Kent), 1902-13 and Wrotham (Kent), 1913-21, son of Rev. Charles John Kenward Shaw, and had issue:
(1) Sir John James Kenward Shaw (later Best-Shaw) (1895-1984), 9th bt. (q.v.)
She died aged 92 on 29 May 1961; her will was proved 25 September 1961 (estate £2,913). Her husband died 11 September 1922; his will was proved 21 November 1922 (estate £8,704).

Sir John J.K. Best-Shaw (1895-1984), 9th bt.  
Shaw (later Best-Shaw), Sir John James Kenward (1895-1984), 9th bt.
Only child of the Rev. Sir Charles John Monson Shaw (1860-1922), 8th bt., and his wife Elizabeth Louisa Whatman Best, younger daughter of James Whatman Bosanquet, born 11 June 1895. Educated at Royal Naval Colleges, Osborne and Dartmouth. An officer in the Royal Navy (Sub-Lt., 1915; Lt., 1918; Lt-Cdr., 1925; retired as Cdr., 1937). He took the additional surname Best by royal licence, 20 July 1956, after inheriting the Boxley Abbey estate from his aunt. High Sheriff of Kent, 1961-62. He was a Guardian of the Shrine of Our Lady at Walsingham, 1931-84, President of the Society for the Maintenance of the Faith, 1949-67 and 
President of the Church Union, 1969-71. Appointed OStJ, 1940. He married, 28 March 1921, Elizabeth Mary Theodora (1896-1986), daughter of Sir Robert Heywood Hughes (1865-1951), 12th bt., and had issue:
(1) Mary Elizabeth Helen Shaw (later Best-Shaw) (1922-2017), born 22 April 1922; married 1st, June 1943 at Swanley (Kent), Capt. Patrick Henry Coates (1919-49), son of Cdr. Henry Venner Coates RN and had issue two sons; married 2nd, Oct-Dec 1968, as his second wife, John Melliar Adams-Beck (1909-79), son of James Francis Adams-Beck of Colchester (Essex); died 12 September 2017; will proved 12 December 2017;
(2) Julia Aylmer 
Shaw (later Best-Shaw)  (1923-2011), born 22 July 1923; served in Second World War with Women's Royal Naval Service; died unmarried, 15 February 2011; will proved, 11 July 2011;
(3) Sir John Michael Robert 
Shaw (later Best-Shaw) , 10th bt. (1924-2014), born 28 September 1924; educated at Lancing College and Hertford College, Oxford (BA 1950); an officer in the army (Capt.), who served in the Second World War, 1943-45, and later in the Malaysian Police Force, 1950-58; primarily engaged in church work, 1959-71, and teaching, 1972-82; succeeded his father as 10th baronet, 26 February 1984; married, 13 February 1960, Jane Gordon (b. 1927), daughter of Alexander Gordon Guthrie of Hampton Court House, Farningham (Kent), and had issue three sons and one daughter; died 22 April 2014;
(4) Hermione Theodora (k/a Sally) 
Shaw (later Best-Shaw)  (1926-2019), born 10 May 1926; lived at Boxley Abbey; died unmarried, 12 January 2019; will proved 30 July 2019;
(5) Charles John Hughes 
Shaw (later Best-Shaw)  (1928-2015), born 23 January 1928; educated at Lancing College; lived at Charing (Kent); married, Oct-Dec 1971, Carol Mary (b. 1949), second daughter of Joseph Martin Drew of Beckenham (Kent), and had issue one daughter; died 6 January 2015; will proved 24 August 2015;
(6) Martha Mary 
Shaw (later Best-Shaw) (1934-2010), born 6 April 1934; lived at Boxley Abbey; died unmarried, 29 July 2010; will proved 3 March 2011;
(7) Stephen Bosanquet 
Shaw (later Best-Shaw)  (1935-2000) (q.v.).
He inherited Boxley Abbey from his aunt in 1955; at his death it passed to his youngest son.
He died 26 February 1984; his will was proved 6 June 1984 (estate £95,245). His widow died 5 July 1986; her will was proved 12 December 1986 (estate £283,838).

Shaw (later Best-Shaw), Stephen Bosanquet (1935-2000). Third and youngest son of Sir John James Kenward Shaw (later Best-Shaw), 9th bt., and his wife Elizabeth Mary Theodora, daughter of Sir Robert Heywood Hughes, 12th bt., born 9 August 1935. Educated at Lancing College. Employed by Combined Insurance Co. of America. He married, 11 April 1964, Elizabeth Annette Freda (b. 1940), daughter of Gerald Baldwin Hayward MBE (1904-58) of Athens (Greece), and had issue:
(1) James Robert Hawley Best-Shaw (b. 1965), born 12 March 1965; educated at Lancing College and Reading University (BA); estate agent with Cluttons; inherited lordship of the manor of Chatham (Kent) and Boxley Abbey estate from his father in 2000, but put the latter up for sale in 2023; married, 1992, Charlotte Louise, second daughter of Nigel Ashley of Mijas (Spain), and had issue one son and one daughter; now living;
(2) Louisa Margaret Aylmer Best-Shaw (b. 1967), born 27 January 1967; educated at West Heath School and Brighton University (BSc); married, 15 October 1988 (div. 1998), Andrew Charles Robert Beale, son of Robert Beale, and had issue one son and two daughters; now living;
(3) Hugh Edward Gerald Best-Shaw (b. 1975), born 12 February 1975; educated at Bradfield College and Royal Academy of Dramatic Art; director of building and renovation companies in London since 2003; married, 2007, Alexandra Mary (b. 1979), daughter of Ian R. Firth of Kirkby Overblow (Yorks NR), and had issue two daughters; now living.
He inherited Boxley Abbey from his father in 1984. At his death it passed to his elder son.
He died 6 February 2000; his will was proved 16 August 2000. His widow is now living.

Best family of Chilston Park


Best, Thomas (1713-95). Eldest son of Mawdistly Best (1682-1744) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Fearne, baptised at St Mary, Chatham, 6 November 1713. Educated at University College, Oxford (matriculated 1732) and Inner Temple (admitted 1732). Tory MP for Canterbury, 1741-54, 1761-68; Lieutenant-Governor of Dover Castle and Deputy Warden of the Cinque Ports, 1762-95. He married, 3 January 1742/3 at Pluckley (Kent), Carolina (1718-82), daughter of George Scott of Scott's Hall, East Sutton (Kent), but had no issue.
He inherited lands at Aylesford, Headcorn and elsewhere from his father in 1744, and purchased Chilston Park in 1746. At his death his estate passed to his nephew, George Best (1757-1818).
He died 26 March and was buried at Boughton Malherbe, 2 April 1795; his will was proved in the PCC, 28 March 1795. His wife died 29 April and was buried at Boughton Malherbe, 7 May 1782.

Best, George (1759-1818). Fifth son of James Best (1720-82) and his wife Frances, daughter of Richard Shelley of Michelgrove (Sussex), born 10 November and baptised at Boxley, 20 November 1759. Educated at Eton, 1771-75, and University College, Oxford (matriculated 1779). A partner in the family brewery at Chatham, 1782-95, after which he withdrew from the partnership, having inherited the Chilston estate. An officer in the Kent Yeomanry (Cornet, 1794; Lt., 1795; Capt., 1797; retired 1803); JP and DL for Kent; MP for Rochester, 1790-96. He married, 7 December 1784 at Boughton Malherbe (Kent), Caroline (1751-1809), daughter of Edward Scott of Scott's Hall, East Sutton (Kent), and had issue:
(1) twin, Thomas George Best (1785-86), baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 19 December 1785; died in infancy and was buried at Boughton Malherbe, 4 February 1786;
(2) twin, Caroline Frances Best (1785-86), baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 19 December 1785; died in infancy and was buried at Boughton Malherbe, 4 February 1786;
(3) Thomas Fairfax Best (1786-1849) (q.v.);
(4) George Best (1787-1814), baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 13 November 1787; an officer in the 10th Foot (Ensign, 1805; Lt., 1807); died unmarried, probably of tuberculosis, at Lancaster (Lancs), 3 April and was buried at Lancaster Priory, 9 April 1814, where he is commemorated by a monument;
(5) Caroline Best (1789-1860), baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 7 April 1789; died unmarried, 15 March and was buried at Kensal Green Cemetery, 23 March 1860; will proved 19 April 1860 (effects under £5,000);
(6) Dorothy Best (1790-1837), baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 1790 (exact date not given); married, 4 November 1813 at Boughton Malherbe (Kent), Rev. Joseph George Brett (1790-1852), vicar of Lenham (Kent), son of Joseph George Brett of Old Brompton (Middx), and had issue six sons and two daughters; buried at St Luke, Chelsea (Middx), 14 April 1837;
(7) Louisa Best (1791-1847), baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 9 May 1791; married, 15 May 1819 at Marylebone (Middx), Lt. George Matcham Tarlton (c.1791-1880) of 6th Foot, son of John Weldon Tarlton of Killeigh (Co. Offaly), and had issue four sons and two daughters; buried at Braddan (Isle of Man), 9 January 1847;
(8) William Balliol Best (1793-1822), baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 10 May 1793; educated at Magdalen College, Oxford (matriculated 1810); died unmarried in London, 8 February 1822; will proved in the PCC, 15 June 1822.
He inherited Chilston Park from his uncle in 1795.
He died 8 September and was buried at Boughton Malherbe, 17 September 1818; his will was proved in the PCC, 3 October 1818. His wife died 24 October and was buried at Boughton Malherbe, 1 November 1809.

Best, Thomas Fairfax (1786-1849). Second, but eldest surviving son of George Best (1757-1818) and his wife Caroline, daughter of Edward Scott of Scott's Hall (Kent), born 15 October and baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 13 November 1786. Educated at University College, Oxford (matriculated 1805). An officer in the Grenadier Guards (Ensign, 1805), who fought at the Battle of Corunna, 1809 but retired soon afterwards; and later in the West Kent Militia (Cornet, 1831; Lt., 1832; Capt., 1832). JP and DL (from 1825) for Kent. A Conservative in politics, he played a prominent role in several general election campaigns in the 1830s and 1840s, chairing the committee which promoted the election of Conservative candidates for West Kent. He was also first Chairman of the West Kent Labourer's Friend Society, 1836. He married, 11 June 1817 at Kensington (Middx), Margaret Anna (d. 1882), daughter of Joseph George Brett of Grove House, Old Brompton (Middx), and had issue:
(1) Caroline Georgiana Best (1818-1900), baptised at Boughton Malherbe (Kent), 1 July 1818; married, 7 December 1858 at St James, Westbourne Terrace, Paddington (Middx), her cousin, William Mawdesley Best (c.1810-69), barrister-at-law, but had no issue; died 6 March 1900; will proved 19 October 1901 (estate £2,557);
(2) Isabella Dorothy Best (1820-98), born 19 April and baptised at Boughton Malherbe, 18 May 1820; married, 18 July 1859 at St James, Westbourne Terrace, Paddington, Edward Disbrowe Kortwright (1819-87), second son of Maj. Lawrence Kortright of Hylands (Essex), and had issue one daughter; died 20 September 1898; will proved 31 December 1898 (estate £588);
(3) Margaret Anna Best (1821-1923), born 18 May and baptised at Elstree (Herts), 31 July 1821; died unmarried, aged 102, on 5 December 1923;
(4) Frances Best (1823-88), born May and baptised at St Mary Abbotts, Kensington (Middx), 25 June 1823; married, 18 April 1857 at St James, Westbourne Terrace, Paddington, Maj. William Henry Archer (1815-91), younger son of Col. Clement Archer (1765-1817), and had issue three sons and one daughter; died 14 December  and was buried at Boughton Malherbe, 21 December 1888.
He inherited Chilston Park from his father in 1818, but sold it in about 1824. He lived later at Wierton Place, Boughton Monchelsea (Kent).
He died at his house in Westbourne Terrace, London, 30 June, and was buried at Boughton Malherbe, 7 July 1849; his will was proved in the PCC. 21 July 1849.  His widow died 24 November 1882; her will was proved 16 January 1883 (estate £1,282).

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1850, vol. 1, p.88; Burke's Landed Gentry, 1894, pp. 140-41; Burke's Landed Gentry, 1952, pp. 597-98; R.A. Keen, 'Best brewers of Chatham', Archaeologia Cantiana, 1958, pp. 172-81; J. Newman, The buildings of England: Kent - West and the Weald, 2nd edn., 2012, pp. 131-32; 

Location of archives

Best of Park House, Boxley: deeds, estate and brewery company records, 1561-20th cent. [Medway Archives, U480, U2295, TR1374]; Frindsbury deeds and papers, 1668-1839 [Kent History and Library Centre, U36].

Coat of arms

Best of Park House and Chilston: Sable, two cross crosslets in chief, and a cinquefoil pierced in base, or.


Can you help?

  • Can anyone provide further photographs of Park House? I would be particularly interested to see any interior views.
  • Can anyone provide portraits or photographs of the people whose names appear in bold above, for whom no image is currently shown?
  • If anyone can offer further or more precise information or corrections to any part of this article I should be most grateful. I am always particularly pleased to hear from current owners or the descendants of families associated with a property who can supply information from their own research or personal knowledge for inclusion.

Revision and acknowledgements

This post was first published 27 April 2025.