Description
Buxted, a village and a parish in Sussex, on the L.B. & S.C.R., 44 miles from London. There is a post, money order, and telegraph office under Uckfield. Acreage of the civil parish, 8961; population, 2039; of the ecclesiastical, St Margaret, 485, and St Mary, 540. The parishes of High-Hurst Wood, St Mary's, a portion of Hadlow Down, and (in the 12th century) Uckfield have all been formed from the parish of Buxted. Busted Park is the property of Viscount Portman. Hog House is a structure of 1581, and was the seat of the Hogges. One of this family, Ralph Hogge, in 1543, made the first cast-iron cannon ever made in England; and his name, altered into Huggett, is still common among the Sussex blacksmiths. The living (St Margaret's) is a rectory in the diocese of Chichester, net value, £485 with residence. Patron, the Archbishop of Canterbury. The church is chiefly Early English, in good condition; has a low fihingled spire, and contains a brass of 1375. St Mary's is a vicarage; gross value, £150 with residence. High-Hurst Wood (Trinity) is also in the gift of the Archbishop; value, .-£300 with residence. Wotton the linguist, and the two Clarkes, grandfather and father of Clarke the traveller, were rectors.
Buxted, Sussex
Transcribed from The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England and Wales, 1894-5
