| Cuxton Rectory, pictured in 1968 not long after completion |
The current Cuxton Rectory (pictured above) is a pleasant modern-looking brick-built house dating back to 1966. For better or worse, it replaced the truly elegant late Georgian-style Rectory building that was built in 1833 by the then Rector of Cuxton, Robert William Shaw.
| Cuxton Rectory, c.1919... |
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| Canon Robert W. Shaw, c. 1866 |
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| South Eastern Gazette, 20 March 1832 |
His chosen site was owned by Lord Darnley, but Shaw agreed a land swop arrangement with him, exchanging some glebe land for the altogether much more agreeable location where the new rectory was to be built.
The Parsonage appears to have been a rather horrible place to live. The short six-month tenure of William Laud as Rector of St. Michael's in 1610 was largely down to him contracting the "Kentish Ague", a form of malaria very much present in the poorly drained surroundings of the time. (Happily for him, William Laud recovered from his bout of 'ague' well enough to go on to become Archbishop of Canterbury in 1633, a post he held until 1645, when he was executed on trumped-up charges of treason - a tale for elsewhere!)
| Cuxton Rectory, 1868, watercolour by Emily Clare Harvey (Canon Shaw's daughter-in-law) |
As Charles Moore wrote in answer to a questionnaire sent to him by the Bishop of Rochester in 1780:
“…I have expended some hundred pounds and made a considerable part of
the walls brick which before were only thin lath and plaster, yet from the
great indifference of the house itself and its very low, damp situation (being
the very lowest spot in the whole parish, it can never be made comfortable or
healthy residence at certain times of the year…”
Then as now, it seems that a nice house such as the rectory will always attract the attention of ne'er-do-wells and indeed, early in the morning of 6th December 1849, a 19-year old by the name of Thomas Godden from Strood broke into the rectory and stole a variety of small trinkets. He was soon apprehended by Robert Sampson, the local constable, and the stolen goods recovered. Godden was sent for trial and in March 1850 was sentenced to seven years' transportation.
It was during Shaw's tenure that the Rectory and its grounds became a centre for social events, initially to raise funds for the Rector's ambitious plans for the rebuilding of the church (which were to come to fruition in 1866). These events were, however, initially very much for "the elite", which is how the attendees of a "GRAND FANCY BAZAAR for the sale of LADIES' WORK" (which was held in the Rectory grounds on the 15th and 16th of June 1853 and which was to raise £150) were described in one local newspaper report at the time.
In 1858, Canon Shaw spent another £600 on the Rectory, enlarging the
drawing room and adding a kitchen and over-room extension, as well as enlarging
the stables and the coach house. The stable block was situated alongside the
old Parsonage in
| Canon Colson, c,1900... |
“Few things add more to the temporal comforts and well being of a
labouring man’s family than his taking pride in his garden. It may help lead
him to better things – certainly keep him from worse…”
If only the robber barons who build our modern houses thought like Canon Colson.
The first cottage garden show was held in that year and the subsequent shows, held in the Rectory grounds, became an established fixture in Cuxton’s social calendar with Canon Colson’s hothouse plants (arranged by his gardener, Mr. Wilson) being a centre of attraction for many years.
Unlike Canon Shaw's events, these were much more egalitarian affairs, with a large and enthusiastic attendance from the villagers of Cuxton. A report in the Tonbridge Wells Standard from 29 August 1884 depicts a lively afternoon, with large displays of fruit, vegetable and flowers, prizes for the best of them as judged by Lord Darnley's gardener, with the Lord and Lady Darnley themselves gracing the occasion with their attendance and all to musical accompaniment by a band from the Royal Engineers.
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| The Cottage Garden Society, c. 1900. |
A map from 1867 shows the extensive garden of the Rectory and the associated glebe land that stretched from the churchyard down to
| OS Map of 1869, showing the Rectory and the glebe land... |
| The Cogger family, tree-felling in the Rectory Garden, 1958. Looking on is Mrs. Rae, wife of Rector Charles Rae... |
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| 'Scoutana', 1961 - the White Hart is in the background... |
And now it seems that the history of the rectory may be coming to a close. In November 2024 Roger Knight, the Rector of St. Michaels since 1987, was compelled to retire at the age of 70 under arcane church regulations. The diocese seem in no hurry to replace him and instead have decided to sell off the rectory instead.
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| Cuxton rectory, September 2025 |
Efforts have been made to try and find the plans of the Rectory to see if Rev. Allington-Smith's desire to keep the rectory grounds "as a venue for fetes and similar functions and as a site for possible parish buildings" actually made it into a covenant. Alas, although listed in the Medway Archive planning registers, the plans themselves are no held there and their whereabouts are not known. I suppose the diocese office may have a set. A Land Registry search might also identify any covenants that may restrict future use of the land.
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| St. Michaels and All Angels - the future..? |
The church is not short of money. The Church of England's endowment fund alone generated a 10.3% return of a staggering £1.1 billion in 2024, while the total value of the fund grew to £11.1 billion. The income for the Church of England is much larger, encompassing parish income, investments and other contributions. Sure, the church want to divert resources to churches in poorer or deprived areas and that's just fine. Cuxton wouldn't be classed as 'poor' or 'deprived'.
But the C of E are far from impoverished. They could easily support its loyal little churches like Cuxton as well as doing all of its trendy evangelical-seeming stuff. One hopes that the ecclesiastical powers-that-be will try and reinvigorate the parish with a new appointment in a bid to increase congregation sizes and local community involvement in our two churches, instead of running or shutting either of them down.
The Rochester diocese have given very little time for the PCCs of Cuxton and Halling to respond. In a letter dated 23rd September (but not received and issued by the PCC until much later than that) the Bishop states that "notice of any objection should be sent to the Secretary to the Diocesan Parsonages Board at the Diocesan Office, St. Nicholas Church, Boley, Rochester ME1 by Friday 2 October 2025.)"
The Secretary's e-mail address is Matthew.Girt@rochester.anglican.org
My own personal views are as follow:
- I don't want to see the Rectory put up for sale until a new Rector for the benefice has been identified. This would give the community confidence that the diocese weren't just planning to 'cut and run', either by closing one or both of our community churches, or by merging our parish with another.
- despite being deprived of a diocesan priest since the enforced retirement of the last Rector, the hard-working and dedicated PCCs of both Halling and Cuxton have nevertheless managed to ensure that the existing programme of services and Holy Communion have been maintained for the benefit of their parishioners. This demonstrates the strength of commitment of the local community to its local churches.
- the churches of St. Johns at Halling and St. Michaels at Cuxton are still greatly loved by their local communities, even if this is perhaps not always reflected in service attendance. Local PCC-organised events, group activities and concerts are always well supported at both churches. The appointment of a new and suitable Rector would undoubtedly serve to reinvigorate the combined parish of Cuxton and Halling, to the great benefit of both the local community and the diocese.
I wouldn't call myself particularly religious, but the Sunday services (particularly at Cuxton, with church bells quite often rang before the service and a talented church choir singing hymns to the accompaniment of a magnificent Victorian church organ - played by an equally talented organist) really are a thing of both tradition and beauty. It feels that we are in danger of losing all that.
Without our beautiful and historic little churches of St. Michaels and St. Johns to remind us of our past, Cuxton and Halling will become just another couple of dull, soulless North Kent conurbations.
References:
2) Church magazines and vestry/PCC records, Medway Archives Centre.
3) "FindMyPast" online newspaper archives.
4) Emily Clare Harvey's scrapbook, from which I took both the watercolour of the Rectory and the photo-collage depicting Rector Robert William Shaw, was bought by an American foundation in 1998. Fortunately, it is one seemingly possessing a very enlightened and generous nature. They have placed the whole thing on the internet in "the public domain" (i.e. free of copyright) for everyone to enjoy, along with some informative notes. The link is here.






