Skip to main content
Service phase: Beta

This is a new way to search our records, which we're still working on. Alternatively you can search our existing catalogue, Discovery.

Fonds

Allington, St Nicholas Parish Records 2

Catalogue reference: P6

What’s it about?

This record is about the Allington, St Nicholas Parish Records 2.

Access information is unavailable

Sorry, information for accessing this record is currently unavailable online. Please try again later.

Full description and record details

Reference
P6
Title
Allington, St Nicholas Parish Records 2
Description

Contains records for both St. Laurence and St. Nicholas, Allington, Kent

Held by
Kent History and Library Centre
Former department reference
CKS-P6
Language
English
Creator(s)
<corpname>Church of England, Allington St Nicholas Parish, Kent</corpname>
Administrative / biographical background

The parish is one of the oldest administrative units of local government in the country, although over the centuries, its role and scope has changed considerably, so that today it is generally associated, and solely responsible, for ecclesiastical affairs. The origin of the parish is uncertain, although it emerged somewhere between the tenth and eleventh centuries out of the manorial system, when the lord of the manor would erect a church for himself and his tenants. Until the early nineteenth century, when many new parishes were created, there were approximately 11,000 in England and Wales. In the Middle Ages, the parish landowners paid tithes to the incumbent for his support and to help with the upkeep of the parish church and, in turn, he farmed the glebe land to add to this income. The parish was administered by a council known as the Vestry and officials such as the churchwarden. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the parish also became responsible for overseeing the care of the poor and the repair of highways, although these secular duties subsequently became the responsibility of local government in the nineteenth century. Parishes were not required to keep any records until 1538 and it is from this date that one can gain a greater understanding of the scope of the role that the parish had in the community. However, for various reasons, the extent of survival for these records can vary considerably from parish to parish. St. Laurence was the first parish church in Allington, consecrated in 1132. In 1969, due to the need for extensive repairs it was declared redundant, sold and converted to a private residence. St. Nicholas, which had been built in 1937 as a church hall and chapel of ease for the parish of St. Peter, Maidstone, had a new church built next to it in 1975 and this became the parish church for Allington after the closure of St. Laurence.

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/14260942-64c7-4ecc-8f3a-4561917c246e/

Catalogue hierarchy

236,709 records

This record is held at Kent History and Library Centre

You are currently looking at the fonds: P6

Allington, St Nicholas Parish Records 2