Birchington
Heritage Trust Image Gallery
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As early as 1203 there was a place called “Scottestone” in the area now associated with Birchington Hall. The oldest picture we have of the building, at the present moment is dated 1800. It is labeled simply “The Old House”, with additional wording stating, “now Birchington Place, before the alterations”. The painting shows an imposing house with a similar appearance to many of the old Court Houses of the 15th and 16th century. There are some even earlier examples of these Court Houses in England, but the Birchington one probably dates from about 1560, according to the opinion of three experts.
The
FRIEND family held the land for several generations.

All this
while, the house appears to have remained in
its imposing but fairly compact state which we see by the end of the
1700s. Various
members of the Friend
family inherited it during this century, including another George
Friend, John
Friend and George Taddy Friend. At
one
stage, the Friend family paid nearly half the rates levied in the
parish – £616
out of £1,299. Between
1740 and 1792
the estate was enlarged to about 148 acres and by this time is clearly
called
“Birchington Place”.
On the 1840 Tithe
Map, the house was in the occupation and ownership of John Friend Esq,
sometimes known as John ’Birchington’ Friend, to
differentiate him from his
relatives, John ‘Brooksend’ Friend and John
‘Taddy’ Friend. The house was still
called ‘Place’ until it was sold in 1852, when it
was renamed “Birchington
Hall”. On
the back of the 1800 painting
of the house, the Friend Coat of Arms has been pasted.