Nearby are, or were, Bramling Bottom, Bramling Downs, and Bramlingcourt Farm.[1]Bramling House, described as a fine example of Elizabethan architecture,[2] was the seat of the Wood Family,[3] whose scion, Thomas Philpott Wood also established Bramling House in Chesterfield.[3] Bramling House and Bramlincourt Farm are in the Bramling conservation area.[4]
History
Bramling is mentioned in the Pipe Rolls of Henry IIIc. 1220, in reference to one Ralph of Bramling, Kent.[5]
References
^Great Britain. Ordnance Survey (1873). Book of Reference to the Plan of the Parish of Fairfield. Eyre and Spottiswoode. p. 23.
^Sir Charles Igglesden (1900). A Saunter Through Kent with Pen and Pencil. Kentish Express. p. 66.