The manor is first recorded in the thirteenth century, when it was held by the de Scathebury family.[2] In 1424 it was purchased by Thomas Walsingham (died 1457)[3] a wealthy wine and cloth merchant in London and a Member of parliament.[4] He married Margaret[5] Bamme, daughter of Henry Bamme, of the City of London, a member of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths.[6] Walsingham added additional land to the estate in 1433.[7]
His son, Thomas Walsingham (1436–1467) married Constance Dryland (died 14 November 1476), a daughter of James Dryland, of Davington, by whom he had a son, James Walsingham (1462 – 10 December 1540). Constance survived him and remarried to John Green, who in 1476 was Sheriff of Kent in right of his wife.[8] James Walsingham married Eleanor Writtle (born before 1465, died after 1540), the daughter and heiress of Walter Writtle of Bobbingworth, Essex,[9] by whom, according to a monumental brass formerly in the church at Scadbury, he had four sons and seven daughters.[8][10] His second son was William Walsingham (died 1534), of Foots Cray in Kent, who was the father of Sir Francis Walsingham, Principal Secretary to Queen Elizabeth I.
Thomas and Dorothy had five sons. The oldest, Guldeford, predeceased his father and the estate had passed to the second son, Edmund, who died in 1589,[11] following which the third son, Sir Thomas Walsingham (died 1630) inherited. He was an MP and was patron of Christopher Marlowe,[12][13] who was known to have been staying at Scadbury just before his violent death in 1593. Sir Thomas' son and heir, also Sir Thomas Walsingham was Vice-Admiral of Kent. He sold Scadbury in 1660.[citation needed]
Many of the Walsingham family's marriages are represented heraldically in stained glass escutcheons dated 1562 now forming the east window of Mereworth Church in Kent.[14]
^Woodger, L.S., biography of Walsingham, Thomas (d.1457), of London, published in History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1386-1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993 [1]