The "Blacksmith's Arms" was built during the reign
of Charles I (1625 - 1649) in the year 1628. The property at this stage is
described as a farm dwelling with stables. The earliest recorded occupant is
one Nathaniel Myndecote, a farmer and blacksmith of the parish of Apuldrefield,
a title by which that area of Cudham was then known. Myndecote purchased the
property in 1638.
A sale inventory of 1669 describes the property
thus:- One messuage, four acres of arable land, one wooded parcel of land, one
forge anvil and tack, two mares one in foal and at this date was purchased by
one Henry Springett Lockyer, a blacksmith of the parish of Knockholt, who on
his deathbed in 1703 bequeathed the property, then described solely as a
blacksmith's forge and dwelling, to his wife Naomi, also recorded as a
blacksmith.
Naomi Lockyer's maiden name was Ward, and in 1729
the property was purchased by one Marcus Ward, a beer retailer and blacksmith
of the parish. The Ward family had for many years owned a registered ale house
situated near the forge, known as the Anvil and later the Blacksmith's Arms,
which was badly damaged by fire and demolished in 1721. On October the 10th
1729, an ale and cider licence was granted to a Marcus Ward, and in 1730, the
sign of the "Blacksmith's Arms" was hung on the present site.
For many years, Marcus Ward continued his trade as a
blacksmith, while his wife Eleanor ran the Inn. After his death in 1781,
Eleanor Ward sold the property to one Henry George Wilson, an Innkeeper of
Bromley for 100 guineas. In 1829, the Inn once again was in the hands of the
Ward family when it was purchased by one Jonathan Ward, grandson of Marcus
Ward.
In 1865, the "Blacksmith's Arms" was purchased by
one Richard Relph. Relph's wife bore him fifteen children, one of whom, born at
the Inn in 1868, named Harry went on to become famous as the legendary music
stall star "Little Titch" (1868-1928).
In 1878, Richard Relph sold the Inn to one Charles
Watson, town crier of Bromley. Watson was for many years a crier and
post-master of the village and parish of Cudham, and the "Blacksmith's Arms" a
posting house where the mail was left for Watson to distribute.
The "Blacksmith's Arms" has seen and undergone many
changes since it was first built, but its historic atmosphere and character
remains unchanged. So come and enjoy the fayre and reflect on those bygone
days.