Sackville College

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StatusGrade I listed
TypeAlmshouse
Architectural styleJacobean
LocationEast Grinstead, United Kingdom
Sackville College
Sackville College from the High street
Interactive map of the Sackville College area
General information
StatusGrade I listed
TypeAlmshouse
Architectural styleJacobean
LocationEast Grinstead, United Kingdom
Coordinates51°07′29″N 0°00′15″W / 51.1246°N 0.0041°W / 51.1246; -0.0041
Opened1609
Cost£1,000
Technical details
MaterialSandstone
Website
Official site

Sackville College is a Jacobean almshouse in the town of East Grinstead, West Sussex, England.

It was founded in 1609 with money left by Robert Sackville, 2nd Earl of Dorset. Throughout its history it has provided sheltered accommodation for the elderly.

Robert Sackville left £1,000 for the building and a rent charge of £330, for the endowment of a 'hospital or college' for twenty-one poor men and ten poor women, to be under the patronage and government of his heirs. This may have been an imitation of Emanuel College, Westminster, founded by his aunt, Anne Fiennes, Lady Dacre. The building of the almshouse known as 'Sackville College for the Poor' at East Grinstead was commenced about 1616 by the executors, his brother-in-law, Lord William Howard, and Sir George Rivers of Chafford. It was occupied before 1622.[1]

Most of the Sackville lands were soon alienated by the founder's son, and the buyers refused to acknowledge the estate's liability to the college. On 6 July 1631 the poor inmates received a charter of incorporation, but their revenues were still irregularly paid. But in 1700, after long litigation, a reduced rent charge was imposed on the Sackville estates on behalf of the college, and the number of inmates reduced to twelve, with a warden. The college buildings were restored in the nineteenth century by the Countess Amherst and the Countess De la Warr.[1]

Present charity

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