The set of four diamond-shaped panels on the wall are 19th-century funerary hatchments.
During the Middle Ages, when a member of the nobility died, his “achievements” (armour, sword and shield displaying his coat of arms) were carried in the funeral procession and laid up in the church in or near the grave. Over the centuries, as battle armour fell out of use, black-framed heraldic paintings were used instead. A custom very common in England from the 17th to the 19th century was to display this board on the house front to give notice of the death to the neighbourhood and to act as a sign of mourning; they would later be moved to the parish church. The word “hatchment” is a corruption of “achievements”.
All these hatchments date from the 1840s; soon afterwards, as modern communications developed, the fashion for displaying them ended.
These hatchments commemorate local people:




The motto Resurgam appears on three hatchments – Latin for “I shall rise again”.