The earliest surviving record of Buckland is the
Domesday Book of 1086, in which it appears as
Bochelant. The settlement is recorded as
Boclande in 1225,
Boclond in 1225,
Bukelonde in 1293 and
Bukkelond in 1448. The name is generally agreed to mean "land held by book or charter". The earliest evidence of human activity in the village is a flint axe fragment from the
Neolithic. A side-looped spearhead from the Middle
Bronze Age, dated to
BCE, was found by workmen in 1907. In 1086, the manor was held by John, a lesser tenant of Richard of
Tonbridge. Buckland had a church,
watermill and thirty-five heads of household. Of these, seventeen farmed the land owned by the feudal lord, and ten were
serfs. The village church of St Mary the Virgin was built in 1380. It is a Grade II
listed building. The church was rebuilt in 1859-60, under the supervision of the architect,
Henry Woodyer. A new, wider chancel arch was constructed and a new organ chamber and vestry added on the north side. Some of the timbers removed during Woodyer's work, may have been reused in the construction of
Buckland Windmill, also Grade II listed, and now a tourist focal point. The barn on The Green dates from the early 17th century. The timber-framed structure, which was restored in the 20th century, has a tower at the south end, topped by a weathervane. The barn was used as a temporary church during the Woodyer reconstruction work and was converted to a private house in the early 1980s. The first school in Buckland, a
National school, was founded in 1822. Its replacement, designed by Woodyer, opened in 1862. It closed in 1981 and the building is now a private house.
Local legend Buckland is also the location of the source of the Shag Brook, a tributary of the
River Mole. Local legend says the brook was the home of a monstrous horse (in some versions a gorilla), called the "Buckland Shag". This beast would drag travellers from the nearby coaching road and devour them on the Shag Stone, a large boulder in the brook with a blood red vein of iron ore running through it. The monster was
exorcised by the local parson, Willoughby Bertie, and the stone was removed from the brook . The legend of the Buckland Shag was revived in 1986 by a local
morris side, The Buckland Shag Morris Men. ==Amenities==