Prehistory A recent excavation has shown that man made use of Chidham more than 4,000 years ago. The flint scrapers discovered on the site on the western shore of the peninsula, seem to suggest that spear shafts or kiddles (
fish traps) and primitive
salterns were being made here.
Saxon, Norman and medieval The village's name, first recorded as
Chedeham in 1193, is derived from the
Old English words
cēod(e), meaning "bay", and
hām, "homestead", or
hamm, "peninsula". The present flint and rubble church, St. Mary's, dates from the 13th century, and may have had a wooden predecessor. The peninsula is not mentioned in the
Domesday Book because it was part of the
Manor or Chapelry of Bosham, rich in farming land and then belonging to the
Bishop of Exeter.
17th century Close to the church of St. Mary is the
manor house, a large late 17th century building, now
Grade II listed. The manor house has had recent work done with permission from the council.
19th century Facing the church, on its south side, is a large early 19th century vicarage known as the
'Old Rectory', now a private house. The men of Chidham seem to have been farmers rather than fishermen or sailors, probably due to the good quality of the soil. In 1812 an embankment wall was built from Chidham to Bosham, where use was made of an old quay. Writing of Bosham in the 1860s Charles Longcroft described how the newly enclosed land was ploughed and planted with corn. 'But one November, there came a raging tide and a gale wind, from the southwest and away went the embankment..'. In 1825 the sea returned, covering the farmland and inundating new buildings. One of these is said to have been a mansion, standing at Cutmill whose stone was afterwards used to build Cutmill Cottage. Chidham parish in the 1860s extended to and had a population of 310.
20th century During the
Second World War bombs were recorded as having fallen within the parish of Chidham. On the night of 8 October 1940 the vicarage, now the Old Rectory, was damaged by an incendiary and a torpedo bomber, carrying a crew of four, crashed close to the church. While the fire in the vicarage was quickly extinguished by the local volunteer fire service, the aeroplane proved a much greater hazard. On the night of 25–26 April 1941, when there was a raid on
Portsmouth, seven high explosive bombs fell near Manor Farm. ==Today==