The name Fetcham is derived from the Anglo-Saxon "Fecca's ham" – Fecca's settlement. Fetcham lay within the
Copthorne hundred. Indeed, there is evidence that there were even earlier settlements, with the discovery of Stone and Bronze Age tools and
Roman artefacts, as well as three ancient burial grounds. Fetcham appears in
Domesday Book of 1086 as
Feceham. It was held partly by
William the Conqueror; partly by Richard from the
Bishop of Bayeux partly by Oswald the
Thegn. Its Domesday assets were: 7
hides; 5½
mills worth 17s; 10½
ploughs; 2
oxen; of
meadow;
woodland, herbage and
pannage worth 23
hogs. It rendered £10 10s 0d per year to its
feudal system overlords per year. Fetcham, therefore, was referenced in the
Domesday survey as three manors; one known as King's Manor was probably
Fetcham Park; another was given to
Odo, Bishop of Bayeux after the
Norman conquest. The third was an Augustinian foundation from
Merton Priory, at Cannon Court, which
Henry VIII dissolved in 1538. Its small manorial farming community numbered 176 in the survey, but halved as a result of the
Black Death in 1349. In the first half of the nineteenth century the population was still only around 370. In the 1931 census it had reached 1,318 and by 1972 was 7,331.
St Mary's Church has been a place of Christian worship for over 1000 years. Built during
Anglo-Saxon and early
Norman periods, it is probably on the site of an even earlier timber church. There are many hints of its past in its structure. These include the south-west quoin of the nave, and a single splay window high on the south wall with traces of Roman brick as well as arches that are presumed to pre-date 1066. In 1951 the
civil parish had a population of 4178. On 1 April 1974 the parish was abolished. ==Topography==