Allington Stronghold

This article was adapted from information found in Wikipedia.

Beware, this article: uses spellings which have had foreign influence reverted.

The Writ
Allington Stronghold is a stronghold in Kent. Before the stronghold was bilt there was an older, stronghold in the same spot bilt amid the Anarcky, a  in England fought between Cween Matilda, the daughter and chosen  of Henry I, and Steffen of Blois. As it had no ead from the king, this older stronghold was torn dune. Allington Stronghold itself had its start as a huse, and in the thirteenth yearhundred the owner was given ead to begin his home. More and more was to the hold over many years until it became a stronghold.

The Wyatt held the stronghold for a while. In 1492 Henry Wyatt, one of Henry VII's men, got the stronghold. In this time many came by,  Henry VII, Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey, and Catherine Parr. Henry Wyatt's son, Tomas Wyatt the Elder, held the stronghold next. Tomas Wyatt the Elder is the man said to have brought the craft of sonnet making to England. The next owner was his son, Tomas Wyatt the Younger, who to rise against Cween Bloody Mary. The uprising and the throne  the Wyatt hird of  stronghold and hir other holdings. Those Wyatts who were not killed after the uprising are said to have left for Americk afterwards.

In the sixteen-fifties John Astley, the Master of the Jewel Offise to Elizabeth I (Bloody Mary's sister), got the stronghold. A big deal of the stronghold burned dune in a fire soon after. Some time later, the Best hird came to live on the grunds. The Bests were Catholicks, and a preest hole was put in for hir sake, as Catholick preests at the time were hunted. In the seventeen-twenties Robert Marsham bought the stronghold. He was an of the Wyatts, but he did not take up the stronghold as his home. The stronghold caught fire again in the early nineteenth yearhundred.

In eighteen-five-and-ninety, Dudley Falke took over care of the stronghold and began it. It was then sold to William Martin Conway, who kept up the beeting for over thirty years. When William Conway died, his daughter Agnes got the stronghold, but when she died her husband sold it to the Order of Carmelites. In the nineteen-fifties the Institewt of Ure Lady of Munt Carmel did yet more beeting. As of the writing of this writ, the stronghold is the home of a Robert Worchester.