Tower late C12 in origin.
Chancel rebuilt in the C14.
S aisle and S chapel early C16.
Probably C16 N vestry.
W porch of 1637.
The W porch is dated 1637 and has a pair of panelled outer doors.
The N and W walls of the nave are C11, possibly pre-Conquest, and retain early quoins
The two N windows are C14, and are of two lights in two different patterns.
The chancel is also C14, and has an excellent, and very large, E window of five lights, renewed c.1854, with Decorated tracery and a blocked N window similar to one in the nave.
The S aisle and S chapel have C16 windows with cusped lights under depressed heads with hood moulds, and there is a C16 S door in the aisle, also with a depressed head and hood mould.
INTERIOR The three-bay S arcade, which replaces a timber arcade, of 1863 by G E Street, in a C13 style with round piers with moulded capitals and arches of two, chamfered orders.
Probably of the late C12, it is pointed and has two orders towards the nave.
PRINCIPAL FIXTURES The monuments are particularly notable.
Excellent early C16 Easter Sepulchre-style tomb in the chancel N wall, with a damaged panelled tomb chest and above it a recess with panelled vaulting and a canopy with a brattished cornice.
Also in the chancel a group of monuments to members of the Polhill family, including David Polhill, d.1754, by Cheere, a fine bust on a scrolly pedestal with an obelisk behind.
1755, very large monument, also by Cheere, with a full length standing figure in a toga leaning on an urn and below him, two reading female figures.
1805, by J Bacon, Jnr, a hanging monument with a portrait profile and a willow tree over an urn.
Good collection of hatchments.
Glass: two small C17 panels in the E window, including the arms of Lennard, and two S aisle windows by Hardman c.1868.
HISTORY There was Bronze and Iron age settlement in Otford, and Roman remains have also been found.
The Archbishops of Canterbury held Otford from as early as the late C9, and the archiepiscopal palace there was rebuilt by Archbishop Warnham in the early C16 in magnificent style, but it is unclear if this was in any way related to the rebuilding of the S aisle and chapel of the church at much the same time.
Otford church was a chapel of nearby Shoreham, and the earliest fabric in the church is the C11 N wall.
The tower was probably added in the late C12.
The chancel was rebuilt in the C14 and the nave provided with new windows.
The S aisle and S chapel are early C16, and were referred to as 'the newe ile' in a will of 1532.
The tower is unusually short, and photographs of it with some of the render removed show that the SW corner, at least, is brick, and it is possible that this is a C17 repair.
The low door to the tower may also be a C17 reworking using older materials.
SOURCES Lambeth Palace Library ICBS 06082, 11938 Buildings of England: West Kent and the Weald , 427-8 Lewis, S. A Topographical Dictionary of England REASONS FOR DESIGNATION The church of St Bartholomew, Otford, is designated at Grade I for the following principal reasons: * Parish church, with C11 nave.
Church restored, S arcades and chancel arch rebuilt 1863 to designs by G E Street. * Excellent C16 Easter Sepulchre tomb.
Two monuments by Cheere, to David Polhill, d.1754 and Charles Polhill, d.