Programme

Our 2023 programme: 23 Feb: '1926' - our speaker is our Chairman, Martyn Lockwood. 23 Mar: Annual General Meeting. 27 Apr: 'John Ray' - Jennifer Rowland. 25 May: Napoleonic Invasion Plans - Neil Wiffen. 22 Jun: 'Jersey under the Jackboot: the occupation of Jersey during WW2' - Patrick Griggs. 27 Jul: 'The Life and Times of William Byrd (c1540-1623): A Local History' - Andrew Smith. 26 Oct: 'The Prison at Hill Hall' - Anne Padfield. 23 Nov: Pre-Christmas meeting. Talk to be confirmed. Admission: Members £1, Non-members £5 Annual Membership: £15 (Family: £30)

Tuesday 30 December 2014

Theydon Mount Church Quatercentenary

Extract from the Theydon Mount Register in 1611
(Photographed at the Celebration Day when the Essex Record Office kindly lent the original documents)
St Michael’s Church, Theydon Mount commemorated the 400th anniversary of its rebuilding in 2014.  A search through old documents held at the Essex Record Office reveals some interesting facts.

Theydon Mount was, and still is, a very small parish.  The Parish Register[1] shows that during the period 1603 to 1625 there were 7 marriages and 38 burials, with none at all in some years and particularly between 1611 and 1613.  (Baptisms were more frequent.)  This is a short extract from the baptisms pages of Register:


1611

Jonne [th]e[2] daughter of Richard Smith was baptized [th]e 21 of Aprill A[nn]o sup[ra]dicto[3]

for Two yeeres we had none Christened in o[u]r Church because it

was so long in building after it was burnt

1614

Margaret daughter of Tho Juby Clarke was baptized [th]e first day

of May A[nn]o sup[ra]dicto
The note in the Register suggests that the old building may have been of wooden construction, but fire can damage stonework and mortar too.  The new church, as we know, is built of brick and must have reopened either on or before 1 May 1614 when Thomas Juby’s daughter was baptised.  Thomas Juby was the clerk or rector of the parish.

Ten Wills survive in the Essex Record Office for Theydon Mount during the reign of King James I.[4]

Did any of them mention anything about the church rebuilding between 1611 and 1614?

The answer is ‘yes’.

Thomas Bredge devised the following Will[5]:

1
Bredge.  Anno domini[6] one Thousand six hundred
2
and twelve dated the Seaven and twentith[7]
3
of Aprill.
4
In the name of god Amen. I Thomas Bredge of Theydon-
5
Mounte in the Countie of Essex.  First I bequeath my soule
6
to Almyghtie God my creator and to Jesus Christ my
7
redeemer and to the holieghos my santifier  As for my
8
bodie I bequeath to the Earth from whence it came. And
9
to be buried in the churchyard of Theydon Garnone[8]
10
aforesaid[9].  I give to the poore of Theydon Mounte
11
ten shillings to be disposed accordinge to the discrecon[10] of
12
my Executors.  Item I give to the rep[ar]acon of Theydon
13
mounte Church ten shillings.  Item I give and bequeath to
14
my sonne James twentie pounde to be paid when he
15
shall come to the full age of one and twentie yeares
16
Item I give and bequeath unto my eldest daughter
17
Margaret Bredge thirteene pounde six shillings and
18
eight pence[11] To be paid when she shall come to the
19
full age of eighteene yeares.  Item I giue to my
20
daughter Anne Bridge[12] thirteen pound six shillings
21
eight pence to be paid when shee shall come to the
22
full age of Eighteene yeares. Item I giue to my
23
daughter Elizabeth xiiiLi[bor] vis viiid[13] to be paid when
24
she shall come to the full age of eighteene yeares
25
If it happen that any of theis my children should
26
die before theie come to age Then my will is that
27
theire porcion should be devided amonge the rest
28
of my children.  Item if it happen that my wife to be w[i]th
29
childe at the time of my decease my mynd and will
30
is that it should have xiiiLi[bor] vis viijd at the end of
31
eighteene yeares.  Item I give and bequeath to Agnes
32
my wif all the rest of my moveable goodes w[hi]ch is unbequeathed
33
whom I make my full and whole Executor of this
34
my last will and Testament. The marke  Item I make
35
my brother Robert and my brother Richard my
36
overseers of this my last will and Testament.  The
37
marke of Thomas Bredge, Richard Maynard, William
38
Kobinet, Edward Aylett. The marke of Thomas
39
Stevens
40
Probatum …[14]

“Thomas Bridge of Thoidon Mount” was buried at Theydon Garnon on 30 April 1612, the register for that parish reveals[15]

We can estimate Thomas’ age at the time of death as being at most in his mid-30s.  This was quite common.

This will is typical of most.  First the testator leaves his soul to Almighty God then directs where his body is to be buried.  The text is pretty standard.

When this will was written the word ‘aforesaid’ was included in error.  Two parishes are mentioned: Theydon Mount and Theydon Garnon.

So was Theydon Mount an error?  Where did Thomas Bredge live? 

Here the Parish Register for Theydon Mount comes to our rescue because all his four children were baptised there: “Margaret [th]e daughter of Thomas Bridge baptized the first of August 1602”; “James Breages the sonne of Thomas Breages was baptized the 8 of July 1604”; “Ann daughter of Tho Bridge was baptized [th]e 9 of December [1607]”; and, “Elizabeth daughter of Tho Bridges was baptized [th]e 29 of Aprill [1610]”[16].

We can deduce that Thomas Bredge was a Theydon Mount man.  Also, that the writer probably used a template copy to complete the will.  Would we want to commit to memory all those standard words?

Legacies to the poor and to the church follow the instructions for disposal of the body.  In the case of Thomas Bredge he leaves 10 shillings for the repair of Theydon Mount church.  Then the inheritance is divided, often to his children first then his spouse who is often appointed executor to the Will. At the end are the witnesses to the Will.  Many, including Thomas Bredge, are illiterate so sign the document with a squiggle or mark.

One of the most interesting marks I have seen is that of Richard Gladwin of Theydon Mount, a bricklayer, who signs documents with an oblong brick shaped symbol. There are two such documents: his own Will dated 14 December 1624[17] and as a witness to a terrier of glebelands, written by the rector, Thomas Juby, in the parish register on 1 December 1621[18].  Richard Gladwine was a sideman at the church. I wonder whether this bricklayer had some responsibility for rebuilding the church?

Three further testators are not buried at Theydon Mount.  Robert Knoppe, a yeoman, who writes his Will on 1 May 1614, requests “my bodye to be buryed where it shall please my executrix”[19].  We can be confident that the church had reopened by then since the will was written on the very day of the baptism of Thomas Juby’s daughter.  Robert Hill’s undated will of 1612/13 merely bequeaths his body “to the ground”[20].  William Winter’s will of 23 October 1613 requested his body “to be buryed in [th]e church yard of Theydon mount”[21] but this was not carried out.  His widow, Susan Winter, who writes her will on 1 March 1624 (now 1625)[22] bequeathing her body “to [th]e earth from whence it came”[23] neither specifies a place of burial.  I looked at other registers in the locality – Stapleford Abbots does not survive – but could not find their resting places.

On the basis of evidence we can deduce that the church and churchyard reopened sometime between October 1613 and May 1614.



[1] ERO D/P 142/1/1: also available online through ‘Essex Ancestors’ by subscription – with free access at the Essex Record Office in Chelmsford.
[2] Throughout the document a symbol known as the thorn, which looks like a letter ‘y’ is used. It is a contraction for ‘th’. Nowadays we see quaint names such as ‘Ye Olde Royal Oak’.  The word ‘ye’ does not exist. It is ‘the’. In palaeography the thorn is converted to [th].
[3] Anno supradicto is Latin for “the year written above”
[4] These have all now become available to view online through Essex Ancestors.
[5] ERO D/AEW 14/218
[6] Anno domini is Latin for ‘year of our Lord’
[7] It was quite common to write dates in this way. We know the nursery rhyme “four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie” – this number is 24.  Thomas Bredge wrote his will on 27 April 1612. Standardised spelling did not exist.
[8] Immediately recognisable as the neighbouring parish of Theydon Garnon.
[9] ‘aforesaid’ implies a repetition of place name, which is not the case here.
[10] Discretion – very often ‘c’ was substituted for ‘t’ and the letter ‘i’ omitted.
[11] £13.6.8d seems a strange sum of money to leave.  However 13s.4d. was equivalent to one mark.  So, for people who don’t remember old money, £2 is 3 marks. £12 is 18 marks, and because there were 20 shillings to £1, this meant £1.6s.8d. is 26s.8d or 2 marks.  So, the bequest was for 20 marks.
[12] Note a different spelling of the surname.
[13] This is also £13.6s.8d. Pre-decimal money was divided into pounds (libor in Latin), shillings and pence (denari in Latin). In sixteenth and seventeenth century handwriting a horizontal bar in the script represents a contraction of a word, which palaeographers “fill in” by putting letters in square brackets.  The symbol £, with which we are familiar is a capital letter L crossed through.
[14] Probate of the will is written in Latin.
[15] ERO D/P 152/1/1
[16] ERO D/P 142/1/1
[17] ERO D/AEW 17/248
[18] ERO D/P 142/1/1
[19] ERO D/ABW 22/240
[20] ERO D/AEW 14/292
[21] ERO D/AEW 15/22
[22] England adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1752.  Until then the Julian calendar placed New Years’ Day on 25 March.  A will written on 1 March 1624 is occasionally referred to nowadays as 1624/25.
[23] ERO D/AEW 17/296

Thursday 25 December 2014

Christmas in The Trenches

Nick Dobson gave a marvellous talk to the High Country History Group on this topic drawing on original sources by way of illustration. The Christmas truce of 1914 has become a legendry halt in hostilities in what was a war of attrition, killing millions and lasting four and a half years.  Revd. Edward Henry Lisle Reeve, of Stondon Massey, kept notes for a parish history (now preserved in the Essex Record Office).  He gives this account of Christmas Day 1914 on the Western Front.

28th January 1915

“When travelling by train to London from Ongar on Jan 25th I had for a fellow passenger for part of the way a Lancashire man who had returned wounded and frost-bitten from the front, and was now sufficiently convalescent to be going for a short spell to his native county before returning to France.

“His first-hand report of the conditions of things abroad was very interesting.  He had often been for days together standing in water in the trenches, and the plight of the soldiers in the cold, wet, and filth was, he said indescribable.  The Germans were in as bad or worse plight.  During an interval on Christmas-day some of the enemy had approached our trenches and joined in conversation with our men.  One German soldier had given his cigarettes and offered him brandy. 

“In reply to the German invitation to drink with him the British soldier declined, until by way of assuring him took a pull himself at the flask he was offering!  Lancashire shyness was then overcome, and the soldier accepted a draught of the “Cognac” for such it proved to be.  The time was soon over for these pleasantries, and the two dropped back again into their several positions, having apparently no special desire to kill one another, save at the call of duty!  I wished my fellow passenger a safe return to England at the close of war.”


Friday 19 December 2014

Journal No. 54 (December 2014)

Members of the High Country History Group will have received their copy of the Quarterly Journal.  Included in the latest edition are items on:
- Mr Charles Edward Hunter
- Wills to 1720 Online at Essex Ancestors
- Theydon Mount: Quatercentenary
- Ongar Radio Station - North Weald 1939-85 (part 2)
- A tribute to Doris Messinger 1918-2014
- Stanford Rivers and John Stuart, Viscount Mount Stuart
- Richard Beadon, Rector of St Margaret's Stanford Rivers 

Friday 28 November 2014

Imperial War Museum's Library and services are under threat

To quote the leaflet handed out to passers by outside the Imperial War Museum, and confirmed by staff at risk of losing their jobs:

"One hundred years after the outbreak of the First World War, the Imperial War Museum is under threat.

"The Museum is facing an annual deficit of £4m because of cuts in government funding.  It has [had to] drawn up proposals to 
- close its unique library
- cut important education services
- cut 60-80 jobs
- close the popular 'Explore History' facility in London.

"The Museum's library gives ordinary people access to the research materials on all aspects of British and Commonwealth involvement in conflict since 1914.

"Prospect trade union believes the world leading authority on conflict will be irreparably damaged by the £4m deficit.

"It has launched a petition to help ensure that the Imperial War Museum continues to provide for, and encourage, the study and understanding of the history of modern war and 'wartime experience'.

"Please show your support by signing our petition http://bit.ly/save_IWM

Hello there,
I just signed the petition "Rt Hon George Osborne MP: Urgently reverse current and future cuts to the UK Imperial War Museum's annual operating grant in aid so that it can maintain services and preserve its standing as an international centre for study, research and education." and wanted to see if you could help by adding your name.
Our goal is to reach 15,000 signatures and we need more support. You can read more and sign the petition here:
https://www.change.org/p/rt-hon-george-osborne-mp-urgently-reverse-current-and-future-cuts-to-the-uk-imperial-war-museum-s-annual-operating-grant-in-aid-so-that-it-can-maintain-services-and-preserve-its-standing-as-an-international-centre-for-study-research-and-education?recruiter=188695201&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=share_email_responsive
Thanks!
Andrew

PS  This was mentioned at the High Country History Group last night.  The government has cut funding to the Imperial War Museum by £4m which will lead to the closure of its Library, the loss of 80 library and archive related jobs, and perhaps its sale.
Andrew Smith
Secretary
High Country History Group

Monday 24 November 2014

High Country History Group pre-Christmas Meeting: 27 November 2014

The next meeting of the High Country History Group will be next Thursday, 27 November, starting at 8pm, at Toot Hill Village Hall.

Nick Dobson is our speaker and will be talking on ‘Christmas in the Trenches’.

We will also have a book stall.

The December 2014 Journal is ready for members to collect.


And, we will end the evening with a glass of wine and mince pies. 

Tuesday 11 November 2014

The Archaeology of Stansted Airport

Over several decades, and prior to any expansion of Stansted Airport, archaeology has revealed a surprising amount of habitation from the Iron Age forwards. Richard Havis gave an interesting talk to many members of the High Country History Group at its October meeting.

Thursday 30 October 2014

Essex Record Office announces digitisation of Wills pre-1720

Wills to 1720 Online at Essex Ancestors

The Essex Record Office has announced a major update of Wills digitised and available online through Essex Ancestors, its subscription site.  A further 22,500 wills have just been added to the 20,000 previously available to create a complete collection of those archived up to 1720.  Work is in progress to complete the run of Wills up to 1858, thus creating a database of 70,000 records.  For more information follow this link http://www.essexrecordofficeblog.co.uk/where-theres-a-will-major-update-to-essex-ancestors/ and to subscribe go to Essex Ancestors http://seax.essexcc.gov.uk/EssexAncestors.aspx .

Earlier this year I worked on transcriptions of Wills for Theydon Mount during the reign of King James I (1603-25).  Seeing the original documents at the ERO brings a sense of excitement in a way that sitting in the comfort of your home logged onto your laptop does not.  Digitisation widens accessibility to these archives which undeniably will be of enormous benefit to local, social and family historians alike.

Wednesday 1 October 2014

Journal No. 53 (September 2014)

Our quarterly Journal to members has been posted out and naturally has a Great War theme. Items this time include:
- Essex Place Names. A review of the recent talk.
- The Great Fire, Stanford Hall, 22 September 1907
- Cowman to Major: the story of Major James William Joseph Millar, D.S.O., D.C.M.
- James Ford, a Forgotten Essex Antiquity (1779-1850)
- World War One Films: David Welford, our treasurer and film addict, reviews the history of films factual and otherwise relating to the Great War.
- Paganism, early Christianity and Beauchamp Roding church
- Ongar Radio Station: North Weald (Part 1)

Monday 29 September 2014

Theydon Mount: New Church Guide Now Available

To coincide with the 400th anniversary celebrations of the rededication in 1614 of St Michael's Church, Theydon Mount, a new colour Guide has just been published   It is the work of local historian Anne Padfield, with photographs taken by Cindy Russell.  

Anne Padfield was very much the key planner of the weekend's events which included an historical exhibition of the church on Saturday, with the High Country History Group present with a stand, followed in the evening with a presentation in words and music of the life and times of Theydon Mount.  On Sunday the Rt. Revd. Stephen Cottrell, Bishop of Chelmsford, led the service.  All concluded with the cutting of a cake and celebratory drink. 

'St Michael's Church. Theydon Mount. A History and Guide' is available, priced £3.00. 

Tuesday 2 September 2014

St Michael's Church, Theydon Mount. 400th Anniversary Celebrations: 27 & 28 September 2014

ST MICHAEL’S CHURCH, 
THEYDON MOUNT
CM16 7PP



Saturday 27th September, 7.30pm
Doors open 6.30

St Michael’s
Through the Ages


The story of St Michael’s Church from its earliest beginnings, its rebuilding in 1614, and its ups and downs from then until today will be told in a special evening presentation by Anne Padfield, the choir and friends.  The narrative will be interspersed with music and readings.

Ticket includes a glass of wine and refreshments


Tickets £10.00, from Anne Padfield




Programme for 400th Anniversary weekend

Saturday 27th September

11am-4pm ~ Exhibition in the church
(including a display by the
High Country History Group)

Evening presentation ~ St Michael’s Through the Ages
Doors open 6.30pm, presentation begins 7.30pm

Sunday 28th September

10am ~ Celebration service with the Bishop of Chelmsford

For more details, contact Colin Flint ( chigwell999@hotmail.com)
or Anne Padfield ( anne@littletawney.co.uk)

Monday 4 August 2014

Remember

Inscribed on the wall of the
Ongar War Memorial Medical Centre
Tuesday 4 August 1914
11pm
The moment when the Great War began

"The lamps are going out all over Europe, we shall not see them lit again in our life-time"

Lights Out
An hour when a nation remembers

Comyns Owers

An extract from the High Country History Group Journal No. 34 (October 2009).

Whilst at St Margaret’s, Stanford Rivers recently I came across a gravestone in the corner of the churchyard. The inscription read:

In
loving memory
of
Margaret Elizabeth Owers
Who died April 17th 1928
In her 63rd year

Also of
Comyns Owers
Missing in Egypt Nov 25th 1917
Aged 21years

Also Comyns
Husband of the above
Who died Sep 28th 1939
Aged 78 years.

It was the part of the inscription about Comyns Owers, missing in Egypt in 1917, that caught my eye.  Had he died on active service?  His name does not appear on the war memorial in St Margaret’s, but a search on the Commonwealth War Graves site revealed that Comyns Owers was a Private (no. 49346) in the 161st Company of the Machine Gun Corps and died on the 25 November 1917.  He has no known grave and his name is commemorated on the Basra War Memorial in Iraq.[1]

His name appears however on the war memorial at St Mary’s church, High Ongar.

In the 1881 Census a John Owers (born 1832) was described as a Baker and Licensee living at the Green Man Public House Toot Hill.  He was also listed as a Farmer with 10 acres and employing 3 men. He had a son, Comyns Owers (born 1862) who was described in the census as a ‘Bakers Son.’

In the 1891 Census, Comyns Owers is married to Margaret and is living in High Street, Chipping Ongar where he is the Licensee of the Bell Inn.  He has 1 child and employs 3 servants.

In the 1901 Census Comyns and his wife are living at Stanford Rivers, and he is described as a Baker.  They have three more children, including a son, Comyns, born in 1887 in Stanford Rivers and who was to die on active service in 1917.  According to Scott in his history of Stanford Rivers, Comyns remained as the licensee of the Green Man until 1910 or thereabouts.  By 1912 a Mrs Emma Comyns is shown as the Licensee.

Why Comyns Owers name is missing from the war memorial at St Margaret’s is not known.

Martyn Lockwood




[1] The Basra Memorial commemorates more than 40,500 members of the Commonwealth forces who died in the operations in Mesopotamia from the Autumn of 1914 to the end of August 1921 and whose graves are not known.

Ongar War Memorial Medical Centre Roll of Honour

Ongar War Memorial Medical Centre Roll of Honour

The Ongar War Memorial Medical Centre occupies the site of the former Ongar War Memorial Hospital.  The present building, which houses the Ongar Health Centre (the town’s G P Surgery) was opened very recently although the building itself was completed in 2012.

In the Reception area of the Centre is a new Roll of Honour, which was dedicated in May 2012.  I understand that it may be viewed by prior appointment.

The former Ongar War Memorial Hospital was opened as a cottage hospital in August 1933, some 15 years after the end of the First World War.

Inside the former building was a Roll of Honour, now preserved in the Essex Record Office [ERO A10815].

The document contains a list of several men who fell in the district and is arranged by parish.  Those parishes included are: Ongar, Shelley, High Ongar, High Laver, Willingale, Greensted, Kelvedon [Hatch], Stanford Rivers, Stapleford Tawney, Theydon Mount, Stapleford Abbots, Stondon Massey, Lambourne, Fyfield, Berners Roding, Navestock, Moreton, Little Laver, Abbess Roding, Beauchamp Roding, Doddinghurst, Blackmore, Norton Mandeville, and Bobbingworth.

The lists are by far from complete, contain duplications of commemorated names and incorrectly spelt names.  This is probably because records were not carefully checked some years after the close of the Great War. (War Memorials erected later than the immediate years after the conflict are known to contain mistakes e.g. Maldon).



Turning to the exterior of the present building, there is a mural of poppies which include the words:

“At the going down of the sun and in the morning, we will remember them.  When you go home, tell them of us and say for their tomorrow, we gave our today.”


It is a dedication to the people of Ongar who sacrificed their lives in the First World War and subsequent conflicts.