BIRCH
THE parish of Birch, (fn. 49) about 5 miles south-west
of Colchester, which covered 3,105 a. (1,257 ha.)
in 1801, comprises the adjacent ancient parishes
of Great and Little Birch which were adminis-
tered together for civil purposes from the 18th
century or earlier. (fn. 50) Birch extended about three
miles from east to west and was a very irregular
shape with detached parts, its boundary frequently crossing fields, and coinciding with
natural features only on part of its east side
where it followed Roman river. In 1610 the
rector of Great Birch claimed tithes on Newards
(Nevards) farm in Layer-de-la-Haye, 60 a. of
land of Little Birch Hall estate, c. 8 a. in Messing
once part of Cantfields (or Canfields), c. 5 a. in
Layer-de-la-Haye park, and c. 5 a. of Easthorpe
glebe. (fn. 51) There was a dispute in 1684 over
whether a ½-a. field called Chippetts garden
belonged to Great or Little Birch. (fn. 52) In 1758 in
another dispute it was decided that 60 a. of
Newards farm still belonged to Birch but that
other lands belonged to Layer-de-la-Haye.
From 1756 Copford claimed land along its
shared border with Birch, and an arbitrator
adjudicated in 1818. (fn. 53) Birch's boundaries were
rationalized in 1888 when two detached parts in
the north-west were transferred to Easthorpe
and another detached part in the south was
added to Layer-de-la-Haye, and small areas
from Messing, Easthorpe, and Copford were
added to Birch; and in 1889 when Canfields
Farm from Easthorpe and detached parts of
Copford were transferred to Birch. That in-
creased the area of Birch to 3,401 a. (1,376 ha.). (fn. 54)
Birch was always an agricultural parish. Its
western half lies on a plateau of boulder clay
30-40 m. high and the eastern half on sand and
gravel which drops to below 20 m. at Roman
river. (fn. 55) The place-name Birch, formerly Brich,
is probably derived from the Old English
'bryce', meaning breaking, in the sense of newly
cultivated land, indicating that the parish was a
series of woodland clearings, further suggested
by the existence of greens like Birch, Hardy's,
Dawsons, Porters, Sandford Hall, Pudding, and
Craxe's greens. (fn. 56)
The Colchester-Maldon road crosses the
parish running south-westwards. Other minor
roads and footpaths connect the houses and
farms. In 1623 the roads from Messing Hall to
Sandford Hall green were in a dangerous condition. Little Birch bridge, presumably over the
stream east of Birch Hall, the responsibility of
the lord of Birch Hall manor, needed repair in
1615. (fn. 57)
By 1848 there was post from Colchester daily,
and by 1863 a post office. In 1863 there was one
carrier to Colchester four times a week, and by
1886 three on four days a week. In 1917 only
one carrier remained and by 1929 none. (fn. 58) There
were motor omnibus services from 1914 to
Colchester and Kelvedon. (fn. 59) Water was obtained
from wells or springs, but for some people in
1884 the supply was poor and had to be carried
a distance. (fn. 60) In 1920-1 wells and cesspits were
provided for new council houses. In 1930 the
South Essex Waterworks Co. supplied water to
the C. G. Round Trust's Birch estate and c. 1936
the Colne and Stour Valley water supply scheme
was extended to Birch. Electricity was supplied
from 1933. (fn. 61) Mains drainage was provided in the
1960s. (fn. 62) There was a resident police officer in
the later 20th century.
Cropmarks may indicate prehistoric settle-
ment, including a possible long barrow west of
Hellens. (fn. 63) Neolithic flints were found at Birch
Park and Birch Green, and there were Roman
finds near Little Birch church, and north of
Whitehouse Farm, at Birch school, and at Birch
castle. (fn. 64) The site of a possible Roman villa was
discovered in 1998 at the former gravel pit,
Maldon Road. (fn. 65)
In Great Birch between 1066 and 1086 the
recorded total of free and unfree tenants and
servi rose from 25 to 28, and in Little Birch
decreased from 18 to 17. (fn. 66) In 1377 most of the
198 people in Birch and Easthorpe who paid
the poll tax, presumably lived in Birch. (fn. 67) The
number of burials in Birch was higher than usual
in 1637, 1678, and 1720. There were 63 house-
holds in 1671, of which 22 were exempt from
the hearth tax. (fn. 68) In 1723 there were reportedly
61 families, and in 1766 c. 40 dwellings. (fn. 69)
Between 1733 and 1800 baptisms usually
exceeded burials each year. (fn. 70) Between 1801 and
1851 the population increased from 560 to 962,
then declined to 749 in 1901. Of the people
counted in 1851 most had been born nearby in
Essex, a few in Suffolk or London, and a very
few from further away in England. Boundary
changes from 1888 affected recorded population
totals. In the period 1901-71 the population
fluctuated between 636 and 772, and in 1991 it
was 845. (fn. 71)
In the Middle Ages there were scattered farms
and cottages, and probably a very small settle-
ment around Great Birch church and the
Gernon family's Birch castle. (fn. 72) The lord of the
manor had a deer park, probably the Heckford
park recorded in 1276. (fn. 73) In the early 17th cent-
ury most of the poor people lived near the
church. Archery butts stood on an unidentified
piece of church land. (fn. 74) Little Birch church and
Birch Hall were about half a mile north-east of
Great Birch church. (fn. 75) Several place-names may
indicate medieval habitation: for example, John
Chemin recorded in 1293, Robert Helyoun in
1275, and Robert de Winterford recorded in
1276 may have been associated with the sites of
the farmhouses called Shemmings (formerly
Claypit Farm), Hellens (formerly Scotts), and
Winterfloods; (fn. 76) a holding called Garlands was
recorded in 1427. (fn. 77)

Figure 7:
Birch 1876
By the 17th century or earlier there were also
a few houses at Heckford bridge and at Birch
Street. (fn. 78) In the 18th century and the 19th pieces
of waste along the roads and on the edges of
heathland were inclosed and some new cottages
were built. For example, in 1810 manorial waste
totalling 15 a. at Pudding, Birch, Wadley, and
Sandford greens, and roadside waste in the
centre of the parish were inclosed. (fn. 79)
From the 18th century members of the Round
family of Birch Hall, who had social contacts in
Essex, London, and Oxford, took an active part
in public life and had great influence on the
social and economic life of Birch. The Evan-
gelical and paternalistic Charles Gray Round
(1797-1867) and his wife Emma (1819-92) pro-
moted religion and education in the parish, were
diligent in charitable works, and provided some
housing for estate workers. (fn. 80) Nevertheless in
1884 the houses of many of the agricultural
labourers were poor and overcrowded. (fn. 81) In the
later 19th century there was a working men's
club, for which a reading room at Birch Street
was built in 1890, financed by public subscription. The building was demolished in the 1960s
but the club continued until 1970. Birch Social
Club existed in the 1970s. (fn. 82)
In the 20th century more houses were built
and in 1921 a hall was erected c. 100 m. south
of the church as a war memorial. (fn. 83) Birch had a
choral society which won a choir competition in
1914, (fn. 84) and Birch Farmers' Club held annual
shows with competitions and prizes. (fn. 85) A branch
of the Women's Institute was started in 1918. (fn. 86)
A pensioners' club was formed in 1967. There
was a doctor's surgery from c. 1984. (fn. 87) In 1999 a
general store with post office survived.
There was an alehouse in the 'main', presumably Maldon, road where in 1614 the landlord
failed to accommodate travellers who arrived
late, 'partly because of his lack of ability but
chiefly through nastiness'. (fn. 88) That alehouse may
have been the Angel and Seven Stars, formerly
called the Cock, and later the Angel inn,
recorded in 1733. (fn. 89) About 1750 Birch Friendly
Society met monthly there, and also held an
annual feast and sermon; its rules excluded
payments for illness caused by 'quarrelling,
drunkenness or whoring'. (fn. 90) Two bays at the
north end of the Angel inn, built in the late 17th
or early 18th century, were concealed from the
street in the early 19th century when the building was extended by three bays and given a
rendered five bayed facade with two full height
canted bay windows. Another inn, called the
Victory, existed by 1866. (fn. 91)
Birch airfield south-west of Sandford Hall
Green, built by the U.S. 9th Air Force, was
opened in 1943. Control was passed to the 8th
Air Force and it was used as a base for assault
gliders. (fn. 92) In 1946 it was handed over to the
R.A.F. and closed, and the land reverted to agri-
cultural use. (fn. 93)
DOMESTIC BUILDINGS. No medieval hallhouses survive intact. The earliest fragment
is at Shemmings, where the east cross wing is
late 14th- or early 15th-century and retains
evidence of two service rooms and a smoke blackened centre-purlin roof. (fn. 94) The east end of
Whitehouse Farm incorporates part of a 15th-
century cross wing with two groundfloor
rooms. Gate House Farm, formerly Church
Gate or Birch Gate Farm, lay close to the castle
bailey, and in 1582 was called The Gatehouse
and was said to be divided from John Smythe's
main mansion. (fn. 95) It has a jettied 15th-century
cross wing at its east end. Winterfloods also originated as a hall and cross wing, (fn. 96) and one bay of
an end-in-line hall-house remains at Little Birch
Holt, formerly Little Holts or Holts, recorded
in 1588. (fn. 97)
From the mid 16th to the late 17th century
many hall ranges were entirely rebuilt. Few halls
seem to have been converted by the insertion of
floor and chimney stack though that may have
been done at Whitehouse Farm. There, a chimney stack inserted in the cross passage is shared
between the hall and a large west cross wing,
rebuilt in the late 16th century. At Shemmings
the stack is shared between hall range and west
wing, both of which were rebuilt in the late 16th
or early 17th century; contemporary painting on
the parlour chimneybreast includes a Roman
letter M. (fn. 98) At Gate House Farm, the rebuilt hall
range of two storeys and three bays has a central
brick chimney which divides each floor into two
rooms; a jettied west wing was added, probably
in the late 17th century or the 18th. At Upper
Hill Farm (on Copford Hall manor), which at
least one late medieval cross wing, the hall range
was apparently rebuilt with two tall storeys in
the 17th century. (fn. 99) One or two houses were
newly built with two storeys in the mid to late
16th century, notably Garlands of four bays,
which has a lateral north-west chimney stack,
and the two-bayed west part of Boarded Barn
House, which is presumably associated with the
'bawdes barn' mentioned in 1554 and 1669, and
Beldam's or the Boarded Barn in 1768. (fn. 1) A barn
was attached to its east end later, probably after
1777. (fn. 2) The whole building was converted to
cottages, probably in the 19th century, and has
since been turned into a house. Another 18th-
century barn, which stands by the road, remains
from the former north-east farmyard.

Figure 8:
Architect's drawings for estate cottages at Birch, 1862
Houses built or much remodelled in the 17th
century have lobby plans. Most are quite small,
of three and four bays and, usually, one and a half storeys. They include Wishing Well
Cottage, near Heckford bridge, made Gothick
in the 19th century, Hellens Cottage, and Glebe
Cottage, Pudding Green, and there are other
single examples in School Hill and at Birch
Street and Hollington Row. Little Birch Holt
seems to have been partly rebuilt as a lobby-
entry house at that period.
Building in brick seems to have been well
established by the end of the 18th century. In
1781 the blacksmith's new house near Heckford
bridge was built of brick, timber, and tile. (fn. 3) In
the 18th century and early 19th at least three
two-storeyed, sash-windowed brick farmhouses
of three bays were built: Conduit Farmhouse,
south-east of Birch Hall, the house at Birch
Street called The Surgery in 1999, and White-
croft, Mill Lane. Of similar design but timber-
framed and weatherboarded are White House,
Mill Lane, and the range added to the front of
Heath Farm, Orpens Hill, before 1750. (fn. 4) Hellens,
first mentioned as a messuage or tenement in
1599, (fn. 5) has a plastered, timber-framed front
range of five bays. Houses of villa type are rare,
most prominent being the early 19th-century
Curate's Cottage, off Rectory Lane, in a large
park-like garden. The 18th-century one an a half storeyed building in School Hill, known as
Church Cottages, was built as the workhouse
and had two large rooms flanked by two small
ones on each floor. (fn. 6) Converted into cottages in
the mid 19th century, when dormers and
porches were added, the four houses were
reduced to two c. 1980. Alterations were also
made at Shemmings, where the hall range was
raised and a flue was added in the late 18th or
early 19th century and an east wing was built
slightly later; at Little Birch Holt, which was
raised to two storeys with the central chimney
stack replaced by a staircase; and at Gate House
Farm, where in 1866 Joseph Grimes, a Col-
chester builder, partly demolished the chimney
and diverted the flues to serve rooms flanking a
new central hall. The facade was probably also
remodelled about that time. Garlands was
enlarged in 1855, the work probably including
the brick block west of the 16th-century range,
which was recased in gault brick after c. 1843. (fn. 7)
The whole house had been plastered by 1981. (fn. 8)
Pairs of 19th-century weatherboarded cottages
stand at Birch Green, together with some redbrick detached villas.
The Round family greatly influenced the
appearance of the parish by rebuilding Birch
Hall, the school, St. Peter's church, a new rectory house, (fn. 9) and by adding some distinctive new
houses. Home Farm, and Orchard Cottage
opposite it, are in High Victorian domestic
revival style with tall ornamented chimney
stacks. Such stacks, together with carved barge-
boards and triangular bay windows, are also
found at the singlestoreyed Lukes Farm and apair of estate cottages at Heath Farm. The ter-
race of redbrick cottages with haltimbered
centre on the Maldon Road is different in style.
Designed for C. G. Round by F. Chancellor
c. 1860, (fn. 10) it resembles a pair near the church,
converted into the Dower House c. 1952. (fn. 11)
Plainer, but presumably built by the Rounds,
are Creffeild Cottages at Birch Street, which
bear the same lion-with-axe emblem as the
Maldon Road cottages and have been much
altered. The emblem also appears on a plain
cottage called the Beehive. The red-brick late
19th- or early 20th-century villa on part of the
site of Birch castle may also have been built by
the Rounds. (fn. 12)
Some of the houses of the period 1918-39
were built by Lexden and Winstree rural district
council. Cottage-style council houses, rendered
and with gambrel roofs, appeared at Birch
Street, where there are six pairs. (fn. 13) Council
houses built after 1945 are also semidetached
but very plain, the majority being the Greenfield
houses at Birch Green. There are also five pairs
of concrete construction, some later clad in
brick, and two pairs of brick bungalows for the
elderly at Hardy's Green, where in 1876 there
were only three or four houses. (fn. 14) There are also
post-1945 brick-built estate workers' houses at
Hardy's Green, and near the east lodge to Birch
Hall. The largest group of speculatively-built
houses is off Mill Lane, where there is a close
of small 1960s detached houses in Birch Way, a
small estate of terraced houses in Luard Way of
1970-1, and two or three red-brick houses of
the 1990s. Otherwise private houses have developed piecemeal. (fn. 15) Among the larger private
houses is Sandford Hall, which was a small red
brick cottage extended c. 1990. (fn. 16) In 1993 Birch
village was designated a conservation area. (fn. 17)