WAKES COLNE
WAKES COLNE (2,058 a. or 833 ha.) lies on the
north bank of the river Colne c. 8 miles west of
Colchester. The ancient parish (1,935 a.) was
bounded by the Colne on part of the south, a
small tributary on much of the west, and the
Cambridge (earlier Jennyes or Loveney Hall) (fn. 69)
brook on part of the north; the eastern boundary
with Fordham followed field boundaries. In the
mid 19th century the parish comprised two main
areas, separated by parts of Mount Bures and
Chappel parishes, and four smaller detached
areas, three (6 a.) in Chappel and one (2 a.) in
White Colne. (fn. 70) Those detachments dated from
the 16th century or earlier. Land in the centre
of the parish, near Wakes Colne green, which
was in Bures Hamlet in 1534 had been incorporated into Wakes Colne by 1838. (fn. 71) Under the
Divided Parishes Act of 1882, a total of 90 a.
formerly in Chappel, 26 a. formerly in Mount
Bures, and 2 a. formerly in White Colne were
transferred to Wakes Colne, and 6 a. formerly
in Wakes Colne was transferred to Chappel. (fn. 72)
Nevertheless Wakes Colne remained an irregular shape, almost split into two by tongues of
Chappel and Mount Bures.

Figure 21:
Wakes Colne c. 1800
Wakes Colne occupies a ridge between the
valleys of the Colne and the Stour. The land
rises from below 23 m. in the Colne valley to a
high point of 71 m. just north of Wakes Colne
green, then slopes steeply to 35 m. in the valley
of the Cambridge brook. The eastern part of the
parish slopes into the valley of a small tributary
of the Colne, then rises to 53 m. near Crepping
Hall. The higher land is boulder clay, but the
Colne, the Cambridge brook, and the brook
near Crepping Hall have all exposed bands of
London clay with Kesgrave sand and gravel in
their valleys. There is a narrow band of alluvium
along the Colne, and a larger patch of sand and
gravel extends from the church to Crepping
Hall. (fn. 73)
The road from Colchester to Cambridge
through Earls Colne and Halstead, turnpiked in
1765, (fn. 74) runs along the southern edge of the
parish. A network of minor roads and tracks,
chief among them that running from Great Tey
to Mount Bures, connects the scattered farmsteads to each other and to Wakes Colne green.
Carriers and a horse-drawn omnibus ran along
the Colchester road from Earls Colne to
Colchester in 1848, presumably stopping in
Wakes Colne. Arthur Hutley started a motor bus
service from Coggeshall to Colchester through
the Colnes c. 1915; by the 1930s Eastern
National and Blackwell & Sons ran an hourly
service. Blackwells was acquired by Hedingham
& District Omnibus in 1965. The Hedingham
and Eastern National services were still running
in 1984. (fn. 75)
The Colchester, Stour Valley, Sudbury, and
Halstead Railway company completed its line
from Marks Tey to Sudbury through Wakes
Colne in 1849, (fn. 76) and the Colne Valley and
Halstead Railway company completed their line
from Chappel station to Halstead in 1860. (fn. 77) The
Sudbury line was still open in 1996; the Halstead
line closed to passenger traffic in 1961 and to
goods traffic in 1965. (fn. 78) Chappel station, actually
in Wakes Colne, was opened in 1849 and rebuilt
in 1891. In 1969, when closure of the line
seemed imminent, the buildings were acquired
by the Stour Valley Railway Preservation
Society which in 1986 became the East Anglian
Railway Museum. In 1996 the Museum owned
the whole site except the track and platform for
the Marks Tey-Sudbury trains. (fn. 79)
A site overlooking the brook on the western
boundary of the parish was occupied from the
Roman to the later medieval period. (fn. 80) By the
10th century Wakes Colne formed part of a
large estate which took its name from the river
Colne, and which belonged to the ealdormen of
Essex. Crepping, presumably a separate estate,
extended into the later parishes of Fordham and
Chappel. Its name contains the element 'ingas',
'followers of', with a lost personal name, and
may date from the early or mid Anglo-Saxon
period. (fn. 81)
In 1086 there was a recorded population of
25, including 3 servi, on Wakes Colne manor,
and 14 on the 4 estates which formed the later
Crepping manor. (fn. 82) In 1349 at least 13 tenants of
Crepping manor had died by summer, presumably of the plague, 6 of them without heirs. (fn. 83)
There were 106 poll-tax payers in Wakes Colne
in 1377, (fn. 84) but the numerous unrepaired or
demolished houses reported in the 15th century
and the early 16th (fn. 85) suggest a declining popu-
lation then. The parish apparently escaped many
of the 17th-century epidemics, but the number
of burials in 1694, 1695, and 1696 was double
the average for the decade. Thirty-two households were assessed for hearth tax in 1671 and
another 24 were exempt, (fn. 86) implying a population
of c. 200, a greater number than that suggested
by the 89 adults reported in 1676. (fn. 87) Smallpox
probably accounted for above average numbers
of deaths in 1712, 1737, and 1738, (fn. 88) but the
population rose fairly steadily throughout the
18th century and the earlier 19th to reach 372
in 1801 and 535 in 1861. It fell to 482 in 1901,
when there was concern at the number of young
men leaving the parish, (fn. 89) then rose to 501 in
1911. The population remained under 500 for
most of the 20th century, falling as low as 435
in 1961, and was still only 462 in 1981; in 1991
it was 546. (fn. 90)
Woodland clearance in the early Middle Ages
led to a pattern of dispersed settlement, much
of it around greens or tyes. By 1777 Wakes
Colne, Allcocks, and Parkers (later Parkhurst)
greens, still totalling c. 14 a., marked the site of
an earlier and larger area of common grazing on
the high ground near the centre of the parish. (fn. 91)
Encroachments on the greens started in the 17th
century or earlier, and the last remnants of
Wakes Colne green were inclosed in the 1930s. (fn. 92)
Pump Hall on Middle Green incorporates the
remains of a late 15th- or 16th-century house
with hall and cross wing, facing south onto a site
which was presumably then open but which was
built on in the 17th century when the surviving
Old Gables was erected. The 16th-century
Lyntons and the late 16th- or early 17th-century
Jordans Farm, on Lower Green, mark the
former north and south edges of the green.
Lyntons comprises a main range, which contained the hall and service rooms, and a parlour
which was roofed as a cross wing. A stack and
upper floor were put into the hall in the 17th
century. At Jordans the hall may originally
have had a smoke bay, which was later replaced
by a brick stack. The northern edge of Parkers
green is marked by the small, later 16th-century
house since divided into June and Wenoah
cottages. It was of standard three-room plan; the
hall and service rooms in the eastern cottage are
divided from the parlour in the western by the
stack which, with the upper floor in the hall, was
probably inserted early in the 17th century.

Figure 22:
Wakes Colne Green, with fishers and its gardens in 1825
There are three moated sites in the parish,
including the manor houses of Crepping and
Little Loveney Halls. The third moat, on high
ground on the eastern side of Allcocks green,
may have surrounded the house occupied by
Gilbert the reeve in 1400 and by the Allcock
family in the 17th century. The house, demolished by the early 20th century, was rebuilt in
the late 15th century as a hall with chamber
blocks at either end. (fn. 93)
Several other substantial, late medieval,
timber-framed houses survive; most of them are
of two storeys. The later 15th-century Watch
House, on the north-west corner of the crossroads north of Chappel bridge, was occupied by
gentlemen in the 17th century and was one of
the largest houses in the parish, with five
hearths, in 1671. (fn. 94) The two cross wings retain
crown-post roofs, but the roof to the central,
hall, range was renewed in the 18th century.
Earlier, perhaps in the later 16th century, a large
chimney stack was inserted into the former cross
passage. The western, service, wing was remodelled and extended northwards in the early 17th
century. Wakes Colne Place, formerly Bunners,
on the Colchester road was a landmark by
1501. (fn. 95) Behind the north and west fronts of the
surviving house are timber-framed ranges,
apparently of a substantial L-shaped house of
17th-century or earlier origin. Shortly before
1813 William Brett (fn. 96) refronted the house in
brick, greatly extended it to the east and south,
and refitted it internally. Lane Farm, on Lane
Road leading from the Colchester road to Wakes
Colne green, is a late 14th- or early 15th-century
hall-and cross-wing house which was remodelled in the 16th century and encased in brick
in the early 19th. (fn. 97) The north-east corner of the
nearby Fridays Cottage incorporates part of a
15th-century parlour cross wing. One bay of the
hall range, which has a cambered tie beam and
a plain crown post, survives against its west side,
and there is a 17th-century addition on the south
side. Old House Farm, Station Road, (fn. 98) incorporates a possibly 14th-century cross wing to
which a hall and another cross wing were added
in the 15th century; both cross wings are of two
storeys. The house was much restored in the
mid 20th century.
Normandy Hall west of Parkhurst Green, formerly Normans Farm and the house for a copy hold estate in 1635, was built in the early 14th
century as an aisled hall with a cross wing. (fn. 99)
Fishers, the house of a medieval freehold, lies
south of Allcocks green. A house, built by
William and Mary Potter in 1635 with a principal room on either side of a large stack with
octagonal chimneys, forms the south-west
corner of the present L-shaped building. (fn. 1) The
building was extended southwards in the mid
17th century and remodelled c. 1768, when John
and Elizabeth Brett built a wing to the west. (fn. 2)
There was extensive refenestration and some
internal refitting in the later 19th century, and
some remodelling in the later 20th century. A
dovehouse, recorded in 1914, (fn. 3) was demolished
c. 1973.
Further north, Inworth House, originally
comprising a hall and two ends under a single
roof, is of the late 15th or early 16th century. It
appears to take its name, first recorded for a
nearby field in 1838, (fn. 4) from a family rather than
from an early settlement. Great Loveney Hall,
a 16th- or early 17th-century farmhouse near the
northern parish boundary, was reconstructed
and encased in brick in the 19th century. The
approach drive and the garden walls appear to
derive from a formal 18th-century arrangement.
The south-eastern quarter of Oak Farm, in the
south-east corner of the parish, is probably the
parlour cross wing of an early 16th-century
house whose main range abutted its west side.
The wing is jettied along its south end and has
a large brick stack against the east wall. Against
the north wall is a slightly later block which had
a jetty along its west side and an external doorway in the north-east corner. In the mid 19th
century a brick range containing principal rooms
was built along the west side of the two old
blocks.
Twentieth-century infilling has created a
small village along the Colchester and Station
roads. There has also been infilling, including
council houses of the 1970s, along Middle and
Lower Green roads. (fn. 5)
An alehouse was licensed in 1596, and tippling
houses and unlicensed beer-sellers were reported throughout the 17th century. No Wakes
Colne houses were licensed between 1769 and
1823, the parish presumably being served by
inns in Chappel. (fn. 6) The Gardener's Arms on
Wakes Colne green, recorded in 1838, closed in
1974. The Sunderland Arms, beside the railway
station by 1863, became the Railway inn c. 1890,
and closed in 1964. (fn. 7) There was a small brewery
on Wakes Colne green from 1861 or earlier until
1914. (fn. 8) Since 1986 an annual beer festival has
been held at the East Anglian Railway Museum.
In the early 20th century most houses in
the parish used shallow wells, although stream
water was pumped by ram to many of the
larger houses. (fn. 9) A water tower was built on the
northern edge of the parish in 1935-6. (fn. 10) Electricity was supplied by Colchester Borough from
1933. (fn. 11)
A friendly society in Wakes Colne recorded
in 1839 continued in 1844. (fn. 12) The Aldham and
United Parishes Insurance Society had members in the parish from 1827 until c. 1951. (fn. 13) A
reading room, opened with over 20 members in
1907, had closed by 1912. (fn. 14) Bowls were played
illegally in 1529, and in 1538 a game of 'le camp',
an early form of football, resulted in bloodshed. (fn. 15) Since the 1950s international motor cycle
scrambles have been held in a field near the
Cambridge brook.
Wakes Colne was one of the manors belonging
to Joan, princess of Wales, which was attacked
by the insurgents in 1381. (fn. 16) There is no evidence
to support the local tradition that Kitty O'Shea,
mistress and later wife of the Irish leader C. S.
Parnell and sister of C. P. Wood of Wakes Hall,
stayed at Lane Farm. (fn. 17)
MANORS. A manor of 1 hide and 30 a. in Colne
held by Assorin in 1066 was held by Robert
Malet in demesne in 1086, and with Robert's
other lands formed the honor of Eye. (fn. 18) The
manor was held of that honor c. 1210, and in
1274 when it was said formerly to have been
held of the honor of Boulogne. (fn. 19) The over-
lordship was not recorded thereafter.
Henry II granted the manor in 1174 to Saher
de Quency, (fn. 20) from whom it passed to his brother
Robert (d. c. 1197) and to Robert's son Saher
de Quency, earl of Winchester. (fn. 21) The mesne
lordship descended from Saher to his son Roger,
earl of Winchester (d. 1264), (fn. 22) and then to
Roger's eldest daughter and coheir, Margaret,
wife of William de Ferrers earl of Derby, whose
great-grandson, Robert Fitz Walter of Woodham
Walter, held in 1328. (fn. 23) Walter Fitz Walter, Lord
Fitz Walter, was in dispute with the demesne
lord in 1393. (fn. 24) The lordship was last recorded
in 1422. (fn. 25)
Before 1219, Saher de Quency gave Colne to
his younger son Robert. (fn. 26) Robert died before
1264, and the manor passed with his younger
daughter Hawise to Baldwin Wake, who was
lord in 1274 and from whose family it was
named WAKES COLNE. (fn. 27) Baldwin (d. 1282)
and Hawise (d. c. 1285) were succeeded by their
son John, Lord Wake (d. 1300), (fn. 28) and by John's
son Thomas (d. 1349) whose widow Blanche
held in dower until her death in 1380. (fn. 29) The
manor descended, with the barony of Wake, to
Joan, countess of Kent and later princess of
Wales. (fn. 30) She was succeeded in 1385 by her son
from her first marriage, Thomas Holland (d.
1397), whose widow Alice held in dower until
her death in 1416. (fn. 31) Wakes Colne then passed to
their daughter Margaret, wife of Thomas of
Lancaster, duke of Clarence. She died in 1440
and was succeeded by her son John Beaufort,
earl and later duke of Somerset (d. 1444), by his
daughter Margaret, wife of Edmund Tudor, and
by her son Henry VII. (fn. 32) Henry VIII granted the
manor to his illegitimate son Henry FitzRoy,
duke of Richmond and Somerset (d. 1536), and
then in 1544 to John de Vere, earl of Oxford. (fn. 33)
The manor descended with the earldom of
Oxford until 1580 when Edward de Vere sold it
to William Tiffin. (fn. 34) Tiffin (d. 1617) was succeeded by his great nephew, another William
Tiffin, who sold Wakes Colne in 1635 to Sir
John Jacob. (fn. 35) Jacob sold it in 1646 to Harbottle
Grimston, later Sir Harbottle, Bt. (fn. 36) Wakes
Colne then descended with West Bergholt until
1719 when William Grimston (formerly
Luckyn) sold it to John London. John was succeeded in 1735 by his son Samuel London. (fn. 37)
Samuel, or his son of the same name, died in
1778 and was followed by his widow Mary (d.
1783), who devised the manor to her nieces
Elizabeth, wife of William Tice, and Mary, wife
of John Field. In 1784 the manor was settled on
William Tice and John Field, who in 1808 sold
it to John Lay, tenant of Crepping Hall. (fn. 38) Lay
(d. 1819) devised the manor to his nephew John
Josselyn whose trustees sold it in 1823 to Henry
Skingley. Skingley died in 1858 and was succeeded by his son Henry. (fn. 39) The manor, but not
the land, was sold in 1869 to Joseph Beaumont,
who enfranchised most of the copyholds. (fn. 40) It
was sold by the trustees of G. F. Beaumont in
1964. (fn. 41) In 1996 the lord was G. R. Horne.
Thomas Wake had a house in Wakes Colne
by 1348, presumably, like its 16th-century successor, on the north bank of the Colne. By 1403
the hall, chapel, and several other rooms were
being used as barns, and glass had been removed
from windows, including those of the oratory
near the great chamber. Other buildings, including the great solar, were leased to a tenant. (fn. 42) The
house was still occupied by tenants in the early
16th century, but the Tiffins lived there. (fn. 43) From
1708 it was leased as a farm house, and before
1730 had been partly burnt down. (fn. 44) A new farm-
house was built on the site in the 19th century. (fn. 45)
Between 1825 and 1838 Henry Skingley built a
new house on the north side of the Colchester
road, of gault brick with a central portico and a
three-storeyed tower on the east. (fn. 46) It was converted into a residential home for sufferers from
cerebral palsy in 1964. (fn. 47)
There was a park by 1325, (fn. 48) presumably north
and west of the manor house where three fields
were still called Park in 1838. (fn. 49) It seems to have
been restored, and extended southwards across
the Colne, in the mid 19th century, (fn. 50) presum-
ably by the first Henry Skingley.
In 1066 Alward held 68½ a. and 1 yardland
in CREPPING which in 1086 was held by
Richard son of Gilbert de Clare and Modwin. (fn. 51)
The overlordship descended with the honor of
Clare to Gilbert de Clare, earl of Gloucester and
Hertford (d. 1314). (fn. 52) Roger Mortimer, earl of
March, was overlord at his death in 1398, (fn. 53) and
the overlordship was last recorded in 1426. (fn. 54)
Walter of Windsor held land in Crepping
which escheated to the crown in 1186. (fn. 55) By 1195
Walter of Crepping probably held the estate,
later two thirds of a knight's fee in Colne and
Crepping. (fn. 56) By 1209 he held a further yardland
in Crepping of Bury St. Edmund's abbey, presumably the 36-a. estate which the abbey held
in Colne in 1066 and 1086. (fn. 57) He or his predecessors had probably also acquired 94 a. in Colne
and Fordham held by 5 sokemen in 1066 and by
Richard de Clare in 1086. (fn. 58) Walter was succeeded before 1227 by Alan of Crepping, who
c. 1230 held land in Wakes Colne and Fordham
of Michael of Fordham. Michael granted that
estate to the Hospitallers, (fn. 59) but there is no later
evidence of the order's interest in Crepping or
Wakes Colne. Alan's son Walter forfeited the
manor in 1266, but in 1274 and 1282 Walter's
son Hugh of Crepping was lord. (fn. 60) In 1307
Hugh's son Walter granted Crepping to Henry
and Margaret Bacon, but in 1324 Hugh son of
Hugh Crepping conveyed the reversion to
William and Elizabeth Royston. (fn. 61) Hugh died in
1340, and in 1342 Robert Perepoint became
lord. (fn. 62) In 1356 Peter and Elizabeth Perepoint
conveyed the reversion of the manor to John de
Vere, earl of Oxford. (fn. 63) The manor descended
with the earldom of Oxford until the later 16th
century. (fn. 64)
In 1548 John de Vere, earl of Oxford, granted
a 60-year lease of Crepping Hall to his servant
John Turner, (fn. 65) and in 1585 Turner's widow
Christine bought the reversion. (fn. 66) She died in
1605, and was succeeded by her daughter
Margaret Powell, and by Margaret's son John
Smith (both d. 1621). (fn. 67) The manor then passed
to John's nephews Stephen (d. 1670) and
Thomas Smith (d. 1684). (fn. 68) Thomas's son,
another Thomas (d. 1721) was succeeded by his
niece Mary Tendring (d. 1735) who devised the
manor to her cousin Thomas Alexander (d.
1747). He devised it to his nephew Charles
Alexander who died in 1775 and was followed by
Charles Alexander Crickitt (d. 1803) and his wife
Sarah (d. 1828). (fn. 69) Harriet Alexander Crickitt (d.
1868) devised the manor to H. B. Harvey. (fn. 70) J. L.
Beaumont was lord in 1943. (fn. 71) The manor was
sold in 1954 by the trustees of G. F. Beaumont
to H. C. Percival of Wakes Colne, and sold again
c. 1984 to E. B. Joiner of California. (fn. 72)
Crepping Hall, (fn. 73) which was formerly moated,
retains a substantial part of an early 14th-
century aisled hall, presumably built by the
Crepping family. A two-centred headed doorway in the north end of the west aisle may have
led to a stair to a first floor solar in a continuation
of the hall range, perhaps the adjoining chamber
which was damaged with the hall in 1432. (fn. 74) That
and the service end of the house appear to have
been rebuilt in the later 16th century, probably
by the Turners. The eastern aisle of the hall
was removed, presumably to facilitate the fenestration of an inserted first floor. Additions,
including a staircase, were made to the south in
the 18th century when there was some refitting,
and there was further remodelling c. 1905. (fn. 75)
Part of the Little Colne estate held of Robert
Malet by Walter of Caen in 1086 (fn. 76) extended into
Wakes Colne where it formed the freehold or
submanor of Serdeleshey or LOVENEY
HALL. It was held of Colne Engaine manor
until 1556 or later. (fn. 77) By the later 12th century
William de Cheney or his successors had enfeoffed Richard Blunville, whose great nephew
William Blunville disputed the estate with
Richard Engaine between 1199 and 1201. (fn. 78)
Another William Blunville held c. 1278. (fn. 79) By
c. 1380 the estate was called Loveney Hall, pre-
sumably from an owner; c. 1440 it belonged to
a Culpepper. (fn. 80) About 1503 Roger Draper sold
'Loveney Hall and Sherdelous' to Edward Sulyard, (fn. 81) and in 1546 Edward's son Eustace conveyed the estate, then called a manor, to William
Sidey. Sidey at once sold part of the estate, later
Great Loveney Hall, to John Newton, (fn. 82) and the
rest to John Sidey. John Sidey devised the
manor to his son, another John, who sold it in
1574 to John Ball (d. 1602) and his son John (d.
1621). (fn. 83) They were succeeded by another John
Sidey, whose widow held in 1646 with her
second husband Thomas Harlakenden. (fn. 84) The
estate, still called a manor in 1698 and 1711, was
called Little Loveney Hall by 1730. (fn. 85) It
belonged to Osgood Hanbury (d. 1784) in 1768,
and presumably descended with Inglesthorpes
manor in White Colne to O. B. Hanbury (d.
1890). (fn. 86) It was farmed by H. C. Crook in 1902, (fn. 87)
and belonged to his family in 1996. (fn. 88)
Little Loveney Hall lies close to the edge of a
large, waterfilled moat. The house has a threeroomed plan with lobby entry, of the late 16th
or early 17th century. A large service wing was
added to the east in the 18th century.