NAVESTOCK
Navestock is about 3 miles south of Ongar and 4
miles north-east of Romford. (fn. 1) With an area of 4,518
acres it is one of the largest parishes in the hundred.
The varied scenery includes a patch of ancient woodland, an open green, and an open heath. Though so
close to Romford, Navestock is not traversed by main
roads and remains completely rural. It was one of the
few parishes in this area to retain a large uninclosed
common until the 18th century, and where Roman
Catholic worship (fn. 2) continued after the Reformation.
The relief of the parish consists principally of two
spurs, the larger in the west including Navestock
Heath, the smaller in the north-east with Beacon Hill
as its highest point. (fn. 3) Both spurs rise to a height of over
300 ft. They descend quite steeply to the north-west
where the winding River Roding forms the parish
boundary. On the south and south-east the boundary
is not allied to any marked physical feature and the land
slopes gently away to Havering Plain and South Weald
Common. Between the spurs is the valley of the
Wetstaff Brook, formerly a tributary of the Roding,
now dammed to form the Lady's Pond, a rush-grown
lake in Navestock Park. This pond is the largest stretch
of inclosed water in the parish but the poor drainage
afforded by the stiff London Clay has encouraged the
formation of many other smaller ponds in various parts
of the parish. There are several areas of parkland and
plantation, mainly at the lower altitudes. Of these the
principal are at Navestock Park and in the upper part
of the Wetstaff Valley near Bois Hall. Curtismill
Green in the extreme west of the parish is the patch
of open woodland, about 100 acres in extent, which
was formerly part of the forest of Essex. Its northeastern and south-eastern corners are still marked by
the old forest boundary stones, known respectively as
Richard Stone and Navestock Stone. Navestock Common, the name of which survives in the south-west, was
formerly much larger in extent, stretching across the
south of the parish for most of its length and containing
some 600 acres.
The main centre of population is Navestock Side in
the extreme east of the parish, where the houses cluster
round a green. There are also some houses around
Navestock Heath which was formerly a more important
hamlet than it is today. The former workhouse and
the old almshouse, both now demolished, were at the
south end. (fn. 4) The village school has been closed and the
vicarage, which adjoins it, is unoccupied. The Heath,
which is still used for grazing cattle, has a desolate appearance.
The parish church is a mile north of Navestock
Heath, adjoining the old manor house of Navestock
Hall. A little to the north of them, in Navestock Park,
is the site of the former mansion of Navestock Hall,
built in the 18th century by Lord Waldegrave but
demolished about 100 years later. Other ancient
manor houses were at Slades near Beacon Hill and
Bois Hall ½ mile south on the same spur. (fn. 5) A homestead moat still survives at the former site of Slades
and there are other moats at Dycotts in the southwest of the parish and at Yew Tree Farm to the north
of Navestock Heath.
Fortification Wood, on the south side of the road
about ½ mile west of Bois Hall, covers an entrenchment
some 350 ft. long by 240 ft. wide. (fn. 6) It occupies a good
defensive position and has been thought to be a
fortification at some unknown date. It is probably
identical with a wood called 'the defence' which
existed in 1222. (fn. 7) Another ancient earthwork, of which
hardly any traces remain, was situated on Navestock
Common, by the road from Ditchleys (in South
Weald) to Princesgate, near the parish and hundred
boundary. It was visited on several occasions in the
18th century by William Stukeley (1687-1765) who
described it as an 'alate temple'. (fn. 8)
Navestock probably means 'the stump on the headland', (fn. 9) a derivation which suits the topography and
suggests early Saxon settlement on one of the spurs.
Although some of the parish place names, including
those of the manor houses, are medieval, (fn. 10) none of the
present buildings, apart from the church, appear to be
earlier than the 16th century. Navestock Hall (see
Manors) is perhaps the most interesting of these. Like
Stondon Hall in Stondon Massey it is an old manor
house that has survived the grander house built in the
18th century to supersede it as the residence of the lord
of the manor. Dabbs Farm, formerly Hole Farm,
about ½ mile south-west of Shonks Mill Bridge, is
probably on the site of a medieval house. It is now
approached by a track past Howletts Hall Farm, the
lane leading from the east being impassable. The
house, which was probably built in the late 16th
century, is timber-framed. It retains a chimney with
six shafts set diagonally. Sabine Cottage, about ¼ mile
east of Navestock Heath, facing the end of Tan House
Lane, is a small timber-framed building of the 16th
century or earlier. This house and the neighbouring
Sabine's Green take their name from the family of a
13th century resident, William fitz Sabine. (fn. 11)
At Dycotts a medieval building undoubtedly occupied the moated site but the oldest building there
now is part of an outbuilding which has 16th-century
timbers. Wattons Green, which lies between Dycotts
and the road, extends north-west as a narrow strip of
common until it strikes the Navestock-Havering road
south of Jenkins Farm. Its name is derived from the
family of John de Walton (fl. 1319). (fn. 12)
By the 17th century the pattern of settlement in the
parish was probably very much as it is today. Larger
houses dating from that period are Bois Hall (see
Manors), Beacon Hill Farm, in the north-east corner
of the parish, and Yew Tree Farm. Beacon Hill Farm
is a red-brick house probably built in the late 17th
century. It was much altered in the 18th or earlier
19th century but retains some original woodwork
inside. The cottage which adjoins the house on the
north is probably of the same period with fewer
alterations. Yew Tree Farm, probably built in the
17th century, has a cruciform chimney set diagonally
on a square base. Two wings at the back and other
features date from the 18th century. North of the
house is part of a large rectangular moat. The surface
of the ground inside it is uneven, suggesting the position of an earlier building. Several smaller buildings,
all timber-framed, also date from the 17th century.
Brook House, to the east of Curtismill Green, is a
weather-boarded cottage probably built in the second
half of that century. On the north side of the road
almost opposite Bois Hall is a cottage of the 17th
century or earlier with an original chimney. At Navestock Side and near it there are other cottages of about
the same period. Houghtons, on the north side of the
road at Horseman Side, may well be an ancient house
altered in the 18th or early 19th century. It is a
weather-boarded range of four cottages.
Shonks Mill was probably rebuilt in the 17th
century. It took its name from a medieval family, but
this may have come indirectly from some other topographical feature in the area. A map of 1835, based
upon one of 1785, shows the old course of the Roding
'before Shonks Mill was erected'. (fn. 13) This suggests that
the existing mill had been built not very long before
1785, and the humped brick bridge that still survives
on the site and has a small arch for the mill race is probably of the 17th century. The parapets have been
rebuilt. The mill itself was still standing in the present
century but does not appear to have been used after
about 1860, and it has since been demolished. (fn. 14)
Great changes took place in Navestock in the 18th
century. Early in the century the new mansion of
Navestock Hall was built and a large park constructed
around it. (fn. 15) Later came the inclosure of Navestock
Common. These changes, while they altered the landscape of the parish, did not, however, alter the main
pattern of settlement. (fn. 16) Before the inclosure there were
several houses along the north edge of the common,
mostly at Horseman Side. Their occupants had no
doubt found the situation convenient for the exercise
of common rights. Inclosure of the common evidently
led to the building of one new farm, Princesgate Farm,
which existed by 1840, (fn. 17) and a few of the houses to
the south of the road between Navestock Side and
Horseman Side are of late 18th- or 19th-century date.
The extinguishment of the rights of common in this
part of the parish may have led to the building of
cottages around the edges of the wood at Curtismill
Green, which was not affected by the inclosure. This
was not, however, the first development round Curtismill Green. (fn. 18)
Chapman and André's Map of Essex, 1777 shows
houses along most of the western edge of Navestock
Side but none on the eastern edge. The 'Green Man',
which may have existed long before, was probably rebuilt in the 18th century when Navestock Side became
a cricket centre. It is a tall rectangular building,
recently modernized. During the late 18th century
Navestock Park was embellished by the construction
of the Lady's Pond and at about the same time there
were alterations to Bois Hall. Abbotswick, at Navestock
Side, is a small country house standing in a welltimbered garden with a small lake. It seems to date
from about 1800 and has since been rebuilt probably
early in the present century. In 1817 it was described
as the seat of Adam Chadwick. (fn. 19) The 1777 map shows
a small piece of common at Slades, but this had been
inclosed by 1840. (fn. 20)
In 1801 the population of Navestock was 623, and
by 1821 it had risen to 840. (fn. 21) It continued to rise until
1851 when a peak of 982 was reached. The number
of inhabited houses in the parish increased from 131
in 1801 to 188 in 1851. (fn. 22) After 1851 there was a
gradual decline in population which became most rapid
between 1871 and 1881, the period of agricultural
depression. By 1901 there were only 692 inhabitants.
The most remarkable event in the life of the parish
in the 19th century was the demolition (1811) of
Navestock Hall. During the course of the century
some of the other larger houses in the parish were
extended or improved and continued to offer opportunities of employment for the cottagers, but the
disappearance of the great house of Navestock, at a
time when the population was increasing rapidly, may
have been partly responsible for the ultimate decrease.
Even if it had no other effect the demolition increased
the isolation of the parish church and must have reinforced the existing tendency for the population to
concentrate in the east and south of the parish. This
tendency may have been partly counteracted by the
rebuilding of the vicarage at Navestock Heath and the
erection beside it of a village school. On the other hand
again there was the closure of Shonks Mill, which
probably failed in competition with the new steam mill
at Princesgate. The new mill was built adjoining
Princesgate Farm. It is an impressive structure of
black weather-boarding, with a tall chimney (see plate
facing p. 156). It is no longer used as a mill.
Between 1901 and 1931 the population of Navestock fluctuated at around 700. (fn. 23) In 1953 it was
estimated at 680, which is the lowest figure since
1801. (fn. 24) Among the houses built during the past fifty
years are five pairs of council houses at the north end of
Navestock Heath and twelve pairs near Navestock Side
on the road to Bentley church. Three of the last
twelve have been erected since 1945, two of them
being of Swedish timber. The Navestock Club, built
at Navestock Side in 1920, increased the amenities in
that part of the parish. Some provision for communal
activities at Horseman Side had been made by the
building there of the Navestock Mission Room in
1897. This was originally a nonconformist chapel but
is now used for services in connexion with the parish
church. During the Second World War Slades Farm
was totally demolished by enemy action and the parish
church damaged.
The Brentwood-Ongar road touches Navestock's
easternmost edge, forming the boundary with South
Weald for a short distance. Its principal connecting
link runs south-west through Navestock Side and
Horseman Side to Havering and Romford, and
another road goes west and south-west past Bois Hall,
Navestock Hall, and Navestock Heath to Havering
and Romford. Linking these two principal roads are
several by-roads aligned from north-west to south-east.
The most important of these follows the Wetstaff
valley for most of its course and passes out of the parish
by Shonks Mill Bridge over the Roding to join the
Ongar-Abridge road.
Most of the parish roads are probably earlier in
origin than the 18th century. They may always have
been poor in the west of Navestock, where the wood
of Curtismill Green formed a barrier, but there was
evidently a thoroughfare of some sort in that area as
early as the 16th century. In 1583 it was reported at
Quarter Sessions that the road from Brentwood through
Navestock to Epping was blocked by a gate called
'Curtinsmill' Gate which was 'the only defence for
the cattle commoning on that part of the forest there'. (fn. 25)
There are detailed reports from the surveyors of the
highways on their statute labour for 1607-9, 1618,
and 1645. (fn. 26)
The inclosure award of 1770 contained the usual
provisions concerning the construction of roads to
serve the inclosed area. (fn. 27) Ten new roads were specified
but many of these were very short lengths and it is
clear from the inclosure map that some of them already
existed in whole or in part. The most important changes
that resulted from the award were the continuation of
the road from Horseman Side to Navestock Side and
roads running south and south-east from that road.
Not all the provisions of the award were actually
carried out. This may have resulted from disputes
concerning responsibility for the new roads. At a
parish vestry meeting in 1844 it was resolved that the
roads set out by the inclosure commissioners should
not be repaired by the parish. (fn. 28) This decision was
repeated at vestry meetings later in the same year and
in 1845, when the parish surveyor was ordered to
request the inhabitants whose lands abutted on Goats
Wood Lane to repair it. (fn. 29)
Much of the parish on the north-west is bounded by
the Roding and there are many references to bridges
in records relating to Navestock. The most important
was Shonks Mill Bridge between Navestock and Stanford Rivers. In 1566 this lay between the land of
Robert Shanke and William Melbourne: its timbers
were then badly decayed. (fn. 30) A little later there was
some doubt whether it should be repaired by Navestock or by Stanford Rivers. In 1617, when it had
been damaged by floods, Navestock was ordered by
Quarter Sessions to repair it, (fn. 31) but in 1618 both
parishes were presented as responsible for the bridge,
then 'very much in decay'. (fn. 32) Both parishes were held
responsible in 1641. (fn. 33) By about 1800 the bridge had
become a charge on the county and it appears in the
later lists of county bridges. (fn. 34) In 1857 it was described
in detail by the county surveyor. (fn. 35) It was damaged by
floods in 1943. One abutment was rebuilt in concrete
and the decking was replaced with a temporary structure. (fn. 36)
A foot-bridge called Hawkes or Hackes Bridge was
in need of repair in 1579 and 1580 and John Greene
of Navestock Hall was said to be responsible. (fn. 37) In
1586 floods destroyed this bridge (then said to be in
Broad Mead) and the same John Greene and the
parishioners of Stanford Rivers were ordered to repair
it. (fn. 38) In the same year Bartholomew Partrych of Navestock was ordered to replace a foot-bridge. (fn. 39)
For its communications with the outside world
Navestock has depended on Ongar, Brentwood, and
Romford. Even today, no bus route passes through
the parish, and this has the effect of making the centre
of the parish, especially Navestock Heath, seem
isolated and rural. This is the more remarkable as
there is suburban development reaching out in this
direction from both Romford and Brentwood, and the
great new housing estate of Harold Hill is only 3 miles
from Navestock Heath.
An application in 1840 for a post-office in Navestock was refused. (fn. 40) A receiver was mentioned in
1855 and in 1856 Navestock had a post-office under
Romford. (fn. 41) There were several changes in the later
postal arrangements for the parish. In 1870 and up to
1884 the only post-office was at Shonks Mill, where
letters were received via Stanford Rivers from Romford. (fn. 42) In 1884 a second post-office was opened at
Navestock Side, and in the same year the telegraph was
extended to both offices. (fn. 43) In about 1890 the main
office was that at Navestock Side and the sub-postoffice at Shonks Mill had no telegraph. (fn. 44) Four years
later the Shonks Mill office had been replaced by one
in the centre of the parish at Sabine's Green. (fn. 45) During
the past 60 years the Navestock Side office has continued to be the more important of the two. The
Sabine's Green (or Navestock Heath) office has existed
for most of this period but does not appear to have been
operating immediately after the First World War. (fn. 46)
Piped water is supplied to the parish by the Herts.
and Essex Waterworks Co. but there is no main
drainage. (fn. 47) The Romford Gas Co. acquired powers
to supply gas in Navestock in 1935 and this has been
laid on for Navestock Side. (fn. 48) Electricity was supplied
to Navestock Heath in 1931. (fn. 49) The Navestock Club
established at Navestock Side in 1920 has as its meetingplace a single-story wooden building given by Mr.
Walter Tyser, the lord of the manor. (fn. 50) A branch of the
county library was opened in 1938. (fn. 51)
Cricket has been played at Navestock since 1784
and probably earlier. (fn. 52) In 1790 the 'Essex Cricket
Club' was holding fortnightly matches at the 'Green
Man', Navestock Side. The members of the club
included Lord Petre and Lord Winchilsea. (fn. 53) A map
of 1835, based on one of 1785, shows the cricket
ground, (fn. 54) and for most of the 19th century this was
the home ground of the West Essex Cricket Club, one
of the best known in the county. (fn. 55)
The map of 1835 marks the fields immediately to
the east of the cricket ground at Navestock Side as a
'horse-race ground'. (fn. 56) Occasional race meetings were
being held at Navestock in the 1860's but had long
been discontinued by 1906. (fn. 57)
During the Middle Ages the most important estate
in the parish was that owned by the Dean and Chapter
of St. Paul's Cathedral. Their property passed in the
16th century to the Waldegrave family. From the
16th century to the 19th the Waldegraves (later
barons and eventually earls) increased their estate until
by 1840 it comprised almost three-quarters of the total
area of the parish. (fn. 58) From the early 18th until the early
19th century Navestock Hall was their main seat. Later
in the 19th century, in spite of the demolition of the
hall, Lady Waldegrave returned to the parish to live at
Dudbrook. (fn. 59)
It was John, Earl Waldegrave who secured the
inclosure of the common in 1770. (fn. 60) The total area
inclosed was 502 acres exclusive of 90 acres set aside
for roads and waste. The earl's allotment was about
350 acres.
In 1840 there were some 25 farms in the parish,
of which about 12 were over 100 acres and 9 between
50 acres and 100 acres. The largest was Bois Hall with
Slades, 480 acres. It was one of the largest in the whole
of Ongar hundred at that time. (fn. 61) Two years earlier it
had been estimated that some 2,150 acres of the parish
were cultivated as arable and 1,850 acres as meadow
or pasture. (fn. 62) These proportions of arable to pasture
were typical of this area of mixed farming. As elsewhere in the hundred the arable open fields, if they
ever existed, must have been inclosed at an early date.
Open meadow lasted longer. The map of 1835 shows
strip holdings (in private ownership) in 'Navestock
Common Mead' adjoining the Roding south of
Shonks Mill. (fn. 63) There is no suggestion that they were
still farmed in common, but it is likely that they represented the areas of earlier strips in the open water
meadow.
Navestock has always been an agricultural parish
and there do not appear to have been any important
occupations that were not connected with agriculture.
The fragment of the parish that was within the
ancient forest of Essex escaped the destruction that
overtook most of the neighbouring forest at Hainault. (fn. 64)
Curtismill Green was disafforested in 1851 and in
1858 was allotted as common to the parish of Navestock. (fn. 65)
Apart from the Waldegraves, several of whom
achieved distinction, (fn. 66) Navestock numbers among its
worthies William Stubbs (1825-1901), the historian
and Bishop successively of Chester (1884-8) and
Oxford (1888-1901) who was Vicar of Navestock
from 1850 to 1866. (fn. 67) Much of his early work for the
Rolls Series was done in the parish. He married a
local girl, Catherine Dellar, who had been mistress of
the village school. His predecessor as vicar, James Ford
(1779-1850, vicar from 1830 to his death), founded
the Ford Lectureship at Oxford University. (fn. 68) He is
said to have made manuscript notes towards a history
of the hundred of Ongar and to have left them to
Trinity College, Oxford. (fn. 69) He and Stubbs were not
the only historians to be connected with Navestock,
for Adam de Murimuth (1275 ?-1347), Canon of St.
Paul's, to whom the manor was leased in 1335 by the
Dean and Chapter, (fn. 70) was the author of the Continuatio
Chronicorum, a chronicle which is a primary authority
for the history of England in the first half of the 14th
century. (fn. 71)