SHELLEY
Shelley is a small parish immediately to the north of
Chipping Ongar. (fn. 1) Its area is 608 acres. (fn. 2) There were
32 inhabited houses in 1801 and 34 in 1811 and 1821. (fn. 3)
In 1801 the population was 169. (fn. 4) By 1851 it had
grown to 215; then it declined to 158 in 1901. (fn. 5) Since
1918 there has been a steady increase, mainly due to
the building of council houses. The population was
386 in 1931 and about 650 in 1953. (fn. 6)
The land is about 200 ft. above sea-level in the south
and slightly less elsewhere. Cripsey Brook, a tributary
of the River Roding, flows south through the west of
the parish. To the east of the brook lies Shelley Common. The south-eastern corner of the parish is bounded
on the south by the road from Chelmsford to Epping
and on the east by the road from Chipping Ongar to
Dunmow. The junction of the two roads is called The
Four Wants and at the north-west corner of the crossroads stands Shelley House. In about 1770 this was
referred to as the only 'good house' in the parish. (fn. 7) In
about 1835 it was described as 'a handsome dwelling
upon a moderate scale'. (fn. 8) It was probably built towards
the end of the 17th century and part of the back of the
house is faced with brickwork of this date or a little
later. The front rooms were added about 1800 and
there is a good Georgian facade facing the road. A
west wing was added later in the 19th century (fn. 9) and a
small extension was built at the back about 1920. (fn. 10)
About 300 yds. north of The Four Wants the
Dunmow road is joined by a road running north-west
to Moreton. Between this Moreton road and the
Epping road there is a large housing estate laid out since
1945 by the Ongar Rural District Council. When complete it will have seven new roads and will consist of
about 450 houses. (fn. 11) The plan provides sites for shops,
a primary school, and a community hall. By November
1953 178 houses had been completed and 147 were
under construction. (fn. 12)
At the south-east end of the Moreton road there are
council houses, built both before and after the Second
World War, including a pair made of Swedish timber.
On the north-east side of the road there are 12 pairs of
older council houses and near Shelley Bridge some prefabricated bungalows. From Shelley Bridge over the
Cripsey Brook the road runs directly northward. On
the east side of the road to the north of Shelley Bridge
is Bridge House which appears to have been built about
1800. There are gravel pits to the north-east of Bridge
House. Farther north there are scattered 18thcentury cottages on both sides of the road. On the east
side just before the road leaves the parish there is a
pair of estate cottages dating from about 1830, called
Gothic Cottages. They follow a type of studiously
'picturesque' dwelling which was evidently popular
with local landowners during the first half of the 19th
century. Nearly opposite Gothic Cottages stands
Ashlings, which was built on the site of a property
called Motes. (fn. 13) The present house originated in a pair
of timber-framed estate cottages belonging to Blake
Hall in Bobbingworth (q.v.), similar in general
arrangement to Gothic Cottages but perhaps rather
earlier in date. Later a third cottage was added and
later still a wing at the back.
The Dunmow road is built up from the southern
boundary of the parish, almost as far north as Shelley
Lodge, which is about ½ mile north of The Four Wants.
This building development dates mostly from the present century. The Ongar and District War Memorial
Hospital (fn. 14) is on the west side of the road just beyond the
turning to Moreton. Shelley Lodge is a single-story
thatched cottage, built early in the 19th century by
Noble of Ongar. (fn. 15) From Shelley Lodge a drive runs
straight to Shelley Hall, (fn. 16) about ¼ mile to the north.
Immediately to the east of the Hall is the church. A
foot-path, formerly a lane, leads from the church, past
the site of the rectory (fn. 17) about ¼ mile to the west, to the
Moreton road north of Bridge House. Another lane
leads eastward from the church to join the Dunmow
road about ½ mile north of Shelley Lodge. There are
some 18th-century cottages on the west side of the
Dunmow road near the turning to the church. Almost
opposite the turning a drive leads eastwards to Boarded
Barns, formerly New Barns. (fn. 18) The house is timberframed and plastered and an oak lintel beside an original
brick fireplace is dated 1613. There is an addition on
the south side and the whole house has been altered and
restored. The property is now an experimental farm
belonging to Messrs. May and Baker. The farm buildings have been converted and two new red-brick
laboratories for veterinary and horticultural research
were built in 1951 and 1952. A building on the road
near the drive entrance was formerly called Boarded
Barns. (fn. 19) Nearly ½ mile farther north on the west side
of the road a long drive leads to Bundish Hall on the
northern boundary of the parish. (fn. 20)
Shelley Bridge, described as a foot- and horse-bridge
in 1665, (fn. 21) was often in a bad state of repair. In the
16th and 17th centuries it was claimed that the bridge
should be repaired by the parson of Shelley. (fn. 22) In 1835
the Report of the Charity Commission quoted from the
court rolls of Shelley, which purported to show that
responsibility for repairing Shelley Bridge rested with
the rector. (fn. 23) In reply to a letter of inquiry the then
rector, Henry Soames, told the commissioners that
although he had kept the bridge in good repair since
his institution in 1812, he did not admit his liability to
do so. (fn. 24) Some time afterwards the county accepted
responsibility for repairing the bridge which first appears in a list of county bridges in 1872. In 1873 the
county surveyor described it as a new iron bridge, in
good repair; the roadway was not to be mended by the
county. (fn. 25)
The roads of Shelley were frequently presented as in
need of repair but individual roads are not often distinguished. In 1613 the inhabitants of both Shelley
and Bobbingworth were presented for not repairing
the highway leading from 'Moreton Street to Shelley
Bridge'. (fn. 26) This was, doubtless, the highway which
led from Ongar via Shelley Bridge to Moreton and
which evidently then as now lay partly in Bobbingworth, partly in Shelley, and also formed part of the
boundary between the two parishes. In 1618 it was
said that these parishes shared the responsibility for
this road. (fn. 27) In 1632 the inhabitants of Shelley were
presented for neglect of their highways to Bishop's
Stortford and Dunmow; they made the cryptic answer
that 'they can take it of better cheape some other waye'. (fn. 28)
There is no post-office in Shelley. The parish is
served by the Shelley Road post-office which is within
the boundary of Chipping Ongar and which was
opened in May 1934. (fn. 29)
Water is supplied by the Herts. and Essex Waterworks Co. (fn. 30) Gas was supplied from Ongar in 1926
by the Bishop's Stortford Gas Co. (fn. 31) Electricity mains
were laid on in 1935. (fn. 32) A branch of the county library
was opened in July 1940; it is now closed. (fn. 33) There is
a cycle speedway in the parish. (fn. 34)
In about 1770 a writer noted that Shelley 'is small
and has but few houses in it, the inhabitants of which
are chiefly supported by husbandry'. (fn. 35) Shelley
remained a rural parish, engaged almost entirely in
agriculture, until after the Second World War.
The lords of the manor did not live in the parish in
the middle of the 16th century but after John Green
purchased the manor in 1582 the Green family lived
on the estate until the early 18th century. (fn. 36) Mary
Green went to live in the parish of St. George, Hanover Square, after her husband Andrew Trebeck became rector there in 1725. (fn. 37) She and her son James
were still resident in that parish three years after
Andrew's death in 1759. (fn. 38) In 1762-4 Shelley manor
house was let to two tenants, one of whom farmed the
estate. (fn. 39) The manor farm continued to be let until
1814-15, after which Harvey Kimpton, then lord of
the manor, occupied it until his death in 1817. (fn. 40) The
Tomlinson family, who purchased the estate in 1819-
20, occupied Shelley Hall from 1822-3 until 1878-82,
since when it has always been let to a tenant. (fn. 41)
In 1839 the parish consisted of 601 acres. (fn. 42) Of this
James Tomlinson owned 197 acres, all of which were
farmed by Richard Tomlinson. (fn. 43) There were in the
parish only two other substantial owners, neither of
whom farmed his land himself; the Revd. John
Bramston Stane (of Forest Hall in High Ongar, q.v.)
owned New Barns Farm (98 acres) and Boarded Barns
Farm (44 acres), and Thomas White owned Shelley
Bridge Farm (95 acres). (fn. 44) There were 59 acres which
belonged to Bundish Hall. (fn. 45) No other farm in the
parish was over 40 acres. (fn. 46)
In Shelley as in neighbouring parishes mixed farming is carried on. In 1837 there were estimated to be
330 acres of arable, 188 acres of meadow and pasture,
and 2 acres of woodland. (fn. 47) There was also an enclosed
common of 13 acres. (fn. 48)