STANFORD RIVERS
Stanford Rivers is a large parish whose north-east
boundary is ½ mile south-west of Chipping Ongar. (fn. 1)
The soil is Boulder Clay and London Clay with small
patches of gravel. The part of the parish to the north
of the stream which flows into the Roding at Wash
Bridge, and which includes Toot Hill and Ongar Park
Wood, may originally have been part of the parish of
High Ongar, and may have become part of Stanford
Rivers about 1280. (fn. 2) Like many other parishes in this
area Stanford Rivers is made up mainly of scattered
farms and cottages. There are two hamlets, one in the
east and the other in the north-west, both some distance from the parish church. The population density
never seems to have been unusual for the area, although
until the 19th century the population was larger than
that of High Ongar, a parish adjacent and of similar
area. (fn. 3) Population in 1801 numbered 740. It rose to
a peak of 1,082 in 1851 and then gradually declined.
In 1951 it was 802. (fn. 4) There has been a slight increase
since 1911, due to council housing and private building
after the break-up of the Bishops Hall estate.
The land in the parish varies in height from about
100 ft. above sea-level in the south to over 300 ft. at
Toot Hill in the north-west. The River Roding forms
the eastern and southern boundaries of the parish. A
stream flows east across the north of the parish to join
the Roding at Wash Bridge. Several smaller streams
join the river farther south. Ongar Park Wood, in the
north-west, is a mile long and ¼ mile wide. A mile
south of this is Knightsland Wood, and farther southeast are Twentyacre Wood and Tenacre Wood. The
main road from Chipping Ongar to London passes
south-west through the parish. Lying along this road,
at a distance of 2 miles from Chipping Ongar, is the
hamlet of Little End. There have been houses here at
least since 1777. (fn. 5) A recent group of council houses has
been built here. The factory of Piggott Bros. & Co.,
tent and tarpaulin makers, is on the east side of the
main road at Little End. (fn. 6) Opposite the factory is the
site of the former Congregational church, and also the
present rectory. Stanford House, which lies near the
factory to the south, is of 18th-century date possibly
with an older core. It has brick walls, to which imitation half-timbering has been applied recently. It was
the home of Isaac Taylor (see below). A mile northeast of Little End is Littlebury (see below). Wash
Farm, at Wash Bridge, is the name given on modern
maps to Bridge Farm, alias Bridge House Farm (see
below, Bridges and Piggsland). The part of the main
road to the south-west of Little End has been known
since at least the 17th century as Hare Street. (fn. 7)
The main road is joined at Little End by a road
running north-west to Toot Hill. Stanford Hall (see
below) and the church lie beside this road ½ mile from
Little End. The old rectory is ½ mile south-west of the
church. The school, and Steward's Farm, are on the
road between the church and Toot Hill.
Toot Hill is now the main centre of population.
Does Farm here is of late 16th-century origin, faced
with brickwork in the 19th century. It has a cruciform
chimney-stack with five polygonal shafts. A cottage
on the north side of the road about ¼ mile east of Does
was part of a larger building at one time divided into
three tenements. (fn. 8) The east end, including a central
chimney, was destroyed by fire within the last 20 years.
It is of the 15th or early 16th century and is of timber
construction, plastered and weather-boarded. Also at
Toot Hill is a small cottage with one gabled cross-wing
which may be of the 16th century or earlier. On both
sides of the 'Green Man' at Toot Hill is a layout of 16
post-1945 council houses.
In the extreme south of the parish the main road is
joined by a road which leads to Navestock and crosses
the Roding by Shonks Mill Bridge. Half a mile northwest of the bridge is Lawns Farm. The house is of
late 16th- or early-17th-century date, much restored.
It is timber-framed and plastered and has a tiled roof.
The front is flanked by two gables oversailing at firstfloor level. North of Lawns is Wayletts, another
timber-framed and plastered house, probably of the
17th century. Traceys Farm (see below) is ½ mile
north-west of Wayletts. Murrells is on the north-west
side of the main road, to the north-east of Traceys. It
also is timber-framed and plastered. The front has
been entirely rebuilt after receiving severe damage from
a flying bomb in 1944. The house probably dates
from the 16th century, but may have incorporated
parts of an even older house. (fn. 9) Berwick Farm (see
below, Barwicks) is in the west of the parish near
Twentyacre Wood. The site of Bellhouse (see below),
once the main manor house of the parish, is a mile east
of Berwick.
The railway from Epping to Chipping Ongar passes
through the north of the parish. North Weald station
is just inside Stanford Rivers in the north-west, and
Blake Hall station similarly in the north.
There are frequent references to the condition of
bridges in Stanford Rivers. In 1566 Stewards Bridge,
with land on both sides belonging to a Mr. Steward,
was in need of repair. (fn. 10) This may have been the bridge
described later as Hawkes or Hackes Bridge and as
Hallyngford. (fn. 11) Stewards Bridge was frequently presented in the manor court during the reign of Elizabeth
I as needing repair. (fn. 12) The great bridge between
Stanford Rivers and Navestock, Shonks Mill Bridge,
is treated under Navestock (q.v.). Wash Bridge was
taken over by the county in 1830. (fn. 13) In 1858 it was
described in detail by the county surveyor. (fn. 14)
The coach and carriers from Chipping Ongar were
calling at Stanford Rivers in 1848 and 1863. (fn. 15)
The railway stations at North Weald and Blake
Hall were probably opened as soon as the line to
Chipping Ongar was completed in 1865. There was
a coal merchant's wharf at Blake Hall Station in 1869. (fn. 16)
Stanford Rivers had a postal receiving house in
1793. (fn. 17) It was on the daily horse ride shown on the
post-office map of 1813. (fn. 18) In 1848 the post-office was
at the 'White Bear'. (fn. 19) By 1896 there was a sorting
office. (fn. 20) Toot Hill had a sub-post-office in 1863. (fn. 21)
There was a telephone service at Stanford Rivers by
1926. (fn. 22)
There was a resident police constable at Stanford
Rivers from 1906. (fn. 23) Two new police houses were
built at Hare Street in 1954.
Water was supplied to parts of the parish in 1949
by the Herts. and Essex Waterworks Co. (fn. 24) There is
sewerage in part of Stanford Rivers. (fn. 25) Electricity was
laid on in part of the parish in January 1951. (fn. 26) There
is no local supply of gas, but the parish is traversed by
an untapped trunk main. (fn. 27)
There is a village hall at Hare Street and a parish
room at Toot Hill, both dating from 1921. (fn. 28) A
branch of the county library was opened in April
1927. (fn. 29)
In 1086 the main manor of Stanford was a large and
important estate containing a total of 20 ploughteams. (fn. 30) Little Stanford contained 1 plough-team. (fn. 31)
There was another ½ plough-team on the estate formerly
held by a freeman. (fn. 32) At the time of Domesday 5½
plough-teams were employed on the demesne, but the
number had dropped steadily since 1066. There was
estimated to be woodland sufficient to feed a total of
520 swine. This suggests that Stanford was less
densely wooded than Chipping Ongar (q.v.) immediately to the north. From the 11th century until the
16th the lords of the capital manor never seem to have
been resident. This, and the size of the parish, explain
why so many subordinate estates grew up. Even after
the Petres had settled at Bellhouse there does not seem
to have been a large demesne farm. Their estate was
mostly let out to tenants farming 100-300 acres. (fn. 33) In
1842 there were 17 farms in the parish with 90 acres
or more. (fn. 34) The largest, of 703 acres, was a comparatively new creation, of which the nucleus was Stanford
Hall farm. (fn. 35) The others were between 90 and 320
acres. There were also a number of smaller holdings.
There were 400 acres of woodland (mostly in Ongar
Park Wood). The remainder of the parish contained
cultivated arable and grassland in roughly equal
quantities. A field of 13 acres near Stanford Hall to
the west was named Hop Gardens; but it was then
being used for pasture. (fn. 36)
There is little to show how and when inclosure took
place in the parish. In 1579 Bartholomew Combers,
blacksmith of Stanford Rivers, was granted permission
by the queen, as lord of the manor, to build a cottage
and forge on a piece of waste ground in the manor
called Bridges Green. (fn. 37) The Tithe Map (1842) shows
traces of former open meadow: strips or 'pieces' in
Hollingford Mead, running down to the Roding, in
the south-east of the parish. (fn. 38)
In 1086 there was a mill in the main manor of
Stanford. (fn. 39) There was one at Littlebury in 1260. (fn. 40)
Its tithes were granted about that time to Thoby
Priory. (fn. 41) In 1701 there was a water-mill at Littlebury. (fn. 42) The present Littlebury Mill appears to be of
early-19th-century date. It is weather-boarded on a
brick base. In 1946 it changed over from water to
electric power, and in 1952 the mill-stream was filled
in, so that the water now follows the original course
of the Roding. (fn. 43) In 1777 there was a windmill between
Littlebury Hall and the main road. (fn. 44) This is shown on
the Tithe Map but it may not then have been in operation. (fn. 45) The former Shonks Mill is treated under
Navestock (q.v.). The map of 1777 shows this watermill beside Shonks Bridge, and also a windmill a little
to the west. (fn. 46) This windmill, like that at Littlebury,
is marked on the Tithe Map, but had disappeared 30
years later. (fn. 47) There was also a windmill at Toot Hill
in the 19th century. It was built about 1824. (fn. 48) In
1829 it was badly damaged by lightning and the miller
was seriously injured. A lithograph drawing of the
mill, showing him gazing at the damage, was sold for
the benefit of him and his family. (fn. 49) The mill was soon
working again and continued to operate until about
1900. It was finally demolished in 1935. (fn. 50) It was a
wooden post-mill turned by hand. The four brick
piers which formerly supported the cross-trees at the
base of the mill can still be seen on the site. The
single-story weather-boarded mill cottage, probably
built about 1824, still exists. The mill stood on
the north side of the road leading to Greenstead
Green.
Spinning was carried on in the parish workhouse
from 1770 to about 1800. (fn. 51) The brick and tile works
to the south of North Weald station existed in 1871-3. (fn. 52)
A transmitting station of the Marconi Wireless Telegraphy Co. operated in the parish in about 1926-9. (fn. 53)
The factory of Piggott Bros. & Co., tent and tarpaulin
makers at Little End, was formerly the Ongar Union
workhouse. It was converted to its present use after
the union was dissolved in 1930. The central range
of brown gault brick has three stories and a basement,
also a splayed projecting bay at the back. It was built
in about 1830-1 as the workhouse of the voluntary
poor law union which preceded the Ongar Union.
The side wings, in a slightly pinker brick, were added
a few years later (see plate facing p. 233).
Most of the eminent men who have been connected
with Stanford Rivers were rectors of the parish; these
are mentioned below (see Church). Isaac Taylor
(1787-1865) artist, author, and inventor, is usually
known as Isaac Taylor of Stanford Rivers. He was the
son of Isaac Taylor of Ongar (1759-1829). (fn. 54) He
settled at Stanford House in 1825 and lived there for
the rest of his life. (fn. 55)