GREENSTEAD

Greenstead c. 1838
The ancient parish of Greenstead comprised
1,501 a. (607 ha.) on the east of the built-up area
of Colchester. (fn. 14) Greenstead was originally a
compact estate, but a quarter of it passed to St.
Botolph's priory, Colchester, and thus became
detached parts of St. Botolph's parish. Earlier the
parish was probably bounded on the south-west
by the Colne, on the west by Mile End, on the
north by woodland, and on the east for a short
stretch by Salary brook, while the south-east
boundary lay across Whitmore heath and
Wivenhoe heath. Later the boundary excluded
a detached part of St. Botolph's parish in the
north-east, and another on the west. Much of
the parish lies at over 30 metres, reaching 40
metres on Clingo hill, but the land falls gradually to c. 5 metres by the river Colne and more
sharply to Salary brook which bisects the main
part of the parish. (fn. 15) The soil is mostly glacial
gravel with some alluvium along the river valleys; a band of London clay runs from
south-west to north-east and there is some glacial loam in the east. (fn. 16) Much of the parish is good
arable land, but the lower ground in the southeast is marshy, and was considered unhealthy in
1723. (fn. 17) The abbot of St. John's, Colchester, had
fishponds in Greenstead in the 13th century, and
before 1286 had created a park, presumably in
the area of the later Park farm. (fn. 18) Wivenhoe park,
landscaped in the late 18th century, extended
into the south-west part of the parish. (fn. 19)
The Colchester-Harwich road, turnpiked c.
1725, crosses the north of the parish. A road,
described as a lane in 1608, branches east towards Bromley. (fn. 20) The Colchester-Ipswich road
runs along the parish boundary for a short
distance in the north-west. In the south Greenstead Road, called Greenstead Street in 1372, is
part of the Colchester-Wivenhoe road; a branch
led eastwards to Greenstead Hall and church
and to Park farm. (fn. 21) A road called Soleyntye was
mentioned in 1498. (fn. 22) In the 17th century a road
from Greenstead to the Hythe was built. (fn. 23)
Sunterforde bridge recorded in 1386, Caterford bridge in 1478, and Cunterfet bridge in
1646 appear to be different names for Salary
bridge which carries the Wivenhoe road over
Salary brook. (fn. 24) Crockleford bridge, which takes
the Bromley road over Salary brook, was a ford
in 1206; by 1586 there was a bridge, perhaps a
footbridge, there. (fn. 25) Dilbridge farm seems to have
taken its name from a bridge over the Colne,
perhaps near the end of Land Lane where signs
of an old ford were apparently still visible in the
early 20th century. (fn. 26)
The railway to Ipswich across the north of the
parish was opened in 1846 and the Tendring
Hundred railway across the south in the 1860s. (fn. 27)
There was a sub-post office by 1866, and by 1908
there were two, one in Greenstead Road and one
at Parson's Heath. (fn. 28)
In the Roman period there may have been one
or two villas in the area. (fn. 29) An estate which
became Greenstead manor existed in the mid
10th century. By 1066 the settlement was well
established, with at least four households in
addition to the two servi who worked the manorial demesne, and had its own church. (fn. 30)
Thirteen householders were assessed for subsidy
in 1296, compared with 7 in Mile End, and 16
in Lexden; William of Greenstead was the most
highly taxed inhabitant. (fn. 31) Members of the
Northen family were substantial tenants of
Greenstead manor in the 15th and 16th centuries. Thomas Northen was the wealthiest man
in the parish in 1523 when 24 were assessed,
more than in West Donyland and Mile End, but
fewer than in Lexden. (fn. 32) There were 73 households in 1671, of which 44 were exempt from
hearth tax. (fn. 33) In 1692 there were 107 adults rated
to the poll tax. There were significantly more
burials than baptisms in the period 1701-31, and
by 1768 there were only 26 houses in the parish,
many on the road to the Hythe having been
demolished. The number of houses increased to
35 in 1790, and in the following decade there
were only two thirds as many burials as baptisms. (fn. 34)
The population increased rapidly from 309 in
1801 to 598 in 1831, then more slowly to 789 in
1861. There was a slight decline to 752 in 1881
before the population rose again to 1,162 by
1901. (fn. 35) The number of inhabited houses increased from 118 in 1821 to 161 in 1851 and 242
in 1901. (fn. 36)
Greenstead was for long a sparsely populated,
agricultural parish, with the houses concentrated
in the south-east nearest Colchester town. (fn. 37)
From c. 1795 another focus developed around
Parson's heath in the north, as parts of the
former manorial waste on Gallow green were
sold in small plots. (fn. 38) By 1900 new houses were
beginning to fill the gaps along the Greenstead
road near the Hythe, and the south-east corner
of the parish was increasingly drawn within the
compass of the town. Most of Greenstead, however, remained a predominantly agricultural
parish, rural rather than suburban, until the mid
20th century. (fn. 39)
A charity house, apparently near Clingo hill,
was recorded in 1435. It may have been an
unendowed almshouse or hospital, or it may
simply have been owned by St. Mary Magdalen's hospital. (fn. 40) The few buildings from before
1800 which survived in 1990 were in Greenstead
Road except for Salary Brook Farm, a timberframed house of the late 16th or early 17th
century. (fn. 41)
MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
Ealdorman Aelfgar held an estate at Greenstead which
he and his daughters devised to a religious house
at Stoke, probably Stoke by Nayland (Suff.). (fn. 42)
GREENSTEAD manor, presumably the same
estate, was held in 1066 by Godric, a free man.
On his death it was divided between his four
sons, and by 1086 half of it was in the king's
hands while Eustace of Boulogne and John son
of Waleram each held a quarter. (fn. 43) Eustace's
quarter seems to have passed to St. Botolph's
priory, of which he was a benefactor, and to have
been merged with the priory's neighbouring
manors of Dilbridge and Shaws. (fn. 44) The remaining three quarters of Greenstead passed to Eudes
the sewer (dapifer), the king's moiety presumably with the rest of the royal demesne in
Colchester, John son of Waleram's quarter with
his other Colchester land which Eudes had
acquired by 1119. (fn. 45) Eudes apparently gave
Greenstead to St. John's abbey, Colchester, but
on his death in 1120 it was seized by William of
St. Clare. William, with the consent of his
brother Hamon of St. Clare and Hamon's son
and heir Hubert, restored Greenstead to the
abbey between 1141 and 1151. (fn. 46) The abbey's
estate in Greenstead was enlarged by several
grants in the 12th, 13th, and 14th centuries,
notably by Hubert of St. Clare between 1148
and 1154, and by William Brome, who gave a
total of c. 75 a. in 1336. (fn. 47)
St. John's retained Greenstead until the Dissolution, when it was granted to Thomas Cromwell,
Lord Cromwell. (fn. 48) On his attainder in 1540 the
estate escheated to the Crown, and was granted
in 1548 to Princess, later Queen, Mary. (fn. 49) In 1557
Mary granted it to Bernard Hampton, a clerk of
the Privy Council, who conveyed it in 1561 to
Lawrence Cockson, a London haberdasher, who
conveyed it in 1563 to Sir Thomas Lucas. (fn. 50) The
Lucas family had already acquired Mile End
manor in 1544 and Bullock and Soane woods in
1546. (fn. 51) From Sir Thomas (d. 1611) the manor
passed to his son Sir Thomas (d. 1625) and
grandson John Lucas, Baron Lucas of Shenfield.
Lord Lucas was succeeded by his daughter
Mary, Baroness Lucas of Crudwell (d. 1702),
who married Anthony Grey, earl of Kent. (fn. 52) The
manor then descended with the barony of Lucas
of Crudwell until 1917 when it was sold. (fn. 53) From
1918 to 1931 the manor was held by C. E. Gooch
of Wivenhoe Park, but thereafter manorial rights
seem to have lapsed. (fn. 54)
Greenstead Hall, where courts were held, was
a manor house. (fn. 55) The building, demolished c.
1967, appears to have been a farmhouse of the
18th and 19th centuries. (fn. 56)
The farmstead of SHAWS, called a manor
from 1542, derived from the holding of John at
Shaw in Greenstead, recorded in 1296. (fn. 57) It was
held of St. Botolph's priory in 1311, and passed
into the priory's possession between 1318 and
1351, perhaps on the death of John at Shaw who
was last recorded in 1337. (fn. 58) By 1542 Shaws, on
the boundary between Colchester and Ardleigh,
was the centre of an extensive estate comprising
land and rents in St. Botolph's, All Saints', St.
Giles's, St. Runwald's, St. James's, St. Peter's,
St. Nicholas's, St. Leonard's, St. Mary Magdalen's, and Greenstead parishes in Colchester,
and in Ardleigh, Bromley, Tendring, Little Bentley, Elmstead, and Wivenhoe, presumably
acquired by St. Botolph's at different times. At
the Dissolution it was granted to Sir Thomas
Audley, later Lord Audley, (fn. 59) and escheated to
the Crown on his death in 1545.
The Crown retained the manorial rights, but
not the demesne land, until 1596, (fn. 60) and probably
until c. 1626 when they were sold to George
Whitmore, alderman and later lord mayor of
London (d. 1654). (fn. 61) He was succeeded by his
son William (d. 1678) and grandson, also William Whitmore, who died without issue in 1684.
Shaws was sold with the Whitmore's other Essex
manor, Wrabness, to Sir Thomas Davall, who
held it in 1698. (fn. 62) On his death in 1712 it passed
to his son, another Sir Thomas Davall (d. 1714),
who was succeeded by his infant son Thomas
(d. 1718). (fn. 63)
On the death of the last Thomas Davall Shaws
passed with Wrabness to Daniel Burr, cousin
and devisee under the will of the second Sir
Thomas Davall. Burr sold the manor in or before
1749 to Nathaniel Garland (d. 1756), who was
succeeded by his son Lewis Peak Garland (d.
1780) and by Lewis Peak's son Nathaniel (d.
1845). Nathaniel's son Edgar Wallace Garland
died without issue in 1902 and was succeeded
by his nephew Arthur Nathaniel Garland who
was lord of the manor in 1928, by which time
most of the manorial rights had been sold. (fn. 64)
The Crown granted the manorial demesne,
later Shaws farm, in 1545 to William Beriff,
a Colchester clothmaker, and John Multon. (fn. 65)
Beriff died in 1595 in sole possession of
Shaws which he left to his son, another
William Beriff (d. 1628), who was succeeded
by his son, also William Beriff. (fn. 66) By 1640 the
farm had passed to Edmund Church. When
he died in 1649, his lands were under sequestration for recusancy and Shaws does not
seem to have been among those recovered by
his daughters Anne and Mary. (fn. 67) By 1706 the
farm belonged to William Hall; (fn. 68) he sold
Shaws before 1748 to Thomas Kilham of
London (d. 1753) (fn. 69) who devised it to his son
Leonard. Leonard, of St. James's, Westminster, died in 1799 leaving the farm to his
cousin John Roberts (d. 1820). In 1837 Roberts's widow Sarah sold Shaws to Sir
Thomas Mash, the principal mortgagee. (fn. 70)
By 1425 St. Botolph's priory held a farm at
DILBRIDGE north-east of the town. (fn. 71) It presumably comprised the detached portion of St.
Botolph's parish there and was probably the
quarter of Greenstead manor held in 1086 by
Eustace of Boulogne which he, or more probably his successor another Eustace of Boulogne,
gave to the priory before the second Eustace's
retirement in 1125. (fn. 72) At the Dissolution the
farm was granted to Sir Thomas Audley, later
Lord Audley, who immediately conveyed it to
John Christmas. (fn. 73) John and his son George
sold it in 1552 to John Lucas, owner of Mile
End manor, with which Dilbridge descended
thereafter. (fn. 74) Baroness Lucas sold the farm to
W. Marriage in 1917. (fn. 75)
Throwerystye, later ROVERS TYE, was recorded in 1353. (fn. 76) An estate there was bequeathed
by Sir Laurence Rainsford to his son Henry in
1489. (fn. 77) In 1544 Edward Smith of Hadleigh
(Suff.) and Ursula his wife sold it, with its lands
and rents in All Saints', St. Botolph's, Greenstead, and Ardleigh, to John Lucas, and it
became part of the Lucas estate in Mile End and
Colchester. (fn. 78) In 1917 Baroness Lucas sold the
farm to its occupier. (fn. 79)
The former Rovers Tye farmhouse is an early
17th-century timber-framed house with 18thcentury additions along the west side. In 1983,
when it was converted into a public house, (fn. 80)
major timber-framed extensions were made on
the west, and a small barn which had stood to
the west of the house was rebuilt at the south
end.
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1066 there were
4 ploughteams. In 1086 only 2 teams with 2 servi
were recorded, both on the king's demesne.
There were 24 a. of meadow and marsh on the
king's 2 hides, and presumably an equivalent
area on the remaining 2 hides. The king's hides
were valued at 30s. each, compared with 20s. for
the remaining 2 hides, suggesting that, although
no teams were recorded in 1086, they had not
gone out of cultivation and were being cultivated
from other Colchester estates. (fn. 81)
There was considerable early clearance of
woodland. The farm name Shaws, meaning
wood or grove, suggests that it was an assart. (fn. 82)
Other land was also inclosed and used for
arable cultivation. (fn. 83) Rye and oats were recorded
in the 14th century. (fn. 84) Some of the cleared land
was used for pasture. (fn. 85) At Shaws and at Rovers
Tye in 1435 pasture was overloaded with 260
sheep. (fn. 86) In the 14th century 13 of St. John's
abbey's tenants holding a total of 270 a. of
arable, 72 a. of wood, and 22 a. of meadow had
rights of common for 348 sheep, 50 cows, and
8 pigs beside Crockleford brook and on Parson's heath and Cross heath. (fn. 87)
St. John's abbey inclosed some ancient common in the north before 1323 and planted Sowen
wood, c. 220 a., later known as Soane or Bullock
wood, one of the earliest examples of planted
woodland in the country. In 1546 trees were still
being planted in rotation on 200 a. there. Sixty
acres remained in 1986. (fn. 88)
An account of the common fields in 1599
recorded 137 a. of arable and pasture and 19 a.
of meadow held in severalty, and 10 a. of
common meadow. (fn. 89) In the 17th century cows'
milk was used for cheesemaking. (fn. 90) Shaws farm
was deteriorating in 1654, but by 1706 was in
cultivation. Underwood from the woods there
was sold in 1712. (fn. 91)
The Lucas family owned Rovers Tye, Dilbridge, and Greenstead farms, as well as Mile
End farm, from the mid 16th century. (fn. 92) In 1683
Rovers Tye, in Greenstead and other parishes,
comprised 2 pasture crofts, and 8 other closes
(one called Saffron field) in the detached part of
All Saints' parish, probably totalling c. 80 a. as
they did in 1802; there was also a meadow in
Greenstead. By 1730 as much as 12 a. of waste
along the Ipswich road had been inclosed as part
of the farm. (fn. 93) In 1699 Dilbridge farm (mainly in
St. Botolph's parish) comprised 11 a. of pasture,
9 or 10 arable fields among the burgesses' half
year lands, at least 11 other arable fields, and an
unspecified amount of meadow and pasture in
St. Botolph's, Mile End, St. James's, and St.
Nicholas's parishes; in 1711 it was by far the
most valuable of the Lucases' Colchester estates. (fn. 94)
Greenstead paid £132 land tax in 1778,
eleventh of the 16 Colchester parishes; the nonresident lady of the manor, whose Greenstead
land was leased in five main farms, paid over half
the tax. (fn. 95) In 1794 Mary Rebow was the chief of
the 39 freeholders and 69 copyholders of the
manor. (fn. 96) Various members of the Clay family
farmed almost three quarters of the manorial
estate in 1800 besides a little of their own land. (fn. 97)
In 1801 the main crops in the parish were
wheat, oats, and barley; some peas, turnips,
beans, and potatoes were also grown. (fn. 98) At Rovers
Tye farm in 1802 fallowing had been entirely
eliminated on the 50 a.-60 a. of arable by using
beans, peas, turnips, clover, or grass. (fn. 99) In 1821
Shaws farm, mainly in St. Botolph's parish but
extending into Ardleigh, comprised 181 a.: 178
a. arable (including c. 7 a. former meadow
presumably along Crockleford brook), 1½ a. of
woodland, and the site of the farmhouse and
buildings. (fn. 1) In 1824 the tenants on the largely
arable manorial farms followed a rotation of
turnips, barley, clover, wheat, and, if manured,
oats, but poor drainage in places diminished
yields. (fn. 2)
By 1839 about three quarters, 726 a., of titheable land was arable. Much of the 239 a. of
tithe-free land was woodland. Just over half of
the parish was owned by the absentee lord of the
manor, who let most of it in three main holdings,
of c. 245 a., 150 a., and 83 a., and the rest mainly
as small parcels of grass or arable or as cottages
with gardens. (fn. 3) The only other significant landowner in the parish was the Rebow family,
which in the 18th and 19th centuries was gradually consolidating its holdings in the east of the
parish and in neighbouring Wivenhoe and Ardleigh. (fn. 4) In 1839 Lieut. Gen. Francis Slater
Rebow of Wivenhoe Park Lodge owned almost
a quarter of Greenstead parish. (fn. 5)
Agriculture remained the most important
source of employment, particularly for those
living in the north part of the parish. However,
the farms employed a smaller proportion of the
inhabitants in the later 19th century because of
agricultural depression and increasing alternative employment in the town. (fn. 6)
There was very little industry in the parish
before the 19th century. A tilemaker was mentioned in 1370, there was a kiln house for the
manufacture of tiles at Dilbridge in 1398-9, and
there was brick- and tile-making on a small scale
c. 1800. (fn. 7) The 'thrower' for whom Rovers Tye
was named before 1353 may have been a potter,
for there is evidence of pottery-making in Mile
End. (fn. 8) A grazier in 1547 was described as being
also a clothier and a salter. (fn. 9) In 1810 a millwright's and engineer's business was started.
Whiting was manufactured in 1842 but no
longer by 1900. (fn. 10) By 1881 there were nursery
gardens along Greenstead Road and an iron and
brass foundry near the Hythe. (fn. 11)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
The abbot of St.
John's held a manor court in Greenstead in the
early 13th century. (fn. 12) In 1274 and 1285 he
claimed gallows, tumbrel, the assize of bread and
of ale, and free warren by charter of Henry III. (fn. 13)
The gallows presumably stood on or near Gallow green, the triangle of land on the edge of
Parson's heath. (fn. 14) Manor courts with view of
frankpledge were held about three or four times
a year from the 14th to the 16th century, usually
including one at Whitsun and one near Christmas. An ale-taster, two constables, and one or
two rent collectors were elected each year at
Whitsun. (fn. 15) Between 1572 and 1602 the manor
court with view of frankpledge met annually and
appointed two constables and two wardens of
the commons; thereafter until 1669 it met less
regularly. Courts baron were held until 1931. (fn. 16)
John at Shaw unsuccessfully claimed heriot
from a tenant of Shaw's manor in 1311. (fn. 17) St.
Botolph's priory and its successors as lords held
courts for the manor of Shaws until 1841; from
1558 they apparently held view of frankpledge,
but no leet business was recorded, the courts
being concerned solely with the transfer of copyhold land; pleas leading to recoveries were
occasionally heard. In 1764 an Ardleigh man was
presented for digging brickearth between Harwich Road and Soane wood, and from 1769
encroachments on the waste were presented and
licences to inclose small pieces of waste were
granted. (fn. 18)
Parish stocks were recorded in 1581. (fn. 19) Vestry
records do not survive, but churchwardens and
overseers were mentioned in 1685. (fn. 20) A parish
workhouse was sold in 1815. (fn. 21) Annual expenditure on poor relief amounted to £152 in 1776
and c. £145 in 1783-5. (fn. 22) By 1812 it reached
£322, equivalent to c. 15s. a head, and by 1820
to £487, but fell to £384 in 1821, still c. 15s. a
head, just below the average for Colchester. In
1835 Greenstead became part of the Colchester
poor-law union. (fn. 23)
CHURCH.
The church existed by 1066, and at
the Conquest passed with the manor to Eudes
the sewer who c. 1119 gave to St. John's abbey
tithes of Greenstead, presumably of his demesne. (fn. 24) After Eudes's death in 1120 William of
St. Clare acquired the church and between 1141
and 1151 gave it to the abbey, which kept the
advowson until the Dissolution. (fn. 25) In 1540 Henry
VIII granted the patronage to Thomas Cromwell, but it reverted to the Crown on his
attainder and was granted in 1548 to Princess,
later Queen, Mary. (fn. 26) It has remained with the
Crown, from 1863 being exercised by the Lord
Chancellor. (fn. 27)
The rectory was valued at 13s. 4d. in 1254
besides a pension to the abbey of 6s. (which had
increased from 5s. in the late 12th century) and
4 lb. of wax a year. (fn. 28) The value of the rectory
was £1 10s. c. 1291 and £5 in 1535. (fn. 29) In 1443
the living was vacant because of its poverty. (fn. 30)
The abbot of St. John's retained the tithes of the
manorial demesne, presumably as a result of
Eudes's grant. In 1620 Thomas Lucas, lord of
Greenstead manor, successfully resisted the rector, William Denman's, claim to tithe from
Greenstead park, but Denman recovered tithe
from two other parcels of land. (fn. 31) The house and
11 rods of glebe were worth £6 and the tithes
£50 in 1650. (fn. 32) The tithes of c. 980 a. were
commuted for a yearly rent of £293 in 1839,
helping to raise the value of the living from £280
in 1835 to £308 10s. in 1887. (fn. 33)
The parsonage house, almost falling down in
1607, had been either repaired or replaced by
the early 18th century, and was in good repair
in 1790. (fn. 34) A new house was built in Greenstead
Road in 1805, and enlarged c. 1898. (fn. 35) About 1962
a new house was built next to the church. (fn. 36)
Before the mid 18th century more than half of
the incumbents of the poor living were pluralists. (fn. 37) Thomas Juscard, rector 1325-51, was
accused in 1324 of assault, and several times
between 1330 and 1351 of roaming the town at
night with armed men. (fn. 38) Richard 'Father' Alvey,
rector 1546-8, was one of the most influential of
the early protestant preachers. Deprived of his
preferments during Mary's reign, he fled abroad
and was closely associated with important Marian exiles such as John Pulleyne. He was later
Master of the Temple from 1560 until his death
in 1584. (fn. 39) In 1575 Richard Spencer, curate from
the early 1570s until 1580, had to do penance for
drunkenness. (fn. 40) Robert Holmes, rector 1586-9
and rector of St. James's, Colchester, 1585-92,
considered the wearing of the surplice a papal
superstition. Three brief incumbencies followed
until the institution of William Denman, rector
1599-1624. In 1607 the churchwardens provided a surplice for communion services only. (fn. 41)
John Jarvis, rector from 1638 and rector of
North Fambridge from 1631, was accused in
1644 of speaking against parliament, neglecting
his cure on Sundays, swearing, frequenting alehouses, and reading his sermons from a book.
He was deprived of both livings in 1646 and, at
the request of the parishioners, Greenstead was
served by John White, rector of St. James's. (fn. 42)
Paul Duckett, appointed in the 1650s, apparently conformed at the Restoration, but was
succeeded in 1662 by John Ruting (Johannes
Ruytinck), minister of the Dutch church in
Colchester 1645-63 and master of Colchester
grammar school 1659-62, who held the church
in plurality with St. Leonard's, Colchester. (fn. 43) In
1683 the rector, Thomas Shaw, was urged to
read prayers on Sunday mornings, but a later
rector was still neglecting to do so in 1705. (fn. 44)
Theodore Garland, rector 1706-28, was elderly
and infirm by 1723 when a neighbouring clergyman served the cure. By then Garland had
moved to the town because his family suffered
ague and fevers at Greenstead. Benjamin Owen,
resident rector 1730-54 and vicar of Abberton,
performed one service on Sundays and administered communion three times a year in each
parish. (fn. 45) Samuel Forster, rector 1783-97, whose
brother Nathaniel was rector of All Saints',
Colchester, lived in Oxford where he was registrar of the university, and employed a curate to
serve Greenstead. (fn. 46)
Charles Hewitt, rector from 1797 until he died
aged 96 in 1849, was rector of St. James's
1783-99 and headmaster of Colchester grammar
school 1779-1806. He was serving Greenstead
himself in 1815, but employed a curate in 1848. (fn. 47)
Under his successor, the Evangelical Meshach
Seaman, rector 1849-82, Greenstead was among
the parishes which petitioned Queen Victoria c.
1850 against the restoration of the Roman Catholic hierarchy. Seaman was responsible for
restoring the church in 1856-7. (fn. 48) On Census
Sunday 1851 attendances of 77 in the morning
and 134 in the afternoon were reported out of a
population of 751. (fn. 49) In 1869 there were still only
eight communion services a year. (fn. 50)
In 1920 average church attendance was 50-60
in the morning and 30-40 in the evening, mainly
'well-to-do working men'. (fn. 51) St. Edmund's
church hall was built in 1966 on Greenstead
housing estate to serve both as a church and as
a parish hall, but in 1985 it was used mainly as
a church hall. (fn. 52) In 1981 a parish room at Harwich Road was converted into St. Matthew's
church and an assistant curate was appointed to
serve the increasing population of Greenstead. (fn. 53)
St. Andrew's maintained its Evangelical tradition in 1987.

Greenstead church c. 1824
The ecclesiastical parish was reduced in 1863
when the chapelry of St. John the Evangelist was
created. In 1911 a small portion of St. Botolph's
parish was added to Greenstead. (fn. 54) Under the
reorganization of Colchester parishes in 1953
one small portion of Greenstead parish became
part of the new parish of St. Anne, and another
became part of the new parish of St. James with
All Saints, St. Nicholas and St. Runwald. In
1961 a small portion of St. John's parish was
annexed to Greenstead. (fn. 55)
The church of ST. ANDREW, Forest Road,
Greenstead, comprises a chancel and nave,
structurally undivided, a south aisle running the
length of the nave and chancel, a west tower, and
a north porch. (fn. 56) The walls are of mixed rubble,
the old work mostly being rendered, the tower
is of red brick, and the roofs are of tiles and
slates. The simple plan may be of 12th-century
origin and the exposed north-west angle incorporates some re-used Roman brick. Until the
mid 19th-century restoration two 12th-century
windows survived in the chancel, which had
other medieval features including a 13th-century
lancet and a mid 14th-century east window with
reticulated tracery. (fn. 57) Two recesses in the east
wall are probably early 14th-century and a plain
tomb recess in the north wall retains some
medieval painting in formal imitation of stonework. The late 16th-century tower is decorated
with a simple pattern in dark headers in the red
brickwork.
In 1633 the church was in a poor condition,
the buttress on the south side of the chancel
having fallen down, and it was presumably
damaged during the siege in 1648 when a parliamentary gun battery was erected in the
churchyard. (fn. 58) About 1705 a buttress, presum
ably the clasping buttress at the south-east angle
in existence in 1824, was built to support the
south wall of the chancel. The chancel and east
part of the nave were refaced in the late 18th
century. By 1824 the south side of the chancel
had been heavily buttressed and two dormer
windows had been inserted in the nave. (fn. 59)
The church was thoroughly restored in 1856-
7, largely at the expense of Thomas Philip de
Grey, Earl de Grey, and J. G. Rebow, M.P. A
south aisle, designed in 13th-century style by G.
Sargent, was added and the interior was
repewed. (fn. 60) After the earthquake of 1884 the nave
ceiling was replaced and the tower repaired and
stripped of its rendering. (fn. 61) Extensive repairs in
1971 included reroofing the tower and rebuilding its parapet. (fn. 62)
Victorian oak wall tablets on either side of the
chancel east window contain the Lord's prayer,
commandments, and creed. The Hanoverian
royal arms hang above the north door. There is
one bell, of 1723 by Thomas Gardiner; an earlier
bell was recorded in 1607. The church plate
includes a 17th-century silver cup made by R.
Hutchinson of Colchester. (fn. 63)
In 1896 Francis Thomas de Grey, Lord Cowper, gave c.½ a. to extend the churchyard, (fn. 64)
which was still used for burials in 1985.
The dual purpose church hall of ST. EDMUND, designed in 1966 by J. Thompson, in
brick lined with wood, has a glass south wall
surmounted by a cross. (fn. 65) The red brick church
of ST. MATTHEW was converted from a
parish room which had previously been a
school. (fn. 66)
NONCONFORMITY.
A small number of Independents was recorded in 1790 and 1810. (fn. 67)
Later Congregational and Baptist chapels were
founded in the parish from churches in the
town. (fn. 68)
EDUCATION.
Three small day schools, presumably dame schools, at which 30 children were
educated at their parents' expense, were reported in 1833, but had apparently disappeared
by 1841. (fn. 69) A National school, which later became
Greenstead Church of England primary school,
was built in Greenstead Road in 1851 at the
instigation of the rector, Meshach Seaman, in a
building erected by Thomas Philip de Grey,
Earl de Grey, lord of the manor. (fn. 70) The site and
building remained the property of de Grey's
successors until they were given in trust to the
rector and churchwardens in 1921. (fn. 71) At first the
school was maintained solely by Seaman. (fn. 72) By
1863 it was attended by c. 100 children, and from
1866 it received annual government grants. (fn. 73) In
1874 attendance fell as new schools opened in
neighbouring parishes, and in 1875, at Seaman's
request, the committee of the central National
school took over the management of the school. (fn. 74)
In 1893, when 91 children attended, the school
was enlarged by subscription to accommodate
174, and by 1899 attendance had risen to 130. (fn. 75)
In 1932 the school was reorganized for juniors
and infants. It was granted Controlled status in
1951 and closed in 1976. (fn. 76)
St. John's Church of England primary school
originated in 1863 as a small school for 30
children, associated with St. John's district
church and held in a cottage. In 1872 a new
school for 90 children was built by subscription
and grants on land in Ipswich Road given by
Katrine de Grey, Countess Cowper. (fn. 77) It received government grants from its opening in
1873. (fn. 78) Average attendance was c. 60 in 1890,
but later that year several children left to go to
Kendall Road board school. In 1895 a government inspector found the school inefficient, but
it survived falling numbers and frequent staff
changes. Attendance rose from 52 in 1898 to 87
in 1910, (fn. 79) when the building was enlarged. In
1934 the school was reorganized for juniors and
infants. It was granted Controlled status in 1952,
and in 1972 moved to new buildings in Clay
Lane Grove. (fn. 80)
Parson's Heath Church of England primary
school originated as a National day and Sunday
school for 72 children, hastily built in Greenstead
Road in 1890 to forestall a British school. It
received annual government grants from its foundation. (fn. 81) By 1893 it had 87 children, and in 1894
was enlarged for 121. (fn. 82) It was reorganized in 1932
for juniors and infants. (fn. 83) In 1951 the school was
granted Controlled status and in 1966 it moved
to a new building in Templewood Road. (fn. 84)
East Ward school, Hazelmere schools, St. Andrew's schools, and Sir Charles Lucas school are
described above. (fn. 85)
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR.
None known.