ECONOMIC HISTORY.
The three Epping
manors mentioned in Domesday clearly do not
account for the whole of the ancient parish, and it is
suggested elsewhere that the great manor of Waltham, held in 1086 by the Bishop of Durham, must
have extended into Epping. (fn. 1) During the Middle
Ages Waltham Abbey greatly enlarged its estates in
Epping, Waltham, and Nazeing. This process culminated in 1350 with the acquisition of Copped
Hall. In the 16th and 17th centuries most of the
manors in the parish changed hands frequently, but
in the 18th and 19th centuries the Conyers family
and their successors, the Wythes family, built up a
large estate around their mansion of Copped Hall.
In 1086 the total area of the manors in Epping, so
named, was about 5½ hides. (fn. 2) The arable land was
being worked by some 4½ plough teams. There was
woodland for some 180 swine. There was very little
meadow except on Ranulf's manor, where some of
it probably lay by the Lea, in Nazeing. Livestock on
the three manors included 12 'beasts', 26 swine, 46
sheep, 8 goats, and a rouncy. (fn. 3) The manors had few
tenants. On that belonging to Waltham were only
2 bordars and 2 serfs. On Osbern's manor were 2
villeins and 2 bordars. Even Ranulf's manor, threequarters of which was in Nazeing, had only 7
villeins and 9 bordars. These Domesday figures, if
read in conjunction with those relating to the manor
of Waltham, (fn. 4) suggest that in 1086 much of what
was later the parish of Epping was sparselypopulated forest. The history of the forest, so far as
it concerns Epping, is described below. (fn. 5) In and
after the 12th century there was much forest clearance.
By c. 1235 the manor of Epping belonging to
Waltham Abbey had some 50 tenants. Of these
Osbert at Brook held 1½ virgate, and Adam at
Fortey 1 virgate. (fn. 6) The other tenements were
smaller; more than half of them were about 2 a.
Most of these smallholders dwelt on the heath,
where the market (fn. 7) was soon to be established. The
rental from which this information comes also lists
the tenants' services in detail. Much of the manorial
hay came from Nazeing Mead by the river Lea. (fn. 8)
Mowing and making hay in this meadow, and carting it to the manor as far as Cobbin's Bridge, figure
in the services of nearly every tenant.
There is no evidence that open-field agriculture
was ever practised at Epping; it is more likely that
most of the land—and certainly that reclaimed
from the forest—was always farmed in severalty.
The few available figures suggest that in the Middle
Ages arable farming predominated in the parish: on
most manors there was little meadow and pasture. (fn. 9)
By the end of the 18th century the proportion was
very different. Ogborne (1814) stated that there
were then in Epping a total of about 6,000 a., of
which 4,800 a. were meadow and pasture, 500 a.
common or forest and the remainder arable and
inclosed wood. (fn. 10) These were only rough estimates,
since the total area of the ancient parish was, in fact,
only 5,319 a., but even when allowance is made for
this the figures are striking. About this time a good
deal of arable in south-west Essex was being converted to pasture. (fn. 11) No doubt this was happening at
Epping; but dairy-farming was already well established in the parish before then. (fn. 12) The main cause
of the conversion to pasture was no doubt the
proximity of London, which provided a large and
growing market for dairy products. The change had
probably been going on at Epping throughout the
18th century, though there are few figures to prove
this. The process is illustrated at Shingle Hall. In
1303 that manor had contained 120 a. arable, 8 a.
meadow, and 4 a. pasture; in 1563 there were 160 a.
arable, 20 a. meadow, and 60 a. pasture; by c. 1750
there were 40 a. arable, 40 a. meadow, and 120 a.
pasture. (fn. 13) In the early 19th century Epping was
well known for its excellent butter, which fetched
the highest prices in London. (fn. 14) The local farmers
did not favour any particular breed of cow, but seem
to have relied on good pastures and a high standard
of cleanliness in their dairies. (fn. 15) Epping pork and
sausages were also well known. (fn. 16)
During the second quarter of the 19th century the
amount of arable land in the parish appears to have
increased. In 1840 there were some 1,300 a. compared with 2,900 a. meadow and pasture. (fn. 17) At this
time the largest local landowner was H. J. Conyers,
of Copped Hall, an irascible squire whose devotion
to hunting became legendary. (fn. 18) His farm leases show
his desire to preserve game, but do not suggest a
deliberate policy of bringing more land under the
plough. (fn. 19)
Besides the pasture on individual farms there was
extensive grazing on the common wastes of the
parish. These included some small patches of grassland, but they were mainly woodland, and all fell
within the legal limits of the Forest of Essex, now
known as Epping Forest. The Epping Forest Act
(1878) placed all the commons in the parish, except
Rye Hill, under the protection of the City of
London, and thus ensured their preservation. (fn. 20) Rye
Hill Common was presumably omitted because
most of it lay in Little Parndon parish. This common
was ploughed up during the Second World War and
has since been inclosed. (fn. 21)
Until the early 19th century one of the main outlets for the dairy produce of Epping and district—
and indeed for a much wider area—was the town's
own market. (fn. 22) After the first railways were built the
town and the market declined but with the extension
of the branch line from Loughton to Epping and
Ongar in 1865 the development of the town (fn. 23) continued and the market revived, though perhaps more
slowly. These events probably affected local dairy
farming. In 1876 Epping butter and sausages were
still being made, but were said to have lost their
previous supremacy. (fn. 24) The proportion of arable to
grassland in the parish did not, however, change
very much. In 1905 the parish of Epping Upland
(an area somewhat smaller than the ancient parish
of Epping) contained some 1,100 a. arable to 2,500 a.
permanent grass. (fn. 25)
The growth of stage-coach traffic in the 18th
century, and the prosperity it brought to Epping are
described above. (fn. 26) This trade declined after 1840,
but it returned in the present century with motor
transport. In the 19th century Epping also began to
develop as a holiday resort, mainly for Londoners.
This originated in the sports connected with Epping
Forest, especially fox-hunting and stag-hunting.
The 'Cockney Hunt' on Easter Monday is well
known from Tom Hood's satire. (fn. 27) From 1805 to
1808 and again from 1813 to 1853 the Essex Hounds
were kennelled at Copped Hall, under the mastership of H. J. Conyers. (fn. 28) In 1848 Epping was said to
be 'much resorted to in the summer months by
parties from London'. (fn. 29) The holiday industry was
facilitated by the opening of the railway to Epping
and its continuance ensured by the preservation of
the forest.
By 1848 the town, though still very small, had a
wide range of trades, including a bird-stuffer, a
brewer, a maltster and 4 brickmakers. (fn. 30) A brewery,
on the north side of Lindsey Street, was established
in 1840 and ceased brewing in 1907. (fn. 31) The building
was later used as a store. (fn. 32) In 1840 there was a
brickfield to the west of the High Street, in or near
the position later occupied by the National School
in St. John's Road. (fn. 33) A brickfield at Epping Plain
was worked for most of the 19th century by two
successive masters, Robert Harvey and Charles
Foster. (fn. 34) The Station Brickworks, belonging to
William Cottis & Sons, was in operation from c. 1894
to 1937 or later. (fn. 35) The firm of Cottis, founded in
1858, had as its original and principal business iron
founding and the manufacture of agricultural
implements. It was the largest employer of labour in
Epping. (fn. 36) In the present century several other firms
have established engineering works at Epping.
A windmill at Shingle Hall manor was mentioned
in 1303. In 1595 and 1624 there were two windmills belonging to the manor of Eppingbury. (fn. 37) In
and after 1635 only one is mentioned. (fn. 38) This was at
Bell Common, next to the former bowling-green. (fn. 39)
It still existed in 1840 but had disappeared by c.
1895. (fn. 40) In c. 1777 there was a windmill at the
northern end of High Street, opposite Maltings
Lane. (fn. 41)
MARKETS AND FAIRS.
In 1253 the king
granted to Waltham Abbey the right to hold a
market every Monday at Epping Heath, and an
annual fair there on the vigil, feast, and morrow of
the Ascension. (fn. 42) In 1575 the queen granted to the
lord of the manor a Friday market and two annual
fairs, one on Whit Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, the other on the vigil, day, and morrow of All
Souls (1–3 November) with the right to hold piepowder courts. (fn. 43) This grant, which superseded that
of 1253, stated that the market and fair had long
been disused because the original times were inconvenient. In 1671 the king confirmed to the lord of the
manor the charter of 1575 and granted him in
addition a Thursday cattle market and two fairs,
one on 2 and 3 April, the other on 2 and 3 September. (fn. 44) Ownership of the markets and fairs descended with the manor until the 20th century. The
Friday market continued to be held on that day
until after the First World War, when it was changed
back to Monday. (fn. 45) It was bought by Epping Urban
District Council in 1955 from the owners of the
manor. (fn. 46) The Thursday market had died out by c.
1768. (fn. 47)
The April and September fairs granted by the
1671 charter had evidently ceased by c. 1768, if
indeed they were ever established. Those in Whit
week and November continued and in the 19th
century there was also a fair in the second week of
October. Another fair, for wool, was held annually
from 1837 for nearly 40 years. The statute-fair, for
hiring servants, was practically extinct by the mid19th century. (fn. 48) Fairs seem to have ceased at Epping
between 1903 and 1925. (fn. 49)
There are occasional references to the market in
records of the 16th century and later. In 1578 a man
was prosecuted for selling unwholesome meal
there. (fn. 50) In 1664 two higglers were said to have forestalled the market by buying goods for re-sale. (fn. 51)
One of these had bought butter; this is an early
reference to what became an important trade. By
the end of the 18th century Epping dairy produce,
much of which went to London, was well known. (fn. 52)
Some of it was sold direct to dealers, or at Waltham
Abbey market, but Epping market was clearly an
important distributing centre. (fn. 53) What was sold
there in addition to dairy produce is not entirely
clear. A pig-market certainly existed in 1795 and
later. (fn. 54) In the early 19th century geese were being
brought into the town in large numbers. (fn. 55) Some
were probably sold in the market, but many were
driven on to London or were sold by dealers in
Epping working from their own premises, the most
important of which was the Old Goose Yard, behind
the High Street on the west side. (fn. 56)
Both the goose-dealers and others sometimes
profited from the existence of the market while
evading market tolls. Dwellers in the High Street
sometimes erected illicit stalls in front of their
houses: presentments of this offence occur in the
court rolls of Eppingbury from the 16th century. (fn. 57)
In 1771 the lord of the manor took legal advice
concerning the erection of stalls outside the normal
market area. (fn. 58) In 1807 he brought an action against
the keeper of the Sun Inn for running an illicit pigmarket, and in 1821 and 1829 prosecuted other
persons for encroachments on the market. (fn. 59) How
successful these actions were is not clear.
In the mid-19th century the market declined. In
1887 it was said to be 'almost obsolete, one stall is a
rarity'. (fn. 60) By this time, however, the railway had
been extended to Epping, and this probably explains
why the market revived. In 1890 livestock and other
goods were being sold there. (fn. 61) The market is still
(1962) held on Monday in the High Street, but the
sale of cattle ceased in 1961. (fn. 62)
A market house was mentioned in 1666. (fn. 63) Two
market houses were in existence in 1741. (fn. 64) One was
replaced by stalls in 1781. (fn. 65) The other was demolished in 1845. (fn. 66) That building, shown in a print of
1818, (fn. 67) stood on the west side of the High Street,
north of the church, on the site of the present carpark. (fn. 68) A butter cross, said to have been removed in
1781, stood in the High Street near the present
police station; it gave its name to Buttercross Lane. (fn. 69)
FOREST.
The whole of the ancient parish of
Epping lay within the Forest of Essex. The eastern
boundary of the parish was also the forest boundary,
as defined by the perambulations of 1301 and 1641. (fn. 70)
The boundary was marked by a 'purlieu bank', part
of which still exists on the south side of Bell
Common near the forest. (fn. 71) This ran through the
town immediately east of the High Street, and
probably accounts for the fact that the houses on
that side of the street are at a higher level than those
on the west side. Under the Epping Forest Act of
1878 the remains of the bank were placed under the
protection of the Conservators of the Forest. (fn. 72) In
the Middle Ages Epping, like the other parishes in
the hundred, was in the forest bailiwick of Waltham.
In the 16th century, when the bailiwicks were replaced by 'walks', Epping Walk was formed,
including the whole of Epping parish and the
northern part of Waltham Holy Cross. The forestership of Waltham hundred, and that of Epping Walk,
were attached to Copped Hall. (fn. 73)
In 1086 much of Epping was probably woodland, (fn. 74)
but in and after the 12th century there was much
clearance. In 1189 Richard I granted Waltham
Abbey over 1,000 a. assarts in south-west Essex. (fn. 75)
Of these only 60 a. were specifically stated to be in
Epping, but some of the assarts in Waltham,
Sewardstone, and Nazeing probably extended into
Epping. Similar grants were made at various dates
in the 13th and 14th centuries to enable the abbey
to enlarge Harold's Park, Copped Hall Park, and
probably Wintry Park. (fn. 76) During the late 16th and
early 17th centuries a number of assarts were made
in Epping without licence: some of these were
reported by a Royal Commission in 1620, and in the
following year the king confirmed them to various
owners, on certain conditions. (fn. 77) By c. 1641 the
woodland in Epping parish covered an area little
larger than it does to-day. (fn. 78) During the next two
centuries, however, there were occasional small
inclosures from the forest. (fn. 79)
In 1840 there were two large areas of forest in the
parish: the Little Forest (192 a.) south-west of the
town, and the Great Forest (or Wintry Wood) (307
a.) to the north-east of it. There were also pieces of
common waste, totalling about 50 a., at Rye Hill,
Thornwood, Severs Green, Gibbons Bush Common,
Epping Long Green, and at the northern and
southern approaches to the town. (fn. 80) Under the
Epping Forest Act (1878) all these areas, except Rye
Hill Common, came under the protection of the
City of London, as Conservators of the Forest, and
thus remain uninclosed common. (fn. 81)
The ways leading from the cultivated areas to the
wastes were closed by gates, usually called hatches.
Forteyhatch, mentioned in 1270, (fn. 82) must have been
in Bury Lane, where later stood Bury Lane Gate. (fn. 83)
Wolverycheshatch occurs in 1410; (fn. 84) it was on the
manor of Hayleys and probably closed the way to
Thornwood Common. Shingle Hall hatch, also mentioned in 1410, (fn. 85) no doubt stood in the lane leading
from Shingle Hall to Severs Green. Clayhatch, mentioned in 1464, 1601, and 1654, was near Claygarth
(now Takeleys). (fn. 86) A gate in Bury Lane and another
in Lindsey Street were removed about 1850. (fn. 87)
The occupiers of ancient tenements in Epping had
the right of grazing their cattle on the grass commons and the forest wastes. (fn. 88) In the Great Forest
their rights of common were shared with the men of
Theydon Garnon, in spite of the fact that Theydon
was outside the forest. (fn. 89) From the Little Forest
their beasts could range over the whole of the main
forest area. A reeve appointed by the court of the
manor of Eppingbury (fn. 90) branded the cattle with the
Epping mark, an 'E' turned on its back, surmounted
by a dot and a crown. (fn. 91) As late as the 17th century
some tenants also had rights of estovers, but these
had lapsed by the time of the Epping Forest
Commission. (fn. 92)
The forest was a fruitful source of timber. In 1342
Waltham Abbey had licence to cut £200 worth in
Epping and other parishes. (fn. 93) In 1649 the government ordered four men, including James Fogg of
Epping, to mark timber suitable for naval use. (fn. 94)
Fogg was still engaged on this work in 1651. (fn. 95)
Illicit felling sometimes occurred. In 1670 William,
Lord Grey, the lord of the manor, was presented at a
forest court for cutting down 150 trees in Wintry
Wood during the past five years. (fn. 96) Presentments for
similar offences were occasionally made at manor
courts. (fn. 97)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
The principal manor
courts were those of Eppingbury and Priestbury (or
Epping Presbiter). These, though nominally separate, were always under the same lord. The court of
Eppingbury had leet jurisdiction over the southern
part of the parish, including the town, and also
functioned as a court baron. Priestbury had only a
court leet, which governed the Upland. It was held
under a maple tree on the road between Eppingbury
and the parish church, probably at the point shown
as 'Cut-maple' on Chapman and André's Map of
1777. (fn. 98)
Court rolls survive for Eppingbury and Priestbury
for 1270 and occasional years in the 15th and early
16th centuries. (fn. 99) There are also several registers
containing extracts from court rolls of the 14th and
15th centuries. (fn. 100) A continuous series of court rolls
runs from 1541 to 1817. (fn. 101) During that period the
courts leet met annually, usually in Whit week or
the week after Trinity. There were 15–20 jurors for
Eppingbury and 8–12 for Priestbury. The courts
exercised jurisdiction over the assizes of bread and
ale, petty criminal cases, nuisances, roads, bridges,
and the market. They also enforced the common
and forest regulations. During the 16th and 17th
centuries the courts were fairly active, but their later
proceedings were of a formal nature.
During the years 1577–93 there were occasional
presentments in the leets for illicit gambling. This
may reflect the Puritan views of Sir Thomas
Heneage, lord of the manor from 1572 to 1595. In
the same period, and in the early 17th century,
infringements of the assizes, fighting, and drunkenness were often presented.
The leets regularly appointed a constable for the
town and another for the Upland. (fn. 102) In 1643 the
town constable was accused of negligence in collecting poor and other rates, and in 1646 the same man
was fined £5 for inefficiency and contempt of court.
Two aletasters were appointed for the town throughout the period of the rolls, and up to 1652 a leathersealer also. There are references to the duckingstool, cage, and pillory in 1609, to the stocks in 1624
and 1800, and to two manorial pounds in 1781. The
cage still existed in 1840 when it was in the High
Street opposite St. John's chapel. (fn. 103) At the end of the
19th century there was a pound immediately south
of Wintry Park Farm, to the west of the main road. (fn. 104)
Three other manors in the parish had courts
baron, but not courts leet. The court rolls of
Campions survive for 1490–1594, 1633, and 1639–
1847, (fn. 105) those of Chambers for 1573–1847, with
gaps, (fn. 106) and that of Shingle Hall for 1566–1795, with
gaps. (fn. 107)
The only surviving parish records earlier than
1834, apart from those relating to the chapel and
charities, are overseers' rates for 1665 and 1757–62,
and overseers' accounts for 1737–8 (the town only)
and 1757–64, and rates for 1757–62. (fn. 108) A little
information concerning parish government before
the 19th century comes from these and other
sources. There were two churchwardens, two overseers, and, from 1652 or earlier, two surveyors of
roads. (fn. 109) In the early 17th century the constables,
although they were manorial and not parish officers,
took some part in rate-collection, as is shown by the
court-roll reference of 1643, quoted above. From at
least as early as 1655 the overseers collected the
rates. In 1627 a former churchwarden was accused
of embezzling £15 'stock for the poor'. (fn. 110) From 1759
the parish clerk was being paid a salary.
In 1757 the parish was paying quit-rents for a
poorhouse and also for a pest-house. A workhouse
was apparently built, or bought, in 1761. In 1776 it
had accommodation for 20. (fn. 111) The workhouse and
pest-house were on the north side of Lindsey Street,
in the positions approximately indicated by field
names on the tithe map of 1840. (fn. 112) Workhouse field
was near the present Woodberry Down; pest-house
field was about 400 yds. south of Wintry Park Farm.
One of the buildings had been conveyed to the
parish in 1714. (fn. 113) Both buildings had disappeared by
1840. In 1757–64 regular out-relief was being given
to some 30 paupers. During that period a parish
doctor was employed. There was an epidemic of
small-pox in 1759–60, and many of the victims were
sent to the pest-house.
The overseers' rate of 1665 appears to have
yielded about £20. (fn. 114) In 1757, when separate rates
were being levied for the town and the Upland, a
6d. rate yielded £87, of which £51 was from the
town. There were four such rates, and one of 3d. in
that year, producing in all about £390. In 1761 the
total was £439. In 1776 it was £373, and the average
of the years 1783–5 was £527. (fn. 115) In 1816 the rate
was £1,580, and in 1821 it was £1,863. (fn. 116)
In 1836 the parish became part of the Epping
Poor Law Union and a Union Workhouse (now St.
Margaret's Hospital) was built on the south side of
the Plain, then in Theydon Garnon parish.
The growth of Epping created problems of public
health which became urgent about 1853. (fn. 117) In that
year a local doctor, Joseph Clegg, complained to the
Board of Health about the need for sewage and
waterworks. He had to campaign for nearly 20 years
before such works were started. In the absence of a
local board of health, responsibility for sanitation
was divided between the Epping Poor Law Union
and the parish vestries of Epping, Theydon Garnon,
and Theydon Bois. Clegg was opposed by those who
considered his proposals unnecessary or extravagant
in such a small town. They included the Vicar of
St. John's, Epping, Thomas Tuck, and two large
landowners, Thomas Chisenhale-Marsh of Gaynes
Park, and John Archer-Houblon of Coopersale. (fn. 118)
Two of his strongest supporters were J. Teesdale
Davis, the Congregational minister, whose daughter
had died of fever, and Benjamin Winstone, Quaker
and local historian. (fn. 119)
Clegg's first approach to the government seems to
have been fruitless. In 1856 the Epping vestry
appointed a nuisance removal committee, but this
did little. During the next ten years there were cases
of cholera, typhoid, and other diseases spread by bad
sanitation. In 1867, when the death rate in Epping
was the highest in Essex. (fn. 120) Clegg complained to the
Home Office under section 49 of the Sanitary Act
(1866). (fn. 121) That section empowered the Home Office,
after such a complaint, and due enquiry, to order a
local authority to carry out sanitary works, and, in
default, to supersede the local authority, carry out
the works, and levy a rate to pay for them. Epping
was one of only 7 places in the country where the
section was fully applied.
The Home Office decided that Clegg's complaint
was justified, but that no remedy was possible until
there was a single local authority for the district.
He then submitted a ratepayers' petition demanding
a special drainage district, under the Sewage
Utilization Act (1867), (fn. 122) and in 1868 the Home
Office ordered the formation of such a district for
Epping town and its environs. A sewer committee
for the district was duly elected, but its members
refused to act, and in November 1868 they all
resigned. In the same month the Home Office
ordered that water works should be started within a
month. When that time limit expired it immediately
put in hand a scheme not only for water works but
also for sewage works, which had not been covered
by the order. This technical error — later rectified
— gave colour to the local belief that the government was acting ultra vires, and in 1870 two local
solicitors (fn. 123) challenged the Home Office by an action
in the Queen's Bench. When the action failed the
way seemed clear for the completion of the works.
By 1872 an artesian well had been sunk, a water
tower built, water mains laid throughout the town,
and main sewers over a large part. But there were
still great difficulties. The well was yielding only
one third of what had been expected, and even this
supply could not be used because no service pipes
had been laid to individual premises.
Under the Local Government Act (1872) the
guardians of Epping Union became the Rural
Sanitary Authority for the district. The government
pressed them to take over the water and sewage
works, together with the debt — £11,900 at 5 per
cent. — incurred in their construction. The R.S.A.
at first refused to accept liability, saying that the
works were useless, but in 1878 they finally agreed
to pay part of the debt over a period of 20 years. (fn. 124)
To assist repayment they sold the water works in
1879 to a private firm. (fn. 125)
The R.S.A. continued to govern Epping until
1896, when Epping Urban District was formed from
parts of the civil parishes of Epping, Theydon
Garnon, and Theydon Bois, following the lines of
the special drainage district of 1868. The residue of
Epping became the civil parish of Epping Upland. (fn. 126)
PUBLIC SERVICES.
In 1879 the Epping Rural
Sanitary Authority sold the water-tower, well, and
engine at Epping to William Russ and Charles Minns,
civil engineers, who had obtained powers under the
Herts. and Essex Water Order (1879). (fn. 127) In 1880 the
property was acquired by Edward Easton, who in
1883 formed the Herts. and Essex Waterworks
Company. The Epping works, compulsorily erected
by the government at great expense, as described in
the previous section, had been lying virtually useless
since 1872. In 1884 the new company supplied only
392 consumers, and earned £678. By 1886 it was
supplying Epping town and several places from a
good artesian well at Sawbridgeworth (Herts.). (fn. 128)
Some householders, however, would not use the
main supply, but continued to draw drinking water
from polluted shallow wells. (fn. 129) The company began
to supply Epping Upland about 1900. The centre of
that parish is still (1961) without piped water. (fn. 130)
The construction of the sewage works at Epping
was also described above. In 1892 it was reported
that many houses in the town were still using cesspools. (fn. 131) The Rural Sanitary Authority laid sewers in
St. John's Road and Chapel Road in 1894—5. (fn. 132)
Main drainage was provided for most properties in
Epping Upland in 1949. (fn. 133)
The Epping Gas Co. was formed in 1862 and
began to supply gas about 1865. (fn. 134) In 1911 it became
part of the Bishop's Stortford and District Gas Co.,
which in 1949 was merged in the Eastern Gas
Board. Since c. 1904 gas has been supplied to part
of Epping Upland, but most of that parish is still
without it. (fn. 135) Electricity was first provided at Epping
town in 1928 and at Epping Upland in 1938, by the
County of London Electric Supply Co. The
northern fringe of Epping Upland is still (1961)
without a supply. (fn. 136)
St. Margaret's Hospital, The Plain, was previously the workhouse of the Epping Union. The
Cottage Hospital, Bell Common, was opened in
1912. (fn. 137) The Literary Institute has been described
in a previous volume of this History. (fn. 138)