MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
All estates
in Romford, however styled, were subordinate to
the manor of Havering. (fn. 1) The manor of ROMFORD
or MAWNEYS lay on the west side of the town,
extending north from High Street to Collier Row. It
appears to have originated in 1200, when the king
granted 'the wood of Romford' to Roger Bigod
(d. 1221), earl of Norfolk, in fee for 5s. a year. (fn. 2)
Two later references show that the wood was then
held by the serjeanty of providing pasturage for the
king's cattle. (fn. 3) In 1277 the wood, comprising 100 a.,
was held of Roger Bigod (d. 1306), earl of Norfolk,
by Adam de Creting, whose estate included also 280 a.,
mostly held in chief, which Adam had bought from
Roger de Rolling. (fn. 4) In 1280 Creting and his wife
Nichola granted the manor of Romford, so styled for
the first time, to Henry of Winchester, a Jew, to
hold for ¼ knight's fee. (fn. 5) Henry, who was a Christian convert, died holding the manor in 1299. (fn. 6) He
had been married under Jewish law, and there was
therefore doubt whether his son Thomas was entitled
to inherit the manor. There is no evidence that
Thomas did in fact succeed to Romford. Adam de
Creting had died in 1298, (fn. 7) and by 1303 the tenancy
in demesne had been acquired by the earl of Norfolk, who was holding ¼ knight's fee of Adam's son
John de Creting. (fn. 8) On the earl's death in 1306
Romford passed to the Crown under a previous
agreement, by which John Bigod, the earl's brother,
had been excluded from the succession. (fn. 9)
In the subsequent division of the Bigod estates
Romford was assigned to Thomas of Brotherton
(d. 1338) earl of Norfolk, on whose death it passed
to his elder daughter Margaret (d. 1399) countess of
Norfolk, wife of John Segrave, Lord Segrave
(d. 1353), and later of Walter de Mauny, Lord
Mauny. (fn. 10) In c. 1355 Mauny's estate, jure uxoris,
comprised 140 a., held as ¼ knight's fee. (fn. 11) He held it
until his death in 1372. (fn. 12) He was one of the greatest
soldiers of his day, celebrated by Froissart, (fn. 13) and from
him the manor took its alternative name. Margaret,
created duchess of Norfolk in 1397, was succeeded
in 1399 by her grandson Thomas de Mowbray,
duke of Norfolk, who died in the same year. (fn. 14)
Romford was assigned in dower to the duke's
widow Elizabeth (d. 1425) later wife of Sir Robert
Goushill (d. 1403) and finally of Sir Gerard Usflete
(d. by 1421). (fn. 15) In 1412 Elizabeth's Romford
estate of 'Moyns' (Mawneys) was valued at £14. (fn. 16)
It passed on her death to her son John Mowbray
(d. 1432), duke of Norfolk. (fn. 17) Romford was assigned
in dower to John's widow Katherine. (fn. 18) She was
still living in 1483, having outlived four husbands. (fn. 19)
In 1488–9 the manor of Mawneys, held in chief,
was settled on William de Berkeley (d. 1492) earl of
Nottingham, later marquess of Berkeley, who was a
coheir to the estates of the Mowbray earls of Norfolk. (fn. 20) He was to hold the manor with remainder to
the heirs of his body, and in default to Sir Reynold
Bray. After Berkeley's death Mawneys was held by
his widow Anne (d. 1497), later wife of Sir Thomas
Brandon. (fn. 21) When she died the manor appears to
have passed under the settlement of 1488–9 to Sir
Reynold Bray, to whom Mawneys was quitclaimed
in 1499 by Berkeley's brother Maurice, Lord
Berkeley. (fn. 22) Bray (d. 1503) was an official close to
Henry VII, and it is not unlikely that he acquired
his interest in the manor by assisting in the transactions, in 1487–9, by which Berkeley obtained his
marquessate. (fn. 23) Mawneys descended to Sir Reynold's
nephew Edmund Bray, later Lord Bray, who was
holding it in 1510. (fn. 24) Edmund appears to have
alienated the manor by 1523, when Thomas
Wastell and Edward Barbour conveyed it to Robert
Fenrother (d. 1524), alderman and goldsmith of
London. (fn. 25) Mawneys passed to Fenrother's widow
Gillian, and after her death in 1536 to their daughter
Gillian and her husband Nicholas Tycheborne. (fn. 26)
In 1538 Nicholas Tycheborne the younger conveyed
it to Robert Dacre. (fn. 27)
Robert Dacre was probably identical with the
man of that name who died in 1543 leaving George
his son and heir. (fn. 28) George Dacre conveyed Mawneys
in 1573 to John Lennard of Chevening (Kent), who
died in 1591, having previously settled it on his son
Samuel. (fn. 29) In 1612 Samuel Lennard conveyed the
manor to Francis Fuller. (fn. 30) Fuller (d. 1637), also
acquired Easthouse in Romford, as well as Downshall, Loxford, and Wangey in Ilford. (fn. 31) Mawneys
and Easthouse appear to have descended to Francis
Osbaldeston (d. 1648) and then to his brother
Henry (d. 1669). Henry Osbaldeston (d. by 1693),
son of the previous Henry, sold Easthouse, but
Mawneys descended to his daughter Ann, who
appears to have carried it in marriage about 1701 to
John Milner of London, who was holding it in 1719
and 1722. (fn. 32) In 1758 William Lloyd and Elizabeth his
wife, who were heirs of the Milners, sold the manor
to Richard Newman. (fn. 33)
Richard Newman was succeeded by his grandson
Richard Harding, who acquired the manor of
Nelmes, in Hornchurch, in 1781, and took the
surname of Newman in 1783. (fn. 34) Mawneys descended
with Nelmes until the 1880s. (fn. 35) In 1846 Thomas
Harding Newman's Romford estate comprised
265 a. (fn. 36) Benjamin Harding Newman, who inherited
the estate in 1882, put it on the market in the following
year, and by 1899 much of it had been developed for
building. (fn. 37) The name survives in Mawney Road.
The manor-house of Mawneys, sometimes called
Great Mawneys, stood on a moated site about 150 yd.
north of High Street. (fn. 38) About 1618 the house was of
considerable size. (fn. 39) In the later 19th century it
was an irregular building, part of which appears to
have been rebuilt in the 18th century. (fn. 40) The moat
was filled in between 1883 and 1887. (fn. 41) The house
was demolished c. 1935. (fn. 42) The United Services club
was later built on the site.
The manor of DAGENHAMS AND COCKERELS comprised two adjoining tenements lying north
of the Romford-Brentwood road, in the area now
called Harold Hill. The tenements appear to have
been identical with two held in the earlier 13th
century by John of Weald: 3½ virgates, later
Dagenhams, and 1 virgate, later Cockerels. (fn. 43) These
were large virgates, of about 120 a. each. (fn. 44) John of
Weald (d. 1251) left as heirs his sister Gillian, wife
of Roger Cockerel, and his nephew William Shenfield, (fn. 45) Sir William of St. Armine, who from 1257 to
c. 1262 was farmer of the manor of Havering,
acquired the lands of both Roger Cockerel and
William Shenfield, and in or before 1269 granted
them in fee to Robinet Rowley (de Rolee) and his
wife Isabel. (fn. 46) They later passed to Thomas of
Dagenham, who was probably identical with the
man of that name who was bailiff of Havering under
Edward I. (fn. 47) Thomas was apparently succeeded by
his son William of Dagenham, (fn. 48) whose lands had
escheated to Queen Philippa by 1352, when she
granted them for life to her clerk Austin Waleys. (fn. 49)
About 1355 Dagenhams and Cockerels, with
other lands, comprising 606 a. in all, were held by
Adam de Holkirk. (fn. 50) By 1382 the estate had been
acquired by John Organ (d. 1392), a London mercer;
he was succeeded by his son Thomas, also a mercer,
who made a conveyance of the manor in 1403. (fn. 51)
The Organs appear to have retained some interest in
Dagenhams and Cockerels at least until 1406. (fn. 52) In
1420 the manor was held by Humphrey, duke of
Gloucester, Edmund de Mortimer, earl of March,
and others. (fn. 53) They were obviously trustees, but for
whom is not clear.
By 1443 the manor had passed to Henry Percy
(d. 1455), earl of Northumberland, (fn. 54) whose grandfather, Henry Percy (d. 1408), earl of Northumberland, had been keeper of the manor of Havering
c. 1399–1403. (fn. 55) Dagenhams and Cockerels descended
to Henry Percy, earl of Northumberland (d. 1461),
who fell on the Lancastrian side at the battle of
Towton. (fn. 56) His estates thus escheated to Edward
IV, who in 1464 granted Dagenhams and Cockerels
to Henry Bourchier, earl of Essex, and his wife
Isabel, to discharge a legacy made to Isabel by her
uncle Edmund de Mortimer (d. 1425), earl of
March. (fn. 57) March's fiduciary interest in the manor, in
1420, has been mentioned above. He is not known to
have had any personal interest in it.
The grant of 1464 had no permanent effect.
Henry Percy (d. 1489), earl of Northumberland,
regained his father's earldom in 1470. (fn. 58) He appears
to have vindicated his title to Dagenhams and
Cockerels in 1474 by a collusive lawsuit against his
father's trustees, (fn. 59) and in 1482 he sold the manor to
Avery Cornburgh. (fn. 60) Cornburgh (d. 1487) also held
Gooshayes in Romford and Dovers in Hornchurch.
Before his death he sold Dagenhams and Cockerels
to Sir William Hussey (d. 1495), chief justice of the
King's Bench, from whom the manor descended to
his son (Sir) John. (fn. 61) In 1512 Sir John Hussey
conveyed Dagenhams and Cockerels to trustees for
the use of his ward Peter Christmas, with remainder,
in default of heirs of Peter's body, to the Grocers'
Company of London. (fn. 62) That transaction had been
arranged by Henry VIII to compensate Christmas
for the manor of Hanworth (Mdx.), which he had
conveyed to the king. Hussey received in exchange
two royal manors in Lincolnshire.
Peter Christmas died in 1517. (fn. 63) The Grocers'
Company duly succeeded to the manor, and held
courts there until 1544 or later. (fn. 64) Dagenhams and
Cockerels was subsequently acquired by Thomas
Legatt, who died holding it in 1556. (fn. 65) The manor
descended in the Legatt family until 1633, when the
representatives of Thomas Posthumous Legatt,
great-grandson of the last-named Thomas Legatt,
sold it to Dr. Thomas Wright, later physician to
Cromwell. (fn. 66) In 1633 the estate comprised 703 a. (fn. 67)
Dr. Wright (d. 1657) was succeeded by his son (Sir)
Henry Wright (Bt.) (d. 1664), and grandson Sir
Henry Wright, Bt. (d. 1681). (fn. 68) The younger Sir
Henry, who died under age, was succeeded by his
sister Ann, who married Edmund Pye and later
William Rider. By her will, proved 1732, she devised
all her Essex estates to her relative Edward Carteret
(d. 1739). (fn. 69) She expressed the wish that Carteret
would never part with the estate, and would keep it
in his family, but in 1749 his daughters and coheirs
Ann, widow of Admiral Philip Cavendish, and
Bridget Carteret sold it to Henry Muilman. (fn. 70)
In 1772 Henry Muilman sold Dagenhams and
Cockerels to (Sir) Richard Neave (Bt.), a West
India merchant. (fn. 71) The manor descended with the
baronetcy until 1948. (fn. 72) The Neaves put together one
of the largest estates in south Essex. (fn. 73) Dagnam
Park, (fn. 74) rebuilt by the first baronet, was their seat
until the Second World War. In 1846 the estate
included some 1,700 a. in Romford and Havering. (fn. 75)
By 1876 the total there was over 1,800. (fn. 76) In 1919 Sir
Thomas L. H. Neave sold 2,200 a. of his Essex
lands, of which 1,500 a. were in Romford and
Havering. (fn. 77) He retained some 500 a. around Dagnam
Park, but in 1948 his son Sir Arundell Neave sold
that, including the house, to the London county
council for the building (1948–58) of the Harold
Hill housing estate. For the same purpose the
L.C.C. bought from other owners some 850 a., most
of which had belonged to the Neaves before 1919. (fn. 78)
Dagenhams was listed among important seats
in 1594, (fn. 79) and was depicted in 1633 as a gabled
house, built round a courtyard, within a square
moat. (fn. 80) Sir Henry Wright, Bt. (d. 1664), rebuilt it on
a modest scale c. 1660. (fn. 81) Pepys, who visited Dagenhams in July 1665, said that it was the most noble
and pretty house, for its size, that he had ever seen. (fn. 82)
It had 23 hearths in 1662 and 24 in 1670. (fn. 83) Between
1732 and 1739 the house was altered and enlarged by
Edward Carteret. (fn. 84) His additions included a
private chapel. (fn. 85) In 1771 Dagnams had a central
block of two storeys with attics, containing eleven
bays. (fn. 86) That may have been the original house of
c. 1660. It was flanked at each end by five-bay wings,
also of two storeys, but without attics, possibly the
additions made in the 1730s. Sir Richard Neave, Bt.,
who bought Dagnams in 1772, demolished the old
house and built a brick house of three storeys. The
main front had nine bays, of which the central three
bays were bowed. (fn. 87) During the Second World War
Dagnam Park was occupied by the Army. It was
demolished c. 1948. (fn. 88) The pond immediately south
of it still survived in 1976.
Cockerels house was about 800 yd. south of
Dagnams. In 1633 it was a substantial gabled
building, standing outside a moated site which was
by then an orchard. (fn. 89) In the 19th century it became
known as Dagnam Park Farm. (fn. 90) It was demolished
c. 1948. The moat still survived in 1977.
The manor of EAST HOUSE lay east of the
river Rom, in Collier Row Lane (North Street).
Early in the 14th century it was held by Richard
Rous, who granted it for life to Robert William of
Havering. (fn. 91) About 1332 Robert suffered outlawry
and forteiture, and East House, then comprising
167 a., was granted for life to Amy Gaveston, a
damsel of Queen Philippa. (fn. 92) By c. 1355 East House,
comprising 60 a., had become part of the Gidea Hall
estate, (fn. 93) in which it descended until 1613, when Sir
Edward Cooke sold it to John Wright. (fn. 94) Wright sold
East House in 1623 to Francis Fuller (d. 1637), who
already held the adjoining manor of Mawneys. (fn. 95)
East House descended with Mawneys until 1673,
when Henry Osbaldeston (d. by 1693) sold it to
Francis Hervey Mildmay, owner of Marks. (fn. 96) East
House descended with Marks until 1878, when it
was put up for sale by the Mildmay trustees: it
then comprised 143 a. (fn. 97) During the next thirty
years the estate was developed for building in
Havering, Rosedale, and Hainault Roads. (fn. 98)
East House manor-house was left standing on the
west side of Rosedale Road. It was said in 1908 to
be a large building in the style of an early-19th-century farm-house. (fn. 99) It had evidently been much
altered, and may have been much older than that. (fn. 100)
Eastern Avenue, built in the 1920s, passed immediately south of the house, which seems to have been
demolished about that time. (fn. 101)
The manor of GIDEA HALL, (fn. 102) from which the
modern Gidea Park is named, lay north-east of
Romford town. In 1250–1 the daughter of Simon of
Gidea Hall (Gidiehulle) held two tenements in the
manor of Havering, of 1 virgate and ¼ virgate
respectively. (fn. 103) Since these were large virgates her
total holdings were probably about 150 a. In
c. 1355 Sir John of Havering held Gidea Hall
(150 a.), East House, in Romford, and other lands,
comprising a total of 501 a. (fn. 104) The Gidea Hall
section of this estate had previously belonged to
John of Abbenach. In 1376 Gidea Hall and East
House were held by William Baldwin, saddler of
London, to whom they had been granted by Robert
of Havering. (fn. 105) Robert Chichele, a London merchant, and brother of Henry Chichele, later archbishop of Canterbury, was holding Gidea Hall in
1412. (fn. 106) By then the estate also included the manor
of Bedfords. In 1441 it was held by Robert Saltmarsh and his wife Christine. (fn. 107) They sold it in 1452
to (Sir) Thomas Cooke (d. 1478), a London draper
who was lord mayor in 1462. (fn. 108) He also bought the
manor of Bedfords and Earls in Havering, and that
of Redden Court in Hornchurch. During an eventful
career he was twice imprisoned, but he retained the
estate, which descended in his family until the 17th
century. The Cookes became the leading local
gentry. (fn. 109) Notable among them was Sir Anthony
Cooke (d. 1576), tutor to Edward VI and father-in-law of Lord Burghley. (fn. 110)
Charles Cooke (d. 1629) was the last of his name
to hold Gidea Hall. His heirs were his sisters Ann
(d. 1652), wife of Sir Edward Sydenham, and
Vere (d. 1685), wife of Sir Charles Gawdy. East
House and Redden Court had been alienated before
1629, but the estate still included Bedfords and
Earls as well as Gidea Hall itself. In the division of
the Cooke property the Gidea Hall estate passed
to the Sydenhams. (fn. 111) Sir Edward Sydenham suffered
sequestration as a royalist in 1642, but his wife and
children were allowed to remain at Gidea Hall. (fn. 112)
In 1658 Sir Edward and his son Charles Sydenham
sold the estate to Richard Emes, cooper of London. (fn. 113)
Emes sold Bedfords and Earls in 1659, but retained
Gidea Hall until 1664, when he sold it to John
Burch, a West India planter. (fn. 114)
Burch (d. 1668) left Gidea Hall to his wife Margaret
(d. 1685), for life, with remainder to his sister
Rebecca Hothersall, and his nephews Thomas and
Burch Hothersall. (fn. 115) The Hothersalls duly succeeded
to the manor on Mrs. Burch's death, and lived at
Gidea Hall at least until 1694. (fn. 116) In 1710, under the
will of Thomas Hothersall, grandson of Rebecca,
the manor was sold to Benjamin Haskins Stiles and
John Hunter. (fn. 117) Stiles and Hunter were probably
agents for Stiles's brother-in-law, (Sir) John Eyles
(Bt.) (d. 1745), who certainly acquired Gidea Hall
about that time. (fn. 118) In 1744 Sir John, as lord of the
manor, was receiving quit-rents from 54 tenants in
Romford town, Hare Street, Collier Row, and
Hornchurch. (fn. 119) He was succeeded by his son Sir
Francis Haskins Eyles-Stiles, who sold the manor in
1745 to Richard Benyon (d. 1774), governor of Fort
St. George (Madras, India). (fn. 120)
Gidea Hall descended like Newbury in Ilford (fn. 121)
until 1802, when Richard Benyon, grandson of the
purchaser, sold it to Alexander Black (d. 1835). (fn. 122) In
1846 Alice Black, Alexander's widow, was holding
the Gidea Hall estate, then comprising 742 a. (fn. 123) She
died in 1871. (fn. 124) The estate had previously been
settled on Black's two daughters and their husbands:
Anne and William Neave, and Adelaide and Alfred
Douglas Hamilton. (fn. 125) After Mrs. Black's death the
estate was put on the market with a view to development, and in 1883 the main part of it, comprising
some 500 a., was bought by the Lands Allotment
Co., a member of Jabez Balfour's Liberator group. (fn. 126)
The company tried to develop the estate, but with
little success, and in 1893, after the collapse of the
group, Gidea Hall was again put up for sale in one
lot. (fn. 127) It was not then sold, but in 1897 the house and
480 a. were bought by (Sir) Herbert H. Raphael
(Bt.). (fn. 128) By then the western edge of the estate (Lake
Rise) had been detached. In 1902 Raphael gave
some 20 a., including a lake, for the public park
(Raphael park). (fn. 129) Soon after that he developed the
rest of the estate as the Gidea Park garden suburb. (fn. 130)
The western side, between Raphael park and Heath
Drive, has been built over, but most of the eastern
side remains open as Romford golf course and
Gidea Park sports ground.
The manor-house stood north of Main Road,
Gidea Park, about 300 yd. east of Raphael park. In
1466 Sir Thomas Cooke obtained the king's licence
to empark the manor, and to rebuild and crenellate
Gidea Hall. (fn. 131) He left the house unfinished. (fn. 132) Sir
Anthony Cooke (d. 1576) completed it before 1568,
when he entertained Elizabeth I there. (fn. 133) The finished
building was arranged round three sides of a courtyard, with an open colonnade on the fourth side. (fn. 134)
In the 17th century Gidea Hall was the largest house
in the liberty except for the king's house at Havering. (fn. 135)
Marie de Medici, mother of Queen Henrietta
Maria, stayed there in 1638. (fn. 136)
Sir John Eyles, Bt., demolished the old house
about 1720, and replaced it with a three-storey
mansion. (fn. 137) Some stabling from the 16th-century
house survived until 1922. (fn. 138) Richard Benyon (d.
1796) appears to have altered and enlarged Gidea
Hall. (fn. 139) In the later 19th century the house was
divided into two dwellings. (fn. 140) It was used by the Army
during the First World War, and after the war
became a club house for the garden suburb. (fn. 141) It was
demolished in 1930. (fn. 142)
The early-18th-century house had a formal
arrangement of canals and avenues converging upon
it. (fn. 143) The northern canal, called the Spoon pond, was
the main survivor from that scheme. (fn. 144) Its site, now
drained, is used as tennis courts. Richard Benyon
(d. 1796) enlarged the park, probably to the design of
Richard Woods, c. 1776. (fn. 145) He made it less formal, and
introduced a lake in the valley west of the house.
The greater width of water at the main road made a
new bridge necessary, and that was designed by James
Wyatt. (fn. 146) It is of three brick arches, forming the
north side of the present road bridge. The lake,
known from a later owner as Black's canal, is now
included in Raphael park. The fishponds also
survive farther east. Near them, in Heath Drive, are
sections of garden walling from Gidea Hall, probably
of the early 19th century. A medicinal spring at
Gidea Hall was the subject of a book published in
1783. (fn. 147) It was occluded c. 1906.
The manor of GOBIONS or UPHAVERING
lay on the south side of Collier Row common, near
Marks Gate. It must be distinguished from a house
called Gobions on the east side of the same common,
and from Gubbins at Harold Wood. (fn. 148) The name
Uphavering, by which it was usually known before
the 16th century, fits its position in the uplands of
the parish, (fn. 149) but the manor may have been named
after the Uphavering family, many of whom are
recorded from the 13th century. (fn. 150)
John Parker, a servant of the queen, was holding
Uphavering in 1387–95. (fn. 151) Richard Gobion was
holding land in that area in 1440. (fn. 152) He may have
been the predecessor of John Gobion, who in 1467
conveyed the manor of Uphavering, comprising
about 200 a., to (Sir) Thomas Urswick, who
already held the neighbouring manor of Marks. (fn. 153)
Urswick retained both manors until his death in
1479. (fn. 154) His heirs appear to have sold them separately,
and by 1491 Uphavering belonged to Edmund
Worsley. (fn. 155) Edmund, son of Edmund Worsley, held
it in 1511. (fn. 156)
Sir Willaim Roche, a former lord mayor of
London, was holding Uphavering and Nelmes
when he died in 1549. (fn. 157) In 1541 Uphavering had
been settled on his wife Margaret, who survived
him. Both manors descended to John Roche, son of
Sir William, and later to Thomas Roche, probably
son of John. (fn. 158) Thomas Roche, who had a large
estate in the liberty, sold most of it, apparently in
the 1620s and 1630s. (fn. 159) Gobions was bought from
him in 1632 by Sir Richard Minshull, who sold it in
1642 to Joachim Matthews. (fn. 160) Matthews, a Parliamentary colonel and commissioner during the Civil
War, was succeeded on his death in 1659 by his son
(Sir) Philip Matthews (Bt.) (d. 1685). (fn. 161)
In 1700 Sir Philip's widow Ann, and his son, Sir
John Matthews, sold Gobions to John Blackstone,
apothecary of London. (fn. 162) In 1720, after Blackstone's
death, his estate was divided among his family.
Gobions was bought from the executors by William
Curwen, another London apothecary, whose son
John had married Blackstone's daughter Ann. (fn. 163)
John and Ann Curwen succeeded to the manor and
sold it in 1739 to Sir Philip Hall (d. 1746). (fn. 164) Philip
Hall, son of Sir Philip, sold it in 1764 to Richard
Heighway. (fn. 165) Heighway sold Gobions in 1771 to
John Gibson, who conveyed it in 1775 to his
relative Thomas Gibson. (fn. 166) Both the Gibsons were
lacemen of London. In 1777 the manor was bought
from Thomas Gibson by the executors of William
Prior Johnson of Stock, on behalf of Johnson's
grandson William Richardson, who himself took the
name of William Prior Johnson. (fn. 167) Between 1777 and
1796 Gobions was apparently in Chancery, but
William Prior Johnson the grandson eventually
gained possession of it, and held it until his death in
1839. (fn. 168) In 1840 Gobions was settled on his brother
James J. W. Prior Johnson, and James's son William. (fn. 169)
William Prior Johnson was holding it in 1846, when
it comprised 183 a., leased to a farmer. (fn. 170) He sold it
to the Crown in 1854. (fn. 171) In 1976 Gobions comprised
some 650 a., leased by the Crown to Mr. James
G. Fowler, whose family had been tenants since
1895. (fn. 172)
The manor-house, called Great Gobions, seems
to have been demolished between 1680 and 1700. (fn. 173)
Another house, Little Gobions, existed in 1715 and
later. (fn. 174) That was probably the farm-house which in
1840 was said to have been modernized but to need
renovation. (fn. 175) The present farm-house was built by
the Crown in 1899. (fn. 176)
The manor of GOOSHAYES ('goose enclosure')
lay west of Dagenhams, in the area now called
Harold Hill. It originated, wholly or partly, in a
tenement which William Hurel held in 1210–12 by
serjeanty of keeping the king's park of Havering. (fn. 177)
In 1219 and 1227 it comprised ½ hide, which John
Hurel (or Parker) held by the same service. (fn. 178) John
Hurel's widow Gillian was holding it in 1235. (fn. 179) The
serjeanty seems to have lapsed soon after that. In
1251 John Hurel's daughter Joan, her husband
John Mauduit, and her sister Emmesold the tenement,
comprising 100 a. land and 1 a. wood, to Richard of
Dover (d. by 1254). (fn. 180) In 1273–4 John of Dover,
Richard's son, held 'Gooseland' of the manor of
Havering. (fn. 181) He also held, jointly with William
Carpenter, land called Hurel. (fn. 182) No service was being
performed for either tenement. In 1274–5 John of
Dover, and William of Felsted, who was probably
identical with William Carpenter, held ½ hide in
Havering, which John Hurel had once held by
custody of Havering park. (fn. 183)
John of Dover's lands in Romford appear to have
descended like Dovers in Hornchurch at least until
c. 1355, when Gooshayes comprised a messuage and
120 a., held by Richard of Sutton. (fn. 184) At the end of the
14th century Gooshayes passed to Richard Hamme.
This probably occurred in 1398, when he acquired
two tenements in Havering: a messuage and 60 a.
from Joan, widow of John Michel, and 2 messuages
and 60 a. from Thomas Hasyll and his wife
Katherine. (fn. 185) Hamme was a servant of Henry
Percy, earl of Northumberland (d. 1408), keeper of
the manor of Havering c. 1399–1403. (fn. 186) In 1405 he
bought a field adjoining Gooshayes. (fn. 187) His will was
proved in 1418. (fn. 188)
Richard Hamme was succeeded by his son John,
who was apparently holding Gooshayes by 1435. (fn. 189)
Henry Percy, earl of Northumberland (d. 1455), who
held Dagenhams at this period, also had a fiduciary
interest in Gooshayes. (fn. 190) This suggests that the
Hammes were still adherents of the Percies, and may
have shared the Percies' forfeiture after Towton.
That would explain why Edward IV granted
Gooshayes in 1462 to Henry Bourchier, earl of
Essex, as well as Dagenhams two years later. (fn. 191) At
Gooshayes, as at Dagenhams, the grant to Bourchier
had no permanent effect. John Hamme retained the
manor, and in 1465 sold it to Avery Cornburgh. (fn. 192)
Cornburgh (d. 1487) also held Dagenhams, and
Dovers in Hornchurch. (fn. 193) His heirs were his sister
Agnes Chambie, and his nephew John Crafford. (fn. 194)
By 1512 Gooshayes was in the possession of John
Morton, (fn. 195) who in 1518 granted a 40-year lease of
the manor to John Roper. (fn. 196) Thomas Morton, who
died holding Gooshayes in 1591, was presumably a
descendant of John. (fn. 197) He was succeeded by his son
George, who in 1600 sold the manor to Richard
Humble. (fn. 198)
Richard Humble (d. 1616) was a Southwark
vintner and alderman of London. (fn. 199) His son Peter
(d. 1623) left a daughter and heir Martha, who
married Reynold Bray. (fn. 200) Martha and Reynold both
died in 1638, leaving Edmund Bray their son and
heir. (fn. 201) Edmund appears to have died childless. By
1659 he had been succeeded by his mother's
cousin Humble Ward, Lord Ward of Birmingham
(d. 1670). (fn. 202) Lord Ward's son Edward Ward, Lord
Dudley and Ward, sold Gooshayes about 1684 to
William Mead (d. 1713), a London linen-draper and
a leading Quaker. (fn. 203) William's son Sir Nathaniel
Mead sold it in 1754 to William Sheldon (d. 1798),
who left it to his son William (d. 1817). (fn. 204) Thomas
Sheldon, son of the younger William, sold Gooshayes
in 1829 to Sir Thomas Neave, Bt. (fn. 205) It was thus
merged in Dagenhams, with which it descended
until 1919, when Sir Thomas L. H. Neave, Bt.,
sold most of that estate. Gooshayes, then a farm of
266 a., was bought by the tenants, R. and H. Watt. (fn. 206)
Some years later Robert Watt sold the farm to
John Mallinson, who already held the neighbouring
New Hall farm. (fn. 207) In 1948 Gooshayes was compulsorily purchased by the London County Council for
the Harold Hill housing estate. (fn. 208)
Gooshayes house, described in 1594 as ancient, is
said to have been rebuilt by Edward Ward, Lord
Dudley and Ward, i.e. between 1670 and c. 1684. (fn. 209)
Gooshayes Chase, which formed the drive to the
house from the London Road, may have been made
at that time. (fn. 210) Most of Ward's house was demolished
before 1768, but part of it survived as a farm-house. (fn. 211)
When the Harold Hill estate was built Gooshayes
became a community centre. It was demolished in
1961. Gooshayes Drive follows the line of Gooshayes
Chase.
The manor of MARKS, in Dagenham and
Romford, is treated elsewhere. (fn. 212)
The tenement of MARSHALLS was in Romford town, on the east side of North Street. (fn. 213) It took
its name from the Marshall family, which occurs in
many local records from the 12th century onwards. (fn. 214)
About 1618 it comprised about 40 a. land, belonging
then to Mr. Thorowgood, and formerly to Edward
Carew. (fn. 215) Edward was the son of John Carew, deputy
steward of the liberty of Havering. (fn. 216) Marshalls
remained in the Thorowgood family until the
early 18th century. Simon Thorowgood (d. 1722)
was holding it in 1695, when he mortgaged it to Sir
William Scawen and his brother (Sir) Thomas
Scawen, both of London. (fn. 217) The Scawens were
friends and business associates of Russell Allsopp,
brother of Thorowgood's wife Elizabeth. In 1704
Simon and Elizabeth Thorowgood sold the freehold
of Marshalls to Allsopp, in return for an annuity on
their joint lives. Allsopp died in 1705 or soon after,
leaving the freehold to his sister Katherine, wife of
Thomas Baines, for life, with remainder to William,
son of John Jerman. (Sir) Thomas Scawen was
Allsopp's executor. At the time of his death Allsopp
was heavily in debt to Sir William Scawen and
others, whose claims on the estate conflicted with
the Thorowgoods' right to their annuity, and caused
protracted litigation, during part of which Marshalls
was in Chancery. In 1725 William Jerman sold the
freehold of the estate to Thomas Scawen, heir to his
father Sir Thomas and also his uncle Sir William
Scawen. Thomas Scawen bought out Elizabeth
Thorowgood's life interest in 1729. He mortgaged
the estate in 1730 to James Colebrooke, who in 1733
foreclosed and sold it to Onesiphorous Leigh of
Tooting. Marshalls later passed to John Leigh of
London, who died in 1748, leaving his estates to
his mother Elizabeth Leigh for life, with remainder
to his sisters Mary Leigh and Mary Frost. In 1748
the remainder to Marshalls was settled on Mary
Frost in anticipation of her marriage to John
Beesley.
In the late 18th century Marshalls was owned
and occupied by Jackson Barwis (d. c. 1809), (fn. 218)
and later by his widow (d. 1816). (fn. 219) After Mrs.
Barwis's death the estate, comprising a large house
and 112 a. land, was put up for sale. (fn. 220) Then or soon
after Marshalls was acquired by Rowland Stephenson, 'the fugitive banker.' (fn. 221) In 1829, after Stephenson's bankruptcy, it was bought by Hugh McIntosh
(d. 1840), and it subsequently descended with the
Havering manor estate until after the First World
War. (fn. 222) Marshalls was put up for sale in 1924 and
most of the land was soon developed for building. (fn. 223)
Marshalls house appears to have been enlarged
into a gentleman's residence early in the 19th
century, possibly by Jackson Barwis. It was a
stuccoed five-bay house with a Tuscan portico and
earlier back parts. (fn. 224) The Sunday parties held there
by Rowland Stephenson were long remembered. (fn. 225)
Hugh McIntosh lived at Marshalls, but after his
death the house was usually let. (fn. 226) In 1959 it was
demolished and the site was used to extend Romford
county technical school. (fn. 227)
The manor of RISEBRIDGE lay south of Lower
Bedfords Road, near the place where an ancient
bridge carried that road over a tributary of the
Bourne brook. (fn. 228) It appears to have originated in a
60-acre tenement which Peter of Romford granted
in 1234 to Adam of Lincoln, in exchange for other
lands. (fn. 229) Lincoln granted it in 1241 to William Dun, (fn. 230)
who soon afterwards gave it to Hornchurch priory
in free alms. (fn. 231) In 1315 it was alleged that Dun's gift
had been intended as the endowment of a chantry in
the parish church, and that the priory had misappropriated it, but the charge failed. (fn. 232) Risebridge subsequently descended with Hornchurch Hall and
Suttons. (fn. 233) In the 17th and 18th centuries it was
leased with the tithes from the northern wards of
the parish, and was sometimes called Parsonage
farm. (fn. 234) In 1846 it was a farm of 135 a. (fn. 235) New College,
Oxford, sold it in 1925 to Mr. C. B. T. Hembry. (fn. 236) It
seems to have been acquired later by Thomas
England, the estate developer, whose widow,
Mrs. E. S. England, sold it in 1969 to Havering L.B. (fn. 237)
In 1976 Risebridge was a municipal golf course, and
the farm-house, a mid-19th-century building, was
in use as the club house.
The manor of STEWARDS lay on the east side
of Hornchurch Lane (South Street), Romford. In
1499 John Hotoft of Orsett and his wife Joan
conveyed it to William Chapman of Bulphan and
others. (fn. 238) Chapman conveyed it in 1501 to Edward
Hales. (fn. 239) Stewards later passed to Marcellin Hales
(d. 1561). (fn. 240) Thomas Hales, son of Marcellin, sold
the manor in 1566 to William Cade. (fn. 241) In 1588 Cade
sold it to James Quarles (d. 1599), purveyor to the
Navy, who was succeeded by his son (Sir) Robert
Quarles (d. 1639); Sir Robert's widow Mary held a
life-interest in the manor, and was still living in
1659. (fn. 242) James Quarles, son of Sir Robert, died in
1642 leaving an infant daughter Hester, who
eventually inherited Stewards and married William
Holgate. (fn. 243) In 1696 the estate comprised 374 a.,
extending from Hornchurch Lane to Squirrels
Heath. (fn. 244) William Holgate, son of William and
Hester, sold it in 1708 to John Wood. (fn. 245) Wood (d.
1761) devised Stewards in equal shares to William
Gill and John Leach. (fn. 246) The halves were reunited
in 1800, when William Tolbut bought them both
from the Gill and Leach families. (fn. 247) Tolbut (d. 1828)
was succeeded by his son William. (fn. 248) The Eastern
Counties railway (1839) cut the estate in half, and
the station was built at that point. In 1849 Stewards,
then comprising some 255 a., was put up for sale by
William Tolbut, and during the next 20 years much
of it was developed for building in Western Road,
Junction Road, Eastern Road, Victoria Road, and
South Street. (fn. 249)
About 1618 Stewards house stood in a large
park. (fn. 250) By 1696 the park had been divided up for
farming, but the house was still standing. (fn. 251) At both
dates it was depicted as a substantial gabled building,
possibly of the 16th century. The owners lived there
from the time of Marcellin Hales at least until the
mid 17th century. Francis Quarles the poet (1592–1644), brother of Sir Robert, lived there in childhood. (fn. 252) In 1700 an Independent meeting was
registered there. (fn. 253) Stewards was demolished shortly
before September 1717. (fn. 254) At that time it was thought
unlikely that it would ever be rebuilt, but in fact a
new house, called Romford Hall, was built soon after
on the same site. (fn. 255) It was a large red-brick building
which survived c. 1914 but was later demolished. (fn. 256)
The tenement of WRIGHTSBRIDGE lay
beside the bridge of that name over Putwell (now
Weald) brook at Noak Hill. A small part of it lay
east of the brook, in South Weald parish. The
Wrights, a prolific yeoman family, had several
branches in this part of Essex. The eldest sons were
usually called John. (fn. 257) About 1355 John Wright was
holding Morris's land in Havering, comprising a
messuage and 60 a., formerly belonging to Robert
Morris. (fn. 258) That tenement was evidently in the Noak
Hill area, since its tithes were leased along with
Newbury in 1378 and 1385. (fn. 259) The Wrights were
certainly holding Wrightsbridge by the 1550s, and
remained there until the later 17th century. (fn. 260)
John Wright, who was living in 1678, appears to
have been at least the fifth holder of the estate, in
successive generations, with the same name. (fn. 261) In
that year Wrightsbridge was mortgaged to John
Wood, a London haberdasher. John Wright and
John Wood were both dead by 1685, when Wright's
mother and sisters conveyed the estate to Wood's
daughter Sarah, later wife of George Caldecott.
Wrightsbridge was bought from the Caldecotts in
1720 by Sir Robert Abdy, Bt., of Albyns, in Stapleford Abbots. (fn. 262) It descended with Albyns until
c. 1872, when it was bought by Sir Arundell Neave,
Bt., and thus became part of the Dagnam Park
estate. (fn. 263) In 1772 Wrightsbridge farm comprised
80 a. (fn. 264) During the next century it was gradually
enlarged, to 93 a. in 1818 and 98 a. in 1869. (fn. 265) By
1919, when that part of the Dagnam Park estate
was put up for sale, Wrightsbridge had been
merged in Hill farm, which was bought by the
sitting tenents, R. Watt & Sons. (fn. 266)
Wrightsbridge house stands immediately north
and west of the bridge. About 1618 there was a
substantial gabled house there. (fn. 267) The present house
is a brick building of the early or mid 18th century.
It was excluded from the sale of 1919, and was
later sold separately. It was remodelled and extended
to the rear in 1926, when an earlier service wing was
probably replaced. The sundial on the front of the
house, dated 1663, was imported at that time. (fn. 268)
Angel Cottages, about 150 yd. south of Wrightsbridge, in Wrightsbridge Road, was part of the
same tenement in the 17th century, and was probably identical with Malland (1625), and with Little
Wrightsbridge (1659). (fn. 269) It comprises the northern
half of a late-14th- or early-15th-century timber-framed hall house. (fn. 270) It is not unlikely that this
building was the original house on Morris's land.
In the early 17th century the first floor was put into
the hall, and the northern end was rebuilt in its
present cross-wing form. By 1707 Little Wrightsbridge had been detached from the Wrightsbridge
estate, and by 1744 it had become the Angel public
house. (fn. 271) Sir Thomas Neave, Bt., of Dagnam Park,
bought the Angel in 1818 and converted it into two
cottages. (fn. 272) In 1976 the building belonged to Hill
farm.