Erith (St. John the Baptist)
ERITH (St. John the Baptist), a parish, in the
union of Dartford, hundred of Lessness, lathe of
Sutton-At-Hone, W. division of Kent, 2¼ miles (N.)
from Crayford; containing 2082 inhabitants. This was
once a market-town; was incorporated; and had fairs
on Holy-Thursday, Michaelmas-day, and Whit-Tuesday.
It is situated on the Thames, which here forms a haven;
and there is a branch establishment in connexion with
the custom-house: the East India ships frequently
anchor opposite the place, in their passage up the river,
and occasion a considerable traffic. A neat pier was
completed and opened in August, 1842, and some of the
steam-boats plying between London and Gravesend call
here. The parish consists of 3735 acres, of which 290
are in wood. The living is a vicarage, valued in the
king's books at £9. 12. 6.; net income, £368; patron
and impropriator, Lord Wynford. The church is an
ancient structure, almost wholly overgrown with ivy.
An abbey for Canons regular was founded here in
1180.
Erme, St.
ERME, ST., a parish, in the union of Truro, W.
division of the hundred of Powder and of the county
of Cornwall, 3¼ miles (N. by E.) from Truro; containing 552 inhabitants. This parish, of which a detached portion is skirted by a branch of the Truro river,
comprises 4155 acres, whereof 320 are common land or
waste: the surface is varied, in some parts hilly; the
soil is chiefly clayey, and the lands are watered by
numerous streamlets. The living is a rectory, valued in
the king's books at £22. 13. 4., and in the gift of E. W.
Wynne Pendarves, Esq.: the tithes have been commuted
for £500, and the glebe comprises 80 acres. The church
was taken down in 1819, and rebuilt at an expense of
£1400, raised by subscription; the present edifice is
cruciform, in the later English style, with an embattled
tower of granite crowned by pinnacles. There are several barrows.
Ermington (St. Peter)
ERMINGTON (St. Peter), a parish, in the union
of Plympton St. Mary, hundred of Ermington, Ermington and Plympton, and S. divisions of Devon, 2
miles (W. N. W.) from Modbury; containing 1607 inhabitants. The parish consists of 4132a. 3r. 8p., of which
2332 acres are arable, 1531 pasture, and 269 woodland;
it is pleasantly situated, and comprises the village of
Ermebridge, on the new road from Exeter to Plymouth,
and a great portion of the village of Ivy-Bridge. A commodious hotel has been erected, and a post-office for
the surrounding district has been established at Ermebridge. A market was formerly held, which has been
long discontinued; there are still fairs for cattle on the
2nd of February and 24th of June. The living comprises a vicarage and a sinecure rectory, with the chapelry of Kingston annexed: the vicarage is valued in the
king's books at £33. 11. 3., and is in the alternate
patronage of the Crown, and J. B. Cholwich, Esq.; the
rectory is valued at £24, and is in the gift of Mr. Cholwich, who is impropriator of one moiety, the other
belonging to J. C. Bulteel, Esq. The great tithes have
been commuted for £270, and the vicarial for £308.
The church contains a curious Norman font, and a
monument to the Strechley family, whose ancient seat
is now the property of Mr. Bulteel. In 1513, an almshouse and a charity school were endowed with lands by
Alice Hatch.
Erney, St.
ERNEY, St., a chapelry, in the parish of Landrake,
union of St. Germans, S. division of the hundred of
East, E. division of Cornwall, 2 miles (N. by E.) from
St. Germans; containing 81 inhabitants. The river
Lynher is navigable on the east, and the St. Germans on
the west; on the south they unite.
Erpingham (St. Mary)
ERPINGHAM (St. Mary), a parish, in the union of
Aylsham, hundred of South Erpingham, N. division
of Norfolk, 4 miles (N. by E.) from Aylsham; containing 475 inhabitants. It is on the road from Aylsham
to Cromer, and bounded on the west by a branch of the
river Bure; and comprises 1385a. 3r. 13p., of which
1180 acres are arable, 130 pasture, and 10 woodland:
from the elevated grounds the views are very pleasing,
embracing the town of Aylsham, and the woods of
Blickling. The living is a discharged rectory, annexed
to that of Blickling, and valued in the king's books at
£9. 18. 9.: the tithes have been commuted for £475,
and the glebe consists of 15½ acres. The church, which
is in the decorated and later English styles, with a lofty
embattled tower, was repaired in 1841; in the south
aisle is a brass effigy of a knight in armour, to the
memory of Sir John de Erpingham, a great contributor
towards the erection of the church. There is a place of
worship in the parish for a congregation of Wesleyan
Methodists.
Erringden
ERRINGDEN, a chapelry, or chapelry district, in
the parish of Halifax, union of Todmorden, wapentake of Morley, W. riding of York, 7 miles (W.) from
Halifax; containing 2221 inhabitants. This chapelry,
anciently Heyrikdene, is encircled by a singular strip of
land called the Ramble, and situated on the south side
of the river Calder; it is a mountainous district, comprising 2980 acres, and chiefly inhabited by persons employed in the numerous mills in the immediate vicinity.
The scenery is of bold and romantic character. Part of
the villages of Hebden-Bridge and Mytholmroyd are in
the township. The chapel of St. John in the Wilderness,
which had become dangerous from dilapidation, was
taken down in 1838; and a handsome structure has
been erected on land given by the late Major Priestly,
at an expense of £2130, of which £700 were granted by
the Parliamentary Commissioners, £400 by the Incorporated Society, and the remainder raised by subscription; it contains 800 sittings. The living is a perpetual
curacy, in the patronage of the Vicar of Halifax, with a
net income of £100, and a good house, built in 1815.
There is a place of worship for Wesleyans. Below the
Cragg is a spring, which is in great estimation.
Erth, St.
ERTH, ST., a parish, in the union of Penzance,
E. division of the hundred of Penwith, W. division of
Cornwall, 4 miles (N. E. by N.) from Marazion; containing 2452 inhabitants. The parish includes part of
the town of Hayle, and is situated on the river Hayle,
over which is a bridge near the church. It comprises
4092 acres, of which 1454 are common land or waste;
the surface is undulated, and mines of copper and tin are
worked, for the latter of which there are three smeltinghouses. The village of Churchtown is extensive and well
inhabited. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king's
books at £14. 1. 0½., and in the patronage of the Dean
and Chapter of Exeter, the impropriators, whose tithes
have been commuted for £402, and those of the vicar
for £280; there is a glebe of 106 acres. The church, a
neat edifice, containing nearly 600 sittings, is situated on
the bank of the river, near the bridge. There are places
of worship for Calvinists and Wesleyans. In the churchyard, and in the village, are the remains of ancient
crosses; and near the vicarage-house is a double circular intrenchment, called Carhangives, supposed to have
been the site of a baronial castle.
Ervan, St.
ERVAN, ST., a parish, in the union of St. Columb, hundred of Pyder, E. division of Cornwall, 4
miles (S. S. W.) from Padstow; containing 477 inhabitants. It comprises 2958 acres, of which 550 are common land or waste. Fairs are held on the 29th of May,
at Churchtown and the hamlet of Penrose, in the parish,
for cattle and sheep. The living is a rectory, valued in
the king's books at £18. 6. 8., and in the gift of Sir W.
Molesworth, Bart.: the tithes have been commuted for
£380, and the glebe comprises 60 acres. The church is
a neat edifice in the later English style. There are places
of worship for Bryanites and Wesleyans.
Ervills, or Leigh
ERVILLS, or Leigh, a tything, in the parish and
hundred of Hambledon, union of Droxford, Droxford
and N. divisions of the county of Southampton; containing 468 inhabitants.
Erwarton (St. Mary)
ERWARTON (St. Mary), a parish, in the incorporation and hundred of Samford, E. division of Suffolk, 8½ miles (S. S. E.) from Ipswich; containing 199
inhabitants. It comprises by estimation 1220 acres,
and is bounded on the south by the navigable river
Stour. The living is a rectory, consolidated with that of
Woolverstone, valued in the king's books at £10. 13. 4.,
and in the gift of the Rev. H. D. Berners: the tithes
have been commuted for £300, and the glebe consists of
21 acres. The church is an elegant structure, lately
repaired and beautified, and contains monuments of the
Davillers, Calthrope, and Parker families.
Eryholme
ERYHOLME, a chapelry, in the parish of Gilling,
union of Darlington, wapentake of Gilling-East,
N. riding of York, 5 miles (S. E. by S.) from Darlington; containing 212 inhabitants. It is on the south
side of the Tees, and comprises 2103a. 1r. 7p.: plantations have been made on two of the farms. Coal is said
to exist, but the attempts to find it have not been successful hitherto, though there appears some chance, from
the broken nature of the ground, of meeting with it.
The village is on a gentle acclivity, and commands
delightful views of the Durham side of the dale. The
living is a perpetual curacy, in the gift of the Vicar of
Gilling, with a net income of £49; impropriators, the
Landowners: the chapel is dedicated to St. Mary.
Escombe
ESCOMBE, a parochial chapelry, in the union of
Auckland, N. W. division of Darlington ward, S.
division of the county of Durham, 1¾ mile (W.) from
Bishop-Auckland; containing 510 inhabitants. The
township comprises 929 acres, of which 557 are arable,
365 meadow and pasture, and the remainder gardenground; the surface is undulated, and the scenery
agreeably diversified. The neighbourhood abounds with
coal, of which there are extensive mines in operation in
the hamlet of Etherley-Lane; the produce is conveyed
by railway. The living is a perpetual curacy; net
income, £200; patron, the Bishop of Durham. The
tithes have been commuted for a rent-charge of £8, and
the glebe comprises 40 acres. The church is an ancient
structure. There is a place of worship for Wesleyans.
Escrick (St. Helen)
ESCRICK (St. Helen), a parish, in the wapentake
of Ouse and Derwent, union, and E. riding, of York;
containing, with the township of Deighton, 895 inhabitants, of whom 710 are in the township of Escrick,
6 miles (S. by E.) from York. The village is on the
Selby road, and is one of the most picturesque in the
county; the buildings, most of which are of recent date,
having neat and tasteful gardens adjoining. Escrick
Hall, the property of Lord Wenlock, was the seat of Sir
Thomas Knyvet, one of the gentlemen of the bedchamber to James I., who was sent, with several others,
November 5th, 1605, to search the vaults under the
house of lords, at the time of the famous Gunpowder
Plot. The living is a rectory, valued in the king's books
at £23. 3. 9.; net income, £530; patron, Lord Wenlock: the tithes were commuted for land and corn-rents
in 1781. The church is a handsome structure, built
about fifty years ago by Beilby Thompson, Esq., on the
site of the former edifice.
Esh, or Ash
ESH, or ASH, a chapelry, in the parish and union of
Lanchester, W. division of Chester ward, N. division
of the county of Durham, 5 miles (W. N. W.) from
Durham; containing 518 inhabitants. The manor gave
name, at a very early period, to a family of considerable
local consequence, who held the estate, with little interruption, from the middle of the 13th century till the
time of Henry VIII.; it afterwards came, among other
families, to the Smythes. The chapelry comprises
1123a. 1r. 6p., of which 461 acres are pasture, 617
arable, and 44 waste: the village occupies the centre of
the heights between the vales of Browney and Derness.
At Walls-Nook, a hamlet in the chapelry, are a flourmill and an iron-foundry. Esh Hall, the deserted seat
of the Smythes, of whom Sir Edward, the first baronet,
most probably erected it, is a long irregular building
fronting the south, and shaded by a grove of old sycamore-trees. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the
patronage of the Bishop of Durham; net income, £190.
The tithes have been commuted for £77. 16. 6.; there
is a glebe of 20 acres. The chapel, dedicated to St.
Michael, was almost entirely rebuilt in 1770, and consists of a narrow nave and chancel, and of a south
porch, which opens under a low pointed arch. There is
a Roman Catholic chapel in the village; and at a short
distance to the east is the Roman Catholic College of
Ushaw, which see.
Esher (St. George)
ESHER (St. George), a parish, in the union, and
partly in the hundred, of Kingston, E. division, but
chiefly in the Second division of the hundred of Elmbridge, W. division, of Surrey, 3¾ miles (S. W.) from
Kingston: containing 1261 inhabitants. It comprises
2075 acres, whereof 799 are pasture, 407 arable, and the
remainder chiefly gardens and houses: the soil is principally sand, but with a mixture of sand and some clay.
In this parish are situated the mansions of Claremont and
Esher Place. The former, well known as the seat of the
Princess Charlotte, is the property of the King of the
Belgians; it was frequently the residence of the Queen
in her younger days, and has been occasionally since Her
Majesty's accession to the throne. The latter was the
place to which Cardinal Wolsey retired when he fell into
disgrace, but there are no remains of his palace, with
the exception of the gateway flanked with towers, which
forms an exceedingly picturesque object from the
grounds. The scenery is highly interesting, being enriched with mansions and seats of the first order. There
is a fair for horses on September 4th. A station on the
London and South-Western railway is situated near the
village. The living is a rectory, valued in the king's
books at £9. 18. 4.; net income, £400; patron, Henry
John Pye, Esq., who appoints, if possible, a kinsman of
the founder of Wadham College, Oxford. The church is
neatly fitted up, and contains at the east end a highly
finished painting of Our Saviour by Sir Robert Ker
Porter, who presented it to the parish in 1837, and whose
mother was for some time a resident here. Adjoining
Esher Common, an hospital or priory was founded in the
reign of Henry II., the site of which is now called
Sandon Farm.
Esholt
ESHOLT, a township, in the parish of Otley, union
of Carlton (under Gilbert's act), Upper division of
the wapentake of Skyrack, W. riding of York, 4¼
miles (S. S. W.) from Otley; containing 443 inhabitants. A nunnery was founded here by Simon de Ward,
in the middle of the twelfth century, which continued
to flourish until the year 1530, when it was suppressed,
and its revenue was returned at £19: some small remains still point out the site. The township comprises
810 acres: the village is pleasantly situated on the
north side of the Aire. Here are a worsted-mill, a
scribbling and fulling mill, and a corn-mill. Esholt
Hall, the ancient seat of the Calverleys, is now the property and residence of Crompton Stansfield, Esq. A
church was erected in 1839 at the expense of Mr. Stansfield, which is supplied by the vicar, whose curate's
stipend is paid by the Pastoral-Aid Society. There is a
place of worship for Wesleyans.
Eshott
ESHOTT, a township, in the parish of Felton,
union of Morpeth, E. division of Morpeth ward, N.
division of Northumberland, 9¼ miles (N.) from Morpeth; containing 117 inhabitants. It was long in the
possession of the ancient family of Carr, and was the
property of William Carr, high sheriff of the county in
the 8th of Queen Anne, and of Thomas Carr, who filled
the same office in the 18th of George III. The township
is situated about midway between the coast and the road
from Morpeth to Alnwick: it includes the hamlets of
Eshott-Brocks, Eshott East-Houses, Eshott SouthHouses, and Eshott Hall; and comprises 1800 acres,
whereof three-fourths are arable, and about 200 acres
grass-land. A seam of coal runs through the township,
and there is a good freestone-quarry. The impropriate
tithes have been commuted for £275.
Eshton
ESHTON, a township, in the parish of Gargrave,
union of Skipton, E. division of the wapentake of
Staincliffe and Ewcross, W. riding of York, 5½
miles (N. W.) from Skipton; containing 74 inhabitants.
It comprises about 1150 acres, chiefly meadow and
pasture; the surface is boldly undulated.
Eskdale
ESKDALE, with Wasdale, a chapelry, in the parish
of St. Bees, union of Bootle, Allerdale ward above
Derwent, W. division of Cumberland, 7 miles (N. E.
by E.) from Ravenglass; containing 375 inhabitants.
This place, with Wasdale and Nether Wasdale, comprises 30,000 acres, of which 26,680 are common land
or waste. It is remarkable for two waterfalls, Birker-Force and Stanley-Gill, about three-quarters of a mile
distant from each other; the former dashes over a bare
precipitous rock, and the latter, though somewhat inferior in height, is equal to it in beauty and grandeur. The
living is a perpetual curacy; net income, £66; patron
and impropriator, E. Stanley, Esq. The chapel, dedicated to St. Catherine, is a very ancient structure; in
the east window is a painting of the saint, and above
the eastern gable is a stone cross. A school was endowed
by Edward Wilson in 1722, and by Edward Hartley in
1752.
Eskdale-Side
ESKDALE-SIDE, a chapelry, in the parish and
union of Whitby, liberty of Whitby-Strand, N. riding
of York, 5½ miles (S. W.) from Whitby; containing
519 inhabitants. This chapelry is beautifully situated,
extending for five miles along the south bank of the river
Esk, and comprising 2500 acres, of which about 1500 are
good arable and pasture land, and the remainder uninclosed moor producing only heath. The surface rises
gradually from the Esk to an elevation of 1600 feet,
forming one of the highest points of the eastern moors
in the county, and inclosing one of the most lovely
valleys in the kingdom, through which the Esk pursues
its rapid and winding course. There are some large
quarries of freestone in operation, and a great abundance
of alum rock, which was formerly extensively worked:
a considerable bed of stone, containing about fortyfive per cent. of iron, was discovered a few years since,
at the western extremity of the township, and the ore,
now extensively wrought, is sent to Newcastle to be
smelted. The Whitby and Pickering railway passes
through the chapelry for more than five miles. The
living is a perpetual curacy, with that of Ugglebarnby
annexed, and in the patronage of the Rev. William
Walker, with a net income of £329; appropriator, the
Archbishop of York. The chapel, founded by Roger,
abbot of Whitby, about the year 1260, having become
ruinous, a very elegant structure was erected on a more
commodious site, in 1767, at the expense of Robert
Bower, Esq., and his wife and sister, who likewise built
a parsonage-house. A second church has been erected
at the western extremity of the chapelry, chiefly through
the exertions of H. Belcher, Esq., of Whitby. There are
numerous springs, most of them containing alum and
iron. In the reign of John a small priory was founded
here. The place is celebrated for the singular ceremony
of the Penny Whittle hedge.
Eske
ESKE, a township, in the parish of St. John,
Beverley, union of Beverley, N. division of the
wapentake of Holderness, E. riding of York, 3¼ miles
(N. E. by N.) from Beverley; containing 29 inhabitants.
This place, in Domesday book Asche, derives its name
from the British word signifying water. It was given
at an early period to the collegiate church of St. John.
The township comprises about 1130 acres: the situation
of the village, on the east bank of the Hull river, is elevated, but the country around is flat, and before the introduction of drainage here, the grounds were frequently
under water. The lands are tithe-free.
Espershields
ESPERSHIELDS, with Milshield, a township, in
the parish of Bywell St. Peter, union of Hexham,
E. division of Tindale ward, S. division of Northum-berland, 11½ miles (S. S. E.) from Hexham; containing 198 inhabitants. At Winnis Hill, a little westward,
is a meeting-house for the Society of Friends, near
which is a place called Hare Town, where it is supposed
was formerly a collection of houses. The country between Espershields and Newbiggin, in the county of
Durham, was anciently covered by a thick wood, said
to have been burnt down by the owner, well known by
the appellation of "Mad Maddison," who was afterwards
hanged at Durham.
Essendine
ESSENDINE, a chapelry, in the parish of Ryhall,
union of Stamford, hundred of East, county of Rut
land, 4 miles (N. by E.) from Stamford; containing
152 inhabitants. It is on the road from Stamford to
Bourn, and comprises 1487a. 2r. 32p. The chapel,
dedicated to St. Mary, is very ancient, with a curious
Saxon arched doorway.
Essendon (St. Mary)
ESSENDON (St. Mary), a parish, in the union of
Hatfield, hundred and county of Hertford, 3½ miles
(E.) from Hatfield; containing 690 inhabitants. This
parish, which is bounded on the north by a branch of
the river Lea, comprises by measurement 2298 acres.
The soil is generally a gravelly loam, resting upon clay,
and by far the greater portion of the land is unproductive; the surface is varied with hill and valley.
The living is a rectory, with the curacy of Bayford annexed, valued in the king's books at £18, and in the
gift of the Marquess of Salisbury: the tithes have been
commuted for £368. 10., and the glebe comprises 45
acres.
Essex
ESSEX, a maritime county, bounded on the north
by the counties of Suffolk and Cambridge, on the west
by those of Hertford and Middlesex, on the south by
the river Thames (which separates it from Kent), and
on the east by the North Sea. It extends from 51° 27'
to 52° 6' (N. Lat.), and from 0° 3' (W. Lon.) to 1° 17'
(E. Lon.); and includes 1532 square miles, or 980,480
statute acres. The county contains 67,618 inhabited
houses, 2490 uninhabited, and 499 in the course of
erection; and the population amounts to 344,979, of
whom 172,348 are males, and 172,631 females.
At the time of Cæsar's invasion, this portion of Britain was inhabited by the Trinobantes; and in the subdivision of the island by Constantine the Great, the
county formed part of Flavia Cæsariensis. The origin of
its name is coeval with the establishment of the kingdom of the East Saxons, of which London was the
metropolis, and of which the tract comprised within the
limits of this county constituted an important district:
the kingdom was founded about the year 530, and it
was called East Seaxa, meaning "land of the Eastern
Saxons," from its relative position to the other Saxon
kingdoms. The county is in the province of Canterbury,
and comprises the archdeaconry of Essex, containing
the deaneries of Barstable, Chafford, Chelmsford, Dengie,
Dunmow, Harlow, Ongar, and Rochford, with part of
Barking; that of Colchester, containing the deaneries
of Colchester, Hedingham, Lexden, Newport, Sampford,
Tendring, and Witham; and part of that of London,
containing the remainder of Barking deanery: the number of parishes is 400. By the act of the 6th and 7th of
William IV., cap. 77, the entire county was transferred
to the diocese of Rochester, with the exception of the
parishes of Barking, East and West Ham, Little Ilford,
Low Layton, Walthamstow, Wanstead, Woodford, and
Chingford, which remain in the diocese of London. For
civil purposes it is divided into the hundreds of Barstable, Becontree, Chafford, Chelmsford, Clavering,
Dengie, Dunmow, Freshwell, Harlow, Hinckford, Lexden, Ongar, Rochford, Tendring, Thurstable, Uttlesford,
Waltham, Winstree, and Witham; and the royal liberty
of Havering-atte-Bower. It contains the borough and
market-towns of Colchester and Maldon; the borough,
market-town, and port of Harwich; and the markettowns of Barking, Billericay, Braintree, Brentwood,
Chelmsford, Chipping-Ongar, Coggeshall, Dunmow,
Epping, Gray's-Thurrock, Halstead, Manningtree, Rayleigh, Rochford, Romford, Thaxted, Saffron-Walden,
Waltham-Abbey, and Witham. By the act of 1832, the
county was divided into the Northern and Southern
divisions, each returning two members to parliament;
and the three boroughs send two representatives each.
The county is in the Home circuit: the assizes and
quarter-sessions are held at Chelmsford, where stands
the old county gaol and house of correction; the new
convict gaol is at Springfield.
The soil comprises every species of loam, from the
most stubborn to the most congenial; there is also a
portion of light gravelly sand, besides a considerable
share of meadow and marsh ground, the greater part of
which, with suitable management, is very productive.
The late Arthur Young divided the soils into eight districts, viz., the crop and fallow district of strong chalky
loam, the maritime district of fertile loam, three districts
of strong loam not peculiar in management, the turnipland district, the chalk district, and the district of miscellaneous loams. The fertility of the arable land, and
the good husbandry practised, enable Essex to rank
high among the agricultural counties of England; its
proximity to the metropolis affords it great advantages,
and the various agricultural societies that have been
established have given a stimulus to improvement
hitherto without example. The cultivation of potatoes
and vegetable crops is extensive in the vicinity of London. Carraway, coriander, rape, canary, and white and
brown mustard seeds occupy a considerable portion of
the marshy districts, and fine tracts of grazing marshes
extend from the mouth of the Thames northward to
Bradwell Point, on which small Highland cattle and
Welsh "runts" are fed, with numerous flocks of Southdown and Romney-marsh sheep. The hop plantations
at present cover about 400 acres, and are chiefly at
Castle-Hedingham and in the adjacent parishes: the
hop-fair is held at Braintree, early in October. The
dairy-district is not considerable: the largest dairy-farms
are those in the neighbourhood of Epping, which are
deservedly in repute for the richness of the cream and
butter; the skimmed milk is used for feeding pigs for
the London market. The natural woods have been
much diminished, both in number and extent, within
the last century; the principal remains are the curtailed
forests of Epping and Hainault.
Among the Manufactures, from time immemorial until
of late years, the woollen manufacture was the principal;
and although it has long been declining, a considerable
quantity of cloth of various kinds is still sent to the
metropolis, or exported to foreign countries, from Bocking, Braintree, Halstead, Coggeshall, and Colchester.
Large silk manufactories have been erected at Halstead,
Coggeshall, and Braintree; and English and foreign
straw-plat is extensively produced throughout the northern districts. The principal rivers are the Thames,
the Lea, the Crouch, the Chelmer, the Blackwater, the
Coln, and the Stort. The Thames is navigable for merchant vessels of the largest burthen during the whole of
its course along the southern border of the county; and
the Lea is navigable along its western border. The
Crouch, after forming a long and narrow estuary, falls
into the North Sea between Foulness Island and the
opposite marshes. The Chelmer and the Blackwater
unite near Maldon, and form the broad estuary of the
Blackwater, which joins the sea twelve miles below, and
the navigation of which, by the Chelmer, is continued
up to Chelmsford. The Stort is navigable up to Sudbury; below Manningtree it forms a long and wide
estuary, which, contracting at its mouth, unites with the
North Sea at Harwich. In the Blackwater river is a
considerable oyster-fishery, and West Mersea is one of
the principal stations of the dredgers; the number of
vessels engaged is about 200, varying in burthen from 8
to 50 tons, and employing from 400 to 500 men and
boys. The principal breeding rivers are the Crouch, the
Blackwater, and the Coln. The oysters are sent to
London, and to Holland, Flanders, and France; the
quantity annually obtained is estimated at from 12,000
to 15,000 bushels. In Foulness Island are salt-water
stews for various sorts of sea-fish. The county derives
facility of communication from the Eastern Counties railway, which, entering from Middlesex, divides at Stratford into two great branches; the one proceeding northeast by Romford, Chelmsford, Witham, and Coggeshall,
to Colchester; the other proceeding north, sometimes in
this county and sometimes in the adjacent counties of
Middlesex and Herts, until it quits Essex for Cambridgeshire near the town of Saffron-Walden. Another line
connected with the county is the Colchester and Ipswich,
which proceeds from Colchester in a north-east direction, and quits Essex at Manningtree.
Under the Roman government this territory was early
and thoroughly explored; one great road ran the whole
length of it, another skirted its northern border, and
many vicinal ways crossed it in different directions. The
first Roman colony in Britain was established in the
county, and there were several other stations and towns
in different parts: those mentioned in the Itinerary of
Antoninus are, An Ansam, of undetermined locality;
Camalodunum, at Colchester or Maldon; Canonium, at
Coggeshall, or near Kelvedon; Cæsaromagus, at Chelmsford or Writtle; and Durositum, below Brentwood; but
there are few remains of any of these. The principal
relics have been discovered at Colchester: upwards of
1300 Roman and British coins were collected by Morant,
the historian and antiquary, in a period of thirty years,
during which he resided in that town. There are also
Roman remains at Leyton, Wanstead, Great Burstead,
Tolleshunt-Knights, West Mersea, Harwich, and other
places; and tumuli, or barrows, at Lexden, Bures ad
Montem, West Mersea, and Wigborough. The remarkably large tumuli called Bartlow Hills, are in this
county, though taking their name from the neighbouring
village of Bartlow, in Suffolk. Before the Reformation
there were forty-seven Religious houses, namely, two
mitred and six other abbeys, twenty-two priories, three
nunneries, nine hospitals, three colleges, and two preceptories of the Knights Templars; the most remarkable
monastic remains are those of St. Botolph's Priory
(Colchester), St. Osyth's Abbey, and Waltham-Abbey
Church. Of the ancient Castles, or castellated mansions,
which were twelve in number, that of Colchester is the
only one not either utterly demolished or extremely
ruinous. Fossils are found in various parts, but no
where so abundantly as in Harwich Cliff. Essex gives
the title of Earl to the family of Capel.