WEST THURROCK
West Thurrock lies beside the Thames, 30
km. east of London and 3 km. west of Grays
Thurrock. (fn. 1) The ancient parish, containing 2,996
a. (1212.5 ha.), was bounded north by the river
Mardyke. (fn. 2) The Thames coastline of 6.4 km. is
longer than those of most other riverside parishes
in south Essex. In 1929 the parish became part of
Purfleet U.D. That was merged in 1936 in
Thurrock U.D., which in 1974 became the
borough of Thurrock. (fn. 3) Industrial sites occupy
most of the parish except on the northern side,
where farm land and woodland survive.
Beside the Thames and the Mardyke are
alluvial marshes, which give way to a belt of
valley gravel, broken by chalk exposure. The
chalk, which is overlaid by Thanet Beds, rises to
30 m. in the east near Mill Wood and in the west
at Beacon Hill. (fn. 4) The landscape is greatly distorted
by extensive quarrying for chalk, clay, sand, and
gravel.
Excavations at Beacon Hill revealed the site of
palaeolithic, Iron Age, and Romano-British
settlements. (fn. 5) Neolithic and Iron Age flints have
been found near Mill wood. (fn. 6) The recorded
population was 44 in 1066, rising to 70 in 1086,
when West Thurrock was the most populous
place in Chafford hundred. (fn. 7) In 1327, when 24
West Thurrock men were assessed to the lay
subsidy, Grays had the same number, though
much smaller in area, and South Weald and
Aveley had more. (fn. 8) In 1523, when 40 people were
assessed for tax, and in 1670, when 58 hearths
were recorded, West Thurrock ranked 7th and
6th respectively in the hundred. (fn. 9) In the later
18th century the population was swollen by the
garrison at Purfleet and by chalk quarrying, and
in 1801, West Thurrock, with 819 inhabitants
was second only to South Weald with Brentwood. (fn. 10) Later growth was slow until the 1870s,
when with the coming of modern industries the
population rose from 1,165 in 1871 to 2,540 in
1891 and to 5,153 in 1931, the last year for which
there are separate figures for the parish. (fn. 11)
Between 1951 and 1971 the population of West
Thurrock ward declined from 7,216 to 4,779, as
new industrial premises manned by workers
from the L.C.C. estate at Aveley, replaced some
of the older dwellings. (fn. 12)
The medieval village developed in an extended
line about 4 m. above the marshes, where the
valley gravel met the chalk. The church, built on
the marshes, was isolated from the village. Purfleet, a hamlet of West Thurrock, first recorded
in 1285, grew up on higher ground at the western
end of the parish, near the mouth of the
Mardyke. (fn. 13) By 1645 the village comprised houses
on both sides of the main road from Grays,
extending west for 3 km. from Mill Lane towards
Purfleet. (fn. 14) The pattern remained unchanged
until the 18th century. In 1777 the main buildings
were High House and Stone House, lying respectively north and south of the Grays-Purfleet
road. (fn. 15)
Purfleet's modern growth began in 1760, when
the government built powder magazines at the
mouth of the Mardyke. (fn. 16) By 1800 a chapel, a
school, and two rows of cottages had been built in
the Dipping, an old chalk quarry, for chalk
workers' families. (fn. 17) In the mid 19th century
Purfleet also became a popular resort. By 1859
Botany Gardens, in an overgrown chalk quarry,
were attracting 'city men and their families', and
later there were cheap rail excursions from east
London. For some years up to 1914 western and
war films were made there. The gardens were
closed by 1917. (fn. 18)
At West Thurrock growth was rapid after
1870, and by 1897 cottages for cement workers
had been built in Peaceful Row, William Street,
West Street, Flint Street, and Essex Road, all
south of the Grays-Purfleet road. (fn. 19) Millwood
House, west of Mill Lane, was built by 1886. (fn. 20) In
the 20th century growth in the parish has been
mainly industrial, both sides of the road being
built up from Grays to Purfleet. At Purfleet,
Jarrah cottages, dated 1904, were built by
Purfleet Wharf and Saw Mills Co., and Botany
cottages (1905) by the Steam Ship Coal Owners'
Association. Between 1920 and 1940, Park, Hill
Crest, and First to Fifth Avenues were built in
West Thurrock, and there was a small development south of Arterial Road, Purfleet. After 1951
the Thurrock industrial estate was developed on
the marshes east of Purfleet, and in the 1970s
Thurrock borough council built a housing estate
on the site of Purfleet powder magazine. (fn. 21)
The medieval road pattern remained almost
unchanged until the 1920s. (fn. 22) Several lanes
ran north from the Grays-Purfleet road. Mill
(formerly Millwood) Lane, leading to Stifford
bridge, for most of its length formed the eastern
boundary of the parish. Farther west Sandy
Lane, leading to the uplands, survives at its
southern end, but the upper stretches and a
second lane were destroyed by quarrying. Stonehouse Lane, crossing the Mardyke at Causeway
bridge, was the road to London until the late 19th
century. (fn. 23) From Stonehouse Lane, North Road
(later Tank Lane) ran west to Purfleet, while
Back Lane (Bosket Hill, 1777) led east to Stifford
bridge. South of the main Grays-Purfleet road,
two manor ways crossed the marshes, a third
(Greenhithe Lane, 1645, later Stoneness Road)
led to the ferry, and a fourth way led to the
church. (fn. 24) Farther east, a way leading to Stifford
Hythe, developed in the 19th century as Mill
Lane, a southward continuation of Millwood
Lane. Tank Hill (formerly King's) Road was a
private, gated road, built by the government after
1760, to connect the powder magazines with a
road to London. (fn. 25) In 1796 a new road (later
London Road) joined it south of the Mardyke,
giving public access from Purfleet. (fn. 26) The
London-Southend Arterial road, opened in 1925,
crossed the Mardyke east of Tank Hill Road and
ran east through Watt's Woods, incorporating
sections of Back Lane. (fn. 27) Purfleet Bypass, built at
the same time, runs from the Arterial Road
south-east to a junction at Stonehouse Corner. (fn. 28)
The Purfleet to Dartford Tunnel, 1.5 km. long,
was built between 1957 and 1963. (fn. 29) A second
tunnel opened in 1980. (fn. 30) The Purfleet to Dartford
Tunnel approach road runs south from a roundabout on the Arterial Road, bridging the Grays to
Purfleet road, before descending 100 ft. beneath
the Thames. In 1979 work was in progress to
extend the road north, through Belhus Park,
Aveley, to join the London Orbital route. (fn. 31) Tank
Hill Road bridge, built in the 1760s by the
Ordnance Board, was renovated in the 1850s. (fn. 32) A
second, cast-iron bridge was built by the county
in the 1880s. (fn. 33) Both carry local traffic between
Purfleet and the Arterial Road.
There was a wharf at Purfleet in 1665. (fn. 34) By 1736
Gore's wharf had been built farther east. (fn. 35) In the
1760s the government, using a small natural
harbour at the mouth of the Mardyke, built a
quay for landing gunpowder. (fn. 36) It was repaired in
1852 and enlarged in 1897. (fn. 37) In 1835 the harbour
was said to be 'full of shipping, business, and
animation'. (fn. 38) During the 19th century, East India
Company troops embarked there. (fn. 39) As Purfleet
and West Thurrock expanded industrially, many
jetties were built along the river. (fn. 40)
West Thurrock ferry, from Stone Ness to
Greenhithe (Kent), was recorded from 1310 and
is thought to have formed part of the pilgrim
route to Canterbury. (fn. 41) It declined in the 18th
century, but was revived c. 1835 and operated
until the 1860s. (fn. 42) Two ferries from Purfleet,
across the Thames and to London, were often
recorded from 1560, but had ceased by 1768. (fn. 43) In
1797 there was a ferry from King's Stairs,
Purfleet, to Long Reach (Kent). (fn. 44) From c. 1838 a
steam ferry from London to Gravesend could be
hailed by boat from Purfleet. (fn. 45) The ferries declined
after the opening of the railway. (fn. 46) In the 18th
century the Mardyke was believed to have been
navigable as far as Orsett Hall (in Orsett) at high
tide. (fn. 47) Plans for a canal to Battlesbridge in
Rawreth in 1825 and one to Puddle Dock, Great
Warley in 1833, both to follow the Mardyke
closely, were not carried out. (fn. 48) An experimental
lighthouse, built by Trinity House, stood on
Beacon Hill, Purfleet, from 1828 to c. 1870.
Remains of it were used by an anti-aircraft
battery from 1914 to 1918, and survived until the
1920s, when they were demolished in chalk
quarrying. (fn. 49) The London, Tilbury, and Southend
railway, with a station at Purfleet, was opened to
Tilbury in 1854, and to Southend in 1856. (fn. 50) A
branch line from Grays to Upminster, opened in
1892 and extended to Romford in 1893, ran north
via South Ockendon. (fn. 51) In 1781, a daily letter post
was established at the powder magazines at
Purfleet. (fn. 52)
In 1876 West Thurrock consisted of a 'few
cottages, some wooden, all poor' and 'several
well-to-do farms'. (fn. 53) Of those buildings High
House, west of Stonehouse Lane, also known as
West Hall or Le Vyneyard alone survives: (fn. 54) the
other former manor houses were demolished in
the 20th century (fn. 55) . Dovehouse, later Hunts
Farm, west of Sandy Lane, was demolished in
the 1960s. The dovecot there, believed to date
from the 13th century, had disppeared by the
1920s. (fn. 56) Tunnel House, south-west of Bayhouse
manor house, was Buntings (Bunten) in 1732. (fn. 57)
It was extended in the 1880s, converted to a
garage after 1960, and demolished, c. 1970. (fn. 58)
Low House, west of Tunnel House, which was a
substantial building in the later 19th century, had
disappeared by 1930. Stone House, opposite the
junction of the main road with Stonehouse Lane,
was demolished in the 1920s, when the road
junction was realigned. Davy Down, near Stifford
bridge, was a small Georgian cottage, derelict in
1979. Brick barns survive there. (fn. 59) Purfleet House,
built in the Dipping c. 1790 by Samuel Whitbread, contained 26 rooms. It was partly
demolished in 1920, the remainder surviving
until 1951 as parish offices. (fn. 60)
The Royal Hotel, Purfleet, owned by the
Whitbread family until 1920, when it was acquired
by Trust Houses, stands on the riverside. (fn. 61) It was
called the Bricklayers Arms from 1769 to 1830,
then the Purfleet Tavern, later Hotel, receiving
its present name in the 1870s, when it was
patronized by the Prince of Wales and was noted
for its whitebait suppers. (fn. 62) It was rebuilt in the
early 19th century. (fn. 63) Earlier public houses in
Purfleet, the Bear, the Lighter on the Ground,
and the Crown were demolished in the 1760s,
when the powder magazines were built. (fn. 64) In
West Thurrock were the Blue Anchor, mentioned in 1591, and the Boars Head, recorded
from 1715 to 1755. (fn. 65) The Rising Sun stood at
Sun Point, west of the church, from c. 1837 to
the 1850s. (fn. 66) The Old Ship, still stands west of
Mill Lane. First mentioned in 1761, it was used,
alternately with the Fox and Goose, for vestry
meetings, until 1821. (fn. 67) The Fox and Goose,
recorded from 1769, survives west of Sandy
Lane. (fn. 68) The Harrow, mentioned in 1738, is a
single-storey weatherboarded cottage in Back
Lane, close to Stifford bridge. (fn. 69)
Modern buildings of note include Van den
Berghs and Jurgens's head offices, built in 1924
to resemble a Dutch town hall; Hedley's (later
Proctor and Gamble's) soap factory (1939–40);
Thames Board Mills (1957); and the West
Thurrock power station (c. 1960). (fn. 70)
From 1859 the School Ship Society established
reformatory ships off Purfleet. The first Cornwall,
built in 1812, held 200 boys and was in use until
1868. The second Cornwall, formerly the
Wellesley, was built by the East India Co. in
1815, and was lent to the society by the Admiralty
in 1868. In 1870 there were 278 boys receiving
industrial or naval training. The ship was moved
to Denton below Gravesend (Kent) in 1928. (fn. 71)
Martin Burrage, born at Purfleet c. 1580, was a
master shipbuilder at the Royal Yard, Woolwich
(Kent). (fn. 72)
Manors.
Domesday Book lists 7 separate
estates in Thurrock. One, held by the bishop of
London, was in Little Thurrock. (fn. 73) Another, held
by William Peverel, was in Grays Thurrock. (fn. 74)
The largest, held by the count of Eu, became the
manor of West Thurrock. Three estates held by
Odo, bishop of Bayeux, and one held by Terry
Pointel, cannot be certainly identified. (fn. 75) They
were probably not in West Thurrock, unless one
of them can be identified with the later tenement
of Mitchells.
The manor of WEST THURROCK or WEST
HALL seems originally to have comprised most
of the parish, but was gradually reduced in size
by the formation of later manors. It was held in
1066 by Earl, later King, Harold as 13 hides, and
in 1086 by Robert, count of Eu, in demesne. (fn. 76)
The tenancy in chief descended with the honor of
Hastings. (fn. 77)
The demesne tenancy was held from the 12th
to the 14th century by the family of Brinson (de
Breaunzon, Brianzun), who were descended from
the counts of Eu. In 1198 the manor was granted
to Bartholomew Brinson as part of a family
settlement in which Walter de Cambrun and his
wife Alice received lands in France formerly held
by Thomas Brinson, son of Robert of Eu. (fn. 78)
Robert was the brother of Henry of Eu (d. 1140),
count of Eu. (fn. 79) About 1210 Bartholomew Brinson
was holding a knight's fee in West Thurrock. (fn. 80)
He had died by 1212, leaving an heir under age. (fn. 81)
A later Bartholomew Brinson was holding the
manor in 1262 and 1268. (fn. 82) He, or a namesake,
died in 1286, leaving William Brinson, his infant
son and heir. (fn. 83) The wardship of William, after
passing through several hands, was acquired
in 1291 by Walter Langton, rector of West
Thurrock, later treasurer of England and bishop
of Lichfield. (fn. 84) In the following years Langton
was closely associated with the Brinsons in both
West Thurrock and Aveley. (fn. 85) William Brinson
came of age c. 1305, and died holding the two
manors in 1310. (fn. 86)
West Thurrock descended with Aveley until
the death of Joan Brinson in 1339. It then passed
separately, by a settlement of 1314, to Sir William
Walton (Wauton). (fn. 87) Walton (d. 1346) was succeeded by his son (Sir) William Walton, who was
still living in 1367. (fn. 88) William Walton, son of the
last, appears to have sold the manor in 1390 to
Edmund FitzSymond. (fn. 89) After further conveyances, the details of which are not known,
West Thurrock was in 1395 vested in Thomas of
Woodstock, duke of Gloucester, and his wife
Eleanor. (fn. 90) In 1397, after Gloucester's murder
and forfeiture, the manor came into the king's
hand, but was then given back to Eleanor (d.
1399). (fn. 91) She was succeeded by her daughter
Anne (d. 1438), wife of Edmund de Stafford, earl
of Stafford (d. 1403), and later of Sir William
Bourchier, count of Eu (d. 1420). (fn. 92) Anne seems
to have been holding the manor as late as 1428. (fn. 93)
About that time, however, it was acquired by
John of Lancaster (d. 1435), duke of Bedford, her
uncle by marriage. Bedford left West Thurrock
for life to his wife Jacquette (d. 1472), with
remainder to the Crown. Jacquette later married
Richard Woodville (d. 1469), Earl Rivers, to
whom in 1448 the king granted the remainder in
tail male. (fn. 94) The manor passed in succession to
their sons Anthony (d. 1483), and Richard (d.
1491), earls Rivers. (fn. 95) The last left no issue, and
West Thurrock reverted to the Crown, which
retained it from 1491 until 1511 or later. (fn. 96)
The manor was later acquired by Thomas
Grey (d. 1530), marquess of Dorset, a descendant
of the first Earl Rivers through his daughter
Elizabeth, queen of Edward IV. (fn. 97) Grey sold
West Thurrock in 1517 to (Sir) John Spencer. (fn. 98)
In 1530 Sir William Spencer, son of Sir John,
sold the reversion of the manor, after the death of
Sir John's widow Isabel, to (Sir) William Hollis
(d. 1542), alderman of London. (fn. 99) Isabel was still
living in 1542, but Hollis had the manor on lease
from 1533 or earlier. (fn. 100)
In 1547 Sir Thomas Hollis, son of Sir William,
sold 'the manor of West Thurrock or West Hall
or the Vineyard' to Henry Herdeson, skinner of
London. (fn. 101) The new alternative name suggests
that the old vineyard which had previously
belonged to the Hospitaller's manor of Purfleet
was annexed to West Thurrock after the Dissolution. The vineyard, which lay near Purfleet mills,
was certainly part of West Thurrock manor in
1646. (fn. 102) In 1548 Henry Herdeson sold the manor
to Robert Long (d. 1552), mercer of London,
and Cecily his wife (d. 1559). (fn. 103) After Cecily
Long's death the manor was divided between her
daughters, Martha, wife of William Meredith,
mercer, and Magdalen, wife of Roger Sadler,
draper, all of London. (fn. 104) On Magdalen's death in
1575 her share passed to her son John Sadler,
who sold it in 1584 to Thomas Owen (d. 1598), a
prominent judge. (fn. 105) Owen bought the other half
of the manor in 1589 from William and Martha
Meredith. In 1607 Sir Roger and William Owen,
sons of Thomas, sold the manor to Christopher
Holford the elder of West Thurrock. (fn. 106)
Christopher Holford (d. 1608) was succeeded
in turn by his sons Christopher (d. c. 1612),
and Daniel (d. 1630). (fn. 107) Daniel's heirs were his
daughters Martha and Mary, later the wives
respectively of Sir Cranmer Harris of Creeksea
and Sir Henry Heyman, Bt., of Selling (Kent). (fn. 108)
Harris and Heyman were holding West Thurrock
jointly in 1645. (fn. 109) Sir Peter Heyman, Bt., son of
Sir Henry, sold his half of the manor in 1670 to
(Sir) Robert Clayton and John Morris of London,
who were already the mortgagees, and who in
1677 bought the other half from Anne Mildmay
of Woodham Mortimer, one of the two daughters
and coheirs of Sir Cranmer Harris. (fn. 110) In 1684
Clayton sold the manor to Sarah Vandenanker,
widow, in fulfilment of a contract made with her
late husband Cornelius Vandenanker, merchant
of London. (fn. 111) She later married Benjamin Desborough, also a London merchant, and in 1685
the manor was settled on them both. (fn. 112) Their
estate in West Thurrock comprised about 850 a.,
including 309 a. of marshland. (fn. 113) Most of the
parish marshland was flooded in 1690, and in
1694 was 'decreed' to a London consortium
which had undertaken to mend the breach. (fn. 114)
Desborough thus lost much of his estate, and
having spent large sums on repairing his own sea
walls he was impoverished. (fn. 115) In 1697 he therefore sold the remainder of the estate, with the
manorial rights, to Caleb Grantham (d. 1699),
from whom it passed in succession to his brother
Nathaniel (d. 1723) and to Nathaniel's son
Caleb. (fn. 116) All three Granthams were naval officers
who went on to command East Indiamen. The
younger Caleb Grantham in 1750 bought 340 a.,
mainly in the marshes, from Robert Hudson and
Susanna Beachcroft, descendants of Robert
Dorrell, one of the consortium of 1694. That land
included Parsonage farm and parts of the later
Stone House and Tunnel House farms. Caleb
Grantham died in 1762, leaving the manor to his
daughter Mary, wife of John Seare. (fn. 117) John and
Mary Seare sold it in 1777 to Samuel Whitbread
the elder (d. 1796), the brewer of Southill
(Beds.) (fn. 118) Parsonage farm had already been sold
off. (fn. 119) Stone House and Tunnel House farms were
also sold separately, c. 1777. (fn. 120) Samuel Whitbread
the younger (d. 1815) who succeeded his father in
1796, was M.P. for Bedford. (fn. 121) The manor, which
in 1839 comprised 468 a., descended in the
Whitbread family until 1920, when their estate
was broken up. (fn. 122)
West Thurrock manor house in 1339 had a
chapel as well as hall, chambers, and outhouses. (fn. 123)
In 1559, when the manor was divided between
Cecily Long's daughters, there were two houses
on the demesne. (fn. 124) West Hall or Stone House,
which was Magdalen Sadler's share, was on the
site of the ancient manor house. The Place or
New Place, built by Cecily Long, lay in the
western half of the manor, apportioned to Martha
Meredith. Stone House, which stood on the
south side of the Grays-Purfleet Road (London
Road, Purfleet), opposite Stonehouse Lane, was
rebuilt in flint and brick in 1683. (fn. 125) It was the
parish workhouse 1778–1802, and was demolished
in the 1920s. (fn. 126) New Place was about 800 m. west
of Stone House. In the early 17th century after
the two halves of the manor had been reunited,
New Place was apparently the more important of
the two houses and was large and well furnished. (fn. 127)
By 1670 it was known as Great Place, probably to
distinguish it from Little Place, a neighbouring
house built by 1631 and later known as High
House. When Sir Robert Clayton bought the
second half of the manor in 1677 it included
Great Place, mentioned for the last time by that
name. About that time the house was rebuilt in
brick, and from 1684 it took the name of Little
Place or High House. What became of the
original Little Place is not clear. In the 18th
century High House was also styled West Hall or
Le Vineyard, names presumably taken from the
title deeds of the manor. (fn. 128) By 1954 it had been
divided into flats. (fn. 129) It survived in 1980 as a house
of the late 17th century, built of brick with a later
stucco rendering.
The manor of BAYHOUSE seems to have
originated as a free tenement held of Purfleet
manor. (fn. 130) Its lands extended into Stifford and
Grays Thurrock, with an outlier at Downsells in
South Weald and Doddinghurst. The manor
house was on the north side of London Road,
near the point where that road is now crossed by
the Dartford Tunnel approach road. The bulk of
the demesne comprised upland between the
house and the river Mardyke, with detached
marshland at Purfleet. (fn. 131)
In 1321 Sir Robert Bayhouse granted all his
lands in West and Grays Thurrock and Stifford
to Thomas Rys, goldsmith of London, and John
Bellamy. (fn. 132) Rys and Bellamy also bought the
tenement of Coombs, in the north-east corner of
the parish, and that of Claverings, which lay
farther west, extending into Aveley. (fn. 133) In 1328
they sold the whole estate to Henry Darcy,
clothier of London, whose son Thomas sold
it in 1363 to Robert Corby. (fn. 134) Robert Corby,
probably son of the previous Robert, sold Bayhouse in 1400 to Nicholas Wootton, merchant of
London. (fn. 135) The estate was held in 1452 by
Richard, son of Nicholas Wootton, and in 1504
by Robert Wootton. (fn. 136) Sir Edward Wootton sold
it in 1529 to William Kirkby. (fn. 137)
The Kirkby family had been local landowners
at least since 1407, when John Arundel, alias
Kirkby, married an heiress, Beatrice Stodey. (fn. 138)
William Kirkby, a descendant of John Arundel,
sold Bayhouse in 1537 to (Sir) William Petre. (fn. 139) It
descended in the Petre family as part of the
Ingatestone estate until 1624, when William
Petre, 2nd Lord Petre, settled it on his son Henry
(fl. 1648). (fn. 140) Henry's widow Ann was holding the
manor in 1673. (fn. 141) In 1674 Bayhouse was conveyed
by the will of William Moore to his son Francis,
who was probably the husband of Henry Petre's
daughter Mary. (fn. 142) William Moore had had an
interest in the manor as early as 1640. (fn. 143) Francis
Moore's estate comprised some 464 a. including
164 a. of marshland. (fn. 144) His failure to maintain the
sea wall caused the breach of 1690, when the
whole of West Thurrock marshes were flooded. (fn. 145)
Attempts to levy penal taxes on him for neglect
were unsuccessful, but his marshland, with the
rest, was in 1694 forfeited to the London consortium which had undertaken to repair the
breach. Meanwhile, in 1692, he and his wife had
obtained statutory powers to break the entail and
sell the remainder of the manor. (fn. 146) By 1739
Bayhouse, together with Purfleet manor, had
passed to Sir Bibye Lake, Bt. (d. 1744), heir of
Thomas Lake, one of the consortium of 1694. (fn. 147)
The two manors descended with the baronetcy
until 1799, when Sir James Lake (d. 1807) sold
his West Thurrock estate, comprising 588 a., to
John Cooper. (fn. 148) In 1807 or soon after Cooper also
bought two small farms near Bayhouse, formerly
the tenement of Mitchells. (fn. 149) In 1839 William
D. C. Cooper was the largest land owner in the
parish with 706 a. (fn. 150) The estate seems to have
been bought c. 1880 from the Coopers's trustees
by John Curtis, whose family had been tenants of
Bayhouse since the 18th century. (fn. 151) John Curtis
remained at Bayhouse until c. 1900, and G. E.
Curtis was later a landowner in the parish until c.
1917. (fn. 152) Bayhouse farm existed until c. 1959, but
by that time much of the surrounding area had
been developed for industrial purposes. (fn. 153)
Repairs to Bayhouse manor house were
recorded in 1408 and 1502. (fn. 154) In 1812 John
Cooper commissioned plans for a new house. (fn. 155) It
had disappeared c. 1962. (fn. 156)
The tenement of MICHELSLAND or
MITCHELLS lay in the north-east corner of the
parish, and included Mitchells Wood, near the
Aveley boundary. (fn. 157) It took its name from
Michael de Helwetone, who in 1285 held 1 hide
of land in Little Thurrock. (fn. 158) About that time
Michael sold it to Bartholomew Brinson (d.
1286), lord of the manor of West Thurrock. John
Brinson, at his death in 1316, held Michelsland,
comprising i hide in West Thurrock, for ¼
knight's fee of William of Bumpstead, who was
said to hold of John de Warenne, earl of Surrey.
Michelsland was not part of Brinson's manor of
West Thurrock, but was emphatically stated
to be an independent tenement. (fn. 159) William of
Bumpstead was lord of Bumpstead manor in
Aveley, and it is not unlikely that Michelsland, as
well as Bumpstead, had been held in 1086 by
Odo, bishop of Bayeux. If so Michelsland may
have been identical with the tenement of i hide
and 40 a. held of Odo by Hugh, probably Hugh
de Montfort, who was associated with Odo also at
Stifford. (fn. 160) The statement that John de Warenne,
earl of Surrey, was tenant in chief of Michelsland, is questionable, for it is not repeated in later
inquisitions, and he held no Essex lands at his
death. (fn. 161) From 1317 to 1320 he did, however, have
the wardship of (Sir) John Brinson (d. 1338). (fn. 162)
Mitchells descended with West Thurrock
manor until c. 1650 or later. (fn. 163) By 1782 it had
passed to Sir James Lake, Bt. (d. 1807), owner of
Bayhouse. (fn. 164) John Cooper, who bought Bayhouse
in 1799, bought Mitchells in or shortly after
1807. (fn. 165) By 1807 the name Mitchells survived
only in fields and a wood. The land was let in two
small farms, of 56 a. and 54 a. By 1839 it was again
a single farm, of 113 a., belonging to William
D. C. Cooper of Bayhouse. (fn. 166) Mitchells farm
house was mentioned in 1535 and 1551. (fn. 167) The
site is not known.
The manor of PURFLEET seems to have
originated in the late 12th century in lands
granted to the Knights Templars by Thomas
Brinson, lord of West Thurrock manor. (fn. 168) It
descended with the manor of Berwick in Rainham
until the dissolution of the Knights Hospitallers
in 1540. (fn. 169) In 1324 the manorial demesne comprised some 70 a., of which 39 a. had formerly
been a vineyard. Over half the income of the
manor came from the rents of free tenements in
West Thurrock, Aveley, Basildon in Laindon,
and East Lee, later Lee Chapel. (fn. 170) At least three of
the free tenements later became separate manors:
Bayhouse and Tendrings in West Thurrock and
Belhus in Aveley.
The old vineyard seems to have been detached
from Purfleet manor soon after 1540 and annexed
to West Thurrock manor. The rump of Purfleet
was in 1558 given by Mary I to the reconstituted
order of Knights Hospitallers. (fn. 171) On her death the
grant lapsed, and Purfleet remained with the
Crown until 1611, when James I granted it to
George and Thomas Whitmore of London. (fn. 172)
George Whitmore conveyed it in 1627 to Sir
Richard Grobham (d. 1630), who was succeeded
by his brother John. (fn. 173) The Grobham family still
held Purfleet in 1652. (fn. 174) John Toller was lord
of the manor in 1711. (fn. 175) By 1739 Purfleet had
passed to Sir Bibye Lake, Bt. (fn. 176) It subsequently
descended with Bayhouse.
There was a house belonging to the manor in
1309. (fn. 177) No later reference to it has been found.
The RECTORY descended with the advowson
of the vicarage until the later 17th century. (fn. 178) In
1650 it was held along with West Thurrock
manor jointly by Sir Cranmer Harris and Sir
Henry Heyman; its annual value was then £120,
i.e. twice that of the vicarage. (fn. 179) By c. 1690 the
rectory had been split into two unequal parts,
described as moieties, one held with the manor
by Benjamin Desborough, the other by Sir
Charles Tyrell of East Horndon.
When Caleb Grantham bought the manor
from Desborough in 1697 he probably acquired
also the great tithes of the 'uplands' in Desborough's moiety, at least some of which seem to
have descended with the manor until the 19th
century. The great tithes of the marshes in
Desborough's moiety remained in his possession
until his death c. 1708. (fn. 180) Some or all of them
probably passed to George Montgomery, who in
1750 held the great tithes from 388 a. (fn. 181) Most of
those were held in 1839 by Crisp Montgomery. (fn. 182)
Sir Charles Tyrell's moiety of the rectory,
which apparently included the rectorial glebe of
190 a., later called Parsonage farm, as well as
tithes, was bought from him in 1704 by Sir
Stephen Evans, Sir Jonathan Andrews, Robert
Dorrell, and Thomas Lake, members of the consortium which had mended the West Thurrock
breach of 1690 in return for a grant of the
marshlands. (fn. 183) In 1750, after many years of litigation, the estates of the consortium, including
their moiety of the rectory, were allotted to four
owners, heirs of those of 1704. (fn. 184) Each lot was
charged with a quarter of the cost of maintaining
the chancel of the parish church, a stipulation
that caused confusion when subdivisions later
occurred. (fn. 185) Lot I, with great tithes from 99 a., fell
to the share of Mary, widow of Sir Bibye Lake,
Bt. (d. 1744), as heir of Thomas Lake. Lot 2, with
great tithes from 116 a., went to Sir Caesar Child,
heir of Sir Stephen Evans. Lot 3, with great
tithes from 131 a., went to Robert Hudson and
Susanna Beachcroft, heirs of Robert Dorrell; the
land in that lot included Parsonage farm. Lot 4,
with great tithes from 93 a., went to Philip
Hubert, heir of Sir Jonathan Andrews.
As a result of the partition of 1750 Lot I was
merged in the Bayhouse estate, which already
belonged to the Lakes. (fn. 186) Nearly all its great tithes
had been detached from the estate by 1839. Lot 2,
including the great tithes, descended as Dovehouse farm. Lot 3 was bought in 1750 by Caleb
Grantham, lord of West Thurrock manor. (fn. 187) His
successors John and Mary Seare sold Parsonage
farm in 1770 to William Cornwell, in whose
family it remained until 1798. (fn. 188) It later descended
in the families of Gilbey, Harding, and Freeman. (fn. 189)
The tithes of that lot had all been detached from
the land before 1839. Lot 4, including the tithes,
descended as Home farm, formerly Torrells
Hall. (fn. 190)
In 1839 the great tithes of West Thurrock were
commuted for a total of £356, only £44 more
than those of the vicarage. (fn. 191) The great change in
their relative values since 1650 is accounted for
mainly by the fact that 1,581 a. out of a total area
of 2,863 a. was by 1839 free of great tithes, while
the whole parish was still charged with small
tithes. Most of the tithe-free land had formerly
belonged to the consortium. (fn. 192) In 1839 William
H. Whitbread, lord of West Thurrock manor,
owned the great tithes from 683 a., commuted for
£173. Of the lands titheable to him 223 a. had
probably belonged to lots I and 3 of the consortium's moiety, and the remaining 450 a. to
Desborough's moiety. The other owners of great
tithes in 1839 were Crisp Montgomery from 373
a., commuted for £115; William E. Hunt from
116 a. (with Dovehouse farm), commuted for
£35; Lady Wilder from 106 a. (with Home farm),
commuted for £32; and William D. C. Cooper
from 4½ a. (with Bayhouse), commuted for 18s.
By that time Parsonage farm, owned by Anthony
Harding, was no longer reckoned as part of the
rectory. In 1917 the farm was sold for industrial
development. (fn. 193)
Parsonage Farm house of brick and tile, stood
at the east end of the village, in London Road. (fn. 194) It
survived until the 1960s. (fn. 195)
The manor of TENDRINGS originated as
a free tenement held of Purfleet and West
Thurrock manors. (fn. 196) It lay east of Coombe Wood
in the north-east corner of the parish, extending
into Stifford. (fn. 197) In 1319 William Tendring held
162 a. in West Thurrock. (fn. 198) By 1404 the tenement
of Tendrings had been conveyed by Robert
Fitz William to William Pevere, goldsmith of
London, who in 1405 and 1406 held 245 a. in
West Thurrock and Stifford. (fn. 199) Pevere's estate
seems to have passed to Robert Botulf, and then
to John Tyrell, who was holding it in 1411 and
1415. (fn. 200) In 1438 Tendrings was part of the large
estate of (Sir) Lewis John. (fn. 201) Sir Lewis (d. 1442)
devised Tendrings to his wife Anne (d. 1457),
with remainder to his son Philip FitzLewis, who
was holding it in 1468. (fn. 202)
Tendrings was among the possessions of Joan,
widow of Thomas Bradbury, when she died in
1530. (fn. 203) It probably passed like the manor of
Black Notley to her grandson John Bodley, who
died young, and then to her daughter Denise (d.
1561), wife of Nicholas Leveson. (fn. 204) Sir John
Leveson, grandson of Denise, died holding
Tendrings in 1615. (fn. 205) From that time Tendrings
appears to have descended with Torrells Hall.
Nothing is known of Tendrings house.
The manor of TORRELLS HALL, later
HOME FARM, lay in the eastern half of the
parish. From the 12th to the 16th century it was
held by the Torrell family, along with Torrells
Hall manor in Little Thurrock. Torrell the
naperer (fl. 1130) and his descendants held their
Little Thurrock estate by serjeanty of keeping
the king's table linen at the coronation. (fn. 206) Torrells
Hall in West Thurrock was, however, held of
West Thurrock manor, originally in fee, but later
in socage. (fn. 207) From the 14th century it included
land in Stifford, and also, until the 16th century,
a share in the advowson of that parish. (fn. 208)
Humphrey Torrell (d. 1544), last in the male
line, left as heir his daughter Anne (d. 1589) who
married Henry Josselyn. (fn. 209) Thomas Josselyn,
Anne's son, sold both manors of Torrells Hall in
1595 to Sir John Leveson (d. 1615). (fn. 210) Sir John's
heirs were his infant granddaughters Christine
and Frances Leveson, but Torrells Hall in West
Thurrock later passed to Sir Richard Leveson,
who in 1627 sold it to Nicholas Grice, merchant
tailor of London (d. 1640). (fn. 211) Nicholas Grice, son
of the last, in 1646 had a large estate along Sandy
and Mill lanes and in the marshes. (fn. 212) He sold it in
1690 to Jane, Lady Smith of Isleworth (Mdx.),
whose estate comprised some 383 a., including
223 a. of marshland. In 1694 her marshland
passed to the London consortium which had
undertaken to mend the recent breach in the sea
wall, and in 1702 she sold the remainder of
the manor to the surviving members of the consortium, Sir Stephen Evans, Sir Jonathan
Andrews, Robert Dorrell, and Thomas Lake. (fn. 213)
In the following years the estates of the consortium were in Chancery, and it was not until
1750 that a final partition was made. (fn. 214)
By 1782 Home farm, as it was by then known,
seems to have come into the possession of Robert
Cornwell. (fn. 215) His successor William Cornwell had
died by 1797, when the farm, then 324 a., was put
up for sale. (fn. 216) Later owners were William Gilbey,
c. 1802, Sir Francis Wilder, c. 1822, and Lady
Wilder, from c. 1832 to 1839 or later. (fn. 217) In the
later 19th century the farm seems to have been
cut up, and much of it was taken for chalk
quarrying. (fn. 218) Home Farm house, west of Mill
Lane and north of the Grays-Purfleet road, had
disappeared by c. 1910. (fn. 219)
Economic History.
The uplands and
marshes of West Thurrock were suitable for both
arable and livestock farming until the later 19th
century, when chalk extraction, practised at
Purfleet since the 16th century or earlier, led to
extensive quarrying and the development of the
greater part of the parish for industrial purposes.
The only agricultural areas remaining in 1980
were in the valley of the Mardyke, north of the
arterial road. (fn. 220)
In 1086 West Thurrock manor, held in demesne
by the count of Eu, comprised 13 hides. (fn. 221) Arable
land was being cultivated by 18 plough teams, 5
on the demesne and 13 belonging to the tenants,
compared with 16 in 1066 (6 on the demesne and
10 to the tenants). There were 40 a. of meadow,
woodland for 200 swine, and pasture in the
marshes for 500 sheep. There were also 2 fisheries
compared with I in 1066. Livestock numbers
remained unchanged: 5 cows, 3 rounceys, 16
swine, and 550 sheep. The recorded population
had greatly increased: from 44 in 1066 (12
villeins, 16 bordars, and 16 serfs) to 70 in 1086
(17 villeins, 46 bordars, and 8 serfs). The arrival
of 26 new families indicates much new activity,
which may have included reclamation of the
marshes or forest clearance, as well as the extension of arable farming indicated by the addition
of two plough teams. The economic growth was
reflected in the increase in the value of the manor,
from £12 in 1066 to £30 in 1086, although that
included rents from 7 houses in London. The
manor held by Hugh of Bishop Odo in 1086, and
comprising I hide and 40 a., may also have been
in West Thurrock. (fn. 222) The economic changes
recorded for that small and poor manor between
1066 and 1086 have no obvious explanation. The
numbers of livestock had decreased from 77 to
59, and there was I plough where there had been
2. At both dates there was woodland for 10 swine,
8 a. of meadow, pasture for 50 sheep, and 2
bordars. The value of the manor had risen from
30s. to 40s.
Conveyances from the 13th to the 16th century
indicate that arable and pasture were equally
important. (fn. 223) By the 18th century arable land was
predominant. In 1731 Davy Down farm, for
example, contained 66 a. arable and 14 a.
pasture, (fn. 224) and in 1767 Purfleet farm comprised
220 a. arable and 31 a. pasture. (fn. 225) By 1839 the
parish contained 2,251 a. arable, 457 a. meadow
and pasture, and 149 a. woodland. (fn. 226) In 1906 the
returns gave 2,084 a. arable and 451 a. pasture. (fn. 227)
By 1926, because of industrial development, the
arable was reduced to 1,200 a., although pasture
remained almost unchanged at 427 a. (fn. 228)
The West Thurrock marshes, lying along the
Thames and the Mardyke and widely used for
grazing and tillage, are discussed below. (fn. 229) In
1760 it was reported that the Mardyke valley was
badly drained and the land was wet and sour. (fn. 230)
Drainage was improved after 1760, when the
government built a sluice in connexion with the
new powder magazines at Purfleet. (fn. 231) A scheme in
1811, to extend the marsh pasture on Stone
House farm, was restricted both by lack of fresh
water for cattle and the fact that much arable land
was tithe free. (fn. 232) Osier beds occupied 3 a. in the
Mardyke valley in 1839. (fn. 233) There were 1,031 a.
marsh in agricultural use in 1861, but by 1897
industrial development was spreading east from
Purfleet. (fn. 234)
West Thurrock has never been heavily wooded.
In 1566 Bayhouse manor included 46 a. woodland, mostly small coppices, near the Mardyke,
an area marked in 1777 as Bosket Hill. (fn. 235) In 1645
West Thurrock manor contained 136 a. woodland, including Vineyard Wood (53 a.), Jack
Watts Wood (43 a.), and several small coppices
near Causeway bridge. (fn. 236) There were 110 a. wood
on the manor in 1724. (fn. 237) In 1839 the parish
contained 149 a. woodland, much of which still
survived in 1980. (fn. 238)
In 1400 there were arable strips on Bayhouse
manor, and surveys of 1565 and 1566 mention
land in the common fields. (fn. 239) A map of 1645 shows
a large area of long, narrow fields in the centre of
the parish, which indicates the site of open fields
at an earlier date. (fn. 240) Common meadow in the
marshes, comprising 35 a. in 1563, may have
been at Purfleet, where long narrow fields are
shown on the 1645 map. (fn. 241) References to horseleazes in 1564–5 appear to indicate the sites of
earlier common pastures. (fn. 242) Common meadow
survived in 1677. (fn. 243) There was no common land in
West Thurrock in 1839. (fn. 244)
Sheep were pastured in the marshes and on the
chalk uplands of the parish. In 1597 a man was
hanged for stealing 30 sheep, and 27 sheep valued
at £6 were stolen in 1612. (fn. 245) In 1605 a Dutch
farmer leased 100 sheep and 30 cows for 2 years. (fn. 246)
Returns of 1866 give 2,043 sheep, 140 cattle, and
85 pigs. (fn. 247) In 1906 there were 1,064 sheep and 94
cattle, but by 1926 only 70 sheep, 61 cows, and 43
pigs were returned. (fn. 248)
The chalky soil and southerly aspect favoured
the cultivation of fruit and vegetables. (fn. 249) References to Vineyard wood in the 17th century, and
to Le Vyneyard as the alternative name for High
House, indicate viticulture at Purfleet, presumably before 1309, when John the vintner was
holding land there. (fn. 250) The vineyard had apparently
disappeared by 1324. (fn. 251) The site was a cherry
orchard in the 17th and 18th centuries and later
became part of Purfleet chalk quarry. (fn. 252)
Irish potato-pickers were being employed at
West Thurrock in the early 19th century. (fn. 253)
Returns of 1866 listed 688 a. vegetables, including
turnips (293 a.), peas, beans, and potatoes; there
were 719 a. cereals, mainly wheat and barley, 343
a. permanent grass, and 188 a. clover. (fn. 254) In 1906
the returns showed 608 a. vegetables, mainly peas
and potatoes, 701 a. cereals, mainly wheat and
barley, 395 a. permanent grass, and 98 a.
lucerne. (fn. 255) The 1926 figures gave 534 a. vegetables,
mainly potatoes and peas, 336 a. wheat and oats,
354 a. permanent grass, and 158 a. lucerne. (fn. 256)
In 1839 the largest farm was Bayhouse with
593 a. There were 4 other farms of over 300 a.,
and 5 between 50 a. and 300 a. (fn. 257) In 1906 there
were 4 of over 300 a., 2 between 50 a. and 300 a.,
and 2 less than 50 a. (fn. 258) In 1926 2 farms had over
300 a., 6 between 50 a. and 100 a., and there was
i of less than 50 a. (fn. 259)
A windmill in Torrells Hall manor was mentioned in 1267 and later up to 1595. (fn. 260) The site
may have been near Mill Wood, west of Mill
(Millwood) Lane. (fn. 261) A later windmill, first mentioned in 1799, lay about 150 yd. from the
Thames, near a creek approached from Mill
Lane, south of the Grays-Purfleet road. (fn. 262) It was a
smock mill of 5 storeys, which had disappeared
by the 1860s. A steam mill and engine, built on
an adjoining site by 1817, formed part of the
premises of the Lion Cement Works after 1874.
In 1273–4 the Templars had a mill at Purfleet. (fn. 263)
It was probably the watermill mentioned in 1309
and later, which stood at the mouth of the
Mardyke. (fn. 264) It often caused annoyance to neighbouring landowners. In 1563 the Crown paid
£400 to repair the mill and sea walls. (fn. 265) The sluice
gates were repaired in 1573 and 1575. (fn. 266) The
miller was indicted in 1661 for holding back
fresh water and allowing salt water to flood the
valley. (fn. 267) It was reported in 1760 that mismanagement of the mills caused flooding upstream. (fn. 268)
In that year the mills, of which there were three
in 1673 and five in 1757, were demolished to
make way for the government's new powder
magazines. (fn. 269) There was also a windmill at Purfleet, standing on Vineyard Hill; (fn. 270) it was leased
several times between 1555 and 1611, (fn. 271) and
recorded last in 1633. (fn. 272)
A weekly market on Wednesday was granted in
1207 to John de Bassingbourn as guardian of the
lord of the manor, Bartholomew Brinson. (fn. 273) No
more is known of it. In 1800 a weekly market was
held at Purfleet powder magazines. (fn. 274) A fair
at West Thurrock, said to be unlawful, was
suppressed by Quarter Sessions in 1762. (fn. 275) In the
19th century there was an annual pleasure fair at
Purfleet in June. (fn. 276) It was abolished in 1910. (fn. 277)
Early industrial growth was based on large
chalk deposits, emerging as cliffs at Purfleet and
extending eastwards. (fn. 278) It is convenient to consider here the whole riverside area of the deposits,
including south Stifford, as far as the west
boundary of Grays. (fn. 279) Factors favouring industry
were proximity to London and easy access to the
river, on which wharfs and jetties could be built,
initially for exporting chalk and lime, and later
for importing coal and oil. (fn. 280) Chalk was originally
dug in primitive pits called deneholes, numbers
of which survive at Purfleet, as at Stifford and
Grays. (fn. 281) From 1554 many leases of the cliffs and
limekilns at Purfleet were recorded. (fn. 282) The chalk
was used as agricultural fertilizer, and for making
lime or bricks. In 1669 Samuel Irons of Purfleet
issued a token depicting a limekiln. (fn. 283) The works
there greatly expanded in the 18th century. In
1738 the chalk-pits, 3 limekilns, and 2 wharfs were
leased for 61 years to Matthew Featherstonhaugh,
later of Hassenbrook, in Stanford-le-Hope,
and of Uppark House (Suss.), a baronet, and
M.P. for Portsmouth, 1762–74. (fn. 284) His company
was known variously as the Bricklayers Co., the
Lime Co., and the Purfleet Co. (fn. 285) When the lease
was terminated in 1794 the landlord, Samuel
Whitbread, began to mechanize the quarries. (fn. 286) In
1807 the limekilns attracted the attention of
Arthur Young who described the trucks carrying
the chalk to the kilns and the lime from there to
the wharf. (fn. 287) In the 1820s and 1830s the quarries
and kilns were worked by Meeson and Hinton. (fn. 288)
In 1839 there were 85 a. of chalk-pits in the
parish. (fn. 289) In 1848 the pits employed c. 400 people,
but in the 1850s they were closed. The quarries
became overgrown and were turned into pleasure
gardens. (fn. 290)
Although chalk was no longer widely used in
agriculture, the increasing use of cement in the
19th century gave a fresh impetus to chalk
quarrying. (fn. 291) In 1872 Gibbs & Co. opened the
Thames works, west of Mill Lane, taking chalk
from quarries south of Millwood House. (fn. 292) It was
there that a rotary kiln, invented by Frederick
Ransome, was first used. Although not entirely
successful it was the forerunner of modern rotary
kilns. (fn. 293) In 1900 Gibbs & Co. was taken over by
Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers. (fn. 294)
Work continued until the early 1920s, when both
quarry and works were closed. (fn. 295)
The Lion Cement Works, south Stifford, was
opened in 1874 in the old steam mill premises. (fn. 296)
Chalk was quarried east of Mill Lane and north
of the Grays-Purfleet road, later north of Warren
Lane, and finally near Grays. (fn. 297) Clay was obtained
from river mud landed at Stifford Hythe, where
there had been a wharf since 1573 or earlier. (fn. 298)
After 1930 liquid clay was piped from South
Ockendon. In the First World War women were
employed at the works and German prisoners of
war were interned in a quarry. (fn. 299) The Lion Works
became the Wouldham Cement Co. (1900),
which in 1912 was taken over by British Portland
Cement Manufacturers, later successively
Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers, and
Blue Circle Industries. In 1976 the quarries were
closed and cement production ceased at Wouldham, which became a distribution centre for
cement from Kent.
Another large cement works was opened, also
in 1874, by Tunnel Portland Cement Co. (West
Thurrock), on a site near Tunnel Farm, east
of Stonehouse Lane and north of the GraysPurfleet road. (fn. 300) The works were largely rebuilt in
1911, when they were acquired by the Danish
company of F. L. Smidth. (fn. 301) From 1927 a pipeline
carried liquid clay from Aveley. (fn. 302) By 1968 the
Tunnel cement works were the largest in western
Europe, with 1,200 employees. (fn. 303) By 1971 over 1
million tons were produced annually from 8 large
kilns, fired by oil brought into Long Reach deep
water jetty, built in 1936 and reconstructed in
1960. (fn. 304) Production ceased in 1976. (fn. 305) In 1980 the
site was occupied by Stablex Ltd., handling
industrial waste. (fn. 306) There were two subsidiary
firms which shared the Tunnel works site: the
Essex Sack Co. founded in 1930, and the Asbestos
Cement Division founded in 1936. (fn. 307)
The Lafarge Aluminous Cement Co., a British
company making quick drying 'ciment fondu',
began production in 1925, on a site west of the
Tunnel works. The works, badly flooded in 1953,
covered 10 a. by 1963. They are the sole producers
of this type of cement in the Commonwealth.
The Alpha Cement Co., operating the Metropolitan works, adjoining Lafarge, opened in
1938. In 1950 it was taken over by Associated
Portland Cement, which ceased production in
1970. From 1922 the Thurrock Chalk and
Whiting Co. shared the same site as Lafarge and
Alpha. (fn. 308)
Thames Board Mills originated c. 1887 when
the St. Louis Park Mills Co. opened a mill at
Purfleet to make straw boards from stable
manure. (fn. 309) The mill was acquired by Charles
Anderson in 1894, and passed in 1902 to the
Thames Paper Co., which became Thames Board
Mills in 1926, and in 1980 Thames Board, a
part of Unilever. The factory, which is on the
riverside, south of the Grays-Purfleet road, was
flooded in 1953. (fn. 310) In 1964, when a new north
mill was opened, Thames Board was the largest
factory of its kind in the country, occupying 45 a.
and with over 3,400 employees producing cardboard and fibreboard for packing. In 1980 it was
announced that the south mill was to close later in
that year. Thames Case Ltd., near Thames
Board Mills, opened in 1909, making corrugated
and solid fibre cases. Grays Paper Works, west
of Lion works chalk quarry, made browns and
grocery papers in the 1890s but had closed by
1902.
The Anglo-American Oil Co., part of Standard
Oil of America, built storage tanks east of Thames
Board Mills at Purfleet, in 1888. Kerosene, and
later petrol, was unloaded at a new wharf. In 1951
Anglo-American became the Esso Petroleum
Co., which in 1978 became part of Exxon Corporation. In 1979 the installation was producing
most types of petroleum products. The Tank
Storage Co. operated from 1890 to 1910 as oil
wharfingers at the Caspian Wharf, east of AngloAmerican oil. After 1912 the British Petroleum
Co., later Shell-Mex and B.P., then B.P. Oil, had
oil storage facilities at Purfleet, east of Caspian
Wharf. In 1953 the Esso and B.P. sites suffered
severe flooding. Thames Matex, a branch of N.V.
Schieveen, in 1965 established storage tanks
east of Tunnel wharf, which can hold 300,000
tons of liquid oil and chemical products unloaded
from its own jetty. (fn. 311)
Coal was landed at Purfleet between 1906 and
1917 by the Steam Ship Owners Coal Association.
From 1926 William Cory and Son, later (1954)
Cory Bros., were trading at Purfleet as coal
factors. In 1962 a new 800-ft. jetty and oil storage
tanks were completed, and in the same year Cory
was taken over by Powell Duffryn, which became
P.D. Oil and Chemical Storage in 1968. Paktank
Storage Co. had bulk storage by 1971 in the
former chalk quarries at Purfleet. The tanks,
capable of holding 275,000 tons of petroleum
products, are connected to two jetties by pipeline. (fn. 312)
The manufacture of soap was started in 1940
by Thomas Hedley & Co. in a factory built in the
marshes besides St. Clement's church. In 1962
Hedley's became part of the Proctor & Gamble
group. The factory in 1980 produced a wide
range of soaps and detergents. (fn. 313)
Edible oils for margarine were first imported
into Purfleet in 1917 by Van den Berghs &
Jurgens, later part of Unilever. The factory, lying
west of the Purfleet-Dartford Tunnel and south
of London Road, was flooded in 1953. It was
extended in 1957 and in 1971, and in 1959 was
employing 1,000 workers, making 'Stork'
margarine, processed cheese, and soft drinks. (fn. 314)
Purfleet Deep Wharf and Storage Co., situated
between Esso and B.P., occupies a site used from
1902 to 1941 by Purfleet Wharf and Saw Mills.
The extensive flooding at Purfleet in 1953 was
caused by the failure of the sea wall on the Deep
Wharf site. In 1974 the wharf was extended to
handle trade with Finland. (fn. 315)
Since the Second World War the Whitehall
Securities Corporation has developed a light
industrial estate south of London Road, West
Thurrock. In includes light engineering works,
factories making kitchen units, plastics, glass
fibre, and adhesives and road haulage depots.
Thurrock power station was built between 1963
and 1967 by the Central Electricity Generating
Board on a 90-a. site west of St. Clement's
church. It can burn 12,500 tons of coal per day. (fn. 316)
Marshes and Sea Defences.
West
Thurrock marshes extend for 6 km. along the
Thames between Aveley and Grays Thurrock,
and inland for about 800 m. The area subject to
flooding was formerly even larger, for at least
until 1760 the river Mardyke, which formed the
northern boundary of the parish, was tidal up to
Stifford bridge and beyond. (fn. 317) During the Middle
Ages the maintenance of the sea walls and
marshland drains was the responsibility of the
landowners, enforced by the wall reeves of the
manor (fn. 318) and occasionally by royal commissions
of sewers which are recorded for West Thurrock
from the 14th century. (fn. 319) A roll of those responsible for the walls, drawn up c. 1475, contains 40
names. (fn. 320) By the later 16th century the marshes
were governed by a court of sewers whose
jurisdiction extended from West Ham to
Mucking. (fn. 321) In 1563 they lay in Aveley level,
comprised 697 a., including 35 a. of common
marsh, and were shared between 11 owners, of
whom 9 were responsible for sea walls. The main
owners were Roger Sadler and William Meredith,
joint lords through their wives of West Hall
manor, who together held 300 a. and maintained
506½ rods (2.54 km.) of walls. Three other owners
between them held 311 a. with 622½ rods
(3.14 km.). (fn. 322)
About 1680 Aveley level was combined with
Mucking level to form Rainham level. (fn. 323) By 1694
West Thurrock marshes, i.e. the area controlled
by the court of sewers, comprised some 945 a.,
under 12 owners, of whom the largest was
Benjamin Desborough, lord of West Hall, with
309 a. (fn. 324) In the 19th century West Thurrock and
Aveley together formed a division of Rainham
level. In 1838 West Thurrock marshes, reckoned
to include also the meadows beside the Mardyke,
comprised 1,108 a., again with 12 owners. (fn. 325) By
1861 they had been reduced to c. 1,050 a. (fn. 326) In
1931 Rainham level passed to the Essex Rivers
catchment board, which in 1952 was merged in
the Essex River board. (fn. 327)
Elizabeth I, throughout her reign, was lord of
the manor of Purfleet, and West Thurrock's sea
defences benefited from the Crown's interest. A
Crown lease of Purfleet mill in 1563 stipulated
that the lessee should rebuild the sea walls
around the mill, and should be given £200
towards the work. It was added that the Crown
had already spent £425 on the marshes besides
aid to the inhabitants. (fn. 328) Those sums were large in
relation to the queen's holding of 8 a. in the
marshes, with responsibility for 48 rods of sea
wall, (fn. 329) and amounted to a government subsidy.
After 1611, when James I sold Purfleet manor,
such aid was presumably no longer available, but
in 1760 the government bought back Purfleet
mill and built a powder magazine there. (fn. 330)
In the later 17th century West Thurrock
suffered at least two catastrophic floods. In 1668
it was stated that one farm there was vacant and
worthless after flooding and that its reclamation
would take seven years. (fn. 331) In 1690 the marshes
were flooded through a breach in the sea walls of
Francis Moore. (fn. 332) Repairs were neglected, causing
a permanent breach over 100 yd. wide and 24 ft.
deep at high tide, and a growing sandbank in the
Thames. The Rainham court of sewers apparently
took no action, (fn. 333) and a special commission of
sewers, promoted by the City of London, was
eventually appointed to deal with the emergency,
as with the breach at Dagenham in 1707. (fn. 334) The
commission attempted to levy a rate to mend the
breach, but only one marsh landowner, Sir
Robert Clayton, paid. By 1694 the commission
estimated that repairs would cost at least £5,000,
and that the total freehold value of the marshes,
together with Clayton's rate, was only £5,265. It
therefore 'decreed' or sequestrated the lands of
all the other owners and sold them to a consortium
of London merchants and sea captains for £5,145,
to be spent immediately on stopping the breach. (fn. 335)
One source, relating to the marshlands of West
Thurrock manor, alleges that the Londoners had
obtained the special commission by pretending
that the sandbank was dangerous to navigation,
and implies that they made an excessive profit on
a fraudulent speculation. It states that Benjamin
Desborough, lord of the manor, had spent £1,500
on building counter walls and had almost finished
doing so when his lands were decreed by the
special commission. (fn. 336) At all events it seems that
the breach was stopped by 1696, or at the latest
by February 1697, when the London consortium,
as the new owners of the marshes, conveyed them
to trustees. The consortium thus acquired some
857 a., which they later enlarged by purchase, but
Benjamin Desborough challenged their title in a
series of lawsuits lasting until his death c. 1708,
and that was followed by litigation within the
consortium, whose complicated affairs were not
finally settled until 1750. (fn. 337)
At West Thurrock, as at Dagenham, the breach
left a permanent mark on local topography.
When the sea wall was rebuilt the flood channel
behind it, about 1,100 yd. west of Stone Ness, was
left as a lake, named as 'the Breach' on maps down
to the 19th century, and later shown as swamp. (fn. 338)
West Thurrock was affected by the floods of
1897, when the railway line to Grays was put out
of action for three months. (fn. 339) It suffered much
more in 1953, when the great industrial complex
at Purfleet was flooded, as well as the railway. (fn. 340)
Purfleet Powder Magazines.
In
1760 Parliament voted £15,000 to build new
powder magazines at Purfleet to replace those at
Greenwich (Kent). (fn. 341) The Board of Ordnance
bought 25 a. (10.2 ha.) at the mouth of the
Mardyke, and demolished most of the existing
buildings, including the water mills, three inns,
and several cottages. Between 1763 and 1765 five
magazines, barrel stores, a guard house, barracks,
and a headquarters building called Ordnance
House were built to the designs of James Gabriel
Montresor of the Royal Engineers. (fn. 342) New and
larger sluice gates replaced those of the water
mill, and a quay was made to land the powder.
By 1767 King's Road had been built from the
magazines north-east to join the road to Wennington. (fn. 343) In 1769 a clock tower was built, southwest of Ordnance House. (fn. 344) A new examining
house or laboratory was built by 1874, and no. 6
magazine in 1884. By 1910 no. 7 magazine, for
storing cordite, had been built north of the
Mardyke, being connected with the other
magazines by a narrow gauge railway and to the
London, Tilbury, and Southend line at Purfleet
Rifle Range halt. All British military stations
were supplied with powder from the stores until
c. 1950. (fn. 345) The Purfleet magazines were closed in
1962. (fn. 346) In the 1970s all the buildings, except no. 5
magazine, a barrel store, Ordnance House, and
the clock tower, were demolished, to make way
for a housing estate. (fn. 347) Ordnance House was
destroyed by fire in 1972. (fn. 348) In 1979 restoration
work was started on the magazine and the barrel
store.
The magazines were usually guarded by
detachments of the Royal Artillery. The West
Essex Militia were used for a period after 1797, (fn. 349)
and the 8th Northumberland Fusiliers from 1876
to 1899. From 1883 police from Woolwich (Kent)
were brought in, and the military garrison was
reduced. The civil staff included coopers, storekeepers, clerks, overseers, and powder men.
Gunpowder, for testing and storage at Purfleet, was supplied by private contractors or,
from 1787, by the government powder factory at
Waltham Abbey. It was carried by barge down
the Lea to the Thames, or overland by wagons. (fn. 350)
The site was surrounded by a high brick wall and
a series of inner walls. (fn. 351) All the original buildings
were brick. Each of the first five magazines was
150 ft. long, 52 ft. wide, and 5 ft. thick, with
massive brick arches supporting a slate roof.
Timber was used for wall linings, floors, powder
racks, and paths between the buildings. (fn. 352) The
doors were sheathed in copper, and the window
openings were covered only with perforated
copper plates. Later buildings, all outside the
perimeter wall, were of lighter construction, with
walls and roofs of wood and floors of non-grit
asphalt.
The powder barrels were moved on copper
barrows or, later, by overhead wires. A barrel of
powder weighed 100 lb., and each magazine
could hold 10,000 barrels. From c. 1856 to 1870
powder was also stored in the hulks Conquestador
and Mermaid, anchored off Aveley marshes.
There were no major accidents at Purfleet.
Purfleet musketry camp, used by regular and
territorial army units, was opened in 1914 and
continued until 1961. It occupied a site west of
Tank Hill Road, near the powder magazines, and
adjoining the rifle ranges on Aveley marshes. (fn. 353)
Local Government.
In 1273–4 the lord
of West Thurrock manor claimed the rights of
shipwreck, gallows, and assize of bread and of
ale. (fn. 354) In 1339 the lord of the manor was said to
have view of frankpledge, right of waifs and
strays, and the ferry. (fn. 355) No court rolls survive,
except a fragment of Purfleet manor court baron
of 1570. (fn. 356)
The parish records include vestry minutes
(1721–70, 1799–1861), which also contain overseers' rates (1744–50) and apprenticeship papers;
overseers accounts (1759–80), rates (1785–1803),
and bills (1797); and churchwardens' accounts
(1803–77). (fn. 357)
The vestry meeting-place was not recorded
before 1799, except in 1761, when it was the Ship
Inn. Meetings were held at the workhouse from
1799 to 1804, and later at the church (1804), at
the Fox and Goose (1804–5, 1810–14), and
alternately at the Fox and Goose and the Ship
(1814–20). After 1820, if recorded, they were
usually at the church. From 1721 to 1770 the
vestry met up to four times a year. Between 1799
and 1820 meetings were usually held about once a
month, apart from a brief experiment with weekly
meetings from 1799 to 1801. After 1820 meetings
were irregular and infrequent. From 1721 to
1770 attendance, as indicated by signatures,
varied from 5 to 16. After 1799 only 2 or 3 usually
signed except at the Easter vestry when there
were 8 or 9. Between 1802 and 1804 meetings
were occasionally postponed because nobody
attended. From 1722 to 1737 and in 1804 the
vicar or curate attended regularly and signed
first. From 1739 to 1755 he usually attended the
Easter vestry. During the early 19th century
there was a succession of non-resident vicars and
they rarely attended vestry even at Easter. A
salaried church clerk was first recorded in 1729.
There were two churchwardens from 1722 to
1732, one only recorded from 1733 to 1770 and
from 1801 to 1822, and two again after 1823. In
1738 and 1739 the warden was nominated by
Joseph Prat of the Bricklayers Company. (fn. 358) From
1741 to 1743 and in 1756 and 1807 the warden
was nominated by the vicar. In 1750 and 1751 the
vicar and parish each nominated a warden. There
were two overseers from 1721 to 1733, usually
one only from 1734 to 1788, and two again after
1789. In 1736, 1745–6, and 1757 a woman was
overseer, and in 1744 both were women. Between
1768 and 1779 an attempt was made to establish a
rota of overseers, and four names occur at sixyear intervals. From 1827 a salaried assistant
overseer was appointed. From 1721 to 1766 there
were usually two surveyors of the highways.
There were two constables from 1722 to 1770 and
again from 1804 to 1828. In 1737 Joseph Prat
nominated a constable.
From 1725 to 1732 separate rates were levied
for the churchwardens, overseers, and constables.
In 1733 and 1734 there was a single rate, but from
1737 to 1739 the rates were again separate. After
1740 the overseers were responsible for the
constables' bills.
Poor relief was given in the form of cash doles,
clothing, and payment for burials. Poor children
were apprenticed as domestic servants, farmworkers, shoemakers, and sailors, usually in
West Thurrock or in neighbouring parishes, but
occasionally in Romford, London, Kent, Surrey,
or Middlesex. In 1737 three farmers were obliged
to take apprentices by the terms of their tenancy.
In 1746 the vestry resolved that all poor children
should be bound out as they came of age, by a £1
rate. After 1801 the workhouse master received
10s. for every child he placed. In 1746 the vestry
ordered all the poor in the poorhouse and on
regular doles, to wear badges. In 1804 it refused
relief to those who habitually spent money in
public houses. During 1816 and 1817 the poor
were supplied with cheap coal and meat.
From 1736 to 1740 the parish was paying
paupers' rent. A poorhouse was leased from 1745
until 1778, when Stone House became a workhouse, shared with Stifford from 1788. (fn. 359) Aveley
joined the scheme in 1792. (fn. 360) In 1802 there were
15 paupers from West Thurrock, mostly children
under 10, but including a centenarian. The
workhouse master was given extra payments in
1799 and in 1800 when the price of flour was very
high. By 1802 repairs to Stone House were so
frequent that the vestry decided to end the joint
scheme. From 1804 to 1806 West Thurrock's
paupers were sent to Mile End (Mdx.) workhouse. From 1806 to 1831 West Thurrock,
Aveley, and Rainham jointly leased Noke House,
Wennington. (fn. 361) After 1831 West Thurrock poor
were lodged in Grays Thurrock workhouse.
Medical care for the poor was provided casually in
the 18th century. From 1805, and probably earlier,
a doctor was employed on a regular contract.
In 1744 the overseas spent £63, including the
constables' bills. The cost of poor relief was £138
in 1776, and averaged £217 in the three years
1783–5. (fn. 362) From 1800 to 1817 the annual average
was £407. (fn. 363) The proportionate increase between
1783 and 1817 was roughly similar to those in the
neighbouring riverside parishes of Rainham and
Aveley. (fn. 364) In 1835 West Thurrock joined Orsett
poor law union.
West Thurrock remained part of Orsett rural
district until 1929, when it joined South Ockendon
and Aveley to form Purfleet urban district. In
1936, after a long battle, carried right up to the
House of Lords, Purfleet U.D. was compelled to
become part of the new Thurrock urban district. (fn. 365)
Churches.
The church of West Thurrock
was given c. 1090 by the lord of the manor,
Robert, count of Eu, to the college of St. Mary in
the castle of Hastings. (fn. 366) The rectory thus became
a prebend of Hastings, the advowson of which
appears to have descended throughout with West
Thurrock manor. (fn. 367) In the early 12th century it
was stated that the duties of the prebendary of
West Thurrock included custody of the grammar
school in Hastings castle. A vicarage, to which
the prebendary presented, had been ordained by
1313. (fn. 368) In 1547, when the college of Hastings was
dissolved, the rectory and the advowson of the
vicarage were granted to Sir Anthony Browne
(d. 1548). (fn. 369) Sir Anthony's son and heir, Anthony
Browne, Viscount Montagu, sold them in 1568
to Henry Josselyn and Anne his wife, lords of
Torrells Hall manor. (fn. 370) In 1573 they were bought
from the Josselyns by Mary Gate, widow,
and Geoffrey Gate, who in 1575 sold them to
Humphrey Hayes. (fn. 371) Hayes (d. 1584) was succeeded in turn by his son Humphrey (d. 1586)
and his daughter Catherine (d. 1591) wife of
Thomas Reading. (fn. 372) Thomas Reading (d. 1593)
left the rectory and advowson to his brother
George. (fn. 373) George Reading still held them in
1609, but by 1628 they had been acquired by
Daniel Holford (d. 1630). (fn. 374) They were thus
reunited with the manor, and both subsequently
descended with it until the later 17th century,
when the rectory was divided. The later history
of the rectory is treated above. (fn. 375) The advowson
continued to descend with the manor until the
sale of the Whitbread estate in 1920, when it
passed to the Church Pastoral Aid Society. (fn. 376)
Until the 18th century West Thurrock was
completely exempt from the jurisdiction of the
archdeacon. (fn. 377) That anomaly sometimes caused
disputes. In 1579 a couple were cited before the
archdeacon's court for incontinence, and for
having been married without banns in West
Thurrock church, 'which is termed a lawless
church'. They were sentenced to do public
penance in Ockendon (presumably South
Ockendon) church. (fn. 378) About 1610 the parisioners
asserted that West Thurrock was a peculiar,
exempt even from the bishop's jurisdiction. (fn. 379)
The claim failed at that time, which is not
surprising since the bishop had been instituting
to the vicarage for at least four centuries and
continued to do so until the Civil War. Later,
probably in the confusion of the war, the claim
seems to have been successfully revived. No
episcopal institutions were recorded between
1643 and 1709, and during the reign of Charles II,
if not later, the owners of the rectory were
appointing to the office of 'commissary of the
peculiar of West Thurrock'. (fn. 380) During Anne's
reign, however, the parish lost at least part of its
independence. From 1709 the vicars were subject
not only to episcopal institution but also to
archidiaconal induction. (fn. 381) The vicars themselves
were not necessarily opposed to the revival of
ecclesiastical discipline, and one of them, William
Dashwood, 1710–18, wrote secretly to the archdeacon in 1711 that he planned to bluff the
churchwardens into accepting the archdeacon's
visitation; his motive was to compel the parish to
repair the church, while himself remaining
exempt from paying procurations and synodals.
How far he succeeded is not clear. The church
was indeed repaired in 1711, and in 1713 the
church wardens were summoned to the visitation, (fn. 382) but c. 1755 West Thurrock was listed in
the archdeacon's records as subject only to the
jurisdiction of the bishop. (fn. 383) In 1908, however, it
was stated that although the vicar was exempt
from fees at the archdeacon's visitation he was
not free from the supervision exercised by the
archdeacon on behalf of the bishop. (fn. 384)
The rectory was valued at 30 marks in 1254,
£26 13s. 4d. in 1291, and £120 in 1650. The
vicarage was valued at 10 marks in 1254 and 1291
and at £15 13s. 4d. in 1535. (fn. 385) In 1650 its value was
£63, including tithes and 2 a. of glebe. From
1646, apparently until 1660, the vicar was also
receiving £40 augmentation from the impropriate rectory of Dagenham. (fn. 386) In 1839 the small
tithes were commuted for £312; there were then
5 a. of glebe. (fn. 387) The Vicarage house, London
Road, is said to have been a 'poor little cottage'
until it was enlarged and renovated c. 1863. (fn. 388) In
1964 it was demolished, part of the site was sold,
and a new Vicarage was built on the remainder. (fn. 389)
A marsh in West Thurrock, given to the
church to pay for a lamp before the high altar, had
been seized by the Crown by 1423, because the
grant was illegal. (fn. 390) Church marsh, and St.
Clements fourteen acres, both in lay ownership,
were named in a survey of 1837. (fn. 391)
John Foster, vicar 1805–38, in his will expressed the wish that after the death of his wife
and daughter the sum of £4 4s. a year, equal to the
land tax on the Vicarage and small tithes, which
he had previously redeemed, should be used to
give bibles and prayer-books to poor children of
the parish. Successive vicars paid the charge,
sometimes reluctantly. From 1939 the parochial
church council paid it. When the Vicarage house
was sold in 1964 the Church Commissioners gave
£75 to endow the charity. (fn. 392)
The first known rector and prebendary
was Aucher, fl. c. 1100. (fn. 393) Among his successors
was Osbert of Eu (d. or resigned 1214), who was
probably related to the Counts of Eu, overlords
of the manor. Ralph de Dungun, presented to the
rectory in 1254, was later keeper of the wardrobe
to the king's son Edward, canon of St. Paul's, and
envoy to France. Walter Langton, rector 1290–
1304, was later treasurer of England and bishop
of Lichfield. Nicholas Fermbaud, rector 1304–
c. 1320, was another royal official, serving as
constable of Bristol and sheriff of Oxford. (fn. 394)
Thomas Bourgchier, rector c. 1432–5, was later
archbishop of Canterbury and cardinal. (fn. 395)
Richard Reynolds, vicar 1578–84, was a
successful writer, but was expelled by the College
of Physicians for ignorance. (fn. 396) Thomas Swinnerton, vicar from 1643, was described in 1650 as 'an
able godly preaching minister', and seems to have
retained the living until the Restoration. (fn. 397) Many
of his successors, until the 19th century, were
absentees; one vicar (1724–32) said that he did
not reside because of the unhealthy climate of the
parish. (fn. 398) Nor were their assistant curates necessarily resident, for they sometimes served neighbouring parishes as well. (fn. 399) The first two vicars
appointed in the 19th century were absentees,
apparently for much of the period 1805–63, but
Elford C. Lethbridge, curate 1858–63 and vicar
1863–76, was resident and active. (fn. 400) Joseph W.
Hayes, vicar 1902–21, restored the church and
was a notable local historian. (fn. 401)
The church of ST. CLEMENT is in St.
Clement's Road, south of Hedley Avenue. Until
the earlier 20th century it stood alone in the
Thames side marshes, but it is now surrounded
and dwarfed by factories, warehouses, and a
power station. (fn. 402) The choice of such an isolated
and inconvenient site has not been explained.
There was apparently no human habitation
within 800 m. but the road to an ancient ferry
passed close by. (fn. 403) The building was liable to
subsidence, and as late as the 19th century
suffered from long periods of neglect. In 1858 the
capitals and bases of the columns were still
coloured black in mourning for princess Charlotte
of Wales(d. 1817). (fn. 404) A writer commented in 1872
on the 'cold and damp and dreary … look of
dilapidation'. (fn. 405) In the 1890s the church was closed
for some years, and services were apparently not
resumed until J. W. Hayes became vicar in 1902.
The church was declared redundant in 1977 and
was closed in 1978. (fn. 406) It 1979 it was being
converted into a training centre for young, unemployed men, with a small chapel on the north
side. Most of the furniture and fittings, and the
bells, have been removed, but the monuments
remain. (fn. 407)
The building is of flint and ragstone rubble
with Reigate stone dressings; parts of the tower
are of brick. (fn. 408) It has chancel, nave, north and
south aisles and chapels, and west tower. In the
12th century the church consisted of a chancel
conterminous with the later nave, a round nave,
and a west porch. (fn. 409) The north and south aisles
were added c. 1200. About 1250 a new chancel,
with north and south chapels, was built east of the
previous chancel, which then became part of the
nave. In the 14th century the chapel arcades were
rebuilt, the south chapel was lengthened, the
chancel arch was rebuilt, and the aisle walls of the
nave were raised. Late in the 15th century the
circular nave was demolished and a massive west
tower was built on the site of it. The third stage of
the tower was probably added in 1640, to accommodate the new bells. (fn. 410) About 1711 the south
aisle was repaired at the expense of Caleb
Grantham, lord of the manor, in return for a
rebate on his rates. The south chapel was rebuilt
and shortened in the early 19th century, with
red-brick and flint facings. There was an internal
restoration c. 1870. (fn. 411) Major repairs, carried out
in 1906 and 1907, to the design of Christopher
M.Shiner, included new roofs on the chancel and
aisles and the underpinning of the south wall.
That work accidentally revealed the foundations
of the former round nave, which were further
traced by excavation in 1912. About 1935 iron
ties were fitted to strengthen walls damaged by
subsidence. (fn. 412) During the Second World War the
church was damaged by bombing and some glass
was destroyed. (fn. 413) The flat roofs had to be repaired
in 1950 after thieves had stripped off all the
lead. (fn. 414) In 1953 the tower and north chapel were
repaired and the roof tiles replaced. (fn. 415)
The church had three bells, all of 1632. (fn. 416) The
plate includes a silver cup of 1564. (fn. 417) The font,
which is octagonal, is of the 15th century. There
are fragments of 13th-and 14th-century glass in
the chancel and the north chapel. In the north
chapel, reset, are some 14th-century tiles. The
oak communion rails are of the 17th century.
There is a brass in the chancel to Humphrey
Hayes (d. 1584) and his son, and another to his
daughter Catherine Reading (d. 1591). (fn. 418) Under
the altar is an indent to Nicholas Fermbaud
(Ferobaud), probably the 14th-century rector of
that name. In the north chapel are the remains of
an alabaster monument to Christopher Holford
(d. 1608) his wife and children. (fn. 419)
The church of ST. STEPHEN, High Street,
Purfleet, is the successor to a small chapel in the
Dipping, built c. 1791 by Samuel Whitbread. (fn. 420)
Though originally used by nonconformists
Whitbread's chapel was by 1826 sometimes
described as a chapel of ease. (fn. 421) In 1849 the curate
of West Thurrock was conducting services in it,
but the vicar was careful to claim no authority
there. (fn. 422) In 1851 the chapel was being used for
both nonconformist and Anglican worship, but
by 1863 had been put under the charge of the
vicar. (fn. 423) It remained the property of the Whitbreads, and was closed when their estate was sold
in 1920. The vicar, J. W. Hayes, then bought the
chapel, with Purfleet House and adjoining land,
as the site of a new church, and St. Stephen's was
built there in 1923, as a chapel of ease of St.
Clement's. (fn. 424)
A church hall, in London Road, was built by
the vicar, Thomas Morley, in 1885. (fn. 425) During the
1890s, when St. Clement's was temporarily
closed, the hall served as the parish church. (fn. 426) A
new hall was built in front of the old one in 1964,
and in 1978, when St. Clement's was finally
closed, it became the church centre for the east end
of the parish. The communion table, brought
from St. Clement's, is said to date from the 17th
century. (fn. 427)
Nonconformity.
Methodism was introduced into Purfleet by the wife of an army officer
stationed there, Mrs. Edwards, who was a
member of Wesley's society in London. (fn. 428) She
influenced John Valton, an ordnance clerk, who
in 1764 wrote to Wesley and began to hold
meetings. By 1768 the Purfleet society numbered
18, and by 1772 Valton had formed classes in
most of the surrounding parishes. (fn. 429) Valton left
Essex in 1774 to become a circuit preacher.
Wesley preached three times at Purfleet: in 1784,
1785, and 1787. (fn. 430) In 1791 John Blunt, preacher,
registered the 'house of Samuel Whitbread' at
West Thurrock for Independent worship. (fn. 431) That
was probably the small chapel said to have been
built for the Methodists by Samuel Whitbread,
M.P. (d. 1815), owner of the Purfleet quarries. (fn. 432)
The chapel, which stood in the Dipping, was a
small building with round-headed recessed
windows. (fn. 433) The Whitbreads owned and maintained it and required their workers to attend. (fn. 434)
The Methodist circuit preachers tended to
neglect it because of the distance from London,
and they were gradually supplanted by a Calvinistic schoolmaster who had settled in the
district. Nonconformist services continued there
at least until 1851, but by that time the building
was used mainly for Anglican worship, and about
1863 it was put under the care of the vicar. (fn. 435) Its
later history is treated above.
West Thurrock Primitive Methodist church,
Manor Road, may have originated as early as
1845, when William Jones, a preacher of the
General Missionary Committee, registered a
house for worship. It was probably connected
with the Aveley mission. (fn. 436) The house of Sarah
Bobbett, registered in 1862, was in the Grays
mission. (fn. 437) The Grays and Romford mission,
formed in 1873, included a cottage station at
West Thurrock, for which the mission in 1876
built a small chapel in Manor Road. (fn. 438) The chapel
had only one member in 1900, and it was closed
and sold c. 1903. (fn. 439) The building was demolished
in the 1960s to make a lorry park. (fn. 440) A Wesleyan
Methodist society, meeting in Purfleet board
school, existed from c. 1890 to c. 1898. (fn. 441)
Purfleet Baptist church, London Road, originated in 1892, with meetings at the house of
Charles Overall. (fn. 442) Help was given by the manager
of the Anglo-American Oil Company, himself a
Baptist, and other local industrialists. An iron
mission room, erected in 1897, was supervised by
Grays Tabernacle until 1907, when an honorary
pastor was appointed. A permanent church was
built in 1938. In 1940, when the church was
damaged by bombing, the members, with their
pastor, temporarily joined the Aveley Congregationalists. (fn. 443) The building was restored in
1951, but the church never fully recovered from
the war. Membership, which in 1936 was 83, fell
to 35 in 1954, and 7 in 1976. (fn. 444)
West Thurrock Brethren's chapel, London
Road, was founded c. 1880 by William Vellacott
of Tunnel farm, an immigrant from Devon. (fn. 445) A
small chapel, built in Fox Field, was replaced in
1885 by a larger one called the Iron Room, later
Gospel Hall, on a neighbouring site facing High
(later London) Road. (fn. 446) In 1896 there were 74
members. A new chapel, built on the site of the
Gospel Hall, was opened in 1962. The Vellacott
family has supported the chapel throughout its
history.
Education
Purfleet county primary school,
Tank Hill Road (formerly Garrison Hill), originated in nonconformist schools held in Whitbread's chapel. (fn. 447) An evening school, started by
Methodists in 1772 for the children of limeburners, was taken over c. 1791 by a 'Calvinistic
schoolmaster' connected with the chapel. (fn. 448) It had
closed by 1808 but had apparently been revived
by 1819 as a Sunday school with 15 children. At
that time there were in the parish 2 other Sunday
schools, 2 day schools, and an evening school. (fn. 449)
Another small nonconformist school existed
from 1826 until 1839. By 1839 the Purfleet school
had become a day and Sunday school, still partly
supported by the Whitbreads. (fn. 450) The garrison
had its own school by 1871. (fn. 451) Housebuilding in
the 1870s to serve the expanding chalk quarries,
and the reluctance of cement companies to
support existing church schools, led to the formation of a school board for West Thurrock in
1876. The board immediately took over the
Purfleet school. (fn. 452) It hired Whitbread's chapel
until 1889, when it built a new school for 120 on
Garrison Hill. A teacher's house was added in
1892 and an infant room in 1894. By 1902 the
garrison children were attending the school,
which was enlarged in 1907 for 318. In 1911 it
was attended by 218. (fn. 453) A cookery and handicraft
centre was built in 1914. (fn. 454) In 1974 the school was
remodelled and enlarged for children from the
new Garrison estate. (fn. 455)
West Thurrock county primary school,
London Road. A church Sunday school had been
established by 1817 when its managers sought
union with the National Society. (fn. 456) It may have
survived to form the nucleus of the day and
Sunday school, founded in 1838 and supported
by subscriptions and school pence. (fn. 457) In 1875 some
80 children were being taught in a small room. (fn. 458)
A new school for 184, built by the school board,
was opened in London Road in 1879. (fn. 459) It was
enlarged in 1884 and 1886 for 281, and again in
1890 and 1892 for 512. The county council in 1907
enlarged the school for 612, and in 1939 reorganized it for juniors and infants. (fn. 460) In 1975 it was
rebuilt on the same site to provide 230 places. (fn. 461)
Charities for the Poor. (fn. 462)
Noke's bread
charity, founded in 1595, is described under
Aveley. (fn. 463) There is no record of its receipt or
distribution in West Thurrock. John England,
by will proved 1761, gave £20 to provide bread
for the parish poor four times yearly. England left
his estate in debt and disorder and there is no
evidence that the gift was ever paid. (fn. 464) The
Whitbread Relief Fund was founded by the will
of Samuel Whitbread, proved 1898, by which he
gave £50 for relief of widows and the aged in
West Thurrock. The Helen Mary Norton charity
was founded in 1937, when the Revd. Alfred
Norton of Wennington gave £100 stock in trust
for relief of the sick and needy of St. Clement's
parish. In the 1970s the income from the Whitbread and Norton charities was distributed at the
discretion of local clergy.