SOUTH WEALD AND BRENTWOOD
The Ancient parish of South Weald, comprising 5,089 a. (2,059.5 ha.), lay at the northern
end of Chafford hundred, about 30 km. northeast of London. (fn. 1) The soil is mainly London
Clay, with Boulder Clay in the north and Bagshot
Beds in the east. This was an ancient forest area,
as the name Weald indicates, and it is still well
wooded. It was sparsely settled until the 12th
century, when a township began to develop along
the London-Chelmsford road at Brentwood,
where a chapel was built in or after 1221 and a
market was opened by 1227. From the 17th
century Brentwood 'hamlet', which included the
town and the adjoining rural areas to the north
and west, was virtually independent for civil
purposes, and in 1837 it became a separate
district chapelry. Brentwood urban district,
formed in 1899, was conterminous with the
chapelry, covering 460 a. It was enlarged in 1934
to 18,269 a. (7,393.4 ha.) by the inclusion of the
whole of South Weald, Hutton, and Ingrave, and
parts of 12 other parishes, and in 1974 became
part of the new Brentwood district, which has an
area of 36,378 a. (14,722 ha.).
This article is in two parts, dealing separately
with South Weald and with Brentwood, as it
existed up to 1934, except as follows. The manor
of Costed, which included Brentwood, will be
found under South Weald, 'Manors', and the
agrarian history of Brentwood under South
Weald, 'Economic History'. On the other hand,
the sections on Brentwood's 'Public Services',
'Roman Catholicism', and 'Protestant Nonconformity' apply to the whole of the ancient
parish of South Weald. Some information
relating to Brentwood is contained in the South
Weald introduction. The Brentwood part of the
article includes references to a few buildings
on the Shenfield side of the ancient parish
boundary.
Footnotes
| 1 |
O.S. Map 1/25,000, Essex TQ 59 (1959 edn.). This
article was written in 1960 and revised in 1980. |