Site-Search
Coming Soon

Arts & Entertainment
Books & Literature (12)
Fine Arts (16)
Movies & Television (36)
Music (18)
OTHER Arts (13)
Business
Advertising & Marketing (39)
eCommerce (22)
Economics (1)
Employment (22)
Finance (1)
Small Business (27)
Taxes & Accounting (2)
OTHER Business (31)
Computers
Hardware (10)
Internet (11)
Operating Systems (0)
Programming (8)
Software (6)
OTHER Computer (9)
Consumer Goods
Autos & Vehicles (1)
Cameras & Electronics (3)
Guarantees & Warranties (0)
Household Goods & Furniture (2)
OTHER Consumer (0)
Education
Schools & Colleges (1)
Homework (1)
Teaching (0)
OTHER Education (6)
Health
Conditions & Diseases (23)
Medicine (0)
Nutrition & Exercise (14)
OTHER Health (12)
People
Celebrities (13)
Family (0)
Romantic Relationships (2)
Other People (0)
Recreation
Antiques & Collectibles (0)
Hobbies (2)
Pets (72)
Sports (10)
Travel (0)
OTHER Recreation (1)
Reference
Food & Cooking (8)
History & Genealogy (1210)
Legal (5)
News & Events (0)
Research (0)
OTHER Reference (0)
Science
Biology, Earth Science & Environment (2)
Math, Physics, Astronomy & Chemistry (0)
Social Sciences (1)
OTHER Science (0)
Society
Countries (0)
Politics (7)
Religion (9)
OTHER Society (5)
Everything Else
Everything Else... (5)






Page and site
© 2008-2012 by Andrew J. Morris
All Rights Reserved

all contributed content copyrighted by the contributing author
Notice: While much of the content on this site comes from free reprint sources, not ALL articles are available for re-use. Please contact the author for permission before reprinting any content.





Walthamstow in Essex County England History and Geography

WALTHAMSTOW, a parish in the hundred of BECONTREE, county of ESSEX, 6 miles (N.E. by N.) from London, containing 4304 inhabitants. According to the Norman survey, wherein it is written Welannestun, the manor was in the possession of Judith, niece to the Conqueror; and having subsequently belonged to the Earls of Warwick, on the attainder and execution of Earl Thomas, in 1396, it lapsed to the crown. The name appears to be of Saxon origin, consisting of weald, a wood, and ham, a dwelling; the adjunct stowe, a place, being intended to distinguish this from other Walthams within the county; and the entire name being accurately descriptive of the village, which consists of numerous dwelling-houses and mansions, detached and encompassed with trees and woodland, and pleasantly situated on the borders of Epping Forest, through which a new road has been recently cut to Woodford, in order to form a nearer communication with the great road from London to Newmarket. The parish is separated from the county of Middlesex by the navigable river Lea, over which is a bridge, and on its banks are extensive copper-mills and an oil-mill, which furnish employment to about sixty persons. Courts leet and baron, for the manors within it, are held as occasion requires. The government of the parish was entrusted to a select vestry of seventeen persons, besides the minister and churchwardens, according to a grant of Bishop Montaigne, in 1624, which does not appear to have been otherwise acted upon. The living is a vicarage, in the jurisdiction of the Commissary of London, concurrently with the Consistorial Court of the Bishop of London, rated in the king's books at £13. 6. 8., and in the patronage of the Rev. W. Wilson, B.D.; it has been endowed with about £125 private benefaction. The church, dedicated to St. Mary, is a neat structure, originally built of flint and stone, with a tower at the west end, situated on an eminence; the tower was partly rebuilt by Sir George Monox, who also built the chapel at the east end of the north aisle, in 1535: it was enlarged, repaired, and beautified, in 1817, at an expense of about £2000: in the chancel is a circular window, divided into compartments of stained glass, representing a 'Gloria'; it was originally intended for Southampton castle, but was presented to this parish by Miss Russell. Among the various sepulchral memorials which adorn the interior are those of Sir George Monox, Lord Mayor of London in 1514, and his lady; a splendid monument of white marble, with figures as large as life, to Sigismond Trafford, his wife, and infant daughter; and another in memory of Lady Lucy Stanley, erected by her husband, Sir Edward Stanley. In the churchyard is a white marble tomb, by Chantry, in memory of Jesse Russell, Esq., father of the above-named benefactress. At Chapel End, in this parish, a chapel of ease was erected, at an expense of £1800, raised by subscription: it will accommodate about four hundred persons. There are places of worship for Independents and Unitarians.

A free school, for clothing and educating children, and an almshouse for thirteen poor people, at the north side of the churchyard, were founded and endowed with a rent-charge of £42. 17. 4.: the latter was further endowed with a proportion of the income arising from certain land bequeathed for the benefit of the parish by Henry Maynard, in 1686. In 1815, Mr. Richard Banks bequeathed a reversionary legacy, now producing £30. 4. 9.; and in 1825, a bequest of £500 four per cent. annuities was made, in aid of the almshouse fund, by William Bedford, Esq. A National school, in which one hundred and twenty boys and ninety-four girls receive instruction, is supported by voluntary contributions, and bequests of charitable individuals, amounting to £17. 10. per annum: it was established in 1819, and the building was enlarged by subscription in 1825. An infant school, in which are one hundred and seventy children, was established in 1823, and is supported in a similar manner: the building adjoins the churchyard, and comprises a large school-room, with separate houses for the master and mistress. In a school belonging to the Independents thirty girls receive instruction, of whom twenty are clothed. Almshouses for six poor widows were built and endowed by Mrs. Mary Squires, in 1797: the annual income is £78. The sum of £10 per annum was given by Mrs. Mary Newell, in 1810, as an annual apprentice fee; she also gave £200 to the Sunday school. George Gascoigne, a poet of considerable repute, and author of several dramatic pieces, was a native of this village; he died in 1578. The Rev. William Piers, D. D., Bishop of Bath and Wells, lies interred in the chancel of the church; he died at the advanced age of ninety-four, and was at the time the oldest bishop in Christendom, both with respect to years, and date of consecration. Edward Rowe Mores, an eminent scholar and antiquary, and one of the principal agents in forming the Equitable Society for Assurance on Lives, was buried here in 1778. Thomas Cartwright, afterwards Bishop of Chester, and Edmund Chishall, a learned antiquary and divine, and author of Travels in Turkey, and Antiquities of Asia before the Christian Era, were respectively vicars of the parish.

From Lewis's Topographical Dictionary of England 1831, courtesy of Databases 4 Sale

Bed and Breakfast Your Ad Here
Mayo Genealogy Free Means
History of Photography Your Ad Here

Readers of this page were also interested in:

Dorsetshire in Dorset County England History and Geography

DORSETSHIRE, a maritime county, bounded on the north by the counties of Somerset and Wilts; on the east by the county of Southampton; on the west by the county of Devon, and part of that of Somerset; and on the south by the British channel: it extends from 50? 30' to 51? 6' (N. Lat.), and from 1? 58' to 3? 18' (W. Lon

Moreton in the Marsh in Gloucester County England History and Geography

MORETON in the MARSH, a market town and parish in the upper division of the hundred of WESTMINSTER, county of GLOUCESTER, 28½ miles (E.N.E.) from Gloucester, and 83 (W.N.W.) from London, containing 1015 inhabitants

Mortlake in Surrey County England History and Geography

MORTLAKE, a parish in the western division of the hundred of BRIXTON, county of SURREY, 6½ miles (S.W. by W.) from London, containing, with East Sheen, 2484 inhabitants. In this parish, about the year 1616, a manufactory of tapestry was established, but it was destroyed in the time of the civil war; there is at present one for earthenware

Nottingham County England History and Geograhy

NOTTINGHAM, a borough, market town, and county of itself, locally in the county of Nottingham, of which it is the chief town, 124 miles (N.N.W.) from London, containing, with the extra-parochial liberty of Standard Hill, and the limits of the castle, which are in the south division of the wapen-take of Broxtow, 40,415 inhabitants

Tregoney in Cornwall County England History and Geography

TREGONEY, a borough and market town in the parish of CUBY, western division of the hundred of POWDER, county of CORNWALL, 41½ miles (S.W.) from Launceston, and 248 (S.W. by W.) from London, containing 1035 inhabitants

Waterbeach in Cambridge County England History and Geography

WATERBEACH, a parish in the hundred of NORTHSTOW, county of CAMBRIDGE, 5¼ miles (N.E. by N.) from Cambridge, containing 814 inhabitants. The living is a discharged vicarage, in the archdeaconry and diocese of Ely, rated in the king's books at £5. 15. 7½., and in the patronage of the Bishop of Ely. The church is dedicated to St. John

This site supports biochar.