34. GREAT WAKERING. (G.d.)
(O.S. 6 in. lxxix. N.W.)
Great Wakering is a small parish on the coast,
4 m. E.N.E. of Southend-on-Sea. The church is
the principal monument.
Roman
(1). Roman tiles from Great Wakering, possibly
from brick-earth pits near Wakering Stairs, are
in Prittlewell Priory Museum, and may indicate
continued occupation in a place known, by the
discovery of many Late Celtic burial-urns, now
in the Colchester Museum, to have been inhabited
just before the Roman occupation.
Ecclesiastical
(2). Parish Church of St. Nicholas (Plate,
p. 60) stands at the E. end of the village. The
walls are of roughly coursed ragstone-rubble with
some septaria and flint; the dressings are of
Reigate and other limestone; the roofs are tiled
and the spire boarded. The Chancel and Nave
were built c. 1100. The ground-stage of the West
Tower was added c. 1130, the upper part of the
tower being completed towards the end of the
same century. The chancel-arch was re-built in
the 15th century re-using older material and late
in the 15th century the West Porch with the room
over were built. The South Porch was added early
in the 16th century. The North Chapel or annexe
was built in 1843 and the church has been restored
in modern times.

Great Wakering, Parish Church of St Nicholas
The 12th-century W. Tower is interesting and
the W. Porch is an unusual feature.
Architectural Description—The Chancel (25 ft.
by 19 ft.) has an E. window all modern except the
splays and segmental-pointed rear-arch which are
probably of the 14th century. The N. arcade is
modern. In the S. wall are three windows, the two
eastern are early 13th-century lancets restored
externally in Roman cement; the westernmost
window is of late 15th-century date and of two
cinque-foiled lights with vertical tracery in a square
head; E. of the middle window is the E. jamb
and part of the head of a single-light window of
c. 1100. The 15th-century chancel-arch is two-centred and of two chamfered orders, the outer
continuous and the inner resting on attached semi-octagonal shafts with moulded capitals and hollow-chamfered bases; the responds, except the capitals,
are of the 13th century, possibly re-set.
The Nave (50½ ft. by 22¼ ft.) has in the N. wall
three windows, the easternmost is of early 14th-century date and of two trefoiled ogee lights with
a quatrefoil in a two-centred head with a moulded
label; the W. jamb and the rear-arch are modern;
the second window has late 14th-century splays,
cut back for wider lights, two-centred rear-arch
and moulded external label; it is fitted with an
18th-century wooden frame; the westernmost
window is of the 18th century, set high in the wall
and blocked internally; W. of the easternmost
window is the 15th-century rood-loft staircase
with a lower doorway having rebated jambs and
two-centred head; a wooden beam set in the W.
splay of the adjoining window was possibly part
of the construction of the rood-loft; the 14th-century N. doorway has chamfered jambs and
two-centred arch; it is now blocked; above it
is a blocked window of c. 1100 with a round head;
part of a similar window is visible above the middle
window in the same wall. In the S. wall are three
windows, the two eastern are similar to the easternmost in the N. wall but the second of these is modern
externally and the splays have been cut back;
the westernmost window is of early 14th-century
date and of two plain pointed lights with a spandrel
in a two-centred head with a moulded label, partly
restored; the mid 13th-century S. doorway has
jambs and a two-centred arch of two chamfered
orders, moulded imposts and a moulded label with
mask-stops; above the W. wall of the porch is the
E. jamb of a window of c. 1100. In the W. wall
above the tower-arch is a window of c. 1100 with a
round head and is now blocked internally.
The West Tower (about 13½ ft. square) is of
three stages, the lowest of c. 1130–40, with flat
pilaster buttresses of rubble at the angles; while
the two upper stages are of late 12th-century date
and without buttresses. The semi-circular tower-arch is of two plain orders with chamfered imposts;
the wall was probably thickened when the tower was
added. In the N. wall is a 15th-century window of
two cinque-foiled lights in a square head with a
moulded label; W. of it is a round-headed window
of c. 1130, blocked externally. In the S. wall
is a similar 12th-century window also blocked and
hardly visible externally. The early 15th-century
W. doorway has moulded jambs and two-centred
arch in a square head with a moulded label; the
spandrels have quatre-foiled circles enclosing foliage; the jambs and label are much defaced. The
N., S. and W. walls of the second stage have each
a window with late 12th-century splays and slightly
pointed rear-arch; the N. window is partly blocked
and fitted with a 16th-century window; the S.
window is blocked externally; the W. window is
covered by the added porch-building. The bell-chamber has in each wall a window with late 12th-century splays and two-centred rear-arch; the
E. window has 16th-century jambs of brick, a four-centred head, remains of a label and an inner
order of 18th-century brickwork; the other three
windows have each two trefoiled 15th-century
lights and a three-centred head with a moulded
label.
The West Porch is of late 15th-century date
and has an outer archway with splayed responds
and two-centred arch with a moulded label. In
the N. wall is a small square-headed window now
blocked. In the S. wall is the doorway to the large
projecting turret-staircase, it has hollow-chamfered
jambs and four-centred head. The room over the
porch has in the W. wall a plain square-headed
window and below it is what appears to be a small
niche, now blocked.
The South Porch is of early 16th-century date
and of timber-framing on dwarf rubble walls;
the outer archway has moulded jambs, three-centred arch and sunk spandrels; above it is a
moulded and embattled beam at the base of the
gable. The openings in the side walls are now
blocked.
The Roof of the chancel is of trussed-rafter
type, ceiled on the soffit. The late 14th or early
15th-century roof of the nave is of three bays with
king-post trusses; the wall-plates are moulded
and the king-posts have moulded capitals and
bases; the two eastern trusses rest on carved
stone corbels.
Fittings—Brass Indents: In chancel—of priest
with crocketed canopy and inscription-plate,
c. 1400. In nave—as threshold of S. doorway,
defaced. Chest: In N. chapel—of oak with
cambered lid, iron-bound, probably 16th-century.
Door: In S. doorway of nail-studded battens
with fillets planted on and strap-hinges, probably
15th-century. Monuments: In churchyard—
S. side—(1) to John Fitzlewes, 1699, and John, his
father, 1701, table-tomb; (2) to Priscilla Skinner,
1711, head-stone; (3) to Nicholas Kennett, 1713,
head-stone; (4) to . . . Coll . . ., 170., headstone. Paintings: In nave—on N. and S. walls,
remains of black-letter inscriptions in rectangular
frames, 17th-century; on chancel-arch, remains
of red and black colour. Piscina: In chancel—
under S.E. window, recess with re-set moulded
head, possibly piscina, 13th-century. Stoup: In
S. porch—rough recess, date uncertain.
Condition—Fairly good, some stonework much
decayed.
Secular
Monuments (3–6).
The following monuments, unless otherwise
described, are of two storeys, timber-framed and
plastered or weather-boarded; the roofs are tiled.
Some of the buildings have original chimneystacks and exposed ceiling-beams.
Condition—Good.
(3). House, now two tenements, on S. side of
road, 300 yards W. of the church, was built in the
17th century on an L-shaped plan with the wings
extending towards the E. and S.; there are modern
additions on the S. of both wings.
(4). House, now three tenements, on N. side of
road, 230 yards W. of (3), was built in the 17th
century on an L-shaped plan with the wings
extending towards the N. and W. There is a
modern addition at the back.
(5). House, at Samuel's Corner, ½ m. E. of the
church, was built possibly in the 16th century on
an L-shaped plan with the wings extending towards
the S. and W. Chimney-stacks were added early
in the following century and there is a modern
extension on the W. side of the S. wing.
(6). Friends Farm, house, 750 yards S.E. of
the church, was built in the 16th century on an
L-shaped plan with the wings extending towards
the N. and W. There is a modern addition on the
S. side of the S. wing. The upper storey originally
projected at the W. end of the S. wing but has now
been under-built.