LOUGHTON
The town of Loughton lies to the east of Epping
Forest and west of the Roding, adjoining Chigwell;
it is 12 miles from London. (fn. 1) The ancient parish of
Loughton became an urban district in 1900 and in
1933 was united with the Urban District of Buckhurst
Hill and Chigwell civil parish to form the Chigwell
Urban District. (fn. 2) The area of the ancient parish was
approximately that of the present Loughton (North)
and Loughton (South) Wards of the urban district,
taken together, and in 1931 comprised 3,961 acres. (fn. 3)
For ecclesiastical purposes the ancient parish was
divided in 1887 by the creation of the new parish of
St. Mary, in the south of the town. (fn. 4)
The best approach to Loughton is from the north,
by the road through Epping Forest from the 'Wake
Arms'. The forest has always formed an important
part of the landscape of Loughton. Over 1,300 acres
of the forest were within the ancient parish and were
preserved by the Epping Forest Acts of 1871-80. (fn. 5)
The road leaves the forest about a mile south of the
'Wake Arms', at Goldings Hill and runs south down
hill, becoming Church Hill and then High Road and
continuing to Buckhurst Hill and London. For many
centuries this road, 2 miles long, was the main focus of
settlement in the parish. South-east of Goldings Hill
is the new Loughton: the large housing estate of
Debden, built since 1945 by the London County
Council. The estate takes its name from the ancient
manor of Debden, which lay at its northern end,
around Debden Hall and Debden Green. Debden
Green itself does not form part of the estate. It is a
pleasant little hamlet of about eight houses, mostly of
the 19th century and later, grouped about the ancient
green. Loughton Hall, on the site of another ancient
manor, is now in the centre of the Debden estate, a
mile south of Debden Green. Beside the hall is the
little church of St. Nicholas (a chapel of ease to St.
John, Loughton) which stands on the site of the
original parish church. The Roding forms the boundary
of the parish in this direction. There is an ancient
crossing at Loughton Bridge a mile south-east of
Loughton Hall. The railway from London via Stratford and Woodford, now part of the Central London
Line, enters Loughton from the south. After passing
through Loughton station it makes a wide arc east and
north to Theydon Bois and Epping. Debden (formerly
Chigwell Lane) station is ½ mile south-east of Loughton
Hall. Rectory Lane, an old path which has become the
main road through the new estate, runs from Church
Hill south-east to Debden station and Loughton
Bridge. Alderton Hall, which like Debden Hall and
Loughton Hall was the centre of an ancient manor, is
at the south-west edge of the new estate.
An early settlement in the parish was within the
forest at what is known as Loughton Camp, about 1½
mile north of the railway station. The camp was a
rough oval some 6½ acres in area, enclosed by a single
rampart and ditch. It is thought to be pre-Roman. (fn. 6)
In the 11th century there were eight estates in
Loughton. The largest were Alderton and Debden,
which were probably the main centres of population
at that time. (fn. 7) In 1086 there were 18 manorial tenants
at Alderton and 11 at Debden and the total number in
the parish was 49. (fn. 8) In 1377 the parish contained 44
poll-tax-payers. (fn. 9)
Although the total area of the parish was fairly
large, the population was for long concentrated in a
small part of it. Many medieval place-names survive
and relate almost entirely to High Road and its immediate neighbourhood and to the areas around the
three manor houses. Traps Hill, Algers Road, Goldings
Hill, Borders Lane, Lyngs Lane (now Pump Hill),
Pyrles Lane, Ollards Grove, and Ree Lane (now
Englands Lane) have medieval names or the names of
medieval tenants who held land in those areas. (fn. 10) There
appears to be a specific reference to High Road in
1404 when a tenant was presented at the manor court
for throwing the scourings of his ditch upon the highway at Richard Algor's Gate. (fn. 11) The offence was
evidently committed in the neighbourhood of the
present Alger's Road. (fn. 12)
While the concentration of population along the
High Road was probably of medieval origin it was no
doubt increased by the construction, early in the 17th
century, of the new road through the forest to Epping
(see below). In 1671 there were 89 houses in the
parish (fn. 13) and there were only 119 in 1801, when the
population was 681. (fn. 14) Chapman and André's map
(1777) suggests that the appearance of Loughton was
not very different from what it had been 100 years
before. (fn. 15) It shows houses dotted along High Road as
far north as Rectory Lane. There were some houses
around Mutton Row (now York Hill) and small groups
round Debden Hall and in the centre of Englands Lane.
Other roads shown were Smarts Lane, Pump Hill,
Clays Lane, Traps Hill, and Borders Lane, Pyrles
Lane, and Debden Lane. (fn. 16) Larger houses specifically
named were the Parsonage, Loughton Hall, Alderton
Hall, Debden Hall, Golden Hill House, Hempstalls
(later Borders Farm), 'The Reindeer' (later The
Warren) and High Standing, which lay in the southwest of the parish on the edge of the forest. The
ancient parish church beside Loughton Hall is, of
course, shown on the map.
Very few of the houses then existing have survived
to the present day. Loughton Hall, (fn. 17) which had been
rebuilt about 1616, was burnt down in 1836, and
Debden Hall has been twice rebuilt since 1777. (fn. 18)
Golden Hill House, shown on the map as the residence
of Richard Lomax Clay, stood on the north side of
Clay's Lane at its junction with the main road. It was
the centre of a small estate built up by R. L. Clay and
his father Richard Clay, a London draper. The estate
included the White Lion Inn, which was demolished
by R. L. Clay in 1777. (fn. 19) Golden Hill House was
rebuilt on a large scale early in the 19th century. It
had three stories and the view from it was said to be
'exceedingly rich and extensive, including most of
London and much of the intervening district of suburban villas in Chigwell, Woodford, Walthamstow
etc.' (fn. 20) After the fire at Loughton Hall in 1836 W. W.
Maitland, the lord of the manor, moved to Golden
Hill (Goldings) and lived there until his death. (fn. 21) In
1940 the house was destroyed by a German land mine. (fn. 22)
The former stable block escaped destruction and has
now been converted into a house called Stanmores.
A small modern house of red brick called Goldings
Manor Cottage has been built on the site of Goldings. (fn. 23)
Alderton Hall, which dates from about 1600 is the
only one of the three ancient manor houses which has
survived. (fn. 24) North Farm, at the south of High Road,
is of the 16th century. It has two stories and attics and
is timber-framed and plastered. The north part has
three gables, the central part of the house projecting
and supported over the ground floor on posts.
Willow Cottage, High Road, about ¼ mile north of
the farm also dates from the 16th century. It consists
of two stories, timber-framed with painted weatherboarding. There are gabled cross-wings at each end of
the front.
Beech House, High Road, bears the date 1648 and
the initials RWM (probably William and Margaret
Rutland) and IR Age 4. It is a two-story brick building,
altered externally but with some oak panelling of c.
1648 inside.
No. 363 High Road was built late in the 18th
century. It is of two stories, in stock brick with three
sash windows. A group of cottages in Pump Hill,
Nos. 20, 22, and 24, date from the 17th century. They
are of two stories with painted weather-boarding. Rose
Farm, Traps Hill, is of the same period or somewhat
later. It is of two stories with painted weather-boarding
and small casements. In York Hill there is a group of
cottages (Nos. 107-19 inclusive) most of which date
from the 18th century and are probably those shown on
the map of 1777. Some are of red brick, others
weather-boarded. Algars at Debden Green dates from
the 17th or 18th century. It is a two-story weatherboarded building having grouped chimney-stacks and
a pedimented doorway with architrave and shaped
brackets.
The population increased steadily after 1801. By
1821 it was 979 and there were 166 inhabited houses. (fn. 25)
In 1831 there were 1,269 inhabitants, but the population subsequently remained stationary until the 1850's
when the railway was built. (fn. 26) The construction of the
new by-pass road from Woodford to Epping (see
below) may have been partly responsible for halting
the growth. The tithe map (1850) shows the parish
just before the coming of the railway. (fn. 27) The general
picture had changed little since 1777. There were a
few more houses at the east end of Smarts Lane, in the
York Hill area and along High Road. Albion Hill was
now clearly marked as a road and some cottages had
been erected at Baldwins Hill. Hatfields, in Rectory
Lane, had been built in 1799. It consists of two stories
and attics and is of stock brick. There is a central
cemented Roman Doric porch. The date is on a rainwater head.
The Warren (formerly 'The Reindeer') had been
rebuilt early in the 19th century. 'The Reindeer' was
a resort of wealthy visitors and famous for its rabbit
pie. About 1800 it was converted into a private house
and became the home of General (later Field-Marshal)
Thomas Grosvenor (1764-1851), a friend of the Duke
of Wellington. The house is of two stories, in Roman
cement. To the rear is a weather-boarded wing of
earlier date. The front looks north over a field containing a 'monument' said to have been erected by
Grosvenor to the memory of his favourite horse,
which had carried him at Waterloo. (fn. 28) The monument
consists of a plain square pedestal above which is an
obelisk resting on ball feet. (fn. 29)
Other buildings erected between 1777 and 1850
were the original National School at the corner of
Staples Road (on the site of the present Ashley Grove
flats), the British School in Smarts Lane, and the
Whitaker Almshouses. (fn. 30) A directory of 1848 spoke of
the 'many genteel houses' of Loughton. (fn. 31) Meanwhile,
in 1846 a new parish church had been built in Blind
Lane (now Church Lane) nearer to the main road, and
there was also a police station.
Between 1851 and 1871 the population doubled,
and there were considerable changes in the landscape
of the parish. (fn. 32) The railway was the most important
new feature. The line from Woodford and London
was followed within ten years by an extension to
Epping and Ongar, which looped north-east in order to
avoid hills and the forest. The station was placed at the
south-east end of the town. On the south side of Albion
Hill a number of large houses were built, and the land
between them and Warren Hill was inclosed to form
their gardens. This was the wealthiest part of the
town. Farther north Upper Park Road and Lower
Park Road were laid out although not yet built up by
1871. Forest Road had also been made, and it was
there and in Smarts Lane that much of the new building had taken place. The houses in these two roads
were of cottage type, in short terraces. Another new
road was Staples Road, which had a few small houses.
Old Station Road had been made, but was not built
up, and the present Station Road was marked out.
Many smaller houses had been built at Baldwins Hill.
Some of the new building on the west of the town took
place on land inclosed from the forest, but expansion
in this direction was stopped by the Epping Forest
Acts of 1871-80. (fn. 33) There was also some new building
in High Road, including St. Mary's Church and the
present Union church.
Loughton grew very slowly between 1871 and 1881,
but between 1881 and 1911 the population rose from
2,851 to 5,433. The progress of building was watched
with a critical eye by William Chapman Waller (1850-
1917) who lived at Ash Green at the top of York
Hill. His articles in the parish magazine of St. Mary's
and the entries in his manuscript notebooks provide
valuable information about this period. (fn. 34)
The new building after 1881 took place mainly on
several small estates along or near the main road. The
'Queen's Park' estate, consisting of 14 acres bounded
by York Hill, Pump Hill, and Church Hill, was
broken up for building in 1886 after the death of the
last owner, George Burney. (fn. 35) Building was much
slower than had been expected. (fn. 36) By 1895 there were
some 25 houses along the Church Hill front of the
estate, but in Queen's Road, which had been built
parallel with Church Hill to the west, only about six
had so far been built. (fn. 37) There was further building in
Queen's Road up to 1914 but parts of the road
remained empty until the 1930's.
The Uplands estate, which lay opposite the Queen's
Park estate to the east of Church Hill, consisted of 18
acres, (fn. 38) centred on a large house which had been a
private residence and later a children's convalescent
home. (fn. 39) The estate was sold in 1902 for £5,250 and
the house was demolished. (fn. 40) By 1914 a number of
small houses had been built along the Church Hill side
of the estate, Uplands Park Avenue (now The Uplands)
had been made and there were several houses there. (fn. 41)
But there, also, building was not completed until after
the First World War.
Farther south the development of the area between
Smarts Lane and Upper Park Road had begun. By
1895 High Beech Road, Forest View Road, Connaught Avenue, Junction Road (now Connaught Hill),
Ollards Grove, and Park Hill had been laid out,
though as yet there were very few houses there. (fn. 42) As
elsewhere in Loughton this area was built up gradually.
In 1914 there were a number of houses in Ollards
Grove, Connaught Avenue, High Beech Road, and
Park Hill but none had been built. in Forest View
Road or Connaught Hill. (fn. 43)
On the east side of High Road near the railway
station Meadow Road and Algers Road had been laid
out by 1895. Meadow Road was half built up but
development had been slower in Algers Road and in
Lower Park Road, which lay between the two new
roads. (fn. 44) South of Algers Road was then the Beech
House estate, consisting of Beech House, Newnham
House, and 117 acres land. In 1899 this estate was
put up for sale with the suggestion that it might be
built upon. (fn. 45) By 1914 The Avenue, The Crescent, and
Spring Grove had been laid out on the north side of
the estate and there were houses at the north end of The
Avenue. (fn. 46)
The areas mentioned above were those in which
most of the town's development took place between
1880 and 1914. A few houses were also built between
1895 and 1914 on the north side of Alderton Hill, and
there was some new building in the older streets of the
town, where there were still many vacant sites. There
were also some new public buildings. Religious needs
had been met by the formation of a new Anglican
parish in south Loughton and by the building of a
Wesleyan church and three mission halls. The Lopping
Hall and the Loughton Club, both in Station Road,
provided centres for secular activities. A new elementary school had been built in Staples Road and the High
School for Girls in Alderton Hill. Many of the new
buildings erected before 1899 were designed by
Edmund Egan, a local architect who died in that
year. (fn. 47)
By 1914 Loughton had changed from a village to a
residential town, though still a very small one. The
preservation of Epping Forest had prevented any
expansion westward. (fn. 48) To the east of the town much
of the parish was owned by J. Whitaker Maitland
(d. 1909), rector and lord of the manor, who rebuilt
and lived at Loughton Hall. It may be supposed that
he would hardly have welcomed any great expansion
of the town on this side, and since he was also rich he
had no need to sell any of his land for building. Social
and economic factors also checked the development of
the town. Loughton was mainly an upper-middle class
residential area, and its inhabitants (of whom W. C.
Waller was probably typical) were jealous of its
amenities. There was no large-scale industry to attract
workers and Loughton was not one of the suburbs to
which population was drawn from London by cheap
workmen's fares. (fn. 49) A sale catalogue of 1912 quotes
the rates for season tickets to Liverpool Street: £4 3s. 9d.
a quarter first class and £3 4s. 3d. second class. (fn. 50) These
were not rates to attract lower-paid workers.
Before 1914, therefore, building was confined to a
comparatively small part of the parish and even there
it proceeded slowly. (fn. 51) The population of Loughton in
1921 was 5,749, little more than it had been in 1911.
By that time, however, building had been resumed,
and between 1918 and 1939 it went on steadily.
Among the new streets laid out and built up were
Priory Road, Brooklyn Avenue, Brook Road, Tycehurst
Hill and Spareleaze Hill, all to the east of St. Mary's
Church, Woodland Road and Habgood Road on the
other side of the main road, and Hillcrest Road (near
Newnham House). New houses were also built in The
Drive, Englands Lane, High Beech Road, Forest View
Road and in Connaught Hill, Connaught Avenue,
and Upper Park Road. Several blocks of flats-a
novelty in Loughton-were built at the south end of
High Road and in York Hill. Development also took
place to the east of the railway between Loughton and
Buckhurst Hill, in Roding Road, Valley Hill and
district. Debden Hall, at Debden Green, was demolished in 1929 and replaced by a modern house of red
brick. (fn. 52) Council houses were built in England's Lane,
Goldings Road, and Woodlands Road. (fn. 53) The most
important new public buildings were the Council
Offices in Old Station Road and the post-office in
High Road, a Roman Catholic Church in Traps Hill
and a Secondary Modern School in Roding Road.
The north end of High Road was transformed by the
building of new shops, including an impressive block
called Brooklyn Parade. In 1939-40 the railway
station was rebuilt. (fn. 54) The population in 1931 was
7,390 and by 1939 had increased well beyond that
figure.
Since 1945 the landscape of Loughton has been
transformed by the building of the Debden London
County Council estate, which occupies most of the
parish to the east of the old town. There are now
(1953) 4,321 dwellings on this estate. (fn. 55) The urban
district council has also provided over 1,000 houses
(including prefabricated bungalows and shops), many
of which are in the Loughton wards. Apart from the
Debden estate most of the new building has been in
the Roding Road area. Along Oakwood Hill to the
east of Roding Road are many prefabricated houses,
some of which have been built by the L.C.C. and some
by the local council. About 200 houses and flats are also
being built by the Chigwell council on the Hilly Fields
estate, in the England's Lane area. (fn. 56) The population
of Loughton is now (1953) estimated at 29,974. (fn. 57)
Factories are being built on the Debden estate so that
it will be more than a dormitory suburb. A number
of schools and churches have been built and others are
projected. Loughton Hall, now in the middle of the
estate, is used as a community centre. The main
shopping centre, now almost completed, is in the
Broadway.
Planning has preserved some of the rural landscape
at Debden. Both here and in the old town open spaces
and many fine trees survive from Loughton's village
days. Most of the houses built in the town during the
past 150 years are of red or yellow brick, some of which
was probably made locally (see below, Industries, also
Chigwell). There are a few 19th-century weatherboarded houses in High Road, Smarts Lane, and elsewhere. In general the houses are well built. Even in
the poorer streets they look solid and in good repair.
Until piped supplies were available water was often
scarce in Loughton, and pumps were valuable property, separately assessed to the rates. (fn. 58) Piped water
was first supplied by the East London (later the
Metropolitan) Water Board in 1866. (fn. 59) Part of south
Loughton was sewered about 1871. (fn. 60) These improvements were overdue. Since 1848 there had been
several Nuisance Removal Committees which tried to
improve sanitation by the threat of legal proceedings
against householders. In 1865 it was decided that a
main sewer should be built for the Smarts Lane district
but the matter had later been shelved. (fn. 61) A sewerage
scheme for north Loughton was carried out in 1890
by Epping Rural District Council, from plans by
Edmund Egan, at a cost of £6,500. (fn. 62) The town was
supplied with gas from about 1873, by the Chigwell,
Loughton and Woodford Gas Co. (fn. 63) Electricity was
first supplied in 1926 under the Woodford and District
Electricity Special Order (1925). (fn. 64)
Loughton became part of the Metropolitan Police
District in 1840. (fn. 65) There was a police station by
1845. (fn. 66) In 1882 there was an inspector in charge. (fn. 67)
In 1902 there were a station sergeant, three sergeants,
and eleven constables. (fn. 68)
During the Middle Ages Loughton was an isolated
parish dominated by the forest to the west. There were
no roads through the forest from Loughton, though no
doubt tracks existed. Until the 17th century the roads
to both Epping and Waltham Abbey led through
Theydon Bois. There was a road south to Buckhurst
Hill and one to Chigwell over Loughton Bridge. The
earliest reference to the bridge is in the 13th century. (fn. 69)
In 1422 it was reported that the road near the bridge
had been flooded for a period of two years. (fn. 70) In the
early 17th century there were the usual disputes concerning responsibility for repairing the bridge. (fn. 71) By
the end of the century it had been accepted as a county
bridge and there are records of various sums spent on
its repair. (fn. 72) In 1780 it was decided to rebuild it at a
cost of £471. (fn. 73) In 1809 it was destroyed by floods. (fn. 74)
The bridge which replaced it was badly sited and lasted
only until 1824. (fn. 75) The present bridge was built soon
after and tunnels were inserted under the causeway on
the Chigwell side to facilitate the passage of flood
water. (fn. 76)
Early in the 17th century (probably between 1611
and 1622) a road was constructed through the forest
from Loughton to Epping. (fn. 77) This was of more than
local importance, for it provided a new and shorter
route through west Essex to Cambridge, Newmarket,
and East Anglia. It was the subject of Acts of Parliament from the reign of William and Mary onwards
and in 1768 came under the control of the Epping
Highway Trust. (fn. 78) Between 1770 and 1774 the trust
remade the road at Goldings Hill in order to reduce
the gradient. (fn. 79) Soon after this the road between
Loughton and Buckhurst Hill was also remade. (fn. 80)
Finally in 1830-4 the trust built a new road through
the forest from Woodford to the 'Wake Arms', running
along the western boundary of Loughton parish and
by-passing the village. (fn. 81)
In 1791 a daily coach ran from Loughton to
London, and a wagon on Tuesday, Thursday, and
Saturday. (fn. 82) In 1817 a daily coach from Loughton
called at the 'Three Nuns' and the 'Bull', Whitechapel,
and the 'Pewter Plate', Gracechurch Street, London. (fn. 83)
In 1839 there were coaches to London and Epping
twice a day and carriers' wagons to London every
weekday except Friday. (fn. 84) The services remained unchanged until 1856, when the railway from Stratford
and London was opened. (fn. 85) By 1863 there were twelve
trains a day to London; coaches still ran twice a day to
Epping. (fn. 86) The extension of the railway from Loughton
to Epping and Ongar was opened in 1865. (fn. 87) By 1892
there were 42 trains a day to London. (fn. 88) The line
from Woodford and London was electrified in 1948
and that from Loughton to Epping in 1949. (fn. 89) This
had been planned before 1939. It is now possible to
travel direct from Loughton to central London. A
bus service from London started in 1915, and in 1920
was extended to Epping. (fn. 90)
Loughton had a postal receiving house in the early
19th century. The delivery was extended in 1815 (fn. 91)
and a new receiver was appointed in 1828. (fn. 92) A subpost-office was set up by 1867. (fn. 93) Loughton now has
a central post-office and sub-post-offices at Goldings
Hill, Roding Road, and The Broadway. Telegraphy
was introduced in 1871 (fn. 94) and the telephone in 1906. (fn. 95)