MANORS
Domesday Book mentions no fewer than six separate
estates in Loughton and also two others,
Alderton and Debden, which later became part of the parish of Loughton. A
small holding of 20 acres in Loughton belonged to
the manor of Havering: it had been held in 1066 by the
reeve of King Harold and in 1086 was held by the
reeve of King William. (fn. 86) Peter de Valognes had two
manors in Loughton in 1086: each was worth 20s. (fn. 87)
One of them, containing a hide and 30 acres was held
of Peter by Ralph. Before the Conquest it had been
held by Ulvric, a free man. The other, of 1 hide, was
held in demesne. It had been held in 1066 by Leofcild.
The descent of a part of these lands of de Valognes is
traced below under Monk Wood. Some other parts
became merged in the main manor of Loughton (see
below).
An estate of 44 acres which had belonged to a free
man before the Conquest was held in 1086 by W.
Corbun of Robert Gernon; it was then worth 10s. (fn. 88)
This also seems to have been later merged in the manor
of Loughton.
By far the greatest part of the parish belonged in
1066 and 1086 to Waltham Abbey. The abbey's
property was listed in Domesday book as four manors.
Two manors were named Loughton: one contained 4
hides and 20 acres and was worth 40s.; the other contained 2½ hides and was worth 20s. (fn. 89) These manors
were said to be in Becontree hundred. The other two
abbey manors, Alderton and Debden, were in Ongar
hundred. (fn. 90) Alderton consisted of 4½ hides and 10
acres and was worth £4 in 1086. Debden consisted of
3 hides and 40 acres and was worth 40s. All these lands
in Loughton, Alderton, and Debden had been given
to the abbey on its foundation in 1060 by Earl Harold.
The gift was confirmed by Edward the Confessor in
1062. (fn. 91)
Waltham Abbey remained owner of most of the
land in the parish until the Dissolution, and its property was known from the 13th century onwards as
the manor of LOUGHTON. A detailed rental of
about 1180 deals separately with the three estates
although they had all belonged to the abbey for over
a century. It lists 32 tenants in Alderton who paid
£2 5s. 3½d. in money rents in addition to rents in kind
and labour services. The tenants of Loughton numbered only 8, who paid 12s. 2½d. rent. There were 24
tenants at Debden paying 16s. 11½d. (fn. 92)
It was probably soon after this time that the abbey
acquired the manor in Loughton which in 1086 had
been held of Robert Gernon. This had descended with
Gernon's other lands to Richard de Montfichet (d.
1202). He or his son Richard de Montfichet (II)
(d. 1267) granted the Loughton estate to Waltham
Abbey. (fn. 93) At the time of the grant there were two
tenants of the manor, Edward Reyntot, who paid an
annual rent of 2s. 4d., and John son of Roger de Pyrle,
who paid 1s. Both these tenants held lands in the
neighbourhood of the modern Pyrles Lane. (fn. 94) About
the same time Waltham Abbey acquired further land
from Reyntot and Pyrle themselves. (fn. 95) Another
acquisition, early in the 13th century, was of onequarter of Monk Wood; the remaining three-quarters
became the property of Stratford Abbey (see below,
Monk Wood).
In about 1254 the manor of Loughton (now apparently including Alderton and Debden) was valued
at £11 12s., of which £8 issued from the demesne and
£3 12s. from rents. (fn. 96)
The property of Waltham Abbey was taken into the
king's hands in 1540 on the dissolution of the abbey.
The manor of Loughton was at that time occupied by
John Stoner on an 80-year lease running from 1522. (fn. 97)
Stoner died in the year of the dissolution and was succeeded as lessee by his son George. (fn. 98)
In 1551 the manor was given to Thomas Darcy,
Baron Darcy of Chiche, as part of the endowment of
his barony, created in that year. (fn. 99) A year later, however, he gave the manor back to the king in exchange
for property in Surrey. (fn. 1) In 1553 Loughton was
granted to Mary Tudor two months before she became queen. (fn. 2) The manor was thus again merged in
the Crown. In 1558 it was annexed to the Duchy of
Lancaster. (fn. 3) It remained part of the duchy until 1613. (fn. 4)
George Stoner, who had inherited the lease of the
manor, died in 1559. (fn. 5) His son and heir John Stoner
built a house at Luxborough in Chigwell (q.v.) in
which he usually lived. It was, however, at Loughton
Hall that he entertained the queen in 1578. (fn. 6) He died
in 1579 and the lease of Loughton passed to his
daughter Susan and her husband Robert Wroth.
Susan and Robert were probably established at
Loughton Hall before Stoner's death. (fn. 7) Robert Wroth,
knighted in 1597, was a large landowner, a forest
official, and a Member of Parliament. (fn. 8) He entertained
James I at Loughton Hall in 1605. (fn. 9) He died in 1606
and was succeeded by his son Sir Robert Wroth, who
had married Mary, daughter of Robert, Baron Sidney
of Penshurst, later Earl of Leicester, and niece of Sir
Philip Sidney. Mary and her husband had literary
interests and were intimate with a number of poets,
including Ben Jonson, who dedicated 'The Alchemist'
to Mary and 'The Forest' to Sir Robert. Mary was
also a friend of the queen, Anne of Denmark. The
Prince of Wales probably visited Loughton Hall in
1606 and it may have been through the influence of
the queen that Sir Robert was permitted, in 1613, to
purchase the manor of Loughton from the Duchy of
Lancaster. (fn. 10)
In 1608 a survey had been made of all the timber
on the demesne lands of the manor, (fn. 11) and in 1612 the
whole manor was surveyed. (fn. 12) The latter survey gave
the clear annual value of the manor as £517. Allowance was made in this estimate for a fee-farm rent
of £58 and a further deduction of £192 for the feeding
of the king's deer on the grounds of the manor. The
manor house, recently repaired, with its orchard and
grounds, was valued at £6 a year. There were 640
acres of pasture, 304 acres of arable, and 156 acres of
meadow. The perquisites of the courts leet and baron
were valued at £7, the bailiwick of the manor at
£1 6s. 8d., and the rents of the 29 copyholders at £23.
In addition to the demesne lands there was the moiety
of a tenement called Hatfields, containing 24 acres.
The timber trees in the manor were valued at £1,028;
the lessee had the right of topping and lopping. (fn. 13) The
waste of the manor consisted of 200 acres in Fair
Mead, 1,000 acres in High Wood, and 100 acres in
Monk Wood. In Fair Mead the ancient tenants of
the manor and several inhabitants in adjoining manors
claimed and usually had common of pasture for cattle
without number at all times of the year, and the
Loughton tenants also had common of estovers. In
High Wood the ancient tenants had common of
estovers, for which each paid annually a 'smoke hen'
or 1s. in lieu. In Monk Wood the lessees of the manor
had always taken the lops and the ancient tenants had
common of pasture only. Sixty pollard oaks in Fair
Mead and High Wood were valued at £24.
Sir Robert Wroth paid £1,224 for the manor, which
remained subject to a fee-farm rent of £58, and for the
advowson of the rectory (see below, Churches). (fn. 14) The
fee-farm rent was not extinguished until 1814. (fn. 15)
Shortly after purchasing the manor Sir Robert died
(1614). His infant son died in 1616. (fn. 16) His estates
were left heavily in debt and some of them had to be
sold. Mary Wroth continued to live at Loughton Hall
for some years, harried by creditors. (fn. 17) In 1621 she
published Urania, a pastoral romance which caused
her to be accused of libel. (fn. 18) The next heir to Loughton
was Sir Robert's brother John Wroth, who died in
1642. (fn. 19) Before his death John settled the manor on
John Wroth, son of his brother Henry. (fn. 20)
Loughton descended in the Wroth family until the
death in 1738 of Elizabeth, wife of John Wroth (d.
1718), the fourth of his name to hold the manor. (fn. 21)
The manor then passed to William, 4th Earl of Rochford, grandson of Elizabeth Wroth's sister Jane. (fn. 22)
John Wroth (III), who was lord of the manor from
1662 to 1708 was described as 'a blustering county
justice and gentleman grazier'. (fn. 23) In 1688 he is said to
have entertained Princess (later Queen) Anne at
Loughton Hall when she fled from London during the
revolution which deposed James II. (fn. 24) Between 1662
and 1667 the income from rents of the manor averaged
about £700 a year. In addition to this over £700 was
received during the whole period for fines and wood. (fn. 25)
About 1700 the manor was said to be worth about
£1,000 a year. (fn. 26) John Wroth (III) left 124 neat
cattle, 12 horses, and over 200 sheep, Welsh and
Weyhill, wool and wheat to the value of £117 and
£170 respectively and 1,000 oz. plate, valued at £254. (fn. 27)
A survey of 1739 gave the extent of the lands of the
manor, including Monk Wood, but not the waste, as
1,319 acres. It had thus increased by 35 acres since
1612. (fn. 28) The largest farm, described as Jonathan
Parker's tenure, was 455 acres. This ran from Wellfield
across Rectory Lane to the Theydon Bois boundary.
Alderton Hall farm was 267 acres. Elizabeth
Gilderson's tenure was 224 acres stretching east of
Chigwell Lane from the pound to the river. Loughton
Hall farm was 202 acres from the hall south to the
river. Debden Park covered 30 acres, Margery Field
held 21 acres, Monk Wood was 101 acres, and the
remaining area was made up of Loughton Warren
(8 acres), Loughton Piece (5 acres), and the tenements
of three cottagers. (fn. 29)
In 1745 the Earl of Rochford sold the manor to
William Whitaker of Lime Street, London, an alderman of the City. (fn. 30) Whitaker died in 1752 and
Loughton passed to his widow Anne, and on her death
in 1770 to their daughter Anne Whitaker. (fn. 31)
Whitaker had not been living at Loughton Hall at
the time of his death, the tenant then being a Mr.
Roberts. (fn. 32) Miss Whitaker, however, did live there, 'a
very formall lady of the old school or court, and
reconned very rich, living in good style'. (fn. 33) She died in
1825, leaving the manor to John Maitland of Woodford Hall. (fn. 34)
The manor passed from John Maitland (d. 1831)
successively to his son William Whitaker Maitland
(d. 1861) and his grandson John Whitaker Maitland,
who also became Rector of Loughton and died in
1909. (fn. 35) He was succeeded by his son William W.
Maitland (d. 1926). In 1944 Cmdr. J. W. Maitland,
M.P., son and heir of W. W. Maitland, sold Loughton
Hall and 644 acres of land to the London County
Council for the building of the Debden housing estate,
which started soon after 1945. With a few short
intervals Loughton Hall had been the home of the lords
of the manor (including lessees under the Crown) since
the 16th century.
In 1851 W. W. Maitland owned some 1,120 acres
in Loughton. (fn. 36) The tithe on most of his demesne land
appears to have been commuted long before this. (fn. 37)
The estate was let out in 10 farms of which the largest
were Alderton farm (about 360 acres), Loughton
Bridge farm (about 300 acres), and Loughton Hall
farm (about 200 acres). Debden Hall farm, of 164
acres, no longer formed part of the estate. In the 18th
century it had passed into the possession of the Hamilton
family, one of whom, Archdeacon Hamilton, was
Rector of Loughton 1805–51. (fn. 38) In 1851 the farm
was owned by John Williams. (fn. 39)
Between 1850 and 1930 the Maitland estate was
gradually reduced by sales for building purposes,
mainly in the neighbourhood of High Road. (fn. 40) The
Revd. J. W. Maitland was prominent in the Epping
Forest inclosure controversy. If his plans had been
successful some 650 acres of the forest waste would
have become his freehold property as the result of
inclosure. In the event he received £30,000 for his
rights in the 992 acres of forest waste. (fn. 41)
The court rolls of the manor of Loughton are
described below (see Parish Government and Poor
Relief).
The present Loughton Hall, which stands in the
middle of the Debden housing estate and is used as a
community centre, is a large red-brick mansion erected
by the Revd. J. W. Maitland in 1878. (fn. 42) It was built
on the site of an earlier house which was burnt down in
1836. The old house probably incorporated parts of
a timber manor house of the 16th century or earlier.
In 1602, during the tenancy of the first Sir Robert
Wroth, the Commissioners of the Duchy of Lancaster
made a report on the condition of the house. (fn. 43) This
indicates a typical medieval or 16th-century establishment with many ancillary buildings including a
detached gatehouse. It was then in poor repair, which
suggests that it was already of considerable age. A
large proportion of the estimated cost of repair was for
carpentry and the quoted sum of £100 specifically
excluded the value of 70 trees to be had from the
manor. This makes it clear that the house was of
timber and was to be restored in the same material.
In 1612 a new survey was made. (fn. 44) The accommodation, apart from outbuildings, now included a hall,
buttery, kitchen, larder, bakehouse, pastryhouse, milkhouse, and wash-house, together with 'eight other
lodgings with faire lodginge and greate roomes over the
said roomes new built and redified at the chardgs of Sir Robert Wroth, the now farmer thereof'.The obligation of entertaining royalty and the higher standard of
comfort demanded by the times had evidently induced
the second Sir Robert to increase the number and size
of the reception rooms. There is some evidence that
further improvements were put in hand when the
manor had at last been acquired by the Wroths in
1613: in 1630 it was stated that Sir Robert Wroth
'about sixteene yeres past' had built some part of
Loughton Hall upon an old foundation. (fn. 45) The date
on the front of the building at the time of the fire is
said to have been 1616. (fn. 46) It seems possible that work
was in progress at Sir Robert's death in 1614 and was
completed two years later.
The description of a lodge in the forest, 'a faire
house built on a Hill', which occurs in Lady Wroth's
Urania, is thought to apply to Loughton Hall at
the time of her marriage. (fn. 47) It includes a reference to
the Lady's Walk, an avenue of trees leading up to the
house from a bridge over the river. This was cut down
during the Napoleonic Wars when a high price could
be obtained for timber. (fn. 48)
No record has been found of alterations to the house
between 1616 and 1825, but it cannot be assumed that
none took place. The claim that parts of the interior,
including a stone staircase, were designed by Inigo
Jones should be taken with the usual reserve. (fn. 49)
After 1825, when the house became the property
of the Maitlands, over £6,000 is said to have been
spent on it. On 11 December 1836 the house was
burnt down. Contemporary newspaper reports stated
that 50 rooms were destroyed or damaged. (fn. 50) There
had been two frontages, both 162 ft. long, and one at
least of these had the date 1616 on the rainwater heads.
The style is said to have been Elizabethan, modernized
later, and the interior was adorned with Ionic and
Corinthian orders. (fn. 51)
A picture of the building shows a very curious twostory front. (fn. 52) It appears to be of brick and is divided
into five bays by a pilaster treatment in stone or plaster.
Each pilaster consists of two tiers of coupled Doric
columns supporting detached entablature blocks. The
only horizontal members which are continuous across
the front are a string course at the upper cornice level
and the coping of the parapet. This parapet rises in
the centre to form a small curvilinear gable. Each
story has ten tall sash windows and the roof has gabled
dormers. A central doorway with a scrolled pediment
is surmounted by a niche. If this front dated from 1616
it is clear that the doors and windows were altered
later. In general the features are more consistent with
a date near the middle of the 17th century.
Alderton Hall is a timber-framed and weatherboarded building having two stories and attics. There
is a main block with east and west wings. The oldest
parts are the centre and the east wing, which date from
the late 16th or early 17th century. The west wing
was probably rebuilt early in the 18th century.
The present Debden Hall was built about 1930 to
replace a previous building on the site which was demolished in the previous year. (fn. 53) A photograph of the
earlier building (c. 1898 ?) shows a large house of two
stories and attics having a pedimented doorcase and a
long range of outbuildings. The house appears to have
dated from the early 19th century. (fn. 54)
The two manors held in 1086 by Peter de Valognes
probably included what later became known as MONK
WOOD. In 1166 Philip de Snaring held 1/3; knight's
fee and Geoffrey de Snaring ½ knight's fee, both of the
honor of Valognes. (fn. 55) These tenements were probably
in Loughton, for early in the 13th century the Snaring
family held an important position in the parish, part of
which was for a time named after them. (fn. 56) Before 1240
a wood in 'Loughton Snarryngs' had come to be divided
between the abbeys of Stratford Langthorne and
Waltham. Three-quarters of the wood had been
granted to Stratford by Ralph de Assartis; the remaining quarter had been granted to Waltham by Geoffrey
Reyntot and Roger Fitz Ailmar. (fn. 57) Ralph de Assartis is
known to have been a tenant of Geoffrey de Snaring. (fn. 58)
In 1236 he was holding 1/8 knight's fee in Loughton of
the barony of Valognes. (fn. 59)
In 1240 an agreement was made between the abbeys
of Stratford and Waltham concerning their timber
rights in their jointly owned wood. When one abbot
wished to fell timber in the wood he was to notify the
bailiff of the other abbot. Four trees of equal value
were then to be selected, of which Stratford was to
take the first, second, and fourth choices, and Waltham
the third. Trees not required for immediate felling
might be marked by either abbey for future use. (fn. 60)
The portion of the wood owned by Waltham Abbey
became merged from the 13th century in the main
manor of Loughton (see above). The three-quarters
owned by Stratford became known as Monk Wood
and remained the property of that abbey until the
Dissolution.
Like the manor of Loughton Monk Wood became
part of the Duchy of Lancaster in the 16th century,
and appears to have been leased along with the manor.
In 1582 the wood was said to contain 53 acres but in
1612 its area was 101 acres of which 74 acres comprised Great Monk Wood and 27 acres Little Monk
Wood. (fn. 61) There was sometimes doubt whether the
wood was demesne or waste land. Historically there
is little doubt that it was demesne. (fn. 62)
After the 16th century Monk Wood descended
along with the manor of Loughton. In 1767, when
Alderton Hall was leased, it was provided that the
lessee should receive 1,000 faggots and 100 logs every
year from the wood. In 1787 this was altered to 500
faggots and 250 logs. (fn. 63)
In 1851 Monk Wood contained 97 acres of which
73 acres were in Great Monk Wood and 24 acres in
Little Monk Wood. (fn. 64)
There is a legend of Monk Wood which concerns a
monk who murdered a maiden. (fn. 65)