CHIPPING ONGAR
Chipping Ongar is a parish and small town 11 miles
west of Chelmsford and 21 miles north-east of London. (fn. 1)
It has been known in the past as Castle Ongar. (fn. 2) The
modern form of the name dates from the 14th century
and relates to the ancient market of the town. (fn. 3) Ongar
has been important for more than 1,000 years as the
principal place in the hundred and later as the head of a
poor law union, petty sessional district and rural
district. The population has always been small and the
main street is still only a few minutes walk from the
open country, but the town houses, the concentration of
shops, and the little gasometer by the bridge all proclaim the place to be more than a village.
Chipping Ongar is situated on one of the few patches
of glacial sand in this clay area. The parish is bounded
on the east by the River Roding and on the south and
west by Cripsey Brook. The land rises sharply from
150 ft. above sea-level in the south, east, and west to
more, than 200 ft. in the centre and north. The main
road from Chelmsford to Epping enters the parish in
the north-east by High Ongar Bridge and leaves it in
the north-west by Ackingford Bridge. At Wants crossroads this road is joined by that which runs north to
Shelley, Fyfield, and the Rodings, and by the main
road from Chipping Ongar to Stratford and London.
The town lies mainly along this last road, which runs
south down the hill and leaves the parish in the southwest by Ongar Bridge. Beyond the bridge the road
runs up Marden Ash Hill. Marden Ash is in High
Ongar parish (q.v.) but is in fact a suburb of Chipping
Ongar. The road from Ongar to Brentwood and
Tilbury branches south-east from Marden Ash. To
the west of Cripsey Brook, in the parish of Greenstead
(q.v.), there is a new housing estate which is also part
of the town. Ongar railway station, in the north of the
parish, is the terminus of the line from Epping and
London.
Soil and situation were favourable for early settlement. The name Ongar ('grass land') indicates that
this place and High Ongar (q.v.) were less thickly
wooded than the surrounding district. The possible
use of Roman bricks in the castle gateway and the
church (see below) and the importance of Chipping
Ongar in and after the 11th century suggest that this
was one of the oldest settlements in the hundred. The
huge mound which formed the centre of the castle
(see below, Manor), together with the other earthworks, probably dates from the 11th or the 12th century. (fn. 4) The castle stood on the spur midway between
the Roding and Cripsey Brook. To the west of it were
the inner bailey and the town enclosure. The defences
of the enclosure are well preserved on the north-east and
consist of a rampart and outer ditch branching from the
north end of the inner bailey. The ditch, now nearly
dry, is 55 ft. wide and 17 ft. below the crest of the
rampart. The profile diminishes westward and the rampart disappears before reaching the road. The south arm
of the enclosure probably followed the line of what is
now Castle Street. The course of the enclosure on
the west appears to be marked by an escarpment
running south through the gardens of the houses on
the west of High Street. The entrances were probably
at the points where the main road passes through the
enclosure. (fn. 5)
In the 12th century there were no doubt several
buildings within the enclosure; for Ongar was then an
important place, and its castle the home of Richard de
Lucy, the Justiciar. Apart from the church (see below)
there is no surviving building earlier than the 16th
century, although it is possible that some traces of
medieval building are obscured by later work. (fn. 6) The
White House and the Castle House (for both of which
see below, Manor) are the largest houses in the town
which date from the 16th century. The other buildings of that century are actually outside the town
enclosure. A house, now shops, which stands on the
west side of High Street to the south of Castle Street
retains an original central chimney-stack with grouped
diagonal shafts. (fn. 7) South of it is another building of the
same or slightly later date which has a half H-shaped
plan with wings extending towards the west. An upper
story formerly projected on the east front of the north
wing. (fn. 8) Near these buildings, on the opposite side of
the road, is The Old House, which may date from
about the same period. (fn. 9) Apart from the Castle House
and the White House the oldest secular buildings
inside the town enclosure are the market house (see
below, Occupations) and the house next to it (now
shops). (fn. 10) On the opposite side of High Street, on the
corner of the street leading to the church, is a twostory shop with basement and attics, which bears on its
original doorway (now blocked) the initial and date
w. 1642. (fn. 11) Opposite this shop is that of Baugh,
chemist, which with King, greengrocer, forms a threegabled building having the original central chimneystack with eight octagonal shafts. (fn. 12) All the above buildings are timber-framed and plastered, but the King's
Head Hotel, which bears the initials and date RS 1697,
is built of red brick. (fn. 13) By this time the rectory (see
below, Church) had been built to the north of the town
enclosure. (fn. 14) Other buildings in the town probably
include portions dating from the 17th century, but
these are obscured by later facades. In 1671 there
were 94 houses in the parish, including the building
on the castle mound. (fn. 15) In 1758 there were 93 premises assessed for the payment of rates. (fn. 16) It is therefore
probable that the buildings shown on the map of 1777
covered the same area as those that had existed a
century earlier. (fn. 17) The map shows that the built-up
area extended down High Street from the north end
of the town enclosure as far as Ongar Bridge. Roden
House (near the bridge) existed, and there were a few
buildings to the south of the bridge, on the parish
boundary. The main body of the rectory had been
built early in the 18th century. (fn. 18) Lauriston, on the
east side of High Street, below Castle Street, is also of
the 18th century. The doorway has a pediment supported by Ionic pilasters. (fn. 19) The original Independent
Meeting House was built in 1720. (fn. 20) A letter dated at
Ongar on 16 October 1798, which describes the illuminations by which the town celebrated the Battle of the
Nile, mentions some of the larger houses that could then
be seen in a walk through the town. (fn. 21)
Between 1777 and 1841 some cottages were built
to the south-west of Ongar Bridge, probably to accommodate the labourers at the brickfield and gas
works. (fn. 22) This expansion of the town was accompanied
by the improvement or rebuilding of some of the older
houses. (fn. 23) Much of this was carried out by the firm of
Noble of Ongar, founded in 1805. (fn. 24) The present
façade of the White House, dating from about 1835,
is said to have been built by this firm. (fn. 25) Holmlea, a short
distance north of Lauriston, is a good house built about
1780, with a central round headed window in the first
floor and in the roof. (fn. 26) Mayfield, a red-brick building
in Castle Street, is said to date from 1809. (fn. 27) Ongar
House, of gault brick, and The Wilderness, which stand
on the east of High Street, near the north arm of the
town rampart, were refronted early in the 19th century. (fn. 28) Ongar House has a symmetrical façade with five
windows in each of the upper floors. The doorway has
simple pilasters but no porch. The windows have external shutters. A third story was added to the house in
1952. (fn. 29) The Wilderness is an H-shaped house in which
there have been many alterations at various times. One
important building erected during this period was also
demolished before 1840. This was the Assembly and
Card Rooms, built in or soon after 1786 on ground in
High Street, previously occupied by the parish pound,
pillory, and cage. The Rooms were removed about
1830. (fn. 30)
Several buildings erected after 1841 are in classical
style. The most striking of these is Greylands, which
adjoins King the greengrocer to the north. It was built
in 1843 by J. Gerry to the design of T. M. Baynes. (fn. 31)
It is a large symmetrical house of gault brick with an
imposing porch flanked by heavy Doric columns. (fn. 32)
The wine shop, opposite Greylands, is roughly contemporary and is also of gault brick. It is said to have
formed a pair with a building which once stood on the
site of the present London Co-operative grocery. (fn. 33) The
old grammar school (see below, Schools) was built about
1850. The present façade of Roden House dates from
the late 19th century (see below, Schools).
The police station (see below, Public Services) was
the first large building in the town to depart from the
classical style. Contemporary with it is the original
portion of the Ongar Primary School (see below,
Schools). The railway station came slightly later, the
Budworth Hall, High Street, was built in 1886 and
the offices of the Ongar R.D.C. in 1896. (fn. 34) In 1896-7
High Street was made more accessible to traffic by the
removal of the old Town Hall. (fn. 35) This had stood
detached in the street at the point where it now widens,
to the north of the church. (fn. 36)
Several of the smaller buildings erected about the
middle of the 19th century were possibly the work of
Edward Sammes, who was described as a builder in a
directory of 1840. (fn. 37) In 1837 he owned two houses in
the town. (fn. 38) By 1848 he owned some 20 houses and
cottages. (fn. 39) Sammes Cottages, near the gasworks, were
named after him. He was a grocer and general broker
as well as a builder. (fn. 40)
Apart from those named above few buildings in
Ongar were erected between 1875 and 1914. There
are some houses in Castle Street dating from this period,
a small terrace to the south of the railway station, and
also a few houses at the south end of the High Street,
and in Bushy Lees. (fn. 41) The building at the north end of
High Street, which is now Great Stoney Boarding
Secondary School, was erected in 1903. (fn. 42) It was
originally a children's home of the Hackney poor law
union. In 1931 there were 206 dwelling houses in the
parish. (fn. 43)
Medieval taxation assessments, printed below (pp.
300 f.) suggest that Chipping Ongar was then much
more densely populated than any other place in the
hundred, although its total population was not the
greatest. Some idea of the population can be gathered
from the fact that there were 108 poll taxpayers in
1377. In 1801 the population was 595, and by 1841
had risen to 870. (fn. 44) After some fluctuations it was 967
in 1901. An increase to 1,362 in 1911 was largely
accounted for by the arrival of the children at the
Hackney home. Population has decreased steadily
since 1911. One cause of this was the decline and
closing of the grammar school. In 1951 the population
of the parish was 925. (fn. 45) In the suburbs of Ongar, just
beyond the parish boundaries, there has, however, been
a considerable growth of population through the recent
building on the Greenstead and Shelley estates and at
Marden Ash. An attendance of over 300 pupils at the
Ongar primary school in 1952 gives an indication of the
population of the town and its suburbs (see below,
Schools).
The roads leading out of Chipping Ongar to the
south, east, and west all pass over bridges on or near
the parish boundary. Ongar Bridge is entirely in the
parish. Ackingford Bridge is common to Chipping
Ongar and Bobbingworth and is treated here. High
Ongar Bridge, although it spans the boundary between
the two Ongars, has usually been considered as falling
wholly in the parish from which it takes its name, and
is treated under High Ongar (q.v.).
Ongar Bridge, on the most direct road to London,
must have been of the greatest importance to the town.
Sir Peter Siggiswyk, whose will was proved in 1503,
left 10s. to be spent on the upkeep of the bridge. (fn. 46) In
1574 it was stated at Quarter Sessions that the bridge
was in decay and that responsibility for it was unknown. (fn. 47) This presentment was later repeated. (fn. 48) In
1581 Quarter Sessions ordered that the county should
assume responsibility. (fn. 49) This decision had apparently
been forgotten by 1626 when the bridge was once
more in need of repair. (fn. 50) It still needed repair in 1628,
and the sessions ordered a county rate to be levied for
this purpose. (fn. 51) Soon after this the hundred jury complained that although the rate had been collected the
repairs had still not been carried out. (fn. 52) The bridge was
again presented for disrepair in 1641, and by order of
the sessions a 'lean-to or rail' was set up on it. (fn. 53) Repairs
were again ordered in 1657. (fn. 54) The next reference to
the bridge in the sessions rolls is in 1660, when it was
stated that the wharf was decayed and should be
repaired by the county. (fn. 55) In 1677 the bridge was in
a dangerous condition. (fn. 56) The sessions ordered Richard
Luther and Thomas Alexander to employ workmen to
repair it without prejudice to the county if it should
later be found that the parish was responsible. (fn. 57) After
this time Ongar Bridge seems to have been accepted
without dispute as a county bridge. The county paid
£85 for its repair in 1697 and £166 in 1715. (fn. 58) In
1857 the county surveyor described the bridge as
having three unequal arches finished with a brick
parapet, the walls being coped with stone. (fn. 59) It has
not been radically altered since. (fn. 60)
Ackingford Bridge was in need of repair in 1573,
and responsibility for it uncertain. (fn. 61) The hundred
jury stated in 1604 that it should be repaired by the
county (fn. 62) but in 1615 they said that Bobbingworth
ought to mend their side of it (fn. 63) and in 1620 Bobbingworth and Chipping Ongar were held jointly responsible. (fn. 64) In 1621 the county was said to be responsible (fn. 65)
and from this time the bridge always seems to have been
regarded as a county bridge. By the end of the 18th
century the road which crossed it had been turnpiked
and was probably carrying much traffic. This was no
doubt the reason for the building of a new bridge in
1806. The plan of this bridge, drawn by the architect,
John Johnson, still exists. (fn. 66) The bridge was completed
by January 1807. (fn. 67)
The county surveyor, who visited Ackingford
Bridge in September 1857, described it as being built
of oak resting on piles with brick abutments. It was
precisely similar to Leaden Wash Bridge (in Leaden
Roding). (fn. 68) It was then in good repair, but by 1862 the
ends of the main girders had begun to decay. (fn. 69) Between 1867 and 1875 many big repairs were carried
out. (fn. 70) The bridge was rebuilt in 1913, in concrete. (fn. 71)
In 1659 the inhabitants of Chipping Ongar were
presented at Quarter Sessions for their failure to repair
the foot-bridge called Bantons, which spanned Cripsey
Brook on the way to Greenstead. (fn. 72)
In 1637 a carrier from Chipping Ongar made a
weekly journey to London, stopping on Wednesday at
the 'Crown' without Aldgate. (fn. 73) In 1686 Ongar was
evidently a fairly important staging place for travellers:
according to a survey of that year there was accommodation in the town for 71 lodgers and 104 horses. (fn. 74) These
figures were larger in both cases than those for Braintree,
Harwich, Maldon, Witham, and Coggeshall; for
lodgers Ongar had more accommodation than Billericay,
Dunmow, Kelvedon, and Saffron Walden, and for
horses there was more stabling than at Rayleigh.
In 1791 a coach left the 'Three Nuns', Whitechapel,
for Ongar every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, (fn. 75)
and a carrier's wagon left from the same place every
Tuesday and Friday. Another wagon for Ongar
started from the 'Saracen's Head', Aldgate, on Tuesday
and Friday. (fn. 76) In 1817 coaches plied daily to Ongar
from the 'Three Nuns' and from the 'Bull', Aldgate. (fn. 77)
There were wagons from the 'Three Nuns' on Tuesday
and Friday and from the 'Swan', Whitechapel, on
Wednesday and Saturday. (fn. 78)
In 1826-7 a coach left the Crown Inn, Ongar,
every weekday and returned from the 'Bull', Aldgate,
the same day. (fn. 79) There were two carriers to London,
Stephen Clements who left on Tuesday and Friday, and
Thomas Nichols who left on Monday and Thursday.
Their terminus was the 'Three Nuns', and they
returned on the following days. (fn. 80) In 1833 the coaches
belonging to A. Nelson & Co., left the 'Bull' twice a
day for Ongar, with accommodation for 6 passengers
inside and 12 outside. (fn. 81) Carriers' wagons also ran
daily from the 'Bull'. (fn. 82) In 1848 there was a daily
coach to London from the 'Lion' at Ongar. (fn. 83) There
were also coaches to Brentwood railway station, leaving
the house of John West, coach proprietor, twice daily. (fn. 84)
Stephen Clements's wagons still left for London on
Tuesday and Friday. (fn. 85) The wagons of Samuel Drake
and Henry Wood left for Chelmsford on Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday. (fn. 86) In 1863, shortly before
the railway reached Ongar, there were still one daily
coach to London and two to Brentwood station. (fn. 87)
There was also a mail cart to Romford. (fn. 88) Clements
operated the same wagon service to London, and
Samuel Drake to Chelmsford. (fn. 89) John White's wagon
went daily to Brentwood. (fn. 90)
The railway service between Ongar and London
was opened in 1865. (fn. 91) Bus services have been operated
since the 1920's. In 1922 there were daily services to
Bishop's Stortford and Brentwood. (fn. 92) Now (1953)
there are good services to Epping, Brentwood, Romford and Chelmsford and others to the Rodings and to
Harlow.
The earliest reference in the post-office records to a
postal service in Chipping Ongar is in 1717. In that
year the name of Joseph King of Ongar occurs in a
general list of sub-postmasters; he had a yearly salary
of £25. (fn. 93) His successor in 1727 was Lionel King, who
was still serving in 1756, with the same salary. (fn. 94) He
was followed by Mrs. Eliza Bancilhon, at first with a
salary of £25, (fn. 95) later of £11, with riding work reckoned
at £21. (fn. 96) This last payment was made by the deputypostmaster to the district surveyor, and it indicates that
Ongar was already the centre for some postal service
to the surrounding villages. There are similar details
for the Epping post-office and it is clear that a by-post
served Epping and Ongar at least from the early 18th
century.
A directory of 1791 includes this service, the post
leaving Epping every day save Monday, with a return
service from Ongar every day except Saturday; Mrs.
Bancilhon was still postmistress, with Thomas Hendry,
victualler, of the 'White Hart', as 'Post Office Keeper'. (fn. 97)
Ongar is also included in a list of the chief post and
sub-post towns given in Cary's Atlas of 1793, with a
note that letters leaving London at 3 p.m. reached
Ongar at 10 a.m. the next day, the cost of a letter being
4d. (fn. 98) The rate was raised to 6d. in 1815. (fn. 99)
This by-post between Epping and Ongar is traced
as a daily horse-ride in a post-office map of 1813. (fn. 1) The
ride from Epping loops south as far as Abridge and goes
on through Stanford Rivers.
In 1810 James Merrington resigned and James
Scruby was made deputy-postmaster at Ongar. (fn. 2) Miss
Maria Scruby was appointed six years later (fn. 3) and still
held the office in 1845, when it was described as a postoffice issuing money orders. (fn. 4) William Scruby was subpostmaster at least between 1851 and 1886. (fn. 5) Later
holders of the office can be traced in the county
directories.
In the mid-19th century there were some changes.
In 1847 application was made to the Postmaster
General both by Epping and Ongar for a daily mail,
which was set up later in the year; (fn. 6) and in 1852 Ongar
was made a post town. (fn. 7) Moreover in addition to the
old-established by-post between Epping and Ongar,
there was a postal service between Romford and Ongar,
described as a 'ride' in 1849, (fn. 8) and as a mail-cart service
in 1857. (fn. 9) In 1855 a contract was also made for an
Ongar-Brentwood day mail service. (fn. 10) After this time
the Ongar post-office developed normally in line with
the national service. The present post-office is in the
centre of the town on the west side of the High Street.
The telegraph was in use at Ongar after 1872 (fn. 11) and the
telephone from 1913. (fn. 12)