HIGH ONGAR
The parish of High Ongar adjoins Chipping Ongar
to the east and south, being divided from it by the
River Roding and Cripsey Brook. Until 1946 it
included two detached parts, the most important of
which was some 3 miles west of the main body of the
parish. The main body itself contains two distinct
areas. Marden Ash, to the south of Chipping Ongar,
is a residential suburb of the town. The soil there is
glacial loam and Boulder Clay. The area to the east
of the Roding is entirely rural. It includes two villages,
High Ongar in the north-west and Paslow Wood
Common in the south-east, and numerous farms. The
soil is Boulder Clay with a small patch of glacial loam.
The detached parts raised special administrative problems, which were made more serious by the poor road
system in the main body of the parish.
Uncertainty as to the area of the parish during the
Middle Ages makes it difficult to use the taxation
returns for that period as a guide to population density
and relative wealth, but if the area of High Ongar in
and after the 14th century was about the same as it was
in 1945 it is probable that the parish was sparsely
populated in the Middle Ages. (fn. 1) In 1671 High Ongar
had only 57 houses compared with the 81 of Stanford
Rivers, a neighbouring parish of similar area. (fn. 2) The
development of Marden Ash and High Ongar village
during the 18th century increased the relative as well
as the total population of the parish, and in 1801 High
Ongar had 741 inhabitants-one more than Stanford
Rivers. The population rose to 1,126 in 1821 and
remained at about that figure for the next century. It
then increased to 1,419 in 1931, and to 1,675 in 1951. (fn. 3)
Recent growth is mainly due to the building of council
houses.
The ancient parish of High Ongar consisted of
4,519 acres of which 1,505 acres were in the two
detached portions. The main body of the parish,
3,014 acres in extent, was situated to the east and south
of Chipping Ongar. (fn. 4) Detached Part No. 1, of 962
acres, lay between North Weald and Bobbingworth.
Its western boundary was that which is now common
to those two parishes. Its eastern boundary ran from
Bobbingworth Lodge in the north to the southern
boundary of Bobbingworth near Blake Hall railway
station. (fn. 5) Detached Part No. 2, of 543 acres, lay to the
north of Norton Mandeville. Its northern boundary
was part of that which now divides Norton Mandeville
from the parishes of Fyfield and Willingale. Its
southern boundary ran from the Roding at a point
about ¼ mile north of High Ongar Bridge east to the
present Norton Mandeville-Willingale boundary
near Bassett's Farm in Willingale. These detached
parts belonged to High Ongar until 1946, when
Detached Part No. 1 was merged in Bobbingworth
and No. 2 in Norton Mandeville. (fn. 6)
Reasons are given below (see Church) for supposing
that in about 1280 a substantial part of the then parish
of High Ongar was transferred to Stanford Rivers
(q.v.). It is suggested that High Ongar had previously
extended continuously from Marden Ash, south of
Greenstead and round to Ongar Park Hall and
Ashlyns, and that the southern boundary of this part of
High Ongar may have been the stream which joins the
Roding at Wash Bridge. It is further suggested that
the part of High Ongar which may have been transferred to Stanford Rivers about 1280 was this belt
between Marden Ash and Ongar Park Hall. This
transfer would have had the effect of making the
Ashlyns-Ongar Park section of High Ongar a detached
part of the parish. This detached part was known as
Bobbingworth hamlet or as Westwood hamlet.
Throughout most of its history Detached Part No. 1
has consisted of two estates: Ashlyns in the north, and
Ongar Park in the south. (fn. 7) Ongar Park was originally
part of the manor of Stanford Rivers (q.v.).
Detached Part No. 2 was separated from the main
body of the parish by Norton Mandeville (q.v.). In
1181 there was no church at Norton. The tithes from
the manor of Norton (Foliot) which belonged to St.
Paul's and which was later known as Forest Hall (see
below) were then payable to the church of High
Ongar.
The church of Norton Mandeville was built after
1181 and before 1190 on the manor of Norton
(Mandeville). It drew tithes from that manor but
there is no evidence that it ever received the tithes of
Forest Hall or those of the manor of Newarks Norton
(see below). This would seem to be the origin of the
second detached part of High Ongar, which included
the manors of Forest Hall and Newarks Norton. It is
possible that this detached part became for a time part
of the parish of Norton Mandeville and was restored
to High Ongar after the Dissolution, when the 1st
Baron Rich was trading in tithes and monastic lands
in these parishes. (fn. 8)
The main body of the ancient parish of High Ongar
now stands alone, without detached parts. It consists
of two sections, linked by a narrow neck of land. The
section to the south of Chipping Ongar is small, but it
includes Marden Ash. The name Marden goes back
at least to the 11th century and means 'boundary
valley': it suggests that this was the boundary between
Chipping Ongar and High Ongar even at that time. (fn. 9)
Cripsey Brook is the present northern boundary of this
part of High Ongar. The brook here joins the River
Roding which flows south-east across the neck of High
Ongar and forms the boundary of Marden Ash on the
east and south. The road from Chipping Ongar southwest to London rises steeply up Marden Ash Hill to a
height of 200 ft. above sea-level. Near the top of the
hill it joins the road to Brentwood and Tilbury, which
runs south-east and leaves the parish via Langford
Bridge (see Kelvedon Hatch). Most of the houses at
Marden Ash are built along these two main roads and
in the streets branching from them. In general the
character of Marden Ash is purely residential. The
sophisticated quality in some of the 18th- and early
19th-century houses is of special interest. It suggests
that the residents were not dependent on local resources.
Marden Ash House, described in 1768 as a 'seat',
was probably built by Nicholas Alexander late in the
17th century. (fn. 10) It retains a fine staircase of this period.
Externally the appearance of the house was entirely
altered in the middle of the 18th century, when it was
cased in red brick and a new front was added. The front
is of two stories with nine windows to the first floor. It
has a central doorway with half-round Ionic pilasters
and a pediment. There is a modillion cornice and a
parapet, with pedimented dormers above. Internally
there is some good mid-18th-century detail and a later
'Adam' ceiling. The oak overmantel in the Jacobean
style was carved in the 19th century. (fn. 11) The 18thcentury brick stable block has a clock turret and cupola.
North of the house is a consciously picturesque
gardener's cottage, probably dating from the late 18th
century. It is of one story with a deep thatched roof,
the eaves supported on rustic veranda posts. The
windows are pointed, with gothic glazing bars and
leaded lights.
Opposite Marden Ash House is Dyers, a much
smaller house which was also brought up to date in
the 18th century. Similarity of detail suggests a connexion between the two houses at this time. Dyers
may have a 16th- or 17th-century origin; there is a
mid- or late-17th-century window head on the north
side. The mid-18th-century front of plastered brickwork is not symmetrical, which suggests the adaptation
of an earlier building. Internally the house is extremely
rich in mid-18th-century decorative features, including
door-heads and overmantels. The fine staircase has
enriched strings and there is a Roman Doric order on
the half landing.
Houses which probably date from the second half
of the 18th century are the White House, near the
north end of the Brentwood road, the Two Brewers
Inn and houses near it on the Greenstead road, and a
red-brick house with a wall sundial on the main road
south of Ongar Bridge.
Grey End, formerly The Nook, appears to have
been a weather-boarded 18th-century house, part of
which was refronted in brick and stucco early in the
19th century. The altered part of the south front has
somewhat elaborate detail of the period.
Brewery Cottages, on the Brentwood road, were
probably built in connexion with the former brewery
at Dyers (see below). They are of whitewashed brick
and probably date from about 1830. Orchard Cottage,
built by Noble of Ongar in 1837, is a typical small
middle-class house of the period with a trellis porch
and sash windows. There are several fairly large late-19th-century houses, the most important of which is
The Gables, built in 1887 with additions of 1891 and
1894. (fn. 12) For some years before the Second World War
it was the Mary Macarthur Holiday Home for Working Women. (fn. 13) Most of the houses along the London
road were built during the second half of the 19th
century. Three cul-de-sac roads have houses of a later
date including seven pairs of red-brick council houses
in St. James's Avenue and three pairs in Landview
Gardens. Also in St. James's Avenue is the site of the
former St. James's Church. (fn. 14) There is a Gospel Hall
on the west side of Marden Ash Hill.
A quarter of a mile east of Marden Ash the Brentwood road is joined by the road running west from
Hallsford Bridge. Newhouse Farm, on this latter road,
is a timber-framed and plastered house dating from
about 1600. The original structure is L-shaped with a
small staircase wing in the angle. There may have been
a second cross-wing at the east end, giving the more
usual half-H plan. There are two rather closely set
gables at the front, decorated during the past 30 years
with imitation half-timbering. (fn. 15) The central chimney
has six octagonal shafts with moulded bases. There
are two original ground floor rooms, that to the west
having a very wide fireplace opening surrounded by
old carving reset. The east room is completely panelled
with a carved frieze and fine carved overmantel, all of
about 1600. If these fittings are in situ they suggest a
house of considerable status which is likely to have been
more extensive at the time it was built. Alterations
took place in the 18th century when a low two-story
wing was added at the back and most of the small
mullioned windows were replaced by larger casements. The two doorways are Georgian, one retaining
an earlier nail-studded door. Single-story additions at
the back of the house are of a still later date.
At Hallsford Bridge there is a brickworks. To the
east of the bridge the Stondon Massey road runs southeast, and Mill Lane, leading to High Ongar village and
the east part of the parish, runs north. This section of
the parish is bounded on the west by the Roding, from
which the land rises gradually to the east, reaching a
height of 300 ft. at Paslow Wood Common. The main
road from Epping to Chelmsford enters the parish in
the north-west by High Ongar Bridge across the
Roding. Near the bridge to the south of this road is
the rectory (see below, Church). High Ongar village
is ½ mile east of the bridge, lying along the road. Here
are the parish church, the village school, the village
hall, the post-office, and a small sawmill. There has
been a village in this place since the beginning of the
17th century and no doubt earlier, although in the
Middle Ages it may have been no more than a tiny
hamlet. In 1637 there were nine tenements in 'High
Ongar Street' belonging to the rectory manor (see
below, Church) and there may have been other houses
in the village not included in that manor.
The oldest surviving house in the village is the
timber-framed and weather-boarded building immediately east of the church; this dates from the late
16th or early 17th century and may have been built
as the rectory. It has a half H-shaped plan, the wings
projecting to the north. The front has two flanking
gables and the upper floor oversails across its entire
length. East of the centre is a brick chimney with four
octagonal shafts with moulded bases and joined caps.
The weather-boarding was probably added in the 18th
century and at some time the west wing was extended
northwards and further chimneys added. A small
lean-to shop, now the post-office, was added to the
front of the east wing, probably early in the 19th
century. There is also a single-story addition at the
back between the two wings. Before these extensions
were made the house probably had fourteen rooms.
The house is now divided into four tenements. Part
of it was at one time used as a lock-up, and the postmasters' tenement contains a small room that may have
been one of the cells. (fn. 16)
Opposite the church is a row of timber-framed houses
known as 'The Street'. They are fairly uniform in
character and probably date from the early or mid-18th century. The fronts, some altered, are mostly
roughcast but one pair is weather-boarded and the
Three Horseshoes Inn has timber framing recently
exposed. Several houses near The Street appear to be
of the same period, faced later with brick. The Tabor
almshouses (see Charities, below) were situated near
the post-office to the east.
Mill Lane, running south from the village, took its
name from the windmill which formerly stood to the
west of the lane ½ mile from High Ongar. (fn. 17) The Old
Cottage also on the west of the lane has diagonal shafts
to the chimney and is of the 17th century. Nash Hall
cottages are an attractive row with a mansard roof and
gabled dormers. There are 9 pairs of council houses
on the west side of the lane immediately south of the
village. Farther south on the same side are 7 pairs.
Behind these is Millfield, a council housing estate consisting of some 20 pairs of houses and 4 pairs of old
people's bungalows. It was built about 1948. Also in
Mill Lane is a small chapel (see Nonconformity, below).
Clatterford Bridge, in Mill Lane, spans a stream which
flows west to join the Roding.
South of the main Chelmsford road ¼ mile east of
the village is Nash Hall (see below). Chivers Hall (see
below) is north of the road 1 mile east of the village.
At Cozens Farm, on the road 1½ mile east of the village,
there is an incomplete moat. The house itself is not
older than the 17th century. It is timber-framed and
plastered and has an original chimney. Spurriers, ½
mile east of Cozens Farm, is a brick farm-house of the
late 18th or early 19th century. Half a mile east of
Spurriers is Norton Heath, a hamlet partly in High
Ongar and partly in Norton Mandeville. (fn. 18)
At Spurriers the main road is joined by the road
running south-west through Nine Ashes and Paslow
Wood Common to Stondon Massey. Bluegates, which
is ¼ mile south of Spurriers on this latter road, has a
late-18th-century front. Withers Pawne (see below),
now called The Rookery, is ½ mile south-east of
Spurriers. Rookery House, formerly called The
Rookery, is ¼ mile west of Withers Pawne. It is a substantial brick house built about 1870. Nine Ashes
Farm, now divided into tenements for the employees
of Paslow Hall farm, is probably of the early 18th
century. North of Nine Ashes the road is joined by
King Street, which runs north-west to the main road.
In King Street are Paslow Hall (see below) and Old
Thrifts (see Frith Hall). Old Withers, a timberframed and plastered farm-house, on the north side of
King Street, appears to be of the late 17th or early
18th-century. This is an ancient moated site, which
derives its name from the family of Richard Wyther
(fl. 1340). (fn. 19) The three-sided moat is now (1953)
being filled in. There are eight pairs of council houses
in King Street.
The village of Paslow Wood Common takes its
name from the common which formerly adjoined the
road here (see below). It has a primary school and a
mission church. There is fairly continuous building on
both sides of the road; most of this dates from the 19th
and 20th centuries and there is a large proportion of
small modern bungalows. Larkins Farm is a timberframed house, probably of the 17th century but encased
in red brick early in the 18th century. In the King
Street-Paslow Wood Common area there are several
18th-century cottages. In 1777 there were eight houses
around the common itself, but most of these have now
disappeared. (fn. 20)
There are several references in the Quarter Sessions
records of the late 16th and early 17th centuries to the
bad condition of the roads in the parish. It is significant
that most of the references concern the remote detached
part of the parish to the west of Bobbingworth. More
than one complaint was made of the lane between
Bobbingworth Green and Reynkyns Brook (apparently
the present main road, A. 122). (fn. 21) Both that detached
part and the main body of the parish were served by
the Epping-Chelmsford road which was turnpiked
late in the 18th century. A toll-gate was erected across
the road opposite High Ongar Church. The toll house
was sold in 1870. (fn. 22) It stood against the south wall of
the churchyard. (fn. 23) King Street probably owes its name
to the family of Richard le Kyng (fl. 1341). (fn. 24) The
most serious defect in the road system of the parish has
always been the absence of a direct road from Marden
Ash to Paslow Wood Common. The road from High
Ongar village to Paslow Wood Common is also somewhat roundabout. There is no reason to suppose that
these defects ever had serious social results, as did the
bad road system of Lambourne (q.v.). Marden Ash
could supply its social needs in Chipping Ongar. Until
the 18th century there were probably few residents at
Paslow Wood Common, and they were not far from
Blackmore.
High Ongar Bridge, which carries the main Chelmsford road across the Roding, has been important from
the 16th century and no doubt earlier. It was often
presented at Quarter Sessions as needing repair. In
1563 it was not known who should repair it. (fn. 25) In
1574-5 it was said to be the responsibility of the
county. (fn. 26) Complaints continued to be made about its
condition, and the county indicted for failure to repair
it. (fn. 27) In the late 17th century, however, considerable
sums were spent on its repair, and the county continued
to maintain the bridge. (fn. 28) In 1858 the county surveyor
made a detailed report on it; it was then a brick
bridge. (fn. 29) In 1913 it was rebuilt in concrete. (fn. 30)
A foot-bridge between Chipping Ongar and High
Ongar was also presented at Quarter Sessions at various
times in the 17th century. It apparently adjoined High
Ongar Bridge. (fn. 31) In 1677 the inhabitants of High
Ongar were indicted for not repairing the foot-bridge
leading to Brentwood-presumably a bridge at
Marden Ash. Hallsford Bridge is dealt with under
Stondon Massey.
For transport High Ongar has depended mainly
upon Chipping Ongar, and upon services along the
main Epping-Chelmsford road. High Ongar village
is now (1953) well served by buses between Epping
and Chelmsford, and also by those between Chipping
Ongar and Brentwood via Blackmore and Nine Ashes.
Marden Ash has buses to Romford and Brentwood
passing through and the terminus for the services to
Epping and to Brentwood via High Ongar is at the
foot of Marden Ash Hill.
A post-office at High Ongar is listed in 1856. (fn. 32)
Edward Knights was receiver between 1862 and
1890. (fn. 33) In 1895-1902 there was a sub-postmaster. (fn. 34)
The post-office was closed for a short time about 1905-
6, but was reopened after a petition from the parish
council. (fn. 35)
Water was supplied to High Ongar village in 1914
by the Herts. and Essex Waterworks Co. (fn. 36) Between
1894 and 1908 there were many complaints of foul
and open drainage ditches in the parish, but in spite of
this a proposal by Chipping Ongar for a joint sewage
scheme was rejected in 1901. (fn. 37) The main drainage of
High Ongar village had been completed by 1915,
although the school was not connected to the main
sewer until 1925. (fn. 38) There is main drainage on the
Millfield estate and at Marden Ash. The Ongar Gas
Co. supplied gas to Marden Ash, no doubt from its
early days. Marden Ash also received electricity when
Chipping Ongar was supplied in 1932. Gas was
supplied to High Ongar village in 1910, (fn. 39) and electricity
mains were extended there in 1935. (fn. 40) Paslow Wood
Common has electricity but no gas or main drainage. (fn. 41)
In 1895 the parish council considered that a policeman was needed in High Ongar village, (fn. 42) and one was
stationed there by 1898. (fn. 43) The constable was retained
until 1914 (fn. 44) but appears to have been withdrawn
during the First World War. In 1921 the parish
council examined complaints that the village youths
were disorderly and decided to apply for a resident
policeman. (fn. 45) The application was not immediately
successful, but there is now (1953) a policeman in the
village. (fn. 46)
A village hall was opened in High Ongar in 1925.
It had an original endowment of Mill Lane allotment
field, the income from which was to be used in the
maintenance of the hall. The trustees were to be a
committee of twelve elected residents. In 1928-34
the allotment field was sold in several lots for £187.
The money was invested and in 1949 brought in
£4 19s. 10d. This was supplemented by £119 18s. 4d.
raised by letting the hall for social and recreational purposes, including film shows. (fn. 47) A branch of the county
library was opened in 1928. (fn. 48) There was a club room
at Marden Ash in 1914, possibly in connexion with
St. James's Church. (fn. 49)
The Fane Memorial Nursing Home was set up by
a deed of 1901. (fn. 50) A public subscription in memory of
the Revd. F. A. S. Fane (d. 1894), for many years
Curate of Norton Mandeville, and chairman of the
Ongar Board of Guardians, had been used to buy
property fronting on the main road at Marden Ash and
this deed put the house in trust to be used as a home for
a nurse employed by the residents of Ongar Union. (fn. 51)
Before 1948 the house was for many years used by the
district nurse provided by the Ongar and District
Nursing Association. In 1949 the property was
transferred to the county council.
For much of its history High Ongar has been occupied mainly by tenant farmers. During the Middle
Ages the Waldens and Batailles of Ongar Park were
probably resident lords, from the 15th century to 1578
the Pawnes probably lived at Chivers Pawne, and from
the 16th century onwards the Stanes of Forest Hall
lived on their manor, but with these exceptions it is
doubtful whether any of the lords lived in the parish
until the 18th century. About 1730 the leading vestrymen were William Stane and William Baker (of
Withers Pawne). (fn. 52) By this time the Stanes owned the
manors of Newarks and Chivers Hall as well as Forest
Hall. A hundred years later their new mansion of
Forest Hall was the centre of an expanding estate of
more than 1,000 acres. (fn. 53) Meanwhile, in the detached
part of the parish adjoining Bobbingworth, the manor
of Ongar Park had been acquired by the Capel Cures,
of Blake Hall in Bobbingworth. Both the Stanes and
the Capel Cures let most of their land to tenant farmers,
but being themselves resident were in a position to
exercise fairly close supervision over the tenants. (fn. 54) In
1849 the parish contained some 20 farms of more than
30 acres. (fn. 55) Of these the largest (Paslow Hall) contained 705 acres. There were five others of more than
200 acres, six of 100-200 acres, four of 50-100 acres,
and four of 30-50 acres. In the previous year it had
been estimated that 2,500 acres of the parish were
arable and 1,500 acres were meadow and pasture. (fn. 56)
As these figures indicate, mixed farming was then, as
now, being carried on in High Ongar. In general this
applied to individual farms: in about 1820-30 Ongar
Park Hall farm (in High Ongar and Stanford Rivers)
consisted of 421 acres, of which 119 acres were pasture
and 302 acres arable. (fn. 57) In 1827-9 wheat, barley,
clover, and oats were the main crops. (fn. 58) Warden's
Farm in the same parishes contained 93 acres of pasture
and 176 acres of arable. (fn. 59) Newhouse Farm, on the
other hand, was entirely pasture (106 acres). (fn. 60)
The Capel Cures still live at Blake Hall (1953) but
the Newalls were not resident at Forest Hall after
about 1900 and their estate was broken up in 1919-20.
The largest farm of the estate, Paslow Hall, was
acquired as a dairy farm by the Stratford (now the
London) Co-operative Society. A previous tenant of
Paslow, Hugh Craig, attained distinction as a maker of
cheese. During the summer of 1904 he made several
Cheddar cheeses, using as much as 160 gallons of
milk. (fn. 61)
There is little information about inclosure in the
parish. Richard I granted Waltham Abbey 60 acres
assarts in the manor of Paslow. (fn. 62) Paslow Wood Common, which contained 83 acres, was inclosed in 1859. (fn. 63)
There was a windmill in Mill Lane in 1777. (fn. 64) The
mill was still working in 1874, but fell out of use soon
after. (fn. 65) A bakery was run in conjunction with it,
which continued after the mill itself had closed. (fn. 66) The
base of the old windmill, now an outhouse, stands in
the garden of Mill Cottage. It is of unusual octagonal
shape and has thick battered walls of red brick. The
cross-trees are still in position. The mill may date from
the 17th century. Mill Cottage, which included the
bakery, is probably of the same period. It has been
considerably extended by the present owners.
In 1833-4 and 1848 malting was being carried on
at Marden Ash by Henry Johnston. (fn. 67) In 1848 there
was also a brewer, Henry Saltmarsh, in the parish. (fn. 68)
In 1874 J. and J. Palmer were brewers at Marden
Ash, and their business was still being carried on in 1906
by E. J. Palmer. (fn. 69) The brewery was behind Dyers (fn. 70)
and must have been a flourishing concern if Brewery
Cottages (see above) were built to house its workers.
In 1823 a lacemaking school was established in or
near Marden Ash by Charles Walker, who took pauper
apprentices from local parishes. (fn. 71)
The brickworks at Hallsford Bridge were opened
about 1914. (fn. 72) Other occupations that have been noted
were mainly of the types common in rural areas, but a
marine store dealer and a fishmonger occur in 1886. (fn. 73)
There is now (1953) a sawmill opposite the church in
High Ongar village.
About 1220 there were two separate grants of a
fair in High Ongar, one to William de Monceux, lord
of the manor of Ongar (later Nash Hall), and the other
to the Rector of High Ongar. (fn. 74) In 1657 Quarter
Sessions suppressed a fair in the parish that was said to
have been held illegally. (fn. 75)