THEYDON BOIS
Theydon Bois is 2 miles south of Epping and 15 miles
north-east of London. (fn. 1) During the past 100 years much
building has taken place near the railway station and
many residents travel to work in London. In spite of
this the parish retains a number of rural features. The
village green is an attractive centre and part of the
parish lies within Epping Forest. Local people are
proud of their village and have formed the Theydon
Bois Rural Preservation Society. (fn. 2)
The ancient parish of Theydon Bois contained 2,198
acres. (fn. 3) In 1896 those parts of it lying within the Epping
Special Drainage Area were transferred for civil purposes to the newly formed Epping Urban District.
This affected about 60 acres in the north of the parish. (fn. 4)
In 1934 a small part of Theydon Bois was transferred
to Epping Upland (fn. 5) and in 1946 there were further
slight adjustments of the boundary between these two
parishes. (fn. 6)
Theydon Bois is the most westerly of the three
Theydon parishes. It takes its distinctive name from
the family of Bois (de Bosco) which held the manor in
the 12th and 13th centuries. (fn. 7) The parish is bounded
on the south by the River Roding. The ground rises
from about 75 ft. above sea-level by the river to 370 ft.
in the north-west, where the parish includes some 300
acres at the north end of Epping Forest. The road
from Abridge (in Lambourne, q.v.) enters the parish
by Abridge Bridge over the Roding and runs northwest through Theydon Bois to the 'Wake Arms' in
Epping Forest, where it meets the main road from
London to Newmarket and Norwich. At Theydon
Green in the centre of the parish the Abridge road is
joined by those going north to Epping and south to
Loughton. The railway, now part of the Central
London (Underground) line, runs north through the
parish to Epping. Theydon Bois station, on this line,
is ¼ mile east of Theydon Green. Theydon Green has
been a village since the 18th century or earlier and
retains a large open green and pond. The modern
parish church and the village school are on the northwest of the green and the Baptist church is on the southwest. Modern development has been mainly to the
north, south, and east of the green. There is a small
group of houses at Ivy Chimneys, in the north of the
ancient parish. This is in the ecclesiastical parish of
Theydon Bois and includes an iron mission room, but
for civil purposes it is in Epping Urban District.
Theydon Hall, which is on the site of the ancient
manor house, is about 1½ mile south of the green on
the Abridge road. Beside it is the site of the old parish
church, demolished in 1843. Theydon Hall ceased
to be the manor house early in the 17th century. Its
place was taken by Birch Hall, ½ mile west of Theydon
Green. The present Birch Hall is a 19th-century
house, but the name is derived from a medieval family
which no doubt had a house on the site. (fn. 8) The other
old manor house of Gregories was probably about
¾ mile north-east of the church, where there is still a
homestead moat. The modern Great Gregories Farm
is about ½ mile north-west of the moat. Parsonage
Farm is ¼ mile east of the railway station. (fn. 9) It probably
dates from the 15th century. The parish almshouses,
dating from the 18th century, are in Coppice Row. (fn. 10)
In the Middle Ages Theydon Bois was a thinly
populated rural parish. In 1428 it was one of the few
parishes in the hundred which were exempted from
taxation because they contained fewer than 10 households. (fn. 11) In addition to those already mentioned there
was probably a medieval house to the north of Theydon
Green where traces of a rectangular moat could still be
seen at the end of the 19th century. (fn. 12) Gaunts Wood
and Redoak Wood, ¼ mile south-west of Theydon
Green, take their names from medieval tenants, whose
houses may have been in the neighbourhood. (fn. 13)
Chapman and Andre's map of 1777 shows about a
dozen houses round Theydon Green but few others
in the parish apart from those above. (fn. 14) Blackacre Farm
is shown, ¼ mile south of Theydon Green. It is a
timber-framed and plastered house now surrounded by
buildings of a much later date. Details which survive
are of the 17th century but subsequent alterations have
made it impossible to trace the original form of the
house. One chimney retains parts of four octagonal
shafts and two more, which originally had diagonal
shafts, have moulded brick cappings at the base. Internally there is a 17th-century staircase with moulded
newels and pendants and heavy turned balusters.
In general there are few buildings in the parish that
are earlier than the 19th century. At Theydon Green
the Bull Inn, part of it of the 17th century, still stands.
A smithy and wheelwright's shop stood near by in
1848. (fn. 15) Between the 'Bull' and the 'Queen Victoria'
is a row of weather-boarded cottages probably built
early in the 18th century. Facing the green on its east
side are a few scattered cottages which may date from
the 17th century or earlier. By the early 19th century
there were a number of cottages in the northern part
of Coppice Row. There were also some in the north
of the ancient parish, now part of Epping Urban
District. (fn. 16) In 1801 the population of Theydon Bois
was 334. (fn. 17) It rose to 676 in 1831 but sank to 538 in
1841. It was 591 in 1851 and 610 in 1861.
The extension of the railway from Loughton to
Epping and Ongar in 1865 had a rapid effect on
Theydon Bois, and must be held mainly responsible
for building development there during the later 19th
century and after. Building had, however, started a
little before 1865, perhaps in anticipation of the railway extension. In Theydon Bois, as in Loughton (q.v.)
and the other forest parishes, there was a strong movement to inclose the forest, and in some cases to clear it
for building. (fn. 18) As early as 1848 the sites of the houses
now called Manor Villas were laid out on newly
inclosed land to the north of Theydon Green. (fn. 19) The
houses themselves were built between 1870 and 1872.
Farther north, beyond the golf course, are houses of
similar character standing in good gardens. The most
imposing of these is Theydon Towers, dating from
about 1880. It is an irregularly shaped house of brown
brick with a four-story tower-like feature forming part
of the entrance front. In this area there are also some
largish houses of a later date. Building in this area was,
however, checked by the preservation of Epping
Forest.
Elsewhere the development, although extensive, is
composed of smaller units. Terrace houses on the
south-west side of Theydon Green date from between
1890 and 1910. Theydon Park Road, which leaves
the Green at its south corner and finally becomes an
unmade track parallel to the railway, is built up with
small houses and bungalows. Some of these date from
the late 19th and early 20th centuries but the majority
were built between the two World Wars. Two culde-sac roads on its west side are of similar character.
A new shopping centre has been formed immediately
west of the station and a large new residential area
is under construction between here and Piercing
Hill.
There were formerly two 'Retreats' in Coppice Row
about 100 yards west of the parish church. Both were
destroyed by German bombs in the Second World
War (fn. 20) together with four houses on the north side of
the road.
Red Oaks Mead is an estate on the north-west side
of Loughton Lane consisting of ten pairs of roughcast
council houses built before the Second World War.
Opposite this a post-war layout is known as Graylands.
Here there are 40 council houses, including some old
people's bungalows. Green Glade and Pakes Way are
two new crescent-shaped roads on the east side of
Theydon Green. They form a large council housing
estate, recently completed.
The population of Theydon Bois has naturally
reflected these developments. It increased steadily to
1,257 in 1901 and then remained almost stationary for
20 years. There was an increase from 1,267 in 1921
to 1,504 in 1931. (fn. 21) The population in 1951 was
2,665. (fn. 22)
Until the construction of the new road between
Loughton and Epping early in the 17th century the
main road from London to Newmarket and Norwich
was via Abridge Bridge and Coopersale (in Theydon
Garnon, q.v.), and part of it thus ran through Theydon
Bois. (fn. 23) After the 17th century the parish roads were
of purely local importance. There was a full report on
them in 1720. (fn. 24) When the railway was built it crossed
the Abridge road by a level crossing. This was replaced
about 1940 by a bridge, and the road itself was transformed from a winding country lane into a good motor
road. (fn. 25)
The bridge between Abridge and Theydon Bois has
already been treated under Lambourne (q.v.). Theydon
Bois was sometimes held responsible for the foot-bridge
which lay alongside Abridge Bridge. In 1625 the
inhabitants were indicated because of its ruined condition. (fn. 26) In 1652 it was described as a 'long footbridge'
to be repaired by the county. (fn. 27) In 1665 it was said to
be impassable; again the county was responsible. (fn. 28)
Until the coming of the railway Theydon Bois was
dependent for communications with the outside world
mainly upon coaches and other horse transport using
the main roads via Epping and Loughton, to north and
south, and via Abridge to the east. Travel to the west
was for long difficult and dangerous because of the
barrier of Epping Forest. There was indeed a road
through the forest from Theydon Bois as early as
1594, (fn. 29) but the prevalence of highway robbery there,
which was still a menace in the late 18th century, (fn. 30)
must have deterred travellers from using this route.
The branch railway line from London, which had
been carried as far as Loughton (q.v.) by 1856, was
extended to Epping and Ongar in 1865, and Theydon
Bois station on this line was opened in the same year. (fn. 31)
The section of the line as far as Epping was electrified
in 1949, and became part of the Central London
Line. (fn. 32)
In 1853 a sub-postmaster was appointed on the
understanding that his wife performed the duties. (fn. 33) In
1867 the post-office there was reorganized. (fn. 34) A moneyorder office was established in 1886 and a telegraph
extension in the same year. (fn. 35) The telephone was established by 1921. (fn. 36)
Water was supplied by the Herts. and Essex Waterworks Co., about 1884. (fn. 37) Main drainage presumably
existed before 1896 in the parts of the parish which
were then part of the Epping Special Drainage Area, (fn. 38)
and there is now drainage in most of Theydon Bois. (fn. 39)
Gas was first supplied (from Epping) in 1872. (fn. 40)
Electricity was laid on in 1928. (fn. 41) A police station has
existed since about 1886. (fn. 42) A branch of the county
library was opened in 1928. (fn. 43) There are two public
halls, both temporary wooden buildings erected since
1946. (fn. 44) One is a church hall, the other a village hall.
There are many village organizations, including a
branch of the United Nations Association. Most of
them are linked by the Village Association, in which is
vested the management of the village hall. (fn. 45) There is a
playing-field behind the hall. The Theydon Bois Rural
Preservation Society was formed about eight years ago
'to preserve the rural character of the countryside in
and around Theydon Bois as an appropriate and natural
setting to Epping Forest'. (fn. 46) It has helped to produce a
parish guide, issued by the parish council.
Apart from the distributive trades in recent times no
occupations unconnected with the land have been
important in the life of the parish. In the 19th century
there was brickmaking on a site north of Birch Hall
Farm now occupied by Oakhill Farm. (fn. 47) In this
parish, as elsewhere in the district, mixed farming is
carried on. In 1849 it was estimated that there were
709 acres of arable, 956 acres of meadow or pasture,
and 86 acres of woodland in Theydon Bois. This was
exclusive of 345 acres of forest waste which lay within
Epping Forest. (fn. 48) At the same date there were some 15
farms in the parish of over 20 acres, the largest of which
was Theydon Hall Farm with 261 acres. About 8
were over 100 acres. (fn. 49)
Theydon Bois lay only partly within the bounds of
the royal forest. It was stated in 1872 that of 2,176
acres in the manor of Theydon Bois 800 acres lay outside the forest. (fn. 50) The movement to disafforest and
inclose Epping Forest has been described above (see
Loughton). At Theydon Bois, as at Loughton, the
Crown was negotiating, during the 1850's, for the sale
of its forestal rights to the lord of the manor. In 1857
R. W. H. Dare bought those rights for the area of his
manor at a cost of £1,353. (fn. 51) Between 1857 and 1871
he and his son inclosed over 300 acres of the forest. (fn. 52)
Inclosure was halted by the action of the government
in the first Epping Forest Act. As a result of the Epping
Forest Act, 1878, most of the forest area in Theydon
Bois was again thrown open and became subject to the
provisions of the Act for the future preservation of the
forest. At Theydon Bois the inhabitants claimed ancient
rights of estovers, exercised, as at Loughton, from 12
November in each year to the following 23 April.
These rights were recognized by the Act, which provided for their extinguishment in return for compensation. (fn. 53)
James Theodore Bent (1852-97), explorer and
archaeologist, married (1877) a daughter of R. W. H.
Dare. He is buried at Theydon Bois. (fn. 54) Frances Mary
Buss (d. 1894), pioneer of education for women at her
North London Collegiate School, is also buried
there. (fn. 55) For John Strype (1643-1737) see below,
Church.