CHURCHES.
There was a priest at Enfield in
1086. (fn. 8) At about that date Geoffrey de Mandeville
gave a portion of the tithes, with pannage in the park
and woods, to his newly-founded priory at Hurley
(Berks.). His grandson Geoffrey, earl of Essex (d.
1144), gave the monks an annual rent of 100s. in
exchange for the tithes of Enfield and Edmonton,
which henceforth were to support the churches
there. (fn. 9) In 1136, however, the church at Enfield was
granted to the earl's foundation at Walden (Essex), (fn. 10)
although Hurley retained its rights of pannage in the
Chase and the tithe of nuts there until 1258, when
they were exchanged with Walden for the church of
Streatley (Berks.). (fn. 11) A single church served the
parish until 1831. (fn. 12)
The Enfield church was appropriated by Walden
before the end of the 13th century (fn. 13) and a vicarage
was ordained before 1254. (fn. 14) In 1538, at the
Dissolution, the rectory and advowson of Enfield
were granted to Sir Thomas Audley, later Lord
Audley of Walden, (fn. 15) who surrendered them in 1542
to the king. (fn. 16) In 1548 they were given to Trinity
College, Cambridge, (fn. 17) with whom they remained.
Vicars were appointed by the abbots of Walden until
1540, when Lord Audley presented; the Crown
presented in 1550 and Trinity College in 1556, as on
all subsequent occasions except 1579, when the
archbishop of Canterbury presented by lapse. (fn. 18)
Godfrey de Beston gave a house adjoining the
churchyard, which he had purchased from Richard
de Plessis, to Bartholomew, vicar of Enfield, between
1272 and 1289; a garden was later granted by
Richard de Plessis. (fn. 19) In 1291 the vicarage was valued
at £6 (fn. 20) and in 1535 at £26. (fn. 21) In 1649 the vicarial
glebe consisted of the vicarage house with barns and
outhouses, two orchards, a close of pasture, and 2 a.
in the common fields, and was worth £8 a year; the
small tithes, together with dues and oblations,
amounted to £50 a year. (fn. 22) When the Chase was
inclosed the vicar received 90 a. in lieu of tithes and
Trinity College, Cambridge, as patron, was empowered to add another 160 a. out of its own allotment on condition that the vicar should always resign
his college fellowship on accepting the living. (fn. 23) The
estate, later known as Vicarage farm, was settled
upon the benefice in 1778. (fn. 24) Under the inclosure Act
of 1801 a further 362 a. was granted to the vicarage
in lieu of tithes in the rest of the parish, including
175 a. between the Hadley and East Barnet roads,
47 a. near Crew's Hill, and 118 a. in the common
marshes and north of Turkey Street; 3 a. was given
in place of the glebe land in Churchbury field. (fn. 25) In
1835 the net annual income of the vicarage was
£1,174 (fn. 26) but the income from glebe lands had fallen
by 1870. (fn. 27) The vicarage house, a timber-framed
building on the western side of Silver Street,
appeared very old in 1795. (fn. 28) It was given a stuccoed
garden front of two storeys and five bays in 1801,
when other alterations were carried out, (fn. 29) and was
completely cased in brick in 1845. (fn. 30) After further
alterations it was still occupied by the vicar in 1972.
Baldwin Raddington, lord of Durants, was
licensed in 1397 to endow a chantry with property,
including Raddington bridge, worth £10 a year. One
or two priests were to celebrate mass daily in Enfield
church for the founder (fn. 31) but apparently they had
ceased to do so before the Reformation. Edward
Causton, vicar of Enfield, was licensed in 1471 to
found a chantry at St. Mary's altar in the parish
church for the souls of Robert Blossom (d. 1418) and
his wife Agnes. (fn. 32) The chantry was endowed with
land worth 10 marks a year at South Benfleet,
Hadleigh, and Thundersley (Essex), including the
manor of Poynetts in South Benfleet, and in 1548 it
supported a priest at Enfield. (fn. 33) The lands were
granted in 1548 to Walter Farre and Ralph Standish
of London (fn. 34) but later formed part of the endowment
of Enfield grammar school and the parochial
charities. (fn. 35)
The brotherhood of Our Lady at Enfield was
mentioned in 1464, when Walter Ford left 13s. 4d.
for an obit. (fn. 36) In 1484 John Ford gave a close and 3 a.
to support a brotherhood priest and Maud
Hammond later gave a tenement in South Street to
maintain the priest and for an obit. The brotherhood
was also endowed with 4 a. by Thomas Aylward,
a tenement by one Rotherham, and two crofts (fn. 37) and
1 a. by Hugh Ford, all for the performance of obits.
The income of the brotherhood c. 1500 was £3 13s.;
it owned the church house with a croft, which had
been bought by the parishioners, and supported two
priests, one of whom was expected to sing. (fn. 38) Its land
may have included the tenement at the 'steeple end'
of the parish church and the meadow called Prounces
which, with 2 a. of wood, were granted in 1549 to
John Hulson and Bartholomew Brokesby of
London. (fn. 39) Walter Baldwin, at an unknown date,
gave 3 a. of meadow for a light before St. Mary's
altar. (fn. 40) Some chantry land in Enfield was granted in
1549 to John Bellowe of Grimsby (Lincs.) and
Edward Streitbury of London, (fn. 41) and other lands
belonging to obits were granted to John Holson and
William Pendrede. (fn. 42)
There is no record of pluralism either before or
after the Reformation. (fn. 43) Thomas Thompson, vicar
1505 to 1540, and Henry Lockwood, vicar 1540-5,
were both masters of Christ's College, Cambridge.
Thompson opposed early reformers, who may have
been encouraged by Sir Thomas Wroth, lord of
Durants and an ardent Protestant; (fn. 44) in 1539 Thomas
Cromwell was told that the vicar had called the
English Bible 'the book of Arthur Cobler' and its
readers heretics, who had been seduced by a 'green
learning that will fade away'. (fn. 45) Thomas Sedgwick
(fl. 1550-65), who became vicar in 1556, was a
Romanist who had been Lady Margaret professor of
divinity at Cambridge University, 1554-6, and later
became regius professor there; he resigned the living
in 1557. (fn. 46) There was an assistant curate in the parish
in 1548. In 1631 Henry Loft of Enfield endowed a
lectureship at the parish church, where the lecturer,
appointed by the vestry, was to preach on Sunday
afternoons. (fn. 47) A lecturer was still being appointed in
the late 19th century. (fn. 48) William Roberts, vicar from
1616, is said to have been ejected from the benefice
in 1642; (fn. 49) a successor, Walter Bridges, was 'an able
and painful preacher' in 1649. (fn. 50) Daniel Manning,
vicar from 1659, was ejected at the Restoration and
died in the parish in 1666. (fn. 51)
In 1685 it was ordered that the communion table
be railed in. (fn. 52) There were two services each Sunday
in the parish church in the early 18th century, when
communion was celebrated monthly and at festivals. (fn. 53)
In 1766 prayers were being read in the church on
three weekdays by the lecturer, who was also master
of the grammar school. (fn. 54) In 1873 communion was
being celebrated weekly at 8 a.m.; the other Sunday
services were Matins and Evensong, with an extra
Sunday evening service at which all seats were free. (fn. 55)
An assistant curate was appointed frequently after
the end of the 18th century; (fn. 56) in 1823 his stipend,
£100 a year, was fixed by private agreement. (fn. 57) In
1849 the vestry opposed changes in the fittings of
the church which might affect its Protestant
character. (fn. 58) There was a dispute about ritualism in
1859, when J. W. Bosanquet of Claysmore formed a
'Protestant Association' to combat alleged popish
practices in the new church of St. John, Clay Hill;
accusations were later also levelled against the
services in Enfield parish church. (fn. 59) William
Maclagan (1826-1910), later archbishop of York,
was curate from 1865 to 1869 and is said to have
brought about a spiritual revival in the parish. (fn. 60)
The church of ST. ANDREW stands at the
northern end of the market-place, at the centre of
Enfield Town. (fn. 61) It is a rectangular building with
aisled nave and chancel, a western tower, and a south
porch. Most of the fabric of the church is 14th- or
15th-century, much restored, and the south aisle
dates from 1824. The walls of the older parts are of
ragstone, flint rubble, and brick, with Reigate stone
dressings; the south aisle is of brick. The east end of
the chancel is of the 13th century, the west tower is
probably a century earlier, and their relative positions suggest an early medieval church of considerable length. In the 14th century the chancel arch was
rebuilt and arcades were constructed along both
sides of the nave and chancel, implying aisles and
side chapels. The walls of the north aisle and chapel
were rebuilt early in the 16th century, probably to
give greater width; at about the same time the south
aisle and chapel were also rebuilt and a clerestory
was added to the nave. A timber-framed south
porch, with muniment room above, (fn. 62) may not be of
much later date. John Barley, by will dated 1500, left
money towards the rebuilding of the north chapel,
where he asked to be buried, and also to the building
of the new south chapel and to a new high altar. (fn. 63)
Carved stones between the clerestory windows seem
to represent the badges of Sir Thomas Lovell, of
Elsing Hall (d. 1524); in 1522-3 Sir Thomas spent
£11 on glass for the clerestory windows and for
carvings of badges and coats of arms in the church (fn. 64)
and in 1531 his widow, Eleanor, spent £3 on a
window there. (fn. 65) A staircase turret to the former
rood-loft projects from the north wall. The chapel
at the east end of the south aisle may have served
Raddington's chantry. (fn. 66) There were seven altars
besides the high altar shortly before the Reformation, the most important of which were St.
Mary's in the north and St. James's in the south
chapel. (fn. 67)
The roof and floor of the chancel were in a poor
state in 1685. (fn. 68) The church was 'beautified' in 1705 (fn. 69)
and repaired in 1771; a medieval doom painting on
wood, over the chancel arch, was removed when the
arch was widened in 1779 and later was apparently
destroyed. (fn. 70) The fabric was again decayed in 1787; (fn. 71)
Mr. Leverton of Great Queen Street was appointed
to repair it in 1789. (fn. 72) More repairs were carried out
in 1810, under the supervision of Edmund
Lapidge, (fn. 73) and in 1819 a new gallery was built in the
north aisle. (fn. 74) In 1824 the south aisle was replaced by
a larger brick one with three-light Perpendicular
windows and a gallery designed by William
Lochner. (fn. 75) Despite the vestry's earlier opposition, (fn. 76)
the medieval sedilia were restored in 1852, the pews
were altered under the supervision of J. P. St. Aubyn
in 1853, (fn. 77) and the choir was moved into the chancel.
The church was reroofed in 1866-7 and a choir
vestry built. (fn. 78) At another restoration in 1908 the
galleries were shortened and a chapel dedicated to
St. John was established at the eastern end of the
south aisle. (fn. 79)
There was a 'pair of organs' in the church in
1552. (fn. 80) By will dated 1751 Mary Nicholl left £900
to the parish to buy an organ and to pay an organist; (fn. 81)
the organ was built in 1752, probably by Robert
Bridge, and the large and impressive wooden case
survives, although the organ itself has been completely rebuilt. The organ was returned to its original
position in the west gallery in 1952, after being
removed in 1885 to the east end of the south aisle
and in 1908 to a corresponding position in the north
aisle. (fn. 82) Other fittings include a wooden bread shelf of
c. 1630 in the north chapel. The pulpit and eagle
lectern were presented to the church in 1866-7. (fn. 83)
The east window was largely obscured at the
beginning of the 19th century by a large oak altarpiece, which rendered the chancel 'gloomy and
dark'; the window was slightly enlarged before 1823
and stained glass was inserted (fn. 84) but in 1834 the
vestry ordered the churchwardens to open it up and
to replace the reredos with a less massive Gothic
screen, (fn. 85) itself replaced by a marble reredos in 1901.
The window's existing stained glass and Decorated
tracery date from c. 1873. (fn. 86)
Among the brasses is a figured plate to William
Smith (d. 1592) and his wife Joan. An altar-tomb
bears the finest brass in Middlesex, (fn. 87) to Joyce, Lady
Tiptoft (d. 1446), beneath a canopy of c. 1530. Other
monuments include kneeling figures commemorating
Robert Deycrowe (d. 1586), Robert Middlemore
(d. 1610), and Francis Evrington (d. 1614); a
cartouche flanked by Mannerist figures of Faith and
Charity, commemorating Martha Palmer (d. 1617);
a large wall monument in the north chapel to Sir
Nicholas Raynton (d. 1646), with stiff, recumbent
figures of him and his wife; and a standing wall
monument to Thomas Stringer (d. 1706) with a bust
under a tent-like canopy, against a slab remounted
by a broken pediment.
The plate includes two flagons dated 1786, four
cups, four patens, and a pewter alms-dish. (fn. 88) There
are eight bells: (i) and (ii) 1808, Mears; (iii), (vi),
(vii), (viii) 1724, Richard Phelps; (iv) and (v) recast
late 19th century. The sanctus bell, the earliest work
of William Wightman, is dated 1680. (fn. 89) The registers
are complete from 1550. (fn. 90)
The church of ST. JAMES, Enfield Highway,
was built as a chapel of ease in 1831 to the designs
of William Lochner on ground south of Green Street
given by Woodham Connop. (fn. 91) In 1834 a district was
assigned to the church, consisting of that part of the
parish of Enfield east of the Hertford road, and
thereafter the living, which was in the gift of the
vicar of Enfield, was described as a perpetual
curacy. (fn. 92) The church is a plain aisled building of
stock brick, in Commissioners' Gothic, with a
western tower and battlemented exterior. A chancel
in the Early English style was added in 1864. (fn. 93) There
were galleries round three sides of the nave by the
end of the century. The north and south galleries
had been removed by 1967, when a fire seriously
damaged the east end of the church. At the rebuilding the chancel arch was removed and a plain
sanctuary was built in continuation of the nave. (fn. 94)
JESUS CHURCH, Forty Hill, was built in 1835
at the expense of Christian Paul Meyer of Forty
Hall, who endowed it with £4,000 and 7 a.; a further
7 a. was given by Trinity College, Cambridge, in
1871. (fn. 95) The church became a perpetual curacy in
1845, with a district formed out of the parish of
St. Andrew. (fn. 96) The patronage has always been vested
in the vicar of Enfield. (fn. 97) The church, which was
designed by Thomas Ashwell in imitation of Holy
Trinity, Tottenham, (fn. 98) is a plain aisled grey-brick
building with lancet windows and turrets at the west
end. A south-east vestry was added in 1889 and the
chancel, in the Perpendicular style, was built in 1926
to the designs of A. E. Henderson. (fn. 99)
CHRIST CHURCH, Cockfosters, was built at
the expense of Robert Cooper Lee Bevan of Trent
Park in 1839. (fn. 1) The benefice, a perpetual curacy, was
in the gift of the founder and remained with the
Bevan family; in 1970 the advowson, which was held
by trustees, was styled a vicarage. (fn. 2) The church,
originally a plain building of stock brick, with lancet
windows and a tower with a short spire, was
designed by Henry Edward Kendall. In 1898 the
orientation was reversed when a north aisle,
transeptal chapels, chancel, and vestries were added
by Sir Arthur Blomfield. A new vestry and boilerhouse were added c. 1970. A church house was
opened in 1933. Services at the church have always
been Evangelical in character.
Services for the hamlet of Clay Hill were held
before 1847 in a building fitted up as a private chapel
by Edward Harman of Claysmore. In 1847 the new
owner of Claysmore, James Whatman Bosanquet,
in co-operation with the vicar of Enfield, established
a Sunday afternoon service in the chapel, (fn. 3) which was
attended by an average of 65 persons in 1851. (fn. 4) In
1858 the permanent church of ST. JOHN, Clay
Hill, was built as a chapel of ease to Enfield parish
church and financed by the sale of glebe land to the
New River Co.; it was consecrated in 1865. (fn. 5) A
district, formed out of the parish of St. Andrew and
the district of Jesus Church, Forty Hill, was assigned
to the new church in 1867. (fn. 6) The benefice, which has
always been in the gift of the vicar of Enfield, was
initially styled a perpetual curacy but a vicarage
from 1875. (fn. 7) The church, a small Gothic building of
polychrome brick inside and out, with a nave,
chancel, south porch, and western turret, was
designed by J. P. St. Aubyn. (fn. 8) Early manifestations
of Tractarianism were opposed by James Whatman
Bosanquet, who complained of 'mysterious mutterings' and ceremonies 'revolting to the feelings of
every good Protestant', as a result of which the
church was closed for a period in 1859 by the bishop
of London. (fn. 9) The vicarage house, in materials similar
to those of the church, was also designed by
St. Aubyn. (fn. 10)
A schoolroom near the junction of Chase Side and
Gordon Hill was licensed for services in 1871. (fn. 11) The
permanent church of ST. MICHAEL was built in
1873 on land given by George Batters of Brigadier
Hall and, as a chapel of ease, was served by clergy
from Enfield parish church. (fn. 12) A parish was formed
in 1931 and in 1970 the living was described as a
vicarage, in the gift of the vicar of Enfield. (fn. 13) The
church, which was designed by R. H. Carpenter, (fn. 14)
was left unfinished in 1874 because of lack of funds;
it is a ragstone building in a 14th-century style,
consisting of a three-bay aisled nave, a north
transept, and a vaulted apsidal chancel, arranged in
the Tractarian manner, with exposed brick walls.
The interior is spacious. The temporary west wall
was replaced in 1963 by a new stone wall with a
narthex.
The church of ST. MATTHEW, at the corner of
South Street and Church Road, Ponders End, was
built in 1877-8 as a chapel of ease to St. James,
Enfield Highway. (fn. 15) Incumbents have always been
appointed by the vicar of Enfield (fn. 16) and the living was
described as a vicarage in 1907. (fn. 17) The nave and
north aisle of the present church survive from the
original building, which was designed by H. J. Paull;
the chancel was added in 1900 to the designs of
J. E. K. and J. P. Cutts. (fn. 18) The church is a plain
Gothic building of Kentish ragstone.
The church of ST. MARY MAGDALENE, at
the corner of Windmill Hill and Ridgeway, was
opened in 1883 and financed by Georgiana Hannah
Twells of Chaseside House, as a memorial to her
husband Philip Twells, M.P. (d. 1880). (fn. 19) A district,
taken from St. Andrew's parish, was assigned in
1884. (fn. 20) The first incumbent, who was styled vicar
after 1885, was appointed by Mrs. Twells; (fn. 21) in 1908
and 1947 the advowson was in the hands of P. T.
Marshall (fn. 22) and by 1951 it was exercised by the
bishop of London. (fn. 23) The church, designed by
William Butterfield in a 14th-century style, (fn. 24) is a
large building of Kentish ragstone consisting of an
aisled nave and a lower chancel, with a western tower
and prominent spire. The lofty interior, an unusually plain example of the architect's work, has
windows filled with stained glass of different dates
and the chancel covered with paintings by Charles
Buckeridge, dated 1897, and by N. H. Westlake,
dated 1899; a wooden screen separating nave from
chancel was built in 1898, while a south chapel was
added in 1907-8. The adjacent vicarage, in 1974 no
longer used for the purpose, was designed by
Butterfield, while the church hall was built to the
designs of C. W. Reeves in 1894. (fn. 25)
An iron mission-room was built in Fourth
Avenue, Bush Hill Park, by the vicar of Enfield in
1885 and served by clergy from the parish church. (fn. 26)
The permanent church of ST. MARK, on the corner
of Main Avenue and St. Mark's Road, was consecrated in 1893 as a chapel of ease to Enfield parish
church. A parish was formed in 1903 and the vicar
appointed by the bishop of London, with whom the
patronage has remained. (fn. 27) The church, a spacious
aisled building with nave, chancel, and north and
south chapels, was designed by J. E. K. and J. P.
Cutts in a plain Early English style and built of red
brick with stone dressings; it was not completed
until 1915 and an intended north-west spire was
never built. A church institute was built in 1907.
Since 1910 the church has maintained an AngloCatholic form of worship.
There was a mission church dedicated to St. Luke
in Acacia Road in 1890. (fn. 28) The permanent church of
ST. LUKE, Browning Road, was later built on the
site of Brigadier House, partly at the expense of the
Revd. V. T. Macy, and was consecrated in 1900; the
nave was added in 1908. (fn. 29) A parish was formed in
1900 out of the parish of St. John, Clay Hill, (fn. 30) and
in 1970 the patronage of the living, a vicarage, was
in the hands of the bishop of London. (fn. 31) The church
is a large red brick building in the early Gothic style,
designed by James Brooks; (fn. 32) it contains an aisled
nave and chancel of the same height, with lower
north and south transepts and a pointed turret over
the east end of the nave.
In 1898 there was an iron church in Hertford
Road, Enfield Highway, (fn. 33) which was still in use as a
hall in 1973. An ecclesiastical district, taken from
the parishes of Jesus Church, Forty Hill, and St.
James, Enfield Highway, was annexed to the church
in 1901 (fn. 34) and the permanent church of ST.
GEORGE, Enfield Wash, was begun in 1900 and
completed in 1906. (fn. 35) In 1908 the living was
described as a vicarage, in the gift of the bishop of
London, with whom it has remained. (fn. 36) The church
is a large, gaunt, red-brick building in the early
Gothic style, designed by J. E. K. and J. P. Cutts;
it contains an aisled nave and chancel and the base of
a south-west tower which was not completed. (fn. 37)
Sunday evening services were held c. 1900-10 in a
wooden hut in the grounds of St. Ronan's, Hadley
Wood. (fn. 38) In 1911 a small church room in Camlet
Way was built of rusticated concrete blocks to the
designs of A. E. Kingwell and licensed for services.
In 1936 a small chancel was added and the building
was consecrated as the church of ST. PAUL, Hadley
Wood. The church has always been a chapel of ease
to Christ Church, Cockfosters, but has had a
resident curate since 1912 and has been managed by
its own church committee since 1930.
The church of ST. PETER AND ST. PAUL,
Ordnance Road, was built in 1928 to replace a
garrison chapel in the Royal Small Arms factory,
Enfield Lock, which existed in 1882 (fn. 39) and was closed
in 1921. (fn. 40) The new church, a plain brick building,
was a chapel of ease to St. James, Enfield Highway.
It was damaged by bombs in the Second World War
and later demolished; a new church was built to the
east, from the designs of Romilly Craze, and
consecrated in 1969. The church is a brick building
of simple plan with tall three-light windows, a
western narthex and baptistery, and a south-western
tower; in 1969 it became the mother church of a new
parish formed out of the parish of St. James,
Enfield Highway.
In the late 1920s services were held in a hall until
the church of ST. PETER, Grange Park, was built
at the corner of Vera Avenue and Langham Gardens
in 1941. A new parish was assigned from that of
St. Paul, Winchmore Hill, which previously had
served the district, and St. Andrew, Enfield, and the
bishop of London became patron. The church, built
of grey brick to the designs of C. A. Farey, consists
of apsidal chancel, transepts, and aisled nave. Among
many fittings from older churches, damaged during
the Second World War, is the marble font from
St. Catherine's, Hammersmith, previously in St.
Catherine Coleman, London (demolished 1926).
The bell, 1785, is from St. John's, Drury Lane. (fn. 41)
The mission church of ST. GILES, Bullsmoor
Lane, was built in 1954 to serve the northern part of
the parish of Jesus Church, Forty Hill. The plain
brick building with a wooden bell-turret serves as
both church and hall, and in 1971 the church was
served by a priest-in-charge. (fn. 42)