History of Romford, Hornchurch, Barking and Havering, Rainham, Wennington, Warley etc & Lots of Historical Essex & London Pubs
History of Barking in 1886, Kellys Directory,
part 1 - part 2
History of
Barking
Barking
is a town and station on the London, Tilbury and Southend railway, 7 miles from
Whitechapel church, 2 south from Ilford and 6 south west from Romford, on the
river Roding, which is navigable for barges from the Thames to Great Ilford; it
is a parish in the Southern division of the county, Becontree Hundred and petty
sessional division, Romford union and county court district, rural deanery of
Barking, archdeaconry of Essex, diocese of St Albans and is under the
jurisdiction of the Metropolitan police; it is separated from East and West Ham
and Little Ilford by the river Roding, from Dagenham by the Rom, having the
Thames on the south and is divided into four wards; Barking in the south west;
Ilford or Great Ilford in the north west; Chadwell in the north east; and Ripple
in the south east. At the mouth of the Roding creek on the
Thames
are gunpowder magazines. The town is governed by a local board of nine members,
who have recently sewered the town at a cost of £18,000; there are main and
intercepting sewers, with an outfall on land at Lady’s Marsh, where there are
precipitating tanks of concrete, each holding 300,000 gallons, the effluent
passing into the Thames. In May 1885, a portion of the new line of the
London,
Tilbury and Southend railway from this place to Pitsea was opened for traffic.
Barking
is called in the Domesday Survey “Burchungas”. Of the place little or nothing is
known until the foundation of the Benedictine abbey, about the year 670, by St
Erkenwald, bishop of London, in the reigns of Sebbi and Sighere, kings of the
East Saxons: the founder being grandson of Uffa, the first Saxon king of the
East Angles and the first bishop who sat in the see of London after the erection
of St Paul’s by King Ethelbert; this abbey was dedicated to the Virgin, and is
said to have been the first religious house established for women in the
kingdom. The original charter of endowment by Hodelied, father of King Sebbi, is
among the Cottonian MSS, in the
British
Museum;
but the names of the estates or lordships are so changed that it is utterly
impossible to trace them. William the Conqueror confirmed the original grants,
as did also the succeeding monarchs down to Henry VIII. The first abbess was
Ethelburga, sister of the founder; and it is a fact worthy of note as showing
the importance of the parish in past ages that most of the abbesses were at high
rank, and some of them of the blood royal; one being Oswyth, daughter of
Edifrith, King of Northumberland and another Ethelburga, wife of Ina,
king of the West Saxons. Mud, wife of Henry I, at one time swayed the destinies
of the monastery, as did also another Maud, wife of King Stephen; in succession
to whom Henry II appointed Mary, sister of St Thomas a Becket, as abbess: during
these periods several kings are related to have dwelt within the abbey walls,
and William the Conqueror is said to have taken up his abode here during the
building of his fortress in London. In 1376 a great inundation broke down the
banks of the Thames at Dagenham, the repairs of which greatly impoverished the
nuns; Eleanor (de Bohun), widow of Thomas Plantagenet (of Woodstock(, duke of
Gloucester, retired hither on the death of her husband in 1397 and here she died
3rd October 1399; here are Edmund and Jasper Tudor, sons of Catherine
of Valois, daughter of Charles VI of France and wife of Sir Owen Tudor, were
educated: the abbesses were appointed by the king till 1200 and held baronial
rank by virtue of their landed possessions. The abbey was surrendered to Henry
VIII, on the 14th November, 1539, at which time its revenues amounted
to £1,084 per annum, an annual pension of 200 marks (£133 6s 10d) being granted
to Dorothy Barley, the last abbess. The site of the monastery with its demesne
lands was leased by the king to Sir Thomas Dennye and not long afterwards
granted by Edward VI, to Edward Fynes, Lord Clinton, who immediately transferred
it to Sir Richard Sackville; subsequently it was again vested in the Crown, and
was granted by James I to Augustine Steward, who died seised of this property in
1628: in 1747 it was purchased by Joseph Keeling and is now held by Sir Edward
Hulse bart, of Breamore House, Salisbury: there is scarcely a vestige now
remaining of the once magnificent abbey, nor have any of the main buildings been
standing for centuries. Mr Lethieulier, when Lord of the manor, by digging about
the ruins, procured a ground plan of the abbey, or of some considerable portion
of it: in 1876 the foundations of the Ladye Chapel and the skeletons of two
abbesse, buried in front of the altar, were discovered in the grounds belonging
to the National Schools, a part of the site which does not appear to have been
excavated by Mr Lethieullier: at the entrance to the churchyard is an ancient
gateway tower of two storeys, with an embattled parapet: the upper stage formed
the chapel of the Holy Rood; this tower, although erected in the Decorated
period long subsequently to the foundation of the monastery, is sufficiently
interesting, from the fact that within its walls the curfew bell is said to have
tolled at eight o’clock; it is by some called the fire-bell gate and this may be
so, for the curfew bell was as well a note of alarm as an indication of the hour
of rest: during six months of the year one of the bells in the church tower is
still tolled nightly at eight and in the morning at five o’clock, merely as
perpetuating an ancient custom; another gateway, leading into the precincts of
the abbey, was pulled down in 1881.
The
church of St Margaret, a structure chiefly of Perpendicular date, with some
Norman and Early English features, consists of a chancel, nave, south aisle, two
north aisles running parallel to each other for the whole length of the building
and a lofty embattled western tower containing 8 fine toned bells; it was
originally appropriated to the monastery and previously to 1328 there had been
two vicarages in the church of Barking, distinguished as St Margarets on the
North and St Margarets on the South, but about this period they were united,
although it was not until 1398 that they were legally consolidated: in the year
1452 several disputes had arisen between Catherine de la Pole, the abbess,
daughter of Sir Michael de la Pole, and Sir John Greening, the vicar, which
being referred to arbitration, the vicar was awarded “provisions every day in
the convent for himself and servant so long as he should not be of a litigious
disposition, but if he should, without license of the abbess, hold any discourse
with the nuns, for the first offence he should lose his diet for a week and for
the second offence he should lose it for a month and if he offended a third time
he should be excluded the convent”: the church was not then endowed with any of
the great tithes: in the year 1536 an agreement was entered into between the
then abbess and vicar for the payment by the former of £10 yearly in lieu of
diet, and this sum the vicar still receives: among the fine monuments in the
church is one to Sir Charles Montague, of Cranbrook, representing his death on
the field of battle; and there is a mural tablet to Sir Orlando Humfreys: in the
chancel are brasses to Thomas Broke and Alice, his wife, 1493, with a son and
daughter; to John Tedcastell, gent and Elizabeth, his wife, 1596, with nine sons
and seven daughters and one of a priest, in academic dress, with chalice, the
inscription gone, c 1480: in the nave and south aisle are brasses to Elizabeth
Hobart, widow, 1590; Christopher Merell, citizen and goldsmith of London, 1598.
et 60 and his sister Anne Yardley, a widow, 1579 and an inscription, c 1530: the
chancel retains several aumbries: there are sittings for 930 persons. The
registers date from the year 1558. The rectory, which in 1541 had been leased to
Mary Blackenhall, consisted of all such tithes as had not been previously
leased; it subsequently fell into the hands of the
Crown, by whom it was sold in 1550 (together with the advowson of the
vicarage) to Robert Thomas and Andrew Salter; the greater portion of it
afterwards passed to the trustees of the will of William Pownsett, of Loxford,
steward to the last abbess), who being desirous of bestowing his substance on
charitable objects, gave the rectory and advowson to the warden and Fellows of
All Souls College, Oxford. The living is a vicarage, tithe rent charge £716,
with 6 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of
All
Souls
College,
Oxford
and held since 1882 by the Rev John Richardson MA of
Trinity
College,
Dublin,
and diocesan inspector of schools for Barking deanery.
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Updated in April 2008 by Kevan.
And Last updated on: Wednesday, 29-Jul-2009 18:56:25 BST
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