History of Barking in 1886, Kellys Directory part 2 , part 1
A
mission chapel, in connection with the Church of England, was erected in
Here is
a Catholic church, dedicated to SS Mary and Ethelburga, also Congregational,
Wesleyan and Baptist places of worship and a meeting place for Brethren; a
savings bank and Metropolitan police station.
In the
High Street stands the old market house, now used as a Town Hall; it has an
overhanging upper storey, and a portion of the wooden arcade is still remaining.
There
is a provident dispensary in Broadway, supported by subscriptions.
The
market has dwindled down to the exhibition of a few street stalls on Saturday
nights. A fair is held on October 23rd. Some smacks are built here
and there are sail lofts and rope yards. A large jute manufactory has been
established here.
A
considerable portion of Hainault Forest is in this parish, within the limits of
which formerly stood the renowned Fairlop Oak, the stem of which, at three feet
from the ground, measured 36 feet in girth, with boughs extending over a
circumference of 300 feet; under its shade for many years, a fair established by
Mr Daniel day, a block and pump maker of Wapping, was held on the first Friday
in July; but the tree is gone and Fairlop Fair now lives only in the records of
the past.
At
Uphall, a farm situated north of the town, are the remains of a fortification of
Roman origin, nearly 40 acres in extent.
The
North London main Drainage Sewer passes through the marsh lands on the banks of
the river Roding and the reservoir, or main outfall, is constructed on lands in
Barking parish, on the west side of
the mouth of Barking creek, and covers an area of nearly 10 acres; the reservoir
is constructed of brick, with stone flooring, and rests on foundations of
concrete 20 feet deep; it is divided into four compartments, and will hold
39,000,000 gallons of sewage, some of which is applied to agricultural purposes
at Lodge farm, near Barking, and the rest discharged into the Thames at high
water.
Eastbury House, about one mile from Barking, is an ancient and very spacious
gabled mansion of brick in the Domestic Tudor style; the buildings surround
three sides of a quadrangle, and include an octagonal tower rising above the
roofs, and a tall stack of curiously decorated chimneys; the mullioned windows
are retained, but the interior has been modernised; this house is connected by
tradition with the Gunpowder Plot, same accounts designating it as a meeting
place of the conspirators and others as the residence of Lord Monteagle; it is
now used as a farm house; the estate on which it stands belongs to the Sterry
family.
The
manor of Barking, which is paramount all over the hundred, remained in the Crown
till James I sold it to Sir Thomas Fanshawe; since then it has been in the
families of Humphrey and Gore; it was purchased of the latter by Smart
Lethieullier esq, and is now the property of Sir Edward Hulse bart, a descendant
of Mary, the last heiress of the Lethieullier family.
The
principal landowners are the marquess of Salisbury KG and Sir Edward Hulse bart.
The
parish contains 12,269 acres of land and 351 of water; rateable value £122,601.
The population of the entire parish in 1881 was 16,848. The population of
Barking ward and town in 1881 was 9,203.
Rippleside consists of a number of scattered farms, extending from 1 to 3 miles
east of Barking, near the bank of the