Who lived in your house 80 years ago today?

Do you know who lived in your house 80 years ago today?…

Exactly 80 years ago today, a remarkable event took place in Britain…

The compulsory National Registration of every single person living in Britain.   
 
And, as a direct consequence, every single home was registered with full details of each homeā€™s occupants.
 
80 years ago this month Britain declared war on Germany after the invasion of Poland.
 
It was the inevitable. But preparations for evacuating children out of dangerous areas ā€“ such as London – had been taking place for weeks.
 
This from the ā€œLog book of Wilson Marriage Senior School – Colchesterā€

24 August 1939 – Headmaster returned to school to complete arrangements for reception of evacuees from London
 
25-30 August 1939 – ground floor room ‘prepared for darkening’, emergency rations for evacuees received and stored in Handicraft Room
 
31 August 1939 – all staff recalled
 
1 September – 809 evacuees passed through school
 
2 September – 1159 evacuees passed through school
 
3 September – 1362 evacuees passed through school
 
4 September ā€“ 115 evacuees passed through school
 
School reopened, girls to attend in morning, boys in afternoon, four air raid shelters ready, children allocated to air raid shelters with two teachers in charge of each, air raid drill, arrangements made to protect boiler room, instructions to caretaker for turning off gas and electricity

From ERO reference E/E 274/7/8

Schoolchildren who had assembled for evacuation at Myrdle School in Stepney at 5am on 1 September 1939. Ā© IWM (D 1939A)

On the 29 September 1939, the government undertook a massive exercise to register every single person in Britain and where they were living on that precise day. 

Everyone was issued with an identity card. 

Now known as the ā€œ1939 National Registerā€, the register is a remarkable glimpse into the world of people and places at the outbreak of war.


 
You can learn who lived in your house in 1939 by looking at this register. The number of people in your home, their dates of birth, and occupations.  If any children with different surnames were living in your home on 29 September 1939, then possibly they were evacuated children.
 
The 1939 Register is a precise point in history where you can discover who lived in your home on that day. 
 
There are several other points in history where you can find accurate details about your home and its occupants.  Even down to its exact layout on your villageā€™s/townā€™s map and the number of rooms in your house.
 
Specific reference points that can give you stories of your home. Both the building and its occupants.
 
Want to learn more and uncover your homeā€™s secret history?
 
Enrol on my online course ā€“ enrolment now open.

 

 

PS Did you know… that the 1939 National Register was used as a living breathing “working document” by the NHS right up to their computerisation in the 1990s? 

 

 

 

Post updated: April 2020
Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2020

How would you like to uncover the secrets of your home?

What mysteries does your home hold?
What ghoulish secrets does your house conceal?
Did high drama play out between your four walls?
 
You donā€™t have to live in a medieval mansion for your home to be interesting. 
 
Maybe youā€™re in a Victorian cottage ā€“ like the ones in Lavenham. Today beautiful red-brick homes, but originally built to house Lavenhamā€™s 18th and 19th century workers.

Such as the tiny cottages built by master woolstapler, Thomas Turner (1784-1864).

Or you live in a converted Victorian school ā€“ as I once did.  My first flat in those heady days of the 80s when converted flat cost Ā£41,500.  My ā€œmust-haveā€ first home!

Whether you live in a fine Tudor hall-house or a humble one-up, one down, all homes have their own story to tell.


 

If walls really could talk, then you would easily find out your homeā€™s riddles.  
 
But, sadly, your four walls probably remain enigmatically quiet and mysterious.
 
The next best thing to talking wall is to join me on my unique online course
 

I’m pleased to announce that enrolment is now open. Click the link above.

I canā€™t promise you that a witch once lived in your house. Or youā€™ll discover that an infamous murder took place. 
 
But I can promise you that you will enjoy the thrill of the chase as your homeā€™s journey through time is pealed back layer by layer. 
 
Begin your journey todayā€¦and find out more by clicking the link below.

 

I do hope you join me on a journey of discovery.

PS The first presentation of my course is offered to you at a very special price.  This price will not be offered again.
 

Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2019

The Reformation and the impact on the history of your house

The story of your house

Click the link to learn more about my unique online course that guides you in tracing the secret history of your home Ā 

https://essexvoicespast.thinkific.com/courses/Spring-2020-House

All over the landscape in England and Wales there are still signs (literally) of our medieval past.

Trace the history of your house | Carmelite Way, Maldon

Carmelite Way, Maldon

The past that we once had before Henry VIII destroyed one of the biggest ā€œsystemsā€ in English/Welsh history.

Look around the towns and villages where you live. Can you see signs that a monastic building was once in your midst?

Where I live in Essex, the county was once full of monasteries ā€“ weā€™ve looked at several this week.

But there were others in Essex, now long gone with not even fragments of ruins left. But they can still be found in the names of houses, roads and communities.

ā›ŖļøĀ Stansgate Abbey Farm: although this name is slightly misleading as it implies a great abbey once stood here. This was shut in an earlier round of Henry VIIIā€™s closures ā€“ shut in 1525 long before the king broke with Rome. Shut because the ā€œAbbeyā€ only had a prior and 2 monks! So, this was not a great and powerful Abbey like the one Bury St Edmunds. But its name still lives on in the areaā€™s landscape.

ā›ŖļøĀ Priors Green in Little Canfield: a modern naming invention, but various town plannersā€™ and developersā€™ reflection back to Thremhall Priory (closed in 1536).

ā›ŖļøĀ Priory Lane in Tiptree: a name reflecting Tiptree Priory ā€“ closed in 1525 (another early closure by Henry VIII). Purchased in 1547 by the powerful Dā€™Arcy family. The current house built by Englandā€™s first witchfinder, Brian Dā€™Arcy. He lived here in 1570s until he moved to St Osythā€™s former abbey (where he proceeded to create havoc and unhappiness in 1582 by accusing numerous locals of being witches).

ā›ŖļøĀ Friary Field/Friary Lane/Carmelite Way in Maldon: names reflecting the siteā€™s former use as Maldon’s Carmelite Friary.

Next time you park your car in Maldon, think on – this area was once part of the lands of the Friary and five hundred years ago walked monks tending their gardensā€¦

And where in 1540 in the ruins of the priory was performed a very anti-Catholic play, Saint John the Baptist, written by the granddaddy of all English dramatists, Dr John Bale.

House-history course | Dr John Bale, Maldon's last Prior

Dr John Bale, Maldon’s last Prior, and probably England’s first Protestant playwright.

The story of your house…

Are there any houses or road names or areas near you that reflect the fact that there was once a monastic building where you live?

If you are fascinated about the history of your home, then youā€™ll be interested in my new online course

šŸ” If Walls Could Talkā€¦
Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”

Enrolment is now open…

Course commences on Monday 30 September 2019

I hope youā€™ll join me and take part in this fascinating course. Learn how you can trace the history of your home.

As this is the first pilot version of my course, itā€™ll be offered at a very special low price that will not be repeated.

Click the link to learn moreĀ https://essexvoicespast.thinkific.com/courses/house2019

Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2019

The Reformation’s and the English Landscape…Part 2

Tracing your house’s history

Click the link to learn more about my unique online course that guides you in tracing the secret history of your home Ā 

https://essexvoicespast.thinkific.com/courses/Spring-2020-House

Tracing the history of your house isn’t just about the physical bricks and mortar building. Or, in many cases, flint, or stone, or wattle and daub or timber framed structure.

It’s also about the land your house is on…Including former monastic land

The other day, we looked at several monasteries that were forcibly closed by Henry VIII in the 1530s. We also looked at how the Reformation was one of the largest visible attacks on the English landscape. Scars that are still visible today. Some scars more subtle then others…

All over England and Wales are remnants of great monastic buildings. Essex is no exception, with immense religious houses that were dissolved by the kingā€™s men in the 1530s, still present today.

Beeleigh Abbey, Maldon, Essex

Here is another former medieval monastery, today a private residential house ā€“ Beeleigh Abbey in Maldon.

Trace the history of your house | Beeleigh Abbey, Maldon

Beeleigh Abbey, Maldon

In 1536, the abbey was valued as having a yearly value of Ā£196 6s. 5d ā€“ a substantial sum for the time. This was a reasonably wealthy Abbey ā€“ maybe not as rich and powerful as great abbeys elsewhere ā€“ such as the majestic (and far too powerful) abbey at Bury St Edmunds.

But valuable, nonetheless.

When Beeleigh Abbey was closed in the 1530s, the Abbot was pensioned off at the yearly rate of Ā£18 (approximately Ā£8,000 in todayā€™s money).

Remember, Henry didnā€™t have to pay pensions ā€“ he forcefully seized the monasteries and personally decided if its heads received a pension. Not all did. The Abbot at Beeleigh Abbey was lucky…

After the abbey was closed, on 6 June 1536, an inventory was taken of the contents of Beeleigh Abbey. There were

šŸ“œtapestries and other articles of furniture in the different chambers (the great chamber, the children’s chamber, the dining chamber). [The question here is – whatā€™s a childrenā€™s bedroom doing in an abbey supposedly solely inhabited by male monks!!!]

šŸ“œbeds and bedding;

šŸ“œmalt and implements in the brewhouse;

šŸ“œa table of alabaster at the high altar (valued at 13s. 4d.), with altar-cloths, mass-books, etc.,

šŸ“œornaments of the Lady chapel (including a pair of organs at 100s.), the Jesus chapel, the rood chapel, the chapel of St. Katharine and the vestry;

šŸ“œarticles in the kitchen, buttery and infirmary;

šŸ“œcattle;

šŸ“œwith some plate remaining in the hands of the commissioners. [ie the kingā€™s men nicked some of the abbeyā€™s gold and silver before it was properly recorded!!!!]

šŸ“œThe goods were valued at Ā£74 18s. 10d., cattle worth Ā£31 15s. and corn worth Ā£14 3s. 8d.

šŸ“œThe debts due to the house amounted to Ā£32 11s. 2d., and those due by it Ā£121 18s. 4d.,

šŸ“œThere were 129Ā¾ ounces of plate [ie gold and silver], valued at Ā£23 16s. 6d.

(Inventory above from ā€œHouse of Premonstratensian Canons: Abbey of Beeleigh by Maldonā€, Victoria County Histories, 1907)

After it was shut in 1536 and its Abbot pensioned off at Ā£18 per year, Beeleigh Abbey was granted to Henryā€™s friend, Sir John Gates, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. Sir John was a very active supporter of the Dissolution of the Monasteries and Henry VIII. Being granted Beeleigh Abbey was his reward.

However, the Tudor period were troubled times ā€“ back the wrong person and it was literally ā€œoff with your headā€.

In 1553, after the death of Henryā€™s son and successor, Edward VI, Sir John backed the wrong side. He was part of the attempt to place the ill-fated Tudor pawn, Lady Jane Grey, onto the English throne instead of Henryā€™s Catholic daughter, Mary.

His reward for this doomed and disastrous conspiracy was to misplace his head on Tower Hill in August 1553.

Being granted Beeleigh Abbey by Henry VIII certainly didnā€™t bring Sir John good fortune!

After the Tudors, the former abbey passed through the hands of many owners. Most famously, the ownership by the Foyle family ā€“ the renowned booksellers. The story of its role as the home of the Foyles is well-documented.

However, it is its past as an religious abbey that has always interested me and the role that this, and other monasteries, played in medieval and Tudor England.

Beeleigh Abbey’s tunnels…

Incidentally, there has long been a rumour that there was/is a network of underground tunnels that run from Beeleigh Abbey through to All Saints Church in Maldon. And that when the Abbey was forcefully closed in the 1530s, the monks escaped through this network of tunnels to All Saints church.

I donā€™t doubt for one moment that this network of tunnels did once exist – and are probably still there, deep underground. However, I strongly argue that not a single monk used these tunnels to escape to All Saintsā€¦

I can assert this for several reasons.

Firstly, the Abbot was granted a pension. If his monks had rebelled and fled, then the Abbot would not have been granted this pension.

Henry did not take kindly to trouble-makers. If you were lucky, you ended up on Tower Hill – if unlucky then the fate of either being burnt at the stake or being hanged drawn and quartered awaited you – monks included.

Rebelling fleeing monks and an abbot being granted a yearly substantial pension simply does not add up.

Secondly, thereā€™s no known uprising when Henry shut the monasteries in Essex. There was certainly trouble in the north of the country ā€“ but not in Essex.

But, for me, more conclusively that the monks didnā€™t flee to All Saints is that the vicar was most certainly NOT sympathetic to the Catholic cause.

The vicar of All Saints church at the time Beeleigh Abbey was closed was William Walton, a man who was also the vicar of St Maryā€™s in Great Dunmow (in those days, men could ā€“ and were – vicars of two or more parishes).

William Walton was a very early Protestant ā€“ in the days when it was dangerous to openly declare yourself as such. Walton associated with many other early Protestant men such as Dr John Bale – one of the last Priors of Maldonā€™s Carmelite Monastery.

Despite previously being a devout Catholic monk and Prior, Dr Bale became a staunch Protestant. He was so Protestant that in 1540 he performed a very inflammatory anti-Catholic play in the ruins of the Carmelite Friary in Maldon ā€“ watched (and partially financed) by the vicar of All Saints, William Walton.

News of Dr Baleā€™s activities and his plays quickly reached the ears of the king, and Bale fled abroad in 1540 to evade Henryā€™s vengeful wrath.

The vicar of All Saints in Maldon, William Walton was a loyal friend of Dr John Bale. Thus, he had firm Protestant tendencies ā€“ these tendencies can also be seen in his other parish in Great Dunmow.

There is absolutely no way that vicar Walton would have protected fleeing monks from Beeleigh Abbey.

So whilst I do believe that these secret tunnels did/do exist and were used in medieval times, they certainly werenā€™t used to protect fleeing monks.

Dr John Bale and his role in the Carmelite Friary in Maldon has always fascinated me. He wrote and performed many anti-Catholic plays all over the east of England ā€“ including the one performed in Maldon ā€“ and was financially supported by the likes of Thomas Cromwell and the Earl of Oxford.

Today, Dr Bale is becoming widely acknowledged and celebrated by scholars as the forerunner to Shakespeare.

The granddaddy of English playwrights was right here, in sleepy Tudor Maldon!

And he is my final proof that the Protestant vicar of All Saints church would not have accepted fleeing Catholic monks.

Thus, all the evidence points to the fact that those tunnels between Beeleigh Abbey and All Saints Church were definitely not used by fleeing monks in 1536…

I digress…again…

The monasteries…

Weā€™ve looked at monasteries that fell into ruin and are now scars on the English countryside ā€“ reminding us of a more troubled times five hundred years ago.

Monastic buildings such as

ā›ŖļøĀ Greyfriars Friary in Dunwich, Suffolk;
ā›ŖļøĀ The great powerful abbey at Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.

Weā€™ve also looked at monasteries that were given away (or sold) by Henry VIII to his favourites and were later used as houses. For example,

ā›ŖļøĀ Walden Abbey in Saffron Walden – now the World Heritage Site, Audley End House;
ā›ŖļøĀ Beeleigh Abbey in Maldon ā€“ now a private residence.

These are just a few of those former monasteries that have merged into todayā€™s landscape. Every single county in England and Wales will have examples of monasteries in ruins, or monasteries incorporated into todayā€™s homes.

Former monasteries were also incorporated into todayā€™s parish churches. Here in Essex a few instantly spring to mind

ā›ŖļøĀ St Andrewā€™s parish church in Hatfield Peverel. Originally the church was attached to Hatfield Peverelā€™s Priory (closed in 1536)

ā›ŖļøĀ St Mary the Virgin parish church in Tilty. Part of todayā€™s church was once a ā€˜chapel outside the gates of Tilt[e]yā€™s Abbeyā€™ (Abbey closed in 1536). Today, the once magnificent Tilty Abbey has totally vanished ā€“ apart from a couple of tiny ruins.

ā›ŖļøĀ St Mary the Virgin parish church in Little Dunmow. In medieval/Tudor times, the village was known as either Dunmow Parva or Dunmow Priory. The latter name an acknowledgement to the Augustinian Priory that stood in the village (closed in 1536).

Little Dunmow Priory

Dunmow Priory was the original home of the traditional English custom still held in Essex today ā€“ the Dunmow Flitch. Although since the 1850s, the Dunmow Flitch is normally held in Great Dunmow ā€“ not Little Dunmow.

I say ā€œnormallyā€ because in the mid-twentieth century the trials were also held in other Essex locations such as Ilford and Maldon.

The Flitch Trials held at Dunmow Priory were so well known that Chaucer wrote about them in his fourteenth century tale about the ā€œThe Wife of Bathā€

(Sometimes I really do despair about historians’ shocking lack of attention to detail of the Essex countryside. Iā€™ve read several scholarly articles from historians and Chaucer buffs who assert that the Priory was in Great Dunmow. Often, they even include a photograph of St Maryā€™s church in Great Dunmow and say that it was Dunmow Priory. Hmmmm, it wasnā€™t! Shocking scholarly research!)

So, after the closing of the monasteries, some buildings were incorporated into parish churches. Itā€™s interesting to note that Henry VIII couldnā€™t totally rid the landscape of religious buildings.

It would be a good piece of research to undertake to see which East of England former monasteries
– became ruins
– were sold to Henryā€™s mates and became splendid residential properties
– stayed as religious buildings and became parish churches (or part of a parish church).

I wonder if there was any rhyme or reason to which monasteries crumbled into ruins and which had better fates?

I suspect the richness of the land and buildings played some part. Although in others – such as the destruction of the extremely powerful and wealthy abbey at Bury St Edmunds must have been for political reasons (or Henry VIII setting an example).

The story of your house…

Are there any houses or road names or areas near you that reflect the fact that there was once a monastic building where you live?

If you are fascinated about the history of your home, then youā€™ll be interested in my new online course

šŸ” If Walls Could Talkā€¦
Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”

Enrolment is now open…

Course commences on Monday 30 September 2019

I hope youā€™ll join me and take part in this fascinating course. Learn how you can trace the history of your home.

As this is the first pilot version of my course, itā€™ll be offered at a very special low price that will not be repeated.

Click the link to learn moreĀ https://essexvoicespast.thinkific.com/courses/house2019

Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2019

The Reformation’s and the English Landscape…Part 1

Tracing your house’s history

Click the link to learn more about my unique online course that guides you in tracing the secret history of your home Ā 

Uncover the secret history of your home

Tracing the history of your house isn’t just about the physical bricks and mortar building. Or, in many cases, flint, or stone, or wattle and daub or timber framed structure.

It’s also about the land your house is on…

As an island nation, we have been relatively lucky that war has left little trace on the landscape of our country. 

Of course, throughout time, there has been battles fought on our soil. Some of which were very bloody – the war between Stephen and Matilda, the War of the Roses, the Civil Wars of the 1640s…. 

However, we haven’t had the wide-scale destruction as seen elsewhere. For example, as a consequence of two world wars, European countries such as Belgium, France and Germany saw wide-scale annihilation. 

Apart from war and battles, the next biggest visible scar on England’s landscape today is that of Henry VIII’s Reformation.

The English Reformation…

Once the Tudor king decided to rid himself of the popeā€™s power in England, religious houses were forcible closed all over the country. 

And if Henry VIIIā€™s destruction was not enough, then his son, the Protestant boy-king Edward VI, followed through his fatherā€™s policies in the 1540s by wiping out any remaining religious houses. 

Henry VIIIā€™s destruction, of what was arguably one of the first social care and welfare systems in England, is all too apparent at Dunwich (Suffolk) within the ruins of Greyfriars. 

Greyfriars, Dunwich, Suffolk

House-history course | Greyfriars, Dunwich, Suffolk
Greyfriars, Dunwich, Suffolk

Until the Friary was seized by the Bishop of Dover in 1538, it had been a very successful Franciscan monastery from the time of its establishment in the 1250s. 

Its size and grandeur can only be imagined as you wander through its ruins. 

Where once monks tended the land and went about their daily business, now there are only animals grazing and munching within the Friaryā€™s ruins.

Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk

The destruction and looting of the monasteries took place all over the English countryside…

Today, all over the English countryside, there are remnants of former great monastic buildings. Wiped out by the actions of a greedy and too powerful king.

One extremely powerful and wealthy monastery was at Bury St Edmunds – the abbey of St Edmundsbury.

The abbey was famed in Norman and Medieval times for holding the relics of the martyred Anglo-Saxon king of East Anglia, Edmund the Martyr (also known as Saint Edmund). 

Attacking Danes murdered the king in 869 and in 903 his remains were brought to what was then a tiny religious community in the small town known as Beodericsworth. 

From that time onwards, the religious community grew in wealth and prosperity, resulting in the foundation of the abbey in 1020. It became one of the richest and most powerful Benedictine abbeys within England. 

A shrine was built to St Edmund during the 11th century and this developed into an extraordinarily popular holy place for pilgrims to visit. Pilgrimages to holy places within England was a common pursuit for the devout of the middle ages prior to the Reformation sweeping away such journeys.

The abbey was also influential with political events. In 1214, during the reign of King John, dissatisfied earls and barons gathered at the abbey to discuss their criticisms of the king. 

The following year the barons notoriously forced the king to sign the Magna Carta at Runnymede.

The abbeyā€™s vast wealth and fortunes ended in 1539 when St Edmundsbury abbey surrendered to the king. 

The great abbey was no more and over the centuries fell into decay. 

No doubt material from this once magnificent abbey was used as building matter for surrounding houses.

Today, the abbeyā€™s former fortunes can still be determined by the vast scale of its ruins.

Wandering around in half-light can be an unnerving experience. If only the walls could talk, what tales would they tell? No doubt stories of Norman monks and abbots, medieval pilgrims, discontented knights and barons, rioting townsfolk, and the abbeyā€™s final days during its death-throes of this once great institution…..

There is a unique postscript to the fortunes of the abbey… Archaeologists believe that St Edmundā€™s remains are still buried within the abbeyā€™s gardens. 

If a medieval king can be found in a car park in Leicester, then will an Anglo-Saxon king be discovered under tennis courts in Bury St Edmunds?

Trace the history of your house | Abbey, Bury St Edmunds
Ruins of the great abbey, Bury St Edmunds

The closing of the Monasteries

All over the English & Welsh countryside, today we can see the ruins of once great and magnificent religious houses. For example, my childhood favorite haunt, Tintern Abbey in Monmouthshire (shut in 1536); and Fountains Abbey in Yorkshire (closed in 1539)

Just a few of the monasteries whose ruins are haunting scars on the countryside. Every single county within England or Wales had at least one medieval monastic building. Some counties had several hundred.

All destroyed by a power-crazed king. 

Incidentally, as most people know, Henry VIII was a despotic king who shut the monasteries and kicked out the pope from being the head of the English church. But did you know Henry died a Catholic king? He was never ever Protestant. 

If you had lived during that troubled time and suggested to the wrong person that the king was a Protestant ā€“ you would be burnt at the stake for High Treason.

Moreover, by the late 1530s, Henry VIII (or more likely his side-kick, Thomas Cromwell) was also gunning to seize the wealth of parish churches (some were extremely wealthy). Henry didnā€™t succeedā€¦ Cromwell got too big for his boots and was executed in 1540 – before the wealth of parish churches could be seized. Henry didnā€™t carry out that task. 

But where he failed, his son, Edward VI, succeeded. Edward ā€“ despite being a boy-king ā€“ was even more despotic and fanatical then his father.

I digress. You see thatā€™s the problem with Tudor history. Itā€™s so interesting that I always get side-trackedā€¦

Back to the monasteries.

Walden Abbey, Essex

Not all former monastic buildings are in ruins today. After they were forcibly closed, and the monks ejected from their former homes, Henry VIII had the habit of selling the buildings to his mates.

One such former monastery was the majestic abbey in the north Essex town of Walden (now Saffron Walden).

In 1538, Henry VIII seized Walden Abbey and gave it to his Lord Chancellor, Sir Thomas Audley (c.1488-1544). 

Audley converted the abbey into his own extensive residence. When he died, the house passed down to his descendants through his daughterā€™s line to the Howards. 

Yep that famous Tudor family ā€“ the Earls of Suffolk. 

Over the next 500 years, the house changed ownership several times ā€“ from kings of England to the nobility. It was built, rebuilt, remodeled and then redone yet again. (Youā€™ll have to read my book “Saffron Walden and Around Through Time” to see who owned it and when! And who remodeled it! )

Suffice to say, that today it is a magnificent building – the whole site is a World Heritage Site. 

But it started life as Walden Abbey, a religious house for medieval monks.

House-history course | Audley End House, formerly a great abbey
Audley End House, formerly a great abbey

Check back next week for part 2!

The story of your house…

Are there any houses or road names or areas near you that reflect the fact that there was once a monastic building where you live?

If you are fascinated about the history of your home, then youā€™ll be interested in my new online course

šŸ” If Walls Could Talkā€¦
Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”

Enrolment is now open…

Course commences on Monday 30 September 2019

I hope youā€™ll join me and take part in this fascinating course. Learn how you can trace the history of your home.

As this is the first pilot version of my course, itā€™ll be offered at a very special low price that will not be repeated.

Click the link to learn more https://essexvoicespast.thinkific.com/courses/house2019

Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2019

How to hide a building in plain sight!

What’s the secret history of your house?….

When I was researching my book “Sudbury, Long Melford, and Lavenham Through Time” (available from Amazon), this postcard from the early 1900s totally and utterly baffled me.

House-history course | Bull Inn, Long Melford

Bull Inn, Long Melford

I “knew” I was in the right place for the Bull Hotel, but I just couldn’t find the building.

This was bizarre.

Iā€™ve long known Long Melford’s Bull Inn – with its very large and striking Tudor frontage.

I’d first encountered the hotel when I went to a lovely wedding reception there in the late 90s. Additionally, I had stayed in the Bull several times in the years immediately before I wrote my book.

But looking at my postcard showing the hotel from the early 1900s, I had a totally ditzy moment about it. I thought the photographer had incorrectly captioned it. It just didn’t look like the Bull I knew and loved.

So I walked up and down Long Melford’s three mile-long Hall Street looking for this Georgian building…

That was a bad research day – pouring with rain – I was being totally ditzy – walking up and down Hall Street – and I ended up soaked through with sore feet!

I just could not locate the building…

Then I twigged I’d been looking at it all along and it was hiding in plain sight.

Of course, when trying to locate the building, I’d totally forgetton the Georgian’s and Victorian’s love for cladding beautiful Tudor timber-framed buildings with plaster or brick.

The facade shown in my early 1900s postcard was placed onto the building in the 1820s. For over a hundred years, the Bull Hotel had the appearance of a grand square-fronted symmetrical Georgian building – not a sprawling timber framed Tudor structure.

But the cladding was finally taken down in 1935 – revealing its original beautiful timber-framed Tudor building.

Strange to think that our Victorian and Edwardian ancestors – if they’d visited Long Melford – would have seen the Bull Hotel as being a splendidly imposing Georgian building.

During the Georgian period, many gorgeous Tudor timber-framed houses were encased in a red-brick facade. We think them to be an elegant Georgian buildings. Whereas they’re hiding in plain sight a fabulous Tudor structure.

Do you live in a Georgian house? Is it hiding it’s past?

If you are fascinated about the history of your home, then youā€™ll be interested in my new online course

šŸ” If Walls Could Talkā€¦
Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”

Make you note in your diary… signup starts from 19 September 2019.

Course commences on Monday 30 September 2019

Keep an eye on my blog throughout rest of September for more news.

I’m also doing regular posts on my Facebook page about how to

šŸ”šŸ” Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”šŸ”

I hope youā€™ll join me and take part in this fascinating course. Learn how you can trace the history of your home.

As this is the first pilot version of my course, itā€™ll be offered at a very special low price that will not be repeated.

Resources for tracing the history of your home

I’ve written a short pdf listing some of the resources that you can use for  researching the history of your house.

House History | 25 Online Resources to Trace the History of Your House

Download 25 online resources for uncovering the secret history of your home




By giving us your details, you are agreeing to join our email list to receive emails and offers on our services. You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails, or from this website. For information about our privacy practices, click here. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking below to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp’s privacy practices here.


Long Melford Through Time

Trace the history of your house | Long Melford - Cock & Bell

Long Melford – Cock & Bell

House-history course | Bridge Approach, Long Melford

Bridge Approach, Long Melford

Trace the history of your house course | Hall Street, Long Melford

Hall Street, Long Melford

How do I research the history of my house | Hall Street, Long Melford

Hall Street, Long Melford

Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2019

Researching the history of your home

The not so secret past of houses in Hutton Poplars

The other day I told you about the first home I purchased in the 1980s – a converted Victorian school in Wimbledon.

After I left Wimbledon, I moved to Hutton close to Shenfield in Essex. Where I became fascinated by the history of the new houses that were then being built in an area known as Hutton Poplars – in the grounds of a former Edwardian school.

For anyone visiting or passing through Hutton, this building is a familiar sight – Hutton Poplar Lodge.  It looks the same today as it did when this photograph was taken one hundred years ago – shortly before the First World War.

House-history course | Hutton Poplars Lodge
Hutton Poplars Lodge

It is one of only three buildings that have survived from a large Edwardian industrial school founded by, among others, George Lansbury in 1906. This building was once the porters’ lodge.

During the final years of the nineteenth century, Poplar Board of Guardians decided to sell their Forest Gate training schools because of the terrible conditions. On New Year’s Day 1890, a devastating fire broke out in the Forest Gate school and 26 small boys died.

Despite this appalling fire and the generally awful conditions, the school continued in Forest Gate until the early 1900s.

Chairman of Poplar Board of Guardians, George Lansbury, a social reformer, paid a visit to rural Hutton (next to Shenfield) and liked what he saw. At Lansburyā€™s instigation, Hutton Industrial School (also known as Poplar Union Training School) was built in 1906 at the cost of Ā£160,000. 

 Social Reformer and leader of the Labour Party - George Lansbury (1859-1940)
Social Reformer and leader of the Labour Party – George Lansbury (1859-1940)

Originally founded as a residential school for pauper boys from Poplar, the school eventually accommodated both boys and girls based around the concept of a ā€œcottage homeā€. 

Fortunately, this school did not have same appalling reputation that Hackney Industry School had in nearby Brentwood. The school in Hutton was generally so well-run that the Board of Guardians had to appear before a Parliamentary Committee accused of “extravagances” in the new school!

The school closed in the 1980s and the majority of its buildings were demolished – apart from 3 buildings still present today. 

Today the area is known as Hutton Poplars and contains extensive new housing. 

Is your house in Hutton Poplars? If it is, did you know the story of the area?

Here’s a quiz for you. George Lansbury later became the British Labour Leader in the 1930s. He had a very very famous grandchild – an absolute legend. What’s his grandchild’s name? (No Googling!!)

New Online Course to trace the history of your home…

If you are fascinated about the history of your home, then youā€™ll be interested in my new online course

šŸ” If Walls Could Talkā€¦
Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”

Make you note in your diary… signup starts from 19 September 2019.

Course commences on Monday 30 September 2019

Keep an eye on my blog throughout rest of September for more news.

I’m also doing regular posts on my Facebook page about how to

šŸ”šŸ” Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”šŸ”

I hope youā€™ll join me and take part in this fascinating course. Learn how you can trace the history of your home.

As this is the first pilot version of my course, itā€™ll be offered at a very special low price that will not be repeated.

Resources for tracing the history of your home

I’ve written a short pdf listing some of the resources that you can use for  researching the history of your house.

House History | 25 Online Resources to Trace the History of Your House

Download 25 online resources for uncovering the secret history of your home




By giving us your details, you are agreeing to join our email list to receive emails and offers on our services. You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails, or from this website. For information about our privacy practices, click here. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking below to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp’s privacy practices here.


Trace the history of your house | Rayleigh Road, Hutton
Rayleigh Road, Hutton. The boys are standing in the area which has now become a side-road – Sun Ray Avenue.
Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2019

What’s the story of my house?

Tracing the history of my home…

This is the first home I purchased. Back in the heady days of the low property prices of the 1980s.

Trace the history of your house | All Saints Court, Wimbledon
All Saints Court, Wimbledon

It was a converted flat ā€“ converted from an old Victorian school built in 1896 (so the date plaque on the right entrance states).

When it was built, Wimbledon was in Surrey ā€“ the inscription over the left entrance ā€œS.C.C.ā€ marking that it was a school under the governance of Surrey County Council. But without the building moving an inch, itā€™s now in the London Borough of Merton.

I was in my very early 20s and fell in love with the flat the minute I set my eyes on it.

I knew I had to have it.

I first saw it literally as it was being converted from a school to a block of one-bedroom flats. I wish Iā€™d had a camera back then to record the renovationā€™s progress!!

When I bought the flat in 1986, it cost Ā£41,500 ā€“ then an arm and a leg. Other nearby one-bedroom flats were all between Ā£35,000 to Ā£38,000. The jump to Ā£41,500 was massive. Well, it was in those days! I had to take on a massive mortgage at stupid interest rates to pay for it.

But I was obsessed with it.

I had started genealogical research when I was just 18. But until this point, I hadnā€™t dipped my toes into local history. However, when I saw this building, I not only fell in love with the building, but also the local history of the area.

And the idea of living in an old Victorian school.

The converted flats kept the 2 original entrances either end of the block; one for girls and the other for boys. The developers also added a new central entrance for those of us whose front-doors were in the middle. To this day, I can still recall the noise of the buzzer and door-release.

The central large-oval window in the block was the massive window on the landing leading to the front-doors of all the central flats. The small window to its right (top floor) was my bedroom. Immediately above my bedroom’s ceiling was a massive full height loft that I always intended ā€“ but never did ā€“ investigate.

To its right ā€“ and the last huge window on the right of the building ā€“ was my living room. Not a massive room ā€“ conversions were very lacking in space in the 80s!. But it had a massive 20+ foot high ceiling.

A high living-room ceiling is an obsession that Iā€™ve always had – dating from this wonderful flat. My current living room ā€“ many miles (in more ways then one) from my first flat ā€“ is also 20+ foot high. That’s despite my home today not being a Victorian converted property, but a house purpose-built in 2000.

My living room in my flat was part of the old schoolā€™s hall. Sometimes at night, I used to lie in bed, imagining the noise of the children in their school hall. In fact, on the night of the Great Hurricane of 1987, I thought theyā€™d all come back to pay me a visit. Until I realised that it was Mother Nature conjuring her wrath on my road ā€“ not the ghosts of small children.

I spent three very happy years there. I never did research its history as a school. I bought every single local history book that was out at the time. There were a wide range of local history books even then, and those books are today still on my overflowing bookcases. When I’m long gone, my children (all born and bred in Essex) will wonder why I have countless books on Wimbledon and Merton (unless they read this post!).

I moved out reluctantly (but happily) in September 1989 when my eldest was on her way. No room for a baby in a 2nd floor one-bedroom flat – no lift and no storage (even if there was a massive loft!).

When I lived in there in the late 80s, there was no parking restrictions. I can see from Googleā€™s StreetView that there is now.

The fun I had parking on that road! First come, first serve to the few parking spaces back then. But in those days, it was only one car per flat ā€“ and 9 flats. With most homes today having at least two cars, it must be mayhem nowā€¦

But I moved to Essex, and the rest, as they say is history (at least, for my family). Once I was a Surrey girl, now Iā€™m an honorary Essex girl!

My obsession with local history started in this building and I look at it with fond memories.

I regret that I didnā€™t take photographs as they changed the building from being Victorian school to a modern luxurious block of flats.

And I will always regret that I never did research its history when I lived there.

Since the 1980s, plenty of Victorian red-brick schools across the country have been renovated into houses and flats.

ā“Do you live in a converted school? ā“

ā“Or do you live (or once lived) in a home that has been converted from another use – such as a hospital, workhouse, mill or a pub?ā“

~~~~~~~~~~~

If you are fascinated about the history of your home, then youā€™ll be interested in my new online course

šŸ” If Walls Could Talkā€¦
Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”

Make you note in your diary… signup starts from 19 September 2019.

Course commences on Monday 30 September 2019

Keep an eye on my blog throughout rest of September for more news.

I’m also doing regular posts on my Facebook page about how to

šŸ”šŸ” Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”šŸ”

I hope youā€™ll join me and take part in this fascinating course. Learn how you can trace the history of your home.

As this is the first pilot version of my course, itā€™ll be offered at a very special low price that will not be repeated.

Resources for tracing the history of your home

I’ve written a short pdf listing some of the resources that you can use for  researching the history of your house.

House History | 25 Online Resources to Trace the History of Your House

Download 25 online resources for uncovering the secret history of your home




By giving us your details, you are agreeing to join our email list to receive emails and offers on our services. You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails, or from this website. For information about our privacy practices, click here. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking below to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp’s privacy practices here.


Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2019

Research the history of your house course…

A house through time…

Have you ever wondered who once lived in your house?

Do you wonder….
šŸ‘‰Who built it and why?
šŸ‘‰What were their names?
šŸ‘‰Their occupations?
šŸ‘‰How did they live their lives?

Tracing the history of your home is a fascinating and all absorbing hobby.

But where do you start?…..

Roughly speaking, house-history research can be split into two large (massive!) themes:-

šŸ‘Øā€šŸ‘©ā€šŸ‘§ā€šŸ‘¦šŸ‘Øā€šŸ‘©ā€šŸ‘§ā€šŸ‘¦     The people who lived in your house.  šŸ‘Øā€šŸ‘©ā€šŸ‘§ā€šŸ‘¦šŸ‘Øā€šŸ‘©ā€šŸ‘§ā€šŸ‘¦

šŸ”The building itself.šŸ”

So there’s two broad questions to ask about your home…

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

a) Who lived in your house? šŸ‘Øā€šŸ‘©ā€šŸ‘§ā€šŸ‘¦šŸ‘Øā€šŸ‘§ā€šŸ‘¦šŸ‘¦šŸ‘§šŸ‘ØšŸ‘©

A variety of records can be used to discover the stories of your home’s occupants – from Census Returns and 1939 Registers, to tithe apportionment records and parish records.

House history course | A busy Edwardian Heybridge

A busy street scene in Edwardian Heybridge, Essex

~~~~~~~~~~~

b) Your house šŸ˜ļøšŸšļøšŸ”

You may be able to guess a lot about the physical building. Its building material – such as brick, flint, stone, timber-framed.

However, you will want to research other information such as when, why and who built your home. The date of your house – the era/century/decade.

Finding out information about the house itself is often the more complex of the two broad themes connected with house-histories…

Sometimes records will exist about the construction of your house. But not all the time…

Certainly, for older homes, records will be far more sketchy. You’ll need to use all sorts of detective work to pin down your house’s full story!

That’s all part of the fun!

Workers’ cottages, Norton Road, Ingatestone, Essex

šŸ”ŽšŸ”ŽStep-by-step, peeling back the layers…until you find the true story of the history of your house… šŸ”ŽšŸ”Ž

~~~~~~~~~~~

If you are fascinated about the history of your house, then youā€™ll be interested in my online course

šŸ” If Walls Could Talkā€¦

Uncover the secret history of your homešŸ”

I hope youā€™ll join me and take part in this fascinating course.

 

Trace the history of your home |Tudor houses in Wendens Ambo, Essex

Tudor houses in Wendens Ambo, Essex

 

Post updated: April 2020
Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2020

How do I trace the history of my home?

Tracing the history of your home

Tracing the history of your home is a fascinating and all absorbing hobby.

But where do you start?…..

Roughly speaking, house-history research can be split into two large themes:-

  • The people who lived in my house.
  • The building itself.

So there’s two broad questions to ask about your home…

a) Who lived in your house?

Have you ever wondered who lived in your house before you?

  • What sort of life did they lead?
  • What jobs/occupations did they have?
  • How many children?
  • What was their family life?
  • What were their tragedies and triumphs?

How to trace the history of my home - Children pose for the camera in Lavenham - early 1900s

Children pose for the camera in Lavenham – early 1900s

How to trace the history of my home - Sudbury early 1900s

Sudbury early 1900s

A variety of records can be used to discover the stories of your home’s occupants – from Census Returns and Registers, to tithe apportionment records.

Even eBay and Facebook can be used to discover the stories of people who once lived in your home!

How to trace the history of my home - Georgian/Victorian Cottages built for local workers- Lavenham

Georgian/Victorian Cottages built for local workers- Lavenham

How to trace the history of my home - Formerly workers' cottages, now pretty homes in Lavenham

Formerly workers’ cottages, now pretty homes in Lavenham

b) Your house

You may be able to guess a lot about the physical building that is your home. Its building material – such as brick, flint, stone, timber-framed.

However, you will want to research other information such as when, why and who built your home.Ā  The date of your house – the era/century/decade.

Finding out information about the house itself is often the more complex of the two broad themes connected with house-histories…

Sometimes records will exist about the construction of your house. But not all the time…

Certainly for older homes, records will be far more sketchy.Ā  You’ll need to use all sorts of detective work to pin down your house’s full story!

That’s all part of the fun!

Step-by-step, peeling back the layers…until you find the true story of the history of your house…

How to trace the history of my home - Timber-framed thatched cottage at Kirby Quay, Essex

Timber-framed thatched cottage at Kirby Quay, Essex

Resources for tracing the history of your home

I’ve written a short pdf listing some of the resources that you can use for part b) of the conundrum of researching the history of a house – When was my house built

Download your FREE eBookĀ 25 online resources for uncovering the secret history of your home




By giving us your details, you are agreeing to join our email list to receive emails and offers on our services. You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails, or from this website. For information about our privacy practices, click here. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking below to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp’s privacy practices here.


Post created: September 2019
Ā© Kate J Cole | Essex Voices Pastā„¢ 2012-2019