Elmstead Market

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Revision as of 20:56, 17 December 2024 by RB (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox town |name=Elmstead Market |county=Essex |picture=Elmstead Parish Memorial - geograph.org.uk - 122873.jpg |picture caption=Elmstead war memorial |os grid ref=TM062244 |latitude=51.88002 |longitude=0.99445 |population=1,684 |census year=2018 est. |post town=Colchester |postcode=CO7 |dialling code=01206 |LG district=Tendring |constituency=Harwich and North Essex }} '''Elmstead Market''' is a village in eastern Essex, two miles north-east of Wi...")
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Elmstead Market
Essex

Elmstead war memorial
Location
Grid reference: TM062244
Location: 51°52’48"N, 0°59’40"E
Data
Population: 1,684  (2018 est.)
Post town: Colchester
Postcode: CO7
Dialling code: 01206
Local Government
Council: Tendring
Parliamentary
constituency:
Harwich and North Essex

Elmstead Market is a village in eastern Essex, two miles north-east of Wivenhoe and four miles east of Colchester. It is on the A133 road which runs to Clacton-on-Sea to the south-east and Colchester to the west. In 2018 it had an estimated population of 1,684.[1]

Churches

The Church of England parish church, St Anne, is largely of the 12th century. The main parts of the church have been dated to around 1310; a south chapel was added about 20 years later. The early 14th-century tower only rises one and a half storeys and was never completed.

The village used to have a Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, built in 1817. It was demolished in 1999 for a newer chapel to be built in its place. This is now Trinity Methodist Church and is situated on Bromley Road, completed in 2000. In July 2020 it was announced the Methodist church would close. This is now office to a local accountancy firm.

Woodland Trust Wood

The Woodland Trust acquired 104 acres of land west of the village.[2] The new woodland creation project has already seen thousands of trees planted and plans to provide a valuable resource for local people and its wildlife. The new woodlands will be a breeding ground for barn owls and buzzards with the opportunity of more wildlife entering the area. With the dramatic fall in water vole numbers in the local area, the Essex Environmental Trust granted the wood an extra £8,000 to maintain and renew its habitat in order to increase numbers.[3]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Elmstead Market)

References