Hazeleigh

From Wikishire
Revision as of 14:05, 1 March 2018 by Owain (Talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{infobox town |county=Essex |latitude=51.7029 |longitude=0.6348 |LG district=Maldon |constituency=Witham |post town=Maldon |postcode=CM13 |dialling code=01245 & 01621 |os gri...")

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Hazeleigh
Essex
Location
Grid reference: TL825035
Location: 51°42’10"N, 0°38’5"E
Data
Post town: Maldon
Postcode: CM13
Dialling code: 01245 & 01621
Local Government
Council: Maldon
Parliamentary
constituency:
Witham

Hazeleigh is a village and parish on the Dengie peninsula in Essex. It lies two-and-a-half miles south-west of Maldon. Hazeleigh and the neighbouring village of Woodham Mortimer share a joint Parish Council which meets monthly at Woodham Mortimer Village Hall.

Churches

Hazeleigh’s original timber-framed church, St Nicholas’s, was located in an isolated part of the village, next to the Old Hall, but by 1900 had fallen into disuse. Due to its size and lack of windows it was known locally as "the meanest church in England". It was pulled down in about 1922, although the last service had been held several years earlier, in 1906. One of the reasons it fell into disuse was that an iron church was built in a more populous part of the village by the late-Victorian vicar, Rev. William Stuart (brother of Robert Stuart and father of William Horwood Stuart, both diplomats). This iron church was later demolished as well, though, and the parish of Hazeleigh is now incorporated into that of Woodham Mortimer.

Outside links

References

The collection of short stories The Night Chicago Died, ISBN 978-1-4389-0011-7, contains a story entitled The Meanest Church in England which references Hazeleigh.