Bocking
Bocking | |
Essex | |
---|---|
St Mary's Church, Bocking Churchstreet | |
Location | |
Location: | 51°52’60"N, 0°33’0"E |
Data | |
Post town: | Braintree |
Postcode: | CM7 |
Dialling code: | 01376 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Braintree |
Bocking is village and ancient parish in the Hinckford hundred of Essex that has become a suburb of Braintree. In 1934 the civil parish became part of the civil parish of Braintree and Bocking.[1]
In 1862 Kelly's Directory of Essex already stated that "Braintree and Bocking, although distinct parishes, form one continuous town, extending for a mile on the road between Chelmsford and Halstead, and the rivers Blackwater and Podsbrook, and having a united population in 1861 of 8,186."[2]
The Deanery Church of St Mary, Bocking, is mainly 15th and 16th century flint and limestone, with 19th century restoration, built on a more ancient church site.[3] It is Grade-I listed.[4] St Peter's Parish Church was built in 1896-97 of yellow brick, in a design intended to be extended at a later date, and is still unfinished; its website describes it as "unusual in appearance from the outside".[5]
Bocking Windmill is a preserved 18th-century post mill and is Grade-I listed.[6] It is owned by Braintree Council and run by the Friends of Bocking Windmill.[7]
Education
Bocking has one school called Bocking Church Street School.[8] It used to have another school called Edith Borthwick School but they moved to Springwood Drive in Braintree in September 2015.
Bocking in 1870-72
The Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales gave the following description of Bocking in 1870-1872:
Bocking: a village, a parish and a sub-district, in Braintree, Essex. The village stands on the left bank of the Blackwater river, and on the Braintree railway, adjacent to Braintree; forms a suburb of that town; consists chiefly of one long street; and is a seat of petty sessions.A trade in baizes, called 'bockings', was at one time prominent; and a manufacture of silk and crape is now carried on.
The parish includes also Bocking-street and Bocking-Church-street, ¾ and 2 miles distant from Braintree, both with post offices under that town, and the former situated on the branch Roman road from Chelmsford. Acres: 4, 607. Real property: £15, 156. Pop.: 3, 555. Houses: 768. The property is much sub-divided.
The Manor was given by Ethelred to the See of Canterbury; and belongs now to the corporation of the sons of the clergy. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Rochester. Value: £923. Patron: the Archbishop of Canterbury. The church is early English, had anciently 3 altars and 5 chantries, and contains some monuments and 2 brasses. There are: an Independent chapel, much improved in 1869; a charity school, with £50; and other charities, with £172. Dr. Dale, the author of 'Pharmacologia', was a native.
The sub-district contains 5 parishes. Acres: 11, 507. Pop.: 5,281. Houses: 1, 171.
H.G.Wells on Bocking
H. G. Wells, in his What Is Coming? A European Forecast (1916), in the fourth chapter, "Braintree, Bocking, and the Future of the World," uses the differences between Bocking and Braintree, divided, he says, by a single road, to explain the difficulties he expects in establishing World Peace through a World State.
“ | If the curious enquirer will take pick and shovel he will find at any rate one corresponding dualism below the surface. He will find a Bocking water main supplying the houses on the north side and a Braintree water main supplying the south. I rather suspect that the drains are also in duplicate. The total population of Bocking and Braintree is probably little more than thirteen thousand souls altogether, but for that there are two water supplies, two sets of schools, two administrations. To the passing observer the rurality of the Bocking side is indistinguishable from the urbanity of the Braintree side; it is just a little muddier. | ” |
References
- ↑ "Bocking CP/AP". Vision of Britain. http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/unit/10235042. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
- ↑ Kelly's Directory of Essex. 1862. http://www.nivek-systems.co.uk/genuki/ESS/Towns/Bocking/. Retrieved 22 March 2016. Quoted in GENUKI
- ↑ "A Brief History of St. Mary's". The Deanery Church of St Mary the Virgin, Bocking. http://www.stmarys-bocking.co.uk/index3.htm. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
- ↑ National Heritage List 1122530: Church of St Mary the Virgin
- ↑ "About St Peter's". St Peter's Parish Church, Bocking. http://www.psukco.plus.com/sp/html/about_st_peters.html. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
- ↑ National Heritage List 1005572: Bocking Windmill
- ↑ "Welcome". Friends of Bocking Windmill. http://www.friendsofbockingwindmill.btck.co.uk/. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
- ↑ "Home page". Bocking Church Street School. http://www.bockingstreet.essex.sch.uk/web. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
Further reading
- "Bocking". An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Essex, Volume 1, North West. 1916. pp. 30-41. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/rchme/essex/vol1/pp30-41. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
- Hoffman, Ann Bocking Deanery: The Story of an Essex Peculiar (Phillimore, 1976 ISBN 0850332265)
Published histories of Braintree & Bocking include:
- May Cunnington & Stephen Warner Braintree & Bocking (Arnold Fairbairns, 1906)
- W. F. Quin A History of Braintree & Bocking (Lavenham Press, 1981, ISBN 0950737801)
- Michael BakerThe Book of Braintree & Bocking (Barracuda Books, 1981, ISBN 0860231348; Baron Books 1992);
- John Marriage Braintree & Bocking A Pictorial History (Phillimore, 1994, ISBN 085033909X).