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Earls Colne

Coordinates: 51°55′41″N 0°42′07″E / 51.928°N 0.702°E / 51.928; 0.702
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Earls Colne
Earls Colne is located in Essex
Earls Colne
Earls Colne
Location within Essex
Population4,848 [1][2]
3,693 (2011)[3]
OS grid referenceTL857289
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townColchester
Postcode districtCO6
Dialling code01787
PoliceEssex
FireEssex
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
Websitewww.earlscolne.org
List of places
UK
England
Essex
51°55′41″N 0°42′07″E / 51.928°N 0.702°E / 51.928; 0.702

Earls Colne is a village in Essex, England named after the River Colne, on which it stands, and the Earls of Oxford who held the manor of Earls Colne from before 1086 to 1703.

History

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Manor of Earls Colne

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In the time of Edward the Confessor Earls Colne belonged to a Saxon noble named Wulfwine, also recorded as Ulwin or Ulwine. Ulwin's whole estate was given to Aubrey de Vere by William the Conqueror.[4] His grandson Aubrey de Vere III became the first Earl of Oxford in the mid-twelfth century.

The Earls had an ancient mansion called Hall Place standing near the site of the present Ashwells in Park Lane.

Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford mismanaged his finances and in 1583 the estate, then comprising the manor and park of seven hundred acres, were purchased from him by his steward Richard Harlakenden.

Village records

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Earls Colne is one of the best recorded villages in the UK and has been the subject of a study undertaken between 1972 and 2002 by Professor Alan Macfarlane and his team from the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge.

The resulting database contains a large part of the surviving records of the parish over the period 1380–1854. The manorial records have been transcribed from Latin and these together with the parish registers, tithe maps and Ralph Josselin's diary have been indexed by place, person and date.

R. Hunt and Company Limited – Atlas Works

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The Atlas Works buildings have been refurbished into residential.

In 1824 Robert Hunt, a millwright from Soham in Cambridgeshire, settled in Earls Colne and set up a millwrighting and wheelwrighting shop and smithy at what was to become the Atlas Works.

The business soon gained a local reputation for making general agricultural equipment, and after exhibiting products at the Royal Agricultural Show in 1851 the company's products gained a country-wide recognition.

After Robert Hunt's death the firm was carried on by his surviving son Reuben Hunt and grew to become the major employer in the village, by 1900 employing approximately half of the male working population of the village.

When Sir R. H. Hunt, the founder's grandson, died in 1970, the firm was still the village's chief employer with some 300 employees and works covering 10 acres (4.0 ha). However the business subsequently declined and The Atlas Works were closed in 1988.

Earls Colne Industrial Co-operative Society

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Co-op building
Co-op building detail

Central to late nineteenth and early twentieth century life in the village was the Earls Colne Industrial and Co-operative Society. The Earls Colne Co-op was one of the last remaining independent village co-operative societies in Essex and Suffolk, finally merging with the far larger Colchester and East Essex society in 1970. The Earls Colne Co-op was founded in 1884 in the front room of a cottage in High Street.

The current store occupies a building dating to between 1480 and 1510, the roof timbers being preserved and exposed in-store to enable the public to appreciate the method of construction.

Landmarks

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The Earls Colne Heritage Museum occupies The Old Water Tower, Reuben Hunt Walk which was the former water tower of the Atlas Works, the home of R Hunt & Company. The main sections of the permanent exhibition comprise Earls Colne in Earliest Times, the Domesday Book, Colne Priory, The Earls of Oxford, The 1598 Map by Israel Amyce, The Diary of the Reverend Ralph Josselin, Other notable Earls Colne residents of the past, The Victorian Era, The Atlas Works and the Hunt Family, and The Second World War.

Education

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In 1520 the Reverend Christopher Swallow gave lands to the Earl of Oxford for the founding of a school for the instruction of thirty children. Earls Colne Grammar School originally occupied a site in Lower Holt Street, but moved to premises in York Road which were opened on 12 September 1893. The School was closed in 1975 when it was amalgamated into The Ramsey School (now The Ramsey Academy) in Halstead as part of the re-organisation of schooling along comprehensive lines.

Religion

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Village sign of Earls Colne

A monastery, Colne Priory, was founded in the parish by Aubrey de Vere I in about 1103-4 and was dedicated to St Mary and St John the Evangelist for monks of the Benedictine order from Abingdon Abbey, Berkshire. The monastery was surrendered to Henry VIII by Robert Abel, the prior, on 3 July 1534.

The parish church is dedicated to Saint Andrew. The date of the original church is not known but is probably earlier than 1100. The current church was built between 1313 and 1360; the present tower was started in 1460 and completed in 1534.

A notable vicar of the parish was Ralph Josselin, who was instituted in 1641 and held the post until his death in 1683. Josselin was a diarist and his published diary has been said to rival, with a rural perspective, that of Samuel Pepys from a similar period.

Transport

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Earls Colne Airfield, which is situated approximately 1-mile (1.6 km) south-southwest of the village, was a bomber station used by the RAF and USAAF between 1942 and 1955. It is now a golf course, business park and UK and civilian airfield for light aviation.

There is a regular bus service (88) linking Earls Colne with Colchester and Halstead.

Notable people and events

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Images

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References

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  1. ^ Data for the Three Colnes ward
  2. ^ www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk
  3. ^ "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
  4. ^ Open Domesday Map: Earls, Wakes and White Colme
  5. ^ Ford, L. L. (23 September 2004). "Audley, Thomas, Baron Audley of Walden (1487/8–1544)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/896. Retrieved 17 February 2019. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ "He was one of founders of Harvard College"
  7. ^ Walter, John (4 October 2008). "Josselin, Ralph (1617–1683)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37618. Retrieved 17 February 2019. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  8. ^ "Death of Sir T. Fowell Buxton". Chelmsford Chronicle. No. 3871. 28 February 1845. p. 4. Retrieved 17 February 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  9. ^ Serota, Nicholas (17 October 2005). "Obituary: Sir Edwin Manton". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 17 February 2019.
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