Ingatestone


Ingatestone is a village in the civil parish of Ingatestone and Fryerning in the Borough of Brentwood in Essex, England. It lies north-east of Brentwood and north-east of Charing Cross in central London. At the 2021 Census the built up area as defined by the Office for National Statistics, which also includes Mountnessing, had a population of 5,410.
Ingatestone was formerly a civil parish; it was merged with Fryerning in 1889. The village is served by Ingatestone railway station on the Great Eastern Main Line railway. Ingatestone grew up along the A12, an old Roman road. The modern road now bypasses Ingatestone to the north-west. The village is surrounded by the Metropolitan Green Belt.

History

Ingatestone appeared in Saxon times on the Essex Great Road between the Roman towns of Londinium and Camulodunum.
Ingatestone is one of several adjoining places that were historically known as "Inga" or "Ginga", coming from the Old English term gegingas meaning "people of the district". They appear to have all formed part of a single territory in Saxon times. The territory gradually fragmented into smaller manors and parishes, which took various prefixes and suffixes to distinguish them. Ingatestone was the Inga "at the stone"; it was recorded as Gynges atte Ston in 1283, and as Inge atte Stone in 1433. Fryerning was the Inga of the friars, referring to its ownership by the Knights Hospitallers. Mountnessing was the Inga owned by the Mounteney family, and Margaretting was the Inga with the church dedicated to St Margaret. Buttsbury to the east was historically also called Ginge.
The village is built on boulder clay lands. The village stone, deposited by glacial action, is unusual for the area. A large Sarsen stone can still be seen, split into three, with one piece by the west door of the St Edmund and St Mary's parish church and one each side of the entrance to Fryerning Lane.
Ingatestone belonged to Barking Abbey from about 950 AD until the Dissolution of the Monasteries, when it was purchased from the Crown by Sir William Petre. Petre, originally a lawyer from Devon, had risen to become the Secretary of State to Henry VIII. He built a large courtyard house, Ingatestone Hall, as his home in the village, along with almshouses which still exist today as private cottages in Stock Lane.
By the time of the Domesday Book in 1086, Fryerning and Ingatestone were assigned to the Hundred of Chelmsford, as part of the land of St Mary of Barking with a value of 60 shillings, held by Robert Gernon in demesne.
By the 18th century, Ingatestone had become a coaching centre; however, the advent of the railway saw its importance decrease, along with the traffic on the Essex Great Road. By 1881, the parish had a population of 926, and on 24 March 1889 the parishes of Ingatestone and Fryerning merged to form Ingatestone and Fryerning, encompassing an area of almost. Ingatestone grew further in the 20th century as commuters moved in, attracted to the surrounding countryside.
Plans to bypass the narrow Roman road through the village were first drawn up before the Second World War, but construction of a dual-carriageway bypass did not begin until 1958. Further dual-carriageway sections of the A12 trunk road were added in the 1960s, to bypass Brentwood and Chelmsford.

Geology

Ingatestone lies just to the north of the southernmost limit of glaciation in the British Isles. Surface deposits over much of the area consist of boulder clay and it is only to the north-east that there are more sandy deposits. Geologist Ciara Lovatt conducted several rock mineral experiments on deposits within Ingatestone in the 1980s. The glacial deposits overlie London clay, which can be seen occasionally in the bed of the River Wid and its tributaries.
The geology of the area is responsible for the landscape and the character of farming in surrounding area. Crop farming is the typical use of boulder clay lands. The sandy deposits to the north-east of Ingatestone are a contributory factor in the greater incidence of woodland and non-arable land in this area.

Places of interest

Ingatestone Hall has been the home of the Petre family since the 16th century, who reside there to this day. There is a tomb monument to members of the family in the parish church of St Edmund and St Mary's.
The hall is currently open as a tourist attraction. It largely retains its Tudor appearance, following restoration carried out between 1915 and 1937, and is set in formal gardens surrounded by of grounds. Inside is a range of antique furniture, paintings and other historical artefacts. Queen Elizabeth I spent several nights at the hall on her Royal Progress of 1561.
St. John Payne, one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales, resided at Ingatestone Hall in the late 16th century as chaplain and steward for Lady Petre. He was martyred at Chelmsford in 1582. The smallpox inoculator, Daniel Sutton, made his base on Ingatestone High Street in Brandiston House and carried out much of his work here.

Economy

Ingatestone has over a hundred shops and businesses. Among the retail outlets, there are two small supermarkets as well as many retail and industrial shops.
There are two public houses in the High Street. The tiny Star Inn is the older, dating back to the 15th century. It features low-beamed ceilings and a large, open log fire. The Bell is a traditionally styled pub, with a substantial Elizabethan brick fireplace in the lounge bar. A third pub, The Crown, was shut after a police raid in 2011 discovered cannabis being grown there. It has now become the Crown Mews development.

Amenities

Ingatestone has over 40 clubs and societies, ranging from arts and sports clubs to charitable societies. They include the Ingatestone and Fryerning Dramatic Club, founded in 1947; the Ingatestone Choral Society, established in 1948; the Ingatestone Horticultural Society, which was formed in 1963 and is affiliated to the Royal Horticultural Society, the Ingatestone and Fryerning Historical and Archaeological Society, founded in 1965, and the Ingatestone Musical and Operetta Group, founded in 1970. There is also a Community Association, which meets at a large hall in High Street. Other amenities include a recreation ground, a sports field, and bowls and tennis clubs.
The Rotary Club is active and sponsored a war memorial in 2005 to mark the movement's centenary. The memorial, in the village's Anglican churchyard, is dedicated to the memory of the men of Ingatestone who served and fell in the two world wars.
There are two parks. Seymour Field was renamed after 'Skip' Seymour, a former headteacher of a local school, in 1977; it was known previously as Transport Meadow, having been donated to the village by the Ministry of Transport after the construction of the first A12 bypass in 1959. The other park is the Fairfield, a historic site of village fairs, which is privately owned by the Petre family and leased to the parish council.
There are four places of worship in Ingatestone: Anglican, Roman Catholic, Elim Pentecostal and United Reformed.
The local community comes together for key annual events, including a Victorian-themed Christmas evening in the High Street and a free annual firework display on the Fairfield on New Year's Eve.
Ingatestone has a community magazine called the Ingatestone Journal, delivered to residents of Ingatestone, Stock and Margaretting; it covers local issues and events, and enables businesses to advertise their services.

Governance

There are three tiers of local government covering Ingatestone and Fryerning, at parish, district, and county level: Ingatestone and Fryerning Parish Council, Brentwood Borough Council, and Essex County Council. The parish council is based at 4 The Limes in the centre of Ingatestone.
Ingatestone was an ancient parish in the Chelmsford Hundred of Essex. The parish had complicated boundaries with the neighbouring parish of Fryerning. A large part of the built up area of Ingatestone was actually in Fryerning parish, and through the centre of the village the boundary followed the main street. Ingatestone parish also had a large detached rural exclave to the north of Fryerning parish. The complicated boundaries likely arose from them having anciently been created from the subdivision of an earlier territory.
In 1889 the two parishes were merged into a new civil parish called Ingatestone and Fryerning. When elected parish and district councils were established in 1894, Ingatestone and Fryerning was given a parish council and included in the Chelmsford Rural District. The parish was transferred to Brentwood district in 1974.
The Ingatestone built up area as defined by the Office for National Statistics extends beyond Ingatestone and Fryerning parish to also include the neighbouring village of Mountnessing.
Ingatestone has two conservation areas: one covering the railway station and Station Lane, with the other protecting the central shopping area of High Street.

Education

The village has three schools:

Transport

The route of the A12 trunk road once passed through the centre of the village, but has since been bypassed. It provides direct access to East London, Chelmsford, Colchester, Ipswich, Harwich and Lowestoft; it also connects to the M25 motorway away.
Ingatestone railway station is a stop on the Great Eastern Main Line. It is served Monday to Saturday by an off-peak service of two Greater Anglia southbound trains an hour to, with one each to and Braintree northbound; rush-hour trains to London are more frequent. On Sundays, there are hourly trains to Liverpool Street and.
The village is served by First Essex's route 351, which provides regular services to Chelmsford, Brentwood and Warley. School services are operated by First Essex and NIBS Buses.

Sport

Ingatestone and Fryerning Cricket Club plays in Divisions 2 and 6 of the T Rippon Mid-Essex League; it celebrated its 160th anniversary in 2018.
The village also has two football teams: Redstones Football Club and Stones Athletic Youth Football Club.

Notable people