Coggeshall ( or ) is a town and civil parish in the Braintree district, in Essex, England, between Braintree and Colchester on the Roman road Stane Street and the River Blackwater. In 2001 it had a population of 3,919. It has almost 300 and a market whose charter was granted in 1256 by King Henry III.
The Domesday Book from 1086 addresses the village as Cogheshala and it is mentioned elsewhere as Cogshall, Coxal, Coggashæl and Gogshall . Coggeshall has also been called Sunnydon'', referenced in 1224 as an alias for the village.Beaumont pp. 11–13
Beaumont brought together several theories for the name in his 1890 book A History of Coggeshall, in Essex.
Coggeshall is mentioned as Cogheshala in the Domesday Book of 1086 in the ancient hundred of Witham, Open Domesday: (Great and Little) Coggeshall. Accessed 18 February 2025. when it had "a mill; about 60 men with ploughs and horses, oxen and sheep; woodland with swine and a swineherd, four stocks of bees and one priest". William the Conqueror gave the manor of Coggeshall to Eustace, the Count of Boulogne.
The modern history of Coggeshall begins around 1140 when King Stephen and his queen Matilda, founded Coggeshall Abbey, a large Savigniac abbey with 12 monks from Savigny Abbey in France,Greatorex, Jane (1999). Coggeshall Abbey and Abbey Mill (Manors, Mills & Manuscripts). Jane Greatorex, Castle Hedingham, Essex. . the last to be established before the order was absorbed by the Cistercians in 1147. Matilda visited the Abbey for the last time in 1151 and asked for the Abbot's blessing, "If thou should never see my face again, pray for my Soul. More things are wrought by prayer than this World dreams of."this is also attributed elsewhere to Alfred Lord Tennyson so Rose's claimed origin of this phrase is questionable
Flint and rubble were the main materials used in the construction of the monastery, and the buildings were faced with stone punted up the Blackwater, and locally produced brick. Brick making had died out in Britain since the Romans left and the monks may have been instrumental in its re-establishment around this time. They built a kiln in the north of the town at a place called Tile Kiln, an area now known as Tilkey. The bricks from Coggeshall are some of the earliest-known bricks in post-Roman Britain. Long Bridge, in the south of the village, was probably built in the 13th century using these bricks and the kiln in Tilkey continued to produce bricks until 1845. The Church was sufficiently complete to be dedicated by the Bishop of London in 1167.
The estate commanded by the monastery was extensive. The monks farmed sheep, and their skilled Sheep husbandry developed a high-quality wool that formed the foundation of the village's prosperous cloth trade during the 15th to mid-18th centuries, when it was particularly renowned for its fine Coggeshall White cloth. The monastery also had fishponds with strict fishing rights – a vicar of Coggeshall was imprisoned in Colchester for stealing fish. However, the monastery could not produce all that it required and sold produce at an annual fair to buy the things they did not have. In 1250 the Abbot of Coggeshall was allowed by Royal Charter to hold an eight-day fair commencing on 31 July – the feast of St. Peter-ad-Vincula, to whom the Parish Church was dedicated. In 1256, a Saturday market was granted as long as it didn't interfere with its neighbours. Colchester complained in 1318 that Coggeshall was a hindrance, and their complaint, being upheld, resulted in the market being moved to Thursday, where it remains to this day.Beaumont p. 91
The Black Death hit the Abbey hard, with the number of monks and conversi much reduced. Revenues across Essex fell to between one third to one half of pre-plague rates; the abbey suffered financially with tenanted and cultivated lands heavily decreased. During the Peasants' Revolt of 1381 the Abbey was broken into and pillaged. The sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire, John Sewall, was targeted by rioters at his Coggeshall house, now the Chapel Inn.Beaumont p. 231 – Greatorex writes Sewale and Beaumont writes Sewall By the early 15th century a new church was begun at the Abbey called St. Mary's; it was completed by the start of the 16th century but the Dissolution of the Monasteries brought an end to the prosperity of monks. In 1530 Abbot Love was demoted with a list of complaints raised against him; though some of them may have been fabricated, it appears that standards at the monastery were dropping. It was common practice at the time that Abbots unsympathetic to the will of the King were replaced with more favourable ones; in this case Abbot More was supplanted by Dr. T. Leigh. Coggeshall survived the Act of Suppression in 1536 and the Abbot of St. Mary Grace's, London, invested in its future. However, the political situation was opposed to the monasteries and Coggeshall succumbed in 1538, handed over by Abbot More.Beaumont p93 The monks were sent back to their families or into the community, many becoming priests. Abbot Love became vicar of Witham where he stayed until his death in 1559. The monastery's possessions and lands, totalling nearly 50,000 acres (200 km2), were seized; King Henry VIII granted them to Sir Thomas Seymour.Beaumont pp. 107–08 They remained in his possession until 1541 when they were split up.
In the 1086 Domesday Survey, Great and Little Coggeshall is listed in the hundred of Witham, Open Domesday: Witham hundred. Accessed 18 February 2025. not in the hundred of Lexden. Open Domesday: Lexden Hundred. Accessed 18 February 2025. The separate parishes of Great Coggeshall and Little Coggeshall were established thereafter. Well before the start of the 19th century, Great Coggeshall parish was within the hundred of Lexden, while Little Coggeshall remained within the hundred of Witham. Great and Little Coggeshall were reunited when the civil parish of Coggeshall was formed on 1 April 1949 from Great Coggeshall, Feering, Little Coggeshall, Markshall and Pattiswick parishes.
The 1851 census showed Coggeshall to be one of the most industrialised places in Essex. However, the English silk industry was being artificially supported by a ban on imported silk goods; Continental silk was cheaper and of a higher quality. When Parliament repealed the ban in 1826 and later reduced and finally removed duties on French silk, English weavers were unable to compete and Coggeshall's economy was devastated.Workers Education Authority 1951 (2000). The History of Coggeshall 1700–1914. Coggeshall: Coggeshall Museum
The town again found fame in Tambour lace, a form of lace-making introduced to Coggeshall around 1812 by a Monsieur Drago and his daughters. The production of this lace continued through the 19th century before dying out after the Second World War. Examples of Coggeshall lace have been worn by Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth II.
Coggeshall was noted for the quality of its brewing, in the late 19th century having four well-established institutions. In 1888 Gardner and Son were awarded the Diploma of Honour at the National Brewer's Exhibition.Beaumont p. 196 The brewery buildings have undergone alternative use in recent years, with several now used a residential buildings and another used as the Coggeshall Village Hall. note the use of the word village; Coggeshall residents often refer to the village as a town. The Village Hall was originally called St. Peter's Hall. In 2008 the Red Fox Brewery was opened near Coggeshall.http://www.redfoxbrewery.co.uk/about.htm Technically closer to Little Tey, the address is Coggeshall and the brewery has brewed a beer called Coggeshall Gold
By the end of the 19th century gelatine and isinglass production was well established at a site on West Street, production continued until ceasing in the late 1980s.
In the mid-19th century John Kemp King established seed growing in the area where it continues to this day.Beaumont p. 196; it is also remarked that JK King had his own brewery that has not survived. The seed growing industry is said to have originally started with the Cistercian monks at the abbey.Warren, C.H. p54
The Quakers were active in Coggeshall as early as 1655, with Fox stating "I came to Cogshall, and there was a meeting of about 2,000 people." That same year James Parnell, a Quaker, caused a disturbance at the church and was sentenced to prison at Colchester Castle where he died whilst imprisoned in 1656. A meeting house was purchased on Stoneham Street in 1673 with a new building constructed in 1878. A graveyard was purchased on Tilkey Road in 1856 but now forms part of a private garden attached to Quaker Cottage. The meeting house is now home to Coggeshall Library.Beaufont pp. 14–48
Coggeshall has proved an important place in the local Baptist Ministry. For many years congregations met in a house just off Hare Bridge, and in 1797 the first annual meeting of the Essex Baptist Association was held in the Independent Meeting House. A permanent meeting house was constructed in 1825 along Church Street. This building is now used as business offices.Beaufont p. 148-49
The have been present in Coggeshall since 1811, worshipping first at a house on Stoneham Street, then a chapel on East Street. A permanent chapel was constructed in 1883 on Stoneham Street to seat 250 people and now hosts a local children's nursery.Beaufont p. 149
Population | 4198 | 3361 | 3919 | 4727 | |||||
Number of houses | 765 | 2039 |
The Church of St Peter-ad-Vincula (St Peter in chains) is built on an earlier Norman church. It is one of the largest churches in Essex (internal dimensions of 134 ft 6 in by 62 ft 9 in, or 41m by 19m; the tower reaches a height of 72 ft or 22m) and was considered as a possible choice for cathedral, with Chelmsford Cathedral eventually being chosen.(2006) A Guide to Essex Churches. Chelmsford: Essex Tourism, p. 4. The present church was built in the perpendicular style with 'wool money' during the first quarter of the 15th century; its unusual size is testament to the affluence of the town at the time. Restoration work was carried out during the 19th century. During the Second World War, on 16 September 1940, the Luftwaffe bombed the church causing the roof of the nave to collapse and significant structural damage; repairs were completed in 1956. by John Armstrong, 1940, showing bomb damage]] To celebrate the Millennium two new Church bell were purchased, bringing the total to ten. Coggeshall hosts the fifth heaviest peal in Essex, A brief History of St Peters . St. Peter-ad-Vincula official website. Retrieved on 28 December 2006 the heaviest four being (in descending order) Waltham Abbey, Chelmsford Cathedral, All Saints’ Writtle and All Saints’ West Ham.Unfortunately, the church brochure incorrectly lays claim to the heaviest ring. Dove'
Paycocke's House was built in or around 1500 by John Paycocke (d. 1505); it is thought it was built as a wedding present for his son Thomas and daughter-in-law Margaret as the initials T.P. and M.P. appear in the wood carvings that decorate the house. The house features elaborate wood panelling and carvings, a testament to the wealth generated by the wool trade in East Anglia. It also features gates which some think were taken from the Abbey at the time of its dissolution.
The Paycocke family moved into Coggeshall in the 15th century and exemplified a trend for successful butchers to acquire large flocks of their own sheep which would produce wool as well as meat. The wool could be used to make cloth and often the 'grazing butchers' would eventually evolve into cloth merchant. These merchants frequently became very wealthy during this process. Thomas was the last Paycocke to live in Coggeshall, dying in 1580. It was the sold to the Buxton family who were clothiers and from 1746 changed hands several times eventually being bought by Lord Noel-Buxton, a descendant of the original Buxtons, and given to The National Trust in 1924. Restoration work was carried out in the 1960s and the house is now open to the public.Wallace, Carew 1974 (1979). Paycocke's. London: The National Trust. Paycocke's , The National Trust Website, Retrieved on 10 February 2007.
Grange Barn was built by the Cistercians in the 13th century to serve the abbey. It is one of the oldest surviving timber-framed buildings in Europe. It was located a quarter of a mile from the Abbey and underwent significant structural alteration in the 14th century. It survived the Dissolution of the Monasteries, remaining in continual agricultural use up until 1960 when it was left derelict. It was compulsorily purchased in 1982 by Braintree District Council, who initiated the restoration of the barn, with the work being completed in 1985. In 1989 the barn was given to The National Trust for its future preservation. Although it has undergone extensive reconstruction and its original Thatch has been replaced with tile, the barn today represents that which existed in the 14th century. Grange Barn is now open to the public showing a collection of farm carts and wagons, and is available to hire for special events. Coggeshall Grange Barn. Coggeshall Grange Barn independent website. Retrieved on 10 February 2007. Coggeshall Grange Barn , The National Trust website. Retrieved on 10 February 2007. Heritage in Our Hands , Friends of Coggeshall Grange Barn website. Retrieved on 21 March 2007.
The Coggeshall clock tower was built to celebrate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1887 and the clockhouse was at one point a school for the poor children of the village and later housed an award-winning tearoom. It is currently a wine bar.
Nunn's Bridge, a wrought-iron footbridge on a Public Right of Way crossing the River Blackwater was listed by Historic England in 2020. Erected in 1892, it is unique in its design, and was made and installed by local blacksmith and social campaigner Henry 'Dick' Nunn after the previous wooden bridge was washed away and authorities refused to replace it. Nunn was an early campaigner for human and animal welfare, and advocate of rights of way in the countryside.
The phrase is said to have originated one day when Coggeshall's town clock chimed 11 times at noon. When the villagers heard that the town clock at Lexden had struck 12 times at 11 o'clock, they rode to the town to collect the missing stroke. Other jobs included winching up a cow onto the church roof to eat the grass growing there, knocking down one of two windmills as there would not be enough wind for both of them, attempting to divert the course of the river with hurdles, hanging sheets over roads to prevent the wind from blowing disease into the town, chopping the head off a lamb to free it from a gate, removing stairs from a house to stop flood water entering and some appropriated from other 'fool centres', for example the classic 'fishing for the moon'.
Local radio stations are BBC Essex on 103.5 FM, Heart East on 96.1 FM, Greatest Hits Radio East (formerly Dream 100 FM) on 100.2 FM, Actual Radio a DAB station and Leisure FM, a community based radio station that broadcast on 107.4 FM.
The town is served by these local newspapers, Braintree and Witham Times, Essex County Standard and East Anglian Daily Times.
The local cricket team, Coggeshall Town CC, currently plays in the Two Counties Cricket Championship, the second tier of club cricket in Essex and have won the 1st Division on 4 occasions, the last in the 90s. They are one of the oldest cricket clubs in Essex having been formed in the 1800s.
JMW Motorsport, a European Le Mans Series LMGT3 class team, are based in Coggleshall.
The magistrates convened at the Chapel Inn in Coggeshall and sent a posse of the new county police to the Black Horse Inn. Some of the gang were caught there and then, but the gang's leader made a daring escape across the rooftops, eventually being arrested trying to board a ship to France. Twenty men were brought to trial at the Shire Hall in Chelmsford, evidence being provided by 700 witnesses. Such was the interest in the gang that the galleries of the courtroom were filled with fashionably dressed women. One of the members was sentenced to hang, commuted to transportation for life, and others were transported to Australia for terms varying from life to seven years. ally farmed a large area of Western Australia and retired to Coggeshall a very wealthy man. Another had farms in Queensland and became a pillar of his local community, while a third ran a successful bakery in Tasmania and mingled with the best of local society. .Wade, Barry The Coggeshall Gang Feedaread.com 2016
Sir Robert Hitcham's School was founded in 1636 as part of the will of Sir Robert Hitcham, a member of parliament and Attorney General. The school was to educate 20 or 30 of the poorest children of the town and to give them funding for apprenticeships. The school functioned until the mid-20th century, being rebuilt in 1858 on land opposite Paycockes.Beaumont pp. 150–59
A national school was started in 1838–39 when the old workhouse on Stoneham Street was given to the vicar and churchwardens.Beaumont p181
The British school was built on land adjoining the Independent Chapel (current-day Christ Church) in 1841 for education of the poor.Beaumont p182
In the late 20th century St Peter's School Church of England Primary School was opened in the land opposite St. Peter ad Vincula Church. It was rebuilt in the 1980s.
In 2008 a Montessori School was founded in the rooms above Christ Church.
Coggeshall has one comprehensive secondary school called Honywood Community Science School.
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