Welcome to Visit Shelley, Essex Places
The Walkfo guide to things to do & explore in Shelley, Essex
Visit Shelley, Essex places using Walkfo for free guided tours of the best Shelley, Essex places to visit. A unique way to experience Shelley, Essex’s places, Walkfo allows you to explore Shelley, Essex as you would a museum or art gallery with audio guides.
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Shelley is a partly rural village and partly residential conurbation in the Ongar civil parish of the Epping Forest district of Essex. The former civil parish focused on the parish church and the manor house of Shelley Hall at the north of the parish. Shelley is 9 miles west from the county town of Chelmsford. When you visit Shelley, Essex, Walkfo brings Shelley, Essex places to life as you travel by foot, bike, bus or car with a mobile phone & headphones.
Shelley, Essex Places Overview: History, Culture & Facts about Shelley, Essex
Visit Shelley, Essex – Walkfo’s stats for the places to visit
With 20 audio plaques & Shelley, Essex places for you to explore in the Shelley, Essex area, Walkfo is the world’s largest heritage & history digital plaque provider. The AI continually learns & refines facts about the best Shelley, Essex places to visit from travel & tourism authorities (like Wikipedia), converting history into an interactive audio experience.
Shelley, Essex history
In the Domesday Book, Shelley is listed as “Senleia”. Shelley manor was of 13 households, with five villagers, five smallholders, and three slaves, and included one lord’s plough team and two men’s plough teams. There were 20 acres (0.08 km) of meadow, and woodland with 150 pigs. Before the Conquest, lordship was held by Leofday, under the overlordship of Esger the Constable; after which in 1086 the manor was given to Reginald, under Geoffrey de Mandeville who was Tenant-in-chief to William the Conqueror. Shelley was described in 1848 as “a small parish of scattered houses, between the river Roding and Cripsey Brook, 1½ miles north from Chipping Ongar”. At the time, Shelley Hall, 65 yards (60 m) west from today’s parish Church of St Peter, was home to the Lord of the Manor and principal landowner. Of Elizabethan style, it was extensively restored in 1869. Shelley Hall is today a Grade II* listed gabled, timber framed and brick clad house dating to the 14th century with 16th- to 18th-century structural additions and internal fittings. By 1848, the former mansion of Bundish Hall, 1⁄2 mile (800 m) north from the church, had been reduced to a moated farmhouse, and is today partly within Moreton parish. The church in 1848, built in 1811 on the site of a decayed and unused former church, consisted of a small nave, a brick chancel and a western wooden turret with one bell. The parish incumbency, in the gift of the Lord of the Manor, was held by the rector of Stapleford Tawney, with Shelley glebe land, attached to the rectory and directly supporting the incumbent and church, being of 37 acres (0.15 km), remaining almost unchanged until at least 1914. The parish rectory, near the hall but no longer existing, was described as “an ancient timber-framed building”, and was where Thomas Newton (1704–1782), subsequently the Bishop of Bristol from 1761 to his death, wrote his Dissertations on the Prophecies, which he completed in 1758. The rectory, about 500 yards (457 m) west from the church, dated to perhaps before the 16th century, was later enlarged, was restored in 1861, and had a front face of four gables with a two-storey porch at the centre. The house was burnt down when unoccupied in 1937. Within the church was noted a memorial of inscribed brass with effigy to John Green, who died in 1626, aged 89, and his wife, and sixteen children of whom seven were boys. The children left the manor but produced 111 grandchildren during the life of John Green and his wife. The parish registers date to 1689 for baptisms, 1687 for burials, and 1709 for marriages. Two parish charities were those of Harvey Kimpton who was Lord of the Manor until his death in 1817, and of William Bullock in 1822. The Kimpton charity of £110.5s.2d. gave a three per cent dividend per year, as did the Bullock charity from a bank annuity of £333.6s.8d. Both charities provided for the relief of parish poor, with Bullock’s being distributed by the rector on Christmas Day in the form of beef, bread and coal to those of good character. The rector was also responsible for the upkeep of Shelly Bridge over Cripsey Brook on Moreton Road to the south-west of the church. Shelley parish was in the Ongar Union – poor relief provision set up under the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 – and in the Ongar Rural Deanery, of the Essex Archdeaconry of the Diocese of St Albans. In 1888 St Peter’s Church was entirely rebuilt on same site in Early English style with flint and Bath stone. The new, and existing, church has a nave of three bays, a north aisle, a vestry and an organ chamber. The tower, with shingle broach spire, and containing two bells dating to 1810, is built at the north west corner of the church, the base of the tower forming the north facing porch. During digging the foundations for new church, two tombstones, dated 1652 and 1765, were discovered and were built into the west wall of the porch. The present church is Grade II listed. During at least the last half of the 19th and into the 20th century, children at Shelley were entitled to attend school at Chipping Ongar. Attached to Shelley Hall was a room which housed the parish Sunday School, which in 1894 was being taught by the occupant of the Hall and the daughters of the rector. In 1818 education for the poor had been provided by a Sunday School in Ongar and a nearby day school, paid for through a subscription from the rector. The rector’s later Sunday School at Shelley, begun in 1828, was attended by nine males and eight females. Crops grown in the parish were chiefly wheat, barley, beans, clover, and roots (typically root vegetables such as turnips), these on a soil of marl over a clay subsoil. Shelley parish area in 1848 was 660 acres (2.67 km); in 1882 was 586 acres (2.37 km); and in 1894, 1902 and 1914 was 604 acres (2.44 km). Shelley parish population in 1818 was 175; in 1833 was 163; in 1841 was 209; in 1881 was 200; in 1891 and 1901 was 186; in 1911 was 232, and in 1931 was 386. Trade directory parish occupations in 1848 listed five farmers, a beer seller, and a plumber. By 1863 there were four farmers, one of whom was a cattle dealer, a tailor, two shoemakers, one of whom ran a beer house, and a ‘traveller’ (possibly a hawker). In 1874 there were four farmers, presuming one to be at Shelley Hall, and a new listing for the licensee of the Red Cow public house, who remained listed until at least 1914. By 1882 the number of farmers was reduced to three, and by 1914, to two. At Shelley Hall a mechanical engineer was listed for 1882. New occupations by 1914 were two accountants and a dressmaker. From 1863 to 1882 an establishment variously listed as a ladies’ boarding school and ladies’ academy was present at Shelley House, a building at the south on today’s crossroads of the A414 and B184. This Georgian-facaded house with later 19th- and early 20th-century additions, probably dated to the late 17th century, but today is non-existent. Until the Second World War Shelley was chiefly a rural parish. However, a small program of council house and prefabricated bungalow building was started before the War on Moreton Road at the south by the then Ongar Rural District Council, which, between 1945 and 1953, planned and developed further housing infill of the southern part of Shelley, between Moreton Road and the A414, of approximately 450 houses, with shops, a community hall and Shelley primary school. In 1965 Shelley civil parish was abolished and absorbed, with Chipping Ongar, Marden Ash and Greensted, into the new Ongar civil parish, governed by its own Ongar Town Council. In 1974 Ongar civil parish with its town council, which was previously within Epping and Ongar Rural District, was transferred to the new Epping Forest District of Essex. In 2013 a planning application was presented to Epping Forest District Council and Ongar Town Council by Fyfield Joint Venture, an organization based within Fyfield Business and Research Park which is privately operated by the real estate company Fyfield Business And Research Park Ltd. The proposal was to develop the Park with the addition of 105 homes and shops, an enlarged café, recreational facilities, 140 square metres (1,507 sq ft) of new retail space, increased parking, and a new access roundabout, partly on the green belt. Ongar Town Council wrote to Eric Pickles, the then Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, over lack of public consultation and safety concerns. A revised plan was presented by Fyfield Joint Venture in 2015.
Why visit Shelley, Essex with Walkfo Travel Guide App?
You can visit Shelley, Essex places with Walkfo Shelley, Essex to hear history at Shelley, Essex’s places whilst walking around using the free digital tour app. Walkfo Shelley, Essex has 20 places to visit in our interactive Shelley, Essex map, with amazing history, culture & travel facts you can explore the same way you would at a museum or art gallery with information audio headset. With Walkfo, you can travel by foot, bike or bus throughout Shelley, Essex, being in the moment, without digital distraction or limits to a specific walking route. Our historic audio walks, National Trust interactive audio experiences, digital tour guides for English Heritage locations are available at Shelley, Essex places, with a AI tour guide to help you get the best from a visit to Shelley, Essex & the surrounding areas.
Walkfo: Visit Shelley, Essex Places Map
20 tourist, history, culture & geography spots
Shelley, Essex historic spots | Shelley, Essex tourist destinations | Shelley, Essex plaques | Shelley, Essex geographic features |
Walkfo Shelley, Essex tourism map key: places to see & visit like National Trust sites, Blue Plaques, English Heritage locations & top tourist destinations in Shelley, Essex |
Best Shelley, Essex places to visit
Shelley, Essex has places to explore by foot, bike or bus. Below are a selection of the varied Shelley, Essex’s destinations you can visit with additional content available at the Walkfo Shelley, Essex’s information audio spots:
Greensted Church
Greensted Church, in the small village of Greensted, near Chipping Ongar in Essex, England, is claimed to be the oldest wooden church in the world. Grade I listed building lies about a mile west of the town centre. It is still a functioning church and holds services every week.
Visit Shelley, Essex plaques
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plaques
here Shelley, Essex has 2 physical plaques in tourist plaque schemes for you to explore via Walkfo Shelley, Essex plaques audio map when visiting. Plaques like National Heritage’s “Blue Plaques” provide visual geo-markers to highlight points-of-interest at the places where they happened – and Walkfo’s AI has researched additional, deeper content when you visit Shelley, Essex using the app. Experience the history of a location when Walkfo local tourist guide app triggers audio close to each Shelley, Essex plaque. Explore Plaques & History has a complete list of Hartlepool’s plaques & Hartlepool history plaque map.