High Ongar, before Victorian rebuilding. If the sketch is accurate then it once had a lofty spire, higher than Doddinghurst or Shenfield |
More about the Probert Scrapbook now deposited at the Essex Record Office (ERO A13366).
The Essex Archaeological Society (now the Essex Society for Archaeology and History) has a long history, stretching back to 1852. The passing of time means that over the many years the Society has not only published thousands of pages of historic interest through its own ‘Transactions’ but accumulated many publications left by former members, probably upon their demise. The office contains a treasure trove of material which has quietly languished there, some in need of viewing by a wider audience, some which needs to be retained and another larger proportion which needs to be sold or disposed. All have gathered dust!
The Essex Archaeological Society (now the Essex Society for Archaeology and History) has a long history, stretching back to 1852. The passing of time means that over the many years the Society has not only published thousands of pages of historic interest through its own ‘Transactions’ but accumulated many publications left by former members, probably upon their demise. The office contains a treasure trove of material which has quietly languished there, some in need of viewing by a wider audience, some which needs to be retained and another larger proportion which needs to be sold or disposed. All have gathered dust!
One
‘discovery’ was a scrapbook owned or compiled by a Victorian member of the
Society named C K Probert. It contains
some reports of Society Meetings (today called ‘Excursions’), text on some
church refurbishments and rebuilds, and, principally, cuttings from books
(Suckling, Buckler) and the compiler’s own sketches of Essex churches.
The
Essex churches are of particular interest.
In my local area there are sketches of High Ongar and Bobbingworth (churches
before “Victorianisation”. I was aware that
Bobbingworth once had a timber bell tower but the sketch confirms that it had,
like High Ongar, at least a timber belfry.
These structures were considerable out of vogue in mid Victorian
Essex. Alfred Suckling (1845) refers to
Blackmore’s magnificent three-tier bell tower as being an “inelegant spire”.
St
Germain, Bobbingworth was rebuilt in 1841.
Doorway at High Ongar Church |
St
Mary’s High Ongar was largely rebuilt in 1858 but still possesses the fine
Norman doorway below the Victorian tower.
The
passing of about 150 years has discoloured the drawings: the paste used to stick
the pictures into the scrapbook having aged.
However, this is the first time I have seen drawings of two local
churches prior to restoration and, given the quality and proportionality of the
other sketches I have reason to believe that these are faithful reproductions –
and that these might be the only surviving representations.
Bibliography:
Pevsner
/ Bettley: The Buildings of England.
Essex (Yale, 2007)
Suckling,
Rev Alfred. Memorials of the antiquities
and architecture family history and heraldry of the County of Essex (John
Weale, London, 1845)
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