Laindon and its Railway; or how the Ancient Institution of the parish was lost
By John Bathurst
The study of old maps can reveal a great deal about the history of the town or village were you live. A study of the older maps of Laindon, for instance can produce some quite interesting facts about our town. Furthermore, it is often a matter of some importance to those who might want to find out more about their family history. Those whose forbears come from Laindon will often need to keep abreast of the changes that may have occurred since they lived here.[1]
One of the reasons for this is that the expansion of Basildon since the New Towns Act of 1946 has led to the obliteration of “old” Laindon as well as a considerable alteration to boundaries that now make up the district as opposed to those of old. For example road signs have been erected that are meant to indicate different parts in the town that bear little relation to those of the past. “Laindon East” for example is now sign-posted for a part of that parish that was in the south of Laindon. Similarly, the Tesco store at the junction of Highview Avenue and Mandeville Way is detailed on its store guide as “Basildon: Laindon Hills” despite being in the original parish of Dunton.
These sorts of “mistakes” are not new. The coming of the railway to Laindon in 1888 introduced some changes to the way people thought of the parts of Essex it passed through. Many people will be aware that the station next to Laindon on the way to Fenchurch Street in London was once known as East Horndon but which became known as West Horndon in 1948 without having moved an inch. The reason is said to be that the then Lord Petre of Thorndon Hall, Ingrave who was the owner of the land on which that station was to be built insisted on the name in addition to the fact that the station should be provided with a private waiting room and special facilities for loading and off loading his horse boxes.[2]
The builders of the railway who were usually pretty precise in relating the naming of their stations and other structures to the topography of the area their lines ran through seem to have accepted the Baron’s strictures without demure and this may have had some influence on what happened in the Laindon area.
Those who regularly use the railway will know that after leaving West Horndon on the “down” line trains climb what is known as Dunton bank before passing through a cutting to reach Laindon Station. This bank has always been a problem for the railway companies because of its instability, a weakness that has been costly to put right and before electrification many a steam hauled train would grind to halt exhausted and unable to proceed without assistance.[3]
On the north side of the railway at the point of entering the cutting at the top of the bank lies Dunton Park (only accessible by road off Lower Dunton Road). This is the site of what was the Dunton Farm Colony, a colony that remained in use by the destitute of Poplar right up to the close of the second world war.[4] The colony was made famous by the actions of, among others, Joseph Fels and George Lansbury. (Grandfather of screen actress Angela Lansbury of “Murder She Wrote” fame) and had previously been Sumpners Farm. The farm was still in agricultural use when the railway first arrived and this necessitated the construction of three of what were known then to the railways as “occupation” bridges, a means by which the farmer could cross from one side of the cutting to the other.[5]
Only two of the original bridges remain, the most westerly of these close to Sumpners farm having long been demolished and has since been virtually replaced by the modern road bridge taking Mandeville way over the railway. Of the remaining two, both now provide only a means to walk between Mandeville Way on the south side to Durham Road on the north. However, both are important as landmarks. Of these two, the most westerly marks the point at which the railway line ceases to run through the parish of Dunton and runs into, surprisingly, the parish of Little Burstead. The railway correctly marked this fact because at a point just 100 yards to the west of this bridge was a small signal box on which there was a plate for those interested in reading it that this was in Dunton East.[6]
One night, at the height of the V2 rocket raids on Britain from the continent a V2 exploded close to the top of the railway cutting just a very short way on the east side of the bridge. For such a large explosion the damage caused was very slight. The top course of bricks on one side of the parapet was dislodged and little more than a barrow load of spoil from the embankment fell on one rail of the Southend bound track. So much for “Vorsprung durch Technik”.
The third of these three occupation bridges and the second of the two footbridges was the last railway bridge before the train running into Laindon station ran under the road bridge taking High Road over the railway. High Road is said to have once been a gated level crossing and all that was necessary when the rail tracks were first installed. No documentary or photographic evidence has, to my knowledge, come to light to support this contention. Meanwhile, the second footbridge served as a link between that portion of Little Burstead parish that was south of the railway to that part of the same parish to the north. But it was also an indication of closeness to one another of all the parishes that make up present day Laindon. To the north of the railway, Durham Road represented the southern boundary of Laindon. Similarly, on the south side of the railway, it was only a short walk into Langdon Hills.
These quirky twists and turns of the parish boundaries are clearly less important today. Time was when knowledge of them was so vital that regularly many English parishes practised the ceremony of the “beating of the bounds”. Parishes are no longer responsible for the local administration that they were when, often, the local parish priest, rector or vicar made decisions regarding the distribution of alms or charity behests.[7] This is particularly true in Laindon where the rector of St. Nicholas, the parish church of Laindon-cum-Basildon (Laindon with Dunton since 1990) controls the purse strings of the John Puckle charity of 1617.[8]. The somewhat bizarre parish boundaries of old that now make up the township of “modern” Laindon led to a situation that when the railway lines from London reached Laindon and a station was built, what name that station should be given. This is because although this new facility was convenient for the parish of Laindon to the north and the parish of Langdon Hills to the south (two parishes whose names have always been confused for centuries) the station when built actually straddled the boundaries of the two parishes of Little Burstead and Lee Chapel.
The choice of best name for the station must have been difficult because “Langdon Hills” was already established as a well-known beauty spot and early tourist trap. On the other hand, in order to progress towards its new Pitsea Junction, the railway developers must have been anxious to exploit their acquisition of the fields of Little Gubbins Farm on which the station had been built. The old farmhouse, speedily demolished, itself was actually situated just north of the southern boundary line of Laindon parish and was connected by a farm track to the main road now bisected by the railway. This farm track through the farmyard and onto the fields beyond was given a name “Windsor Road” and led to a series of speculative road names alongside which building “plots” were being offered for sale.
Some of the road names that were chosen reflected a general enthusiasm for the Crown and Victoria’s long occupancy of the throne. They continued in use until obliterated by the development of the New Town more than half a century later, and related to the names of royal residences; names like Balmoral, Buckingham, Osborne and Sandringham interspersed with the names of counties, Cumberland, Essex, Hertford, Kent and Rutland. At the same time, as if to reflect the aspirations of the speculators, the main road from Billericay to Horndon on the Hill and Stanford-le-Hope appears on the map for the first time with the name ”High Road”. This emphasised what was a clear wish; the “centre” of Laindon should henceforth be its commercial heart of newly constructed shops hard by the station. The township would no longer be the rambling, disconnected rural parish it once was. Much the same concept ruled to the south where High Road, Laindon became High Road, Langdon Hills.[9]
The “Windsor” of Windsor Road that connected the hoped-for new housing estate with the High Road was chosen as the name for the Working Men’s Club constructed right beside it. In a later moment of patriotism in 1940 “Windsor” became “Winston” and remained so right into the New Town era when Windsor Road was reduced to no more than a simple footpath leading to Little Oxcroft.
When trains bound for Southend-on-Sea and Shoeburyness leave Laindon station they rattle down hill from Laindon’s high point through the extra-parochial parish of Lee Chapel . This is a parish that, if it ever had a chapel, nobody has discovered where it was. Taking its name from the two manors of East and West Lee or Ley (only West Lee Hall is extant hence Westley Heights), the parish remained under the jurisdiction of the parish of Langdon Hills despite the great bulk of it being convenient to Laindon-cum-Basildon.[10]
Before leaving Lee Chapel parish the railway sliced its way through a grove of trees referred to as “The Plantation” Much mutilated, just a remnant of this remains today and is preserved on the south side of the track as a nature reserve between the railway and Mandeville Way. Another remnant remains south of Mandeville way parallel with Staneway.[11] Just to the east of The Plantation the railway builders were compelled to install a level crossing to allow passage of the users of the ancient way between St Nicholas church and Corringham. This road sometimes called the “Way to Willow Park” but more recently was known as Green Lane, an extension of Markhams Chase, and ran in very nearly a straight line over the hill via Lee Chapel Farm to One Tree Hill.
In “plotlands” Laindon a general shop hard by this gated level crossing led to the crossing being known to all and sundry as Barker’s crossing. It was much in use by the people who lived on the Primrose Hill estate a little south of the railway.[12] This included the redoubtable, horse riding, Mrs. Chataway whose rather distinctive style of dwelling in Uppercrest Road has led to the naming of the “Castle Mayne” public house in Lee Chapel South. The crossing is no more and no public right of way across the tracks exist any longer here, the New Town development having led to construction of a new road bridge adjacent to the converging Staneway, Mandeville Way and Laindon Link roads approximately 300 yards further east.
In constructing this new bridge the planners seem to have forgotten that the embankment that carries the Laindon Link to being on a level with the bridge was an artificial construction built up by spoil extracted from the east of Laindon High Road at the very beginning of the Link. Most of it was clay and when the developers built the small estate called “Winter Folly” at the east end of Hatterill they discovered that the made-up ground was unstable and were compelled to demolish some occupied dwellings.
Shortly after passing under the “new” Staneway bridge, eastbound trains pass the site of a now demolished signalbox that the railway company had, Basildon West. This was perched on an embankment at a point just west of the large car park opposite the traffic-light controlled junction of Laindon Link with Great Knightleys. Here again, the railway went a little astray because this signal box actually marked the boundary line between the parishes of Lee Chapel and Fobbing. The parish of Basildon actually lay to the east of the narrow country road called Lee Wootens Lane. This narrow country road ran from Dry Street in the south, past the lonely Fobbing Farm with its mill to link with Lee Wooton Farm (now demolished) in Lee Chapel parish and on to Brewitt’s before turning left and becoming Earl d’Essex Chase. The west end of this chase linked into Laindon parish at Markham Chase.
After crossing Lee Wootens Lane on a rather dilapidated looking bridge,(at least it was in photographs shortly before its demolition), the railway proceeded on through Basildon parish en route to Pitsea. At a time when the New Town and its railway station called “Basildon” had yet to be built, despite the distance, the people who lived in this sparsely populated and rather water logged area looked to Laindon as being the community to which they belonged. The, by now nationalised railway, was a long time resistant to building a station at Basildon’s town centre and did not concede the necessity to do so until the Ford Motor Company assisted financially in its construction in 1974 with the building of their Trafford House.
Before the construction of Basildon station, Laindon station shared with Pitsea the responsibility of providing the means of Basildon residents using the rail service. In order to do this the, then, bus service provider (Eastern National) operated a service that ran in times that coordinated with those of the train. This ran between Laindon and Pitsea stations and served Basildon Town centre and by so doing perpetuated a long standing use of the forecourt at Laindon as a bus service terminal that went back to the times of Fred Hinton, Bill Watson and (Old) Tom Webster’s buses that operated a Laindon Circular service in the 1920s.[13] Widespread private car ownership as well as the creation of Basildon Station ended the need for this and now Laindon station is but another call on the routes of local services.
Foot notes