Hornchurch
CHURCH RECORDS

St Andrew
High St
Baptisms 1567-1895
Marriages 1576-1885
Burials 1576-1898: ERO
Later records: Not deposited

Holy Cross
Park Lane
Baptisms 1926-1987
Marriages 1928-1985: ERO

St Alban
(Roman Catholic)
Langdale Gardens
Elm Park
Formed 1939

St George
Kenilworth Gdns
Built 1935 as chapel-of-ease to St Andrew

St Mary Mother of God
(Roman Catholic)
Hornchurch Rd
Formed 1931

St Nicholas
Elm Park
Baptisms 1942-1979
Marriages 1947-1989: ERO

St Peter
Gubbins Lane
Harold Wood
Baptisms 1895- date
Marriages 1939- date: Not deposited


Handbook to The Environs of London : James Thorne 1876

Including Ardleigh Green, Elm Park, Emmerson Park & Harold Wood

Hornchurch, Essex, about 2 miles east-southeast of the Romford Railway Station (Great Eastern Railway), on the road to Upminster: population 2476. Inns, White Hart; Bull.

The village, large and busy-looking, extends north towards Butt's Green, as well as along the road. It has a good-sized brewery (Woodfine's), a well-known steam engine and agricultural implement factory (Wedlake's), large tile and drainpipe works, and other establishments; but in the main the business is agricultural, and all around are extensive farms. The parish is bounded east by the little Rom brook, west by the Ingerbourn.

The Church, St. Andrew, on the right of the road at the east end of the village, is a large Perpendicular building of stone, but patched with brick.

It comprises nave with clere-storey, aisles (the south aisle being of brick and modern), chancel, porches, and a battlemented tower at the west end, of 3 stages, with turrets at the angles, that at the south west being the largest and carrying a flagstaff, and a slender spire which rises to a height of 170 ft.

On the apex of the east gable is fixed the carved skull of an ox, with broad-spreading curved horns. The interior is not of much interest.

The chancel was restored in 1869: the fine east window of five lights is filled with painted glass. At the east bay of each aisle is a good oak parclose. The body of the church is filled with tall pews. On the south of the chancel is a monument with kneeling effigies.

The horns on the gable of the church are commonly supposed to symbolize the name. Its origin is accounted for by a coarse tradition, which is given by Weever.

The received explanation is that the priory founded here by Henry II as a cell of the Hospice of St. Bernard in Savoy, was called the Monasterium Cornutum, and had the head and horns of an ox for a crest: but this, of course, does not show how the name originated.

On the suppression of the alien priories, William of Wykeham purchased the property, with the advowson of the living, for his New College, Oxford, to which it still belongs. A curious custom is maintained here.

New College, or the lessee of the tithes, provides once a year a boar's head, garnished with bay leaves and decorated with ribbons, which is wrestled for in a field adjoining the churchyard.