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Home Untitled Page reverend mother

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Below you'll find a list of all posts that have been tagged as “reverend mother”

convent with cross

Saffron Walden Convent

Until 1974, a forbidding brick wall ran along the Ashdon Road on the north side of the Common, largely concealing an even more forbidding and austere building.

carmeliteconventmother superiornunsratesreverend mothersisters

Indexed Articles (A-Z)

  • hill house frontage
    1979 Blueprint for Walden Buildings published: Saffron Walden Conservation Study
    Lorry drivers like driving through old towns and enjoy the nuisance value they create.
  • church
    A Moment in Time: Manuden in wartime
    The last few household possessions had been securely lifted into Mr Horley's van and my mother had gone back to the cottage to lock the front door. She tried the handle again to make sure it was locked then put the key in an envelope, together with a note for Charlie. She walked briskly to his door and pushed it underneath. Walking back past our cottage she took one last look through the front window, hesitated a little, then turned and walked quite quickly down the path to the removal van.
  • bittern in essex
    American Bittern: an historic first for Essex
    A remarkable detective story began when Nick Green, a member of the Essex Avifauna Committee, joined a group of ornithologists researching specimens of mounted birds kept at museums in Essex.
  • victorian policemen
    Archives of Saffron Walden-Crime Records, Diaries & Letters
    Saffron Walden is rich in historical archives, held by the Town Library, Saffron Walden Museum, the Town Council, Essex Record Office Archive Access Point and others, and much of it still largely untapped
  • Saffron Walden Museum
    Bronze Age Hoards from NW Essex
    Our understanding of local prehistory has been enriched over the past few years
  • camden, brittania
    Camden’s Britannia
    Among the treasures of Saffron Walden Town Library are various editions of the first-ever topographical survey of the whole country, by William Camden
  • newspaper front page
    Carnival v Festival
    ‘About five minutes television film time’, estimated BBC Director, Don Howarth, when questioned by a Weekly News reporter about the results of a To-Night television film team’s visit to Saffron Walden on Sunday.
  • causeways stone circles
    Causewayed Enclosures and Stone Circles
    Causewayed Enclosures are rare in England, with only about 60 known to exist, most of them in the south and south-east, but at least ten of these were clustered in the Cambridge area
  • Quendon church
    Churches of North-West Essex
    In 1973 the National Association of Decorative & Fine Art Societies or NADFAS (Now known as The Arts Society) set up an ambitious project to record all the features of churches, including names of artists, manufacturers, donors and those commemorated.
  • earthworks with church behind
    Clavering Castle: a mysterious moated monument
    Clavering Castle, which lies next to the Parish Church, is a large moated site designated by English Heritage as a Scheduled Ancient Monument, of Saxon or medieval origin.
  • picture of front of langley church
    Closure of Langley Methodist Church
    The final service at Langley Methodist Church on Sunday 18 July 2004 marked the end of over 142 years since the chapel was opened in 1862
  • henry compton
    Compton Census in NW Essex
    In January 1675/6 Gilbert Sheldon, Archbishop of Canterbury, directed that a census be made of the number of inhabitants papist recusants and dissenters in each parish
  • water colour with boat
    Cotman Connections: a case of serendipity
    Our search gradually revealed the history of another family in Church Street, one that produced one of our finest watercolour painters, John Sell Cotman.
  • Crawley Agrimotor of Saffron Walden
    In the early 20th century the town had its own motor-plough production and assembly plant
  • abolition of the slave trade
    East Anglia and the Abolition of the Slave Trade
    Between 1690 and 1807 it is estimated that some 11 million Africans were transported across the Atlantic as slaves
  • Essex record office
    Essex Record Office Archive Access Point in Saffron Walden
    The Essex Record Office Archive Access Point in Saffron Walden was opened in January 1996 in response to prolonged lobbying from local organisations, historical groups and individual historians
  • blackfoot indians
    Ethnography at Saffron Walden Museum
    Upstairs, in the semi-darkened rooms of Saffron Walden Museum, there lies a remarkable collection of cultural artefacts from all around the world, many of them gathered at the height of Victorian collection fever.
  • francis gibson garden bridge end
    Francis Gibson’s Garden
    Francis Gibson (1805–58), the youngest of Atkinson Francis Gibson’s children, conceived and designed Bridge End Garden, previously known as Fry’s Gardens.
  • woolworths, high street,
    Goodbye Woolies
    two old properties were demolished and replaced by Woolworths’ splendid new modern store.
  • town photo
    Historians of Essex
    The now considerable corpus of Essex historical literature and historiography is an important component of county tradition and its heritage. This brief survey of the Essex historians and their books is necessarily constrained by considerations of space and content.
  • stone, hole,
    Holed stones and sharp iron: equine folklore at Wicken Bonhunt
    The tiny settlement of Bonhunt, part of the parish of Wicken Bonhunt, four miles south-west of Saffron Walden, consists today of only four houses and the abandoned and desecrated early medieval chapel of St. Helen
  • map of UK
    How Saffron Walden correlates to the Demographic Transition Model between 1700 and 1850
    Saffron Walden was a town that was relatively unaffected by the Industrial Revolution, not experiencing vast amounts of in-migration. Instead it continued to thrive as a market centre for the surrounding villages
  • us airforce world war 2
    Impact of the American air bases during World War Two in East Anglia
    In 1939 there were only 1,700,000 people living in East Anglia. The main industry continued to be centred around agriculture, but the East Anglian economy was in a poor state in the pre-war period.
  • collin, hunt, colourized
    John Collin, Attorney of Saffron Walden, 1740- 1783
    John Collin, who was born in 1740 and died in 1783, was an attorney and banker from Saffron Walden.
  • picture of plaque on town hall
    John Newman: Martyr
    A blue plaque with the above inscription is to be found on the wall of Saffron Walden Town Hall above the western end of the front portico
  • photo of lief aalbu
    Lief Aalbu’s Scrapbook
    Amongst the papers of former Town Clerk H. C. Stacey in the Saffron Walden Town Library is a cheap red scrapbook that provides a unique insight into life in Saffron Walden during the second half of WW2
  • old print of tower of london
    Lieutenant of the Tower of London, Sir William Waad of Battles Hall, Manuden
    On the north wall of what used to be called 'Battles' Chapel', now the vestry of St Mary's Church, Manuden, is a large, elaborate tablet extolling the virtues of Sir William Waad who lived at Battles Hall, Manuden from 1586 to 1623
  • Littlebury-a walk back in time around the bounds
    On Sunday 21 May 2006 the History Group of the Parish of Littlebury Millennium Society re-created the ancient tradition of beating the parish bounds.
  • thunderley hall map essex
    Lost Parish of Thunderley
    Thunderley was a parish in NW Essex till the 15th century when it was judged unable to support a parson and merged with neighbouring Wimbish.
  • broxted green,
    Memories of Broxted
    ‘The date is 1910, when as a girl of twelve years, I lived in a small village among the meadows, brooks, and endless miles of flowering hedges and trees. All was peaceful in my little village… a church, post-office, mill, school and a candy shop.
  • boys british school
    Memories of the Boys’ British School, Saffron Walden 1937-1964
    ‘A man’s world’ – or so it seemed to me when I joined the staff of B.B.S. in 1937.
  • protestors
    Molehill Green Landscape History
    Molehill Green, a hamlet which is part of the parish of Takeley, bordering on Broxted, was envisaged to almost completely disappear if the proposal to build a second runway for Stansted Airport had gone ahead
  • harvest
    Radwinter’s Wartime Harvest Camp
    The country was hard-pressed to feed itself during the war, looking to the farmers to plough every last acre. Come harvest time, there was a shortage of labour.
  • Recent Archaeology in Saffron Walden Town Centre
    Saffron Walden has one of the best preserved historic centres in Essex.
  • oliver cromwell portrait
    Saffron Walden and the Struggle for Democracy
    The English Civil War, which divided England between the supporters of Charles I and those of Parliament in the middle of the 17th century, ground to a temporary conclusion in the twelve months following the Parliamentary army’s victory at the battle of Naseby on 14 June 1645
  • colour image of town arms
    Saffron Walden Borough Arms Deo Adjuvante Floremus
    In 1784 William Robinson jnr made a drawing which included the Borough Arms as used then, based on the 1688 seal made after the 1685 Charter.
  • college image
    Saffron Walden College
    During the years 1884-1977 Saffron Walden College for Mistresses had a distinguished history
  • convent with cross
    Saffron Walden Convent
    Until 1974, a forbidding brick wall ran along the Ashdon Road on the north side of the Common, largely concealing an even more forbidding and austere building.
  • Saffron Walden Town Hall
    A book with the title ‘Accct of Town Hall & New Buildings begun 1761’ in the town archives is endorsed ‘Samuel Fiske 1826 given me by J. Wolfe Esq’.
  • Saint Blaise
    Because of the importance of wool to the local economy, celebrations of Saint Blaise's day regularly took place in Saffron Walden. The last procession reportedly took place in 1778.
  • copper, tokens
    Seventeenth Century Copper Tokens of Saffron Walden: a commentary
    Copper farthing and halfpenny coins were issued in the mid-17th century by the town's tradesmen in the absence of royal copper coinage.
  • battle of assunden
    Site of the Battle of Assandun, 1016
    The Battle of Assandun was the event which eventually gave Cnut the Crown of England.
  • image of strethall church
    Skulduggery in the History of Strethall-A Millennium of Malfeasance in the Smallest Parish
    Small parishes do not necessarily have brief histories. Strethall (600 acres, 11 houses - current population 22) is arguably the smallest parish in Essex but its origin can be traced back well before Domesday when the 10 hides of land sold by King Aethelred
  • image of library
    Some Saffron Walden Buildings and their Architects
    Saffron Walden’s many and remarkable old buildings include features of nearly every architectural period from Norman times until the present day.
  • horham hall
    Some Stately Homes of North-West Essex
    The manor and estates of Little Easton were held in the Middle Ages by the Bourchiers, Earls of Essex 1356 – 1540. In 1582 the Manor of Easton, with its estates, was gifted by Queen Elizabeth I to Henry Maynard in recognition of his long service as Private Secretary to Lord Burleigh, the Queen’s Treasurer and Lord Chancellor.
  • St Marys, saffron walden, burials
    St. Mary’s, Saffron Walden Burial Registers 1558-1892
    The burial registers officially continue until the end of 1856, when the churchyard was closed for burials due to overcrowding
  • Ponds Cottages
    The Archetypical Poisoning Woman: Sarah Chesham
    Sarah Chesham was a working-class, illiterate woman who lived at Ponds cottages in Clavering. She was charged with murder (poisoning with arsenic) and tried on four occasions,
  • family tree
    The Churchmans of 16th and 17th century Walden, Wenden and Littlebury
    People of the middling sort were rare in the 16th and 17th century. In the arable areas of Essex, most people were either farm labourers (i.e. essentially, peasants) or were part of the small, all-powerful gentry.
  • wimbish green
    The Dissenters’ Burial Ground at Wimbish
    The Wimbish Dissenters’ burial ground today is well-maintained, planted with bulbs, and contains two memorial stones, as well as a seat donated by descendants in 2002.
  • building
    The History and Architecture of Number 1 Myddylton Place, Saffron Walden
    Saffron Walden's Youth Hostel stood on the corner of Myddylton Place and Bridge Street, once the main trading route and busy thoroughfare leading from London to Cambridge.
  • myddleton place
    The Legacy of Adrian Gibson
    Adrian Gibson, left an important legacy to the town of Saffron Walden by carefully describing and listing many of its most important buildings on behalf of English Heritage
  • shop
    The Misses Hart of Saffron Walden
    The story of Hart's is well known: of how Henry Hart, a carpenter's son from Linton, was apprenticed as printer in 1814 to George Youngman in Market Hill, Saffron Walden; and of how he bought his own printing press in 1836 and set up a stationery shop.
  • aerial photo
    The Moat Farm Murder – new documents
    The story of this scheming, philandering killer, Samuel Herbert Dougal and his callous elimination of Camille Holland, in order to get hold of her money, has been retold so endlessly in numerous books and articles, even novels and plays, that one would think there was nothing left to say on the subject.
  • image
    The National Trust in Saffron Walden and North-West Essex
    The National Trust in recent years has spoken out about the damage that could accompany ill-considered decisions to build on green-field sites as a result of the relaxation of current planning policies.
  • soldiers
    The Somme Anniversary
    On 1st July 1916 began the longest and most costly land battle in British history – the battle of the Somme.
  • king
    The Stone Coffin, the Lost Chapel and the Miracle of the Ring
    This is the intriguing story of one of the Miracles associated with Edward the Confessor, the last of the Saxon kings, and of its connection to a long-forgotten chapel in the village of Clavering in NW Essex
  • vestry members rejecting poor
    The Story of Widow Mowl: Parish politics in 18th century rural England
    Elizabeth Pomfrett was born in Saffron Walden in 1742. On the 2 May 1774 she married John Mowl, a higler of Thriplow in Thriplow Church.
  • The Walden Slades
    The Slades, three little streams that run through Saffron Walden, have an interesting history, including their impact on the town. The three streams drain the high land east of the town.
  • image of entrance to catons lane
    Treasure at Catons Lane: results of metal detector survey
    With the kind permission of Steve Cox and the Saffron Walden Football Club. I was afforded the opportunity to conduct an extensive survey of the football pitch both before and during soil disturbance
  • church frontage
    Who lies in the vault? An investigation of the occupants of Debden Church vault
    In recent years, the vault beneath the chancel of Debden church has been open to the public during the Church Christmas Fair.
  • Wimbish and Thunderley – the development of settlement in a boulder-clay landscape
    Thunderley and Wimbish since the Conquest, landholding and agricultural change in NW Essex
  • tomb of george wombwell at highgate
    Wombwell’s Menagerie
    George Wombwell was one of nine children of John Wombwell and Sarah Rogers. George was born on 24 December 1777 in Duddenhoe End in N.W. Essex
  • building
    ‘Establishments for Young Ladies’ Private Boarding Schools for Females c.1791-1861 with emphasis on Saffron Walden Ladies’ Schools
    After 1779 many private schools sprang up to cater for the needs of those who were not only dissatisfied with the old- fashioned, grammar schools for their sons, but also wanted education for their girls.
  • inside greenhouse
    ‘Say it with Flowers’ The Engelmann Nursery, Saffron Walden
    The difficulty of producing flowers throughout the year in the unfavourable British climate was finally solved by the development of the heated greenhouse.
  • Saffron Walden Museum
    ‘STAND AWHILE AND ADMIRE’ A History of the Saffron Walden Museum
    In September, 1832, three gentlemen strolled across the grass in front of the ruined keep of Walden Castle, deep in conversation. They were talking about the possibility of putting up a building for use as a museum

PDFs

The Articles repository existed historically as PDFs. As of 2025, we are indexing all articles, which appear above, alphabetically. All old PDFs yet to be indexed appear below in their original PDF format.

  • Cotman Connections
  • Debden Church Vault
  • Demographic Transition
  • Demolition Line WW2
  • Eglantyne Jebb
  • Eighteenth Century Walden
  • Family History - Miller
  • Family History - Pledger
  • Family History - Robinson
  • Field Names of Clavering
  • First World War - Saffron Walden
  • Hadstock Church
  • House Mr Robinson built
  • John Harveys Mantlepiece
  • Little Walden Medieval Park
  • Malt Theft Case 1833
  • Marquis d'Oisy
  • Miles Graye Made Me
  • Moat Farm Murder
  • Orford House
  • Pre-enclosure maps NW Essex
  • Prof Steve Osbourne
  • Prosecution Associations NW Essex
  • Pumps & Wells
  • RAB Butler
  • Radwinter Reredos
  • Reminiscences of a Country Auctioneer
  • Right up my Street
  • Rose & Crown Fire
  • Ruby Hurn
  • Saffron Walden and the Struggle for Democracy
  • Saffron Walden Turf Maze
  • Saffron Walden Museums Elephant
  • Saffron Walden Survey
  • Saffron Walden Town Football Club
  • Saint Blaise
  • SOE at Audley End 
  • The Bounds of Littlebury
  • The Gibson Boulders
  • The Richest Man in Walden
  • The Walden Slades
  • The Windmills of Walden
  • Walden memories 1950s
  • WE Nesfield and the Missing Archives
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The Saffron Walden Historical Society, founded in 1933, organises eight lectures a year and publishes a magazine, the SWHJ, twice a year. We welcome new members

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GPics avatar GoldenEraPics @GPics ·
26 Sep 1971579326077587768

🏰 St Bartholomew’s Gatehouse, London

Earliest surviving timber-framed façade in the city

Two-storey 16th-century Tudor building; stonework & archway from 13th century

Gatehouse to Norman Priory church of St Bartholomew Great, founded 1123
#London #History

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SWaldenHistory avatar Saffron Walden Historical Society @SWaldenHistory ·
18 Sep 1968573227652743267

Sigismond (John) Brooke/Broke. An alias he used in exile in Frankfurt ca 1557, which stuck. Prob the 4th son of George Brooke, 9th Ld Cobham. Close friend of Thomas Crawley of Wenden Lofts, owned property in Chrishall/ Chishill/Heydon. I've lost the reference … can anyone help?

Image for the Tweet beginning: Sigismond (John) Brooke/Broke. An alias Twitter feed image.
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SWaldenHistory avatar Saffron Walden Historical Society @SWaldenHistory ·
13 Sep 1966925211007320406

Steps to the pulpit at Oulton Chapel in Norfolk, a lovely little melody in gentle curves. Impossible to resist running one's hand up and down it.

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SWaldenHistory avatar Saffron Walden Historical Society @SWaldenHistory ·
7 Sep 1964606835434062014

Fascinating take on Pepys and on the publication history of the Diary from Kate Loveman, Braybrooke and various other Nevilles naturally to the fore - less charming but no doubt interesting, G de la B on the 'Dirty Bits' The TLS

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The debt to pleasure

Every year in the UK, Samuel Pepys’s diary is used to introduce thousands of primary school children to the st...

www.the-tls.com

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