Chigwell

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Chigwell
Chigwell (Essex)
Chigwell

Chigwell shown within Essex
Population 12,449
OS grid reference TQ435935
District Epping Forest
Shire county Essex
Region East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CHIGWELL
Postcode district IG7
Dialling code 020
Police Essex
Fire Essex
Ambulance East of England
European Parliament East of England
UK Parliament Epping Forest
List of places: UKEnglandEssex

Coordinates: 51°37′21″N 0°04′20″E / 51.6225, 0.07227

Chigwell is a village in the Epping Forest district of Essex. It is located 11.6 miles (18.7 km) north east of Charing Cross. It is served by a London Underground station and has a London (020) area code.

Contents

[edit] Etymology

According to P. H. Reaney's 'Place-Names of Essex', the most authoritative guide to etymology in the county, the name means 'Cicca's well', Cicca being an Anglo-Saxon personal name. Folk etymology derives the name from a lost 'king's well', supposed to have been to the south-east of the village centre near the border of what is now the London Borough of Redbridge. There were several medicinal springs in Chigwell Row.

[edit] History

Traditionally a rural farming community, but now largely suburban, Chigwell was mentioned in the Domesday Book and later lauded by Charles Dickens in the novel Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty; the Maypole Inn is based on the King's Head inn, though the name was taken from the Maypole public house in Chigwell Row; and it is likely Dickens visited both hostelries. Charles Dickens frequently visited Chigwell, which he described in a letter as "the greatest place in the world...Such a delicious old inn opposite the church...such beautiful forest scenery...such an out of the way rural place!".

From 1933 to 1974 Chigwell formed together with Buckhurst Hill and Loughton the Chigwell Urban District. Parish councils were re-established for the parishes of Buckhurst Hill, Chigwell, and Loughton in 1996.

Chigwell School, a public school, was founded from a bequest by Samuel Harsnett, Archbishop of York, in 1629. Among its many famous past pupils is William Penn, who later went on to found Pennsylvania. The diarist John Aubrey recorded that it was at Chigwell School that Penn had a mystical vision, which influenced his later conversion to Quakerism. The original 17th-century schoolroom where Penn was taught still stands, and is now the school library.

Chigwell is characterised by large suburban houses, notably in Manor Road and Chigwell High Road, which featured in the popular English situation comedy Birds of a Feather (although many of the outside locations used in that programme were not in Chigwell). It is generally a wealthy area, which since the TV series Essex Wives journalists have called (with Loughton and Buckhurst Hill), the Essex golden triangle.

The hamlet of Chigwell Row lies towards the east of Chigwell near Lambourne; this part of the parish is well forested and mostly rural.

Grange Hill is the area around the junction of Manor Road and Fencepiece Road/Hainault Road, extending as far as the boundary with Redbridge and including the Limes Farm estate.

Chigwell is twinned with Mantes-la-Ville, a suburb of Paris, France.

[edit] Famous residents

[edit] Transport

[edit] Bus

Route Number Route
150 Becontree Heath to Chigwell Row via Ilford
167 Debden to Ilford via Barkingside
275 Walthamstow to Barkingside via Woodford
362 Grange Hill to King George Hospital via Marks Gate
462 Hainault (Manford Way) to Ilford via Gants Hill
667 (School Journeys) West Hatch School to Ilford via Barkingside
804 West Hatch School to Debden via Loughton
W14 Woodford Bridge (Manor Road) to Leyton via South Woodford

[edit] London Underground

Chigwell is served by Chigwell tube station and Grange Hill tube station (further south bordering Hainault), both on the Central line of the London Underground.

[edit] External Links

Section 19: London Outer Orbital Path Section 20:
Chingford Chigwell Havering-atte-Bower