Tillingham
Tillingham maps (2 available)
Tillingham books (13 available)
Tillingham memories
Church Choir
This is were I sung in the church choir,I started in the choir then progressed to what was then known as a server helping the vicar with holy communion.After church on sunday mornings it was over to the sweet shop for our free milky way chocolate bar.
Contributed by Antony Burton
Wonderful Tillingham
My memories are a little vague but my family come from Tillingham. The family name is Hammond and my great-great-grandfather had a blacksmith's shop there in the High Street, it was there untill fifteen years ago but has now been redeveloped. I have many personal photos of my family but would be interested in anybody who had more photos or memories to share of this wonderful Essex village.
Contributed by Antony hammond
Tillingham When I was a Lad
I remember helping my father Alan to herd the sheep from Marsh House Farm to West Hyde Farm. When we got to Tillingham Square we rested them and the villagers used to come out to see us. I used to sing in the church choir and I used to attend the primary school, I was in Miss Rodda's class. When the Bradwell power station was being built, after school I used to cycle to Bradwell to see the large heat exchanges being lifted on to low loaders to be transported to the station.
Contributed by Thomas Lungley
school bus and pub
The old school bus in the photoo was used to take me and other children of the village to school it was affectionately known as "kemps cronk"as it was owned by Tony Kemp and his brother who owned the local garage. The fox and hounds was where I first started drinking at "18" !!!!!!!?????? I played in the dart and domino club at the pub.
Contributed by Antony Burton
Extracts From Tillingham & Essex books
For a number of years the five acre site stood in
splendid isolation with magnificent views of the sea
across open fields which had formerly been Clacton’s
first golf course and was later to become the Gardens
area. The home had cost £30,000 to build and was
designed to accommodate 26 men, 17 women and
12 children. An annexe for consumptive patients
was subsequently added. The home’s most notable
role however was to accommodate wounded soldiers
throughout the First World War. Shortly after the
Second World War the home was transferred to
the Kensington and Chelsea Health Authority and
it was closed by them in 1977. It was subsequently
taken over by the North East Essex Health Authority
and was used to accommodate up to 70 mentally
handicapped patients and as a small day care unit. It
was finally closed in 1985 and the site was acquired
by Wimpey Homes. The building still stands and is
given over to private dwellings.
Eventually Page’s Estate, Bruff’s Estate, together
with other estates around Clacton such as Round’s
Estate and Burrsville, linked up with the ancient
villages of Great Clacton and Magdalen Green as well
as the outlying areas of Jaywick and Little Holland, to
form what we know today as Clacton-on-Sea.
Maybe its glory days of the 1920s and 1930s are
gone, but with its several miles of golden sand, its
gardens and its entertainments and amusements
Clacton-on-Sea still has much to offer to the
holidaymaker and resident alike.
An extract from from"Clacton-on-Sea Town and City Memories".
To the right of christ church is the Catholic Church of Our Lady of Light. The architect was F W Tasker and the church was opened on 15 October 1903. It is cruciform in plan and consists of a nave of five bays with transepts to the north and south.
An extract from from"Clacton-on-Sea Town and City Memories".
The passmore Edwards Convalesent Home stood at the far end of the Promenade. It was concieved by John Passmore Edwards as a holiday home for deprived children. The foundation ston was laid by Sir H H Fowler MP on 19 May 1898 and the building officially opened on 23 June 1899. It eventually became a convalescent home and medical rehabilitation center for the North East Metropolitan Region and was closed and demolished in 1986.
An extract from from"Clacton-on-Sea Town and City Memories".
To the right, behind the flagpole is the Life Boat House, designed by Charles H Cooke and opened in 1878. The building was enclosed by a fence to protect it from damage by cattle. The round dormer window at the top admitted light to the roof space which housed two large hook for raising and lowering the boat on to its carriage. A winding staircase led up the tower to the left where a warning bell was hung to summon the crew when needed. The boat was then drawn down to the beach by horses and launched from the beach.
An extract from from"Clacton-on-Sea Town and City Memories".
The building on the right was built in 1899. Part of it was
a pumping station used to pump sea water to standpipes
dotted around the town for Council workmen to draw off
water to wash down the dusty streets. Residents could also
buy a key to enable them to bring relief to their tired feet.
An extract from from"Clacton-on-Sea Town and City Memories".





