Panfield
Panfield maps (2 available)
Panfield books (16 available)
Braintree Town and City Memories
Hardback
Chigwell Photographic Memories
Paperback
Chigwell Photographic Memories
Hardback
- 2 photos on Panfield appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of Panfield
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Panfield and Essex
Panfield memories
Be the first to add a memory of Panfield.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Essex below.
Essex memories
Our wedding
I am originally from St. Helens, Lancashire, and met my husband, Roy, at Burtonwood AFB where I worked. He was stationed at Wethersfield but came on occasion to Burtonwood. When I moved south to be married, I had to live in the neighbourhood for three weeks for the bans to be called out, and my husband's NCOIC was friendly with a lady who lived in the houses directly across from the church. Her name was Ada Stebbing. She took me in for those three weeks and I was married from her house in St. Andrews church. She managed to convince the local retired minister, Harry Jordan, to get permission from the bishop to come out of ...read more here
A memory of Shalford contributed by Anita Watson
Thorogoods in my family tree
This is not a memory as such, however I have been researching my husband's family tree. When speaking to elderly family members I have found that his grandmother's family, the Thorogoods, come from Shalford. I would like to know if there are any Thorogoods still in Shalford. We can't wait to find out more about your village and discover my husband's roots.
A memory of Shalford contributed by Paula Cooke
Rotten End
My parents had a weekend cottage at Rotten End in the 1950s, and I remember walking a footpath to Shalford regularly.
Can anybody tell me if this footpath still exists, or anything about it at all?
many thanks
Ros Stayne
A memory of Shalford contributed by Ros Stayne
Braintree County High School
I own a picture of the students of BCHS taken in 1947. Such a view has many many names and connections. There is the headmaster Dr. Cordingly [he of the famous stick]. Here is the vicar Hartley Brook's daughter. My old girl friend Shirley, and members of my class including Billy Cranfield, Ron Whittaker, David Woodward, Valerie O'Neill and a crowd of others. There also is "Madame" Elliot who tried in vain to teach me french. I visited the school a couple of years ago to discover to my distress, that it was no more. Perhaps some of those I have named will contact me. I am a physician in Oakland California USA...yes me, the most unruly nuisance of a kid ...read more here
A memory of Braintree contributed by Malcolm Stewart-Morris
Extracts From Panfield & Essex books
This mid-15th-century church was Victorianised in 1858. The lovely timber porch was left relatively
untouched, however; and a grave-slab from an earlier church has recently been discovered beneath
the pews. The rectory burned down in the 1950s. It was a Tudor building inside a later shell: those
chimney-stacks betray its true vintage.
An extract from from"Dunmow, Thaxted and Finchingfield Photographic Memories".
Panfield is a small village
with no real focal point.
The Hall occasionally
throws open its farmyard
and barns to host the
village fête. The building
is ascribed to c1500,
though successive lords
of the manor added new
wings, marked with their
initials and armorial
bearings. They removed
old wings too: the Hall
once extended further to
the right.
An extract from from"Dunmow, Thaxted and Finchingfield Photographic Memories".
Prior to 1935, all that would have been seen from in front of
the church would have been the top of the church spire. In the
foreground would have been a collection of dilapidated shops, and
a large wooden maltings out of shot to the right. In 1935 the
buildings, including the maltings, were demolished as part of a
road improvement scheme.
An extract from from"Braintree Town and City Memories".
One of the features of the gardens is the way in which the visitor is met with different views and layouts, from open spaces to densely planted areas, or along wide pathways with narrow winding pathways off to the sides.
An extract from from"Braintree Town and City Memories".
Continuing the development of houses along the main Dunmow to Colchester Road, these
fine houses, dating from the turn of the 20th century, were also built for the growing middle
class. They were known locally as ‘The Villas’. Mr Leonard Alden, who ran a tailor and
outfitter’s business, had one of these houses.
An extract from from"Braintree Town and City Memories".







