Southminster
Southminster maps (2 available)
Southminster books (20 available)
Brentwood Town Walk Guide
Paperback
So You Think You Know? Chelmsford
Hardback
Colchester Photographic Memories
Paperback
Southminster memories
Jacqueline Oldman
While researching my family history I came across this article in the Eastern Counties Advertiser 18th October 1879. It is the coroner's report relating to my great great grandfather's brother Thomas Brassett 1815 - 1879 an agricultural labourer of Southminster Essex. He was born 2nd August 1871 and baptised 5th August the son of Thomas and Amelia.
Southminster
Found Drowned - On Saturday afternoon an inquest was held at the White Hart Inn, by Mr W Codd, touching the death of Thomas Brassett aged 64 years of age, whose body was found in a ditch early on Thursday morning last, near Plumbro House, on the Southminster marshes. The witnesss examined were Benjamin Boosey and George Sams; but there was no ...read more here
Contributed by First name Last name
Essex memories
Jacqueline Oldman
While researching my family history I came across this article in the Eastern Counties Advertiser 18th October 1879. It is the coroner's report relating to my great great grandfather's brother Thomas Brassett 1815 - 1879 an agricultural labourer of Southminster Essex. He was born 2nd August 1871 and baptised 5th August the son of Thomas and Amelia.
Southminster
Found Drowned - On Saturday afternoon an inquest was held at the White Hart Inn, by Mr W Codd, touching the death of Thomas Brassett aged 64 years of age, whose body was found in a ditch early on Thursday morning last, near Plumbro House, on the Southminster marshes. The witnesss examined were Benjamin Boosey and George Sams; but there was no ...read more here
A memory of Southminster contributed by First name Last name
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.
A memory of Tillingham 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.
A memory of Tillingham contributed by Antony Burton
Extracts From Southminster & Essex books
Colchester was also visited by the Roman
Emperor himself, who considered the capture of
this capital vital to the success of the conquest
from AD43 onwards.
The next appearance on the chart of British
history was less happy. Boudicca, or, as she
used to be known, ‘Boadicea’, queen of the
Iceni and daughter of King Prasutagus, ruled
much of what is now East Anglia and rose in
revolt after being flogged and her daughters
raped by the Romans. The town with its mostly
timber buildings was burnt, though the stone
Temple of Claudius defied the Britons for two
more days. The rebels swept on to burn more
towns before their defeat, and Colchester was
rebuilt and walled in stone. It never fully
recovered; although it remained a prosperous
town, Londinium, the more natural focus
for the province, rapidly outstripped it as the
premier settlement of Britannia.
During the Anglo-Saxon period the town was
occupied at varying degrees of intensity, but the
only physical reminder of these centuries is the
fine west tower of Holy Trinity church, a mid
11th-century landmark. It uses salvaged Roman
bricks, septaria and stone from ruined Roman
buildings, a habit continued by the Normans
after 1066, when the town was a prosperous one
with seven priests. This presumably relates to
the number of churches, including Holy Trinity,
St Botolph’s and St Runwald’s, which was in
the High Street near the town hall and was only
demolished in 1878.
The Norman arrival led, as in other towns
such as Norwich, to wholesale demolition to
accommodate a castle with its baileys within the
town walls. The great castle cleared the north-
east sector of the Roman town.
An extract from from"Colchester Photographic Memories".
The roof and floors had been removed when the upper two storeys
of the keep were demolished after 1683. This view can no longer be
seen, as a new roof and floors were installed in 1932, owing to water
damage to the Roman vaulted basements.
An extract from from"Colchester Photographic Memories".
This view shows the wall
walk, originally passage-
ways in the thickness of
the third storey of the
higher keep. Jumbo can
be seen to the right of
the town hall’s soaring
tower. The lower archway
of the three within the
castle was a fireplace.
An extract from from"Colchester Photographic Memories".
Much of this avenue
survives the outer
bailey, although it is
now bounded by 1920s
low walling, and the
ornate benches have
been replaced by more
utilitarian ones. The
trees have been thinned
and the nicely restored
bandstand is more
visible.
An extract from from"Colchester Photographic Memories".
By 1960 some of the 1890s
trees were fully mature.
Subsequently there has
been much thinning and
opening-up to the benefit
of the castle’s setting. This
view is looking north past
the keep to the start of the
descent from the ramparts
to the River Colne below.
An extract from from"Colchester Photographic Memories".







