Chigwell, St Mary's Church 1925
Photo ref: 78728
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Photo ref: 78728
Photo of Chigwell, St Mary's Church 1925

More about this scene

This is the Anglican parish church of Chigwell. Parts of the fabric of the church are Norman, from the 12th century. The population of the parish increased from 1,351 in 1801 to 2,059 in 1841, making the small medieval church unsuitable. The extensions were designed by Sir Arthur Blomfield and completed in 1886, and by and large this is the church we see today. Outside is the war memorial; it was unveiled by Sir Francis Lloyd, with a guard of honour from the school cadet force, on 6 November 1921.

A Selection of Memories from Chigwell

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Chigwell

Sparked a Memory for you?

If this has sparked a memory, why not share it here?

The boys band stayed here for 5 weeks in June/July 1963 on their European Tour of England and the Netherlands. Had a great time. From here we set out each day to visit England and play concerts. A boys High School band of about 53 young men. Thank you for your hospitality
Hi, yes I think he must've been the Welshman who took over from your Mum. I was there from June until September 1974.
I had a great childhood living at Grange Farm. My parents moved there in 1960 when I was five. My mum was employed as the catering supervisor for the site and we were given accommodation in a large Bungalow, No 1. From memory the sun was always shining! My sister and I spent hours in and out of the pool, playing tennis and table tennis in the recreation hall. As a teenager my friend and I who also lived on ...see more
I learnt to swim in this pool late 1950s. It was always massively popular during the hot summers we always seemed to have then, and I was sad to see it close - there are so few open air lido type pools around these days. I remember jumping off the high diving board 7metres and the fear of making the jump. Public swimming pools don't seem to have high diving boards any more; the safety reasons for this are understandable, but how do youngsters become Tom Daleys without them?