Epping, Essex: Difference between revisions
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On the 27th of April 2004 [[Prince of Wales|The Prince of Wales]] visited [[Copped Hall]] and inspected the restoration work of the Copped Hall Trust. |
On the 27th of April 2004 [[Prince of Wales|The Prince of Wales]] visited [[Copped Hall]] and inspected the restoration work of the Copped Hall Trust. |
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Epping's famous market was held every Friday from 1575 up until just after the [[First World War]] at which point it returned by to being every Monday.<ref>http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=42715</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 22:18, 15 May 2008
Epping | |
---|---|
Population | Expression error: "11,047[1]" must be numeric |
OS grid reference | TL455025 |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | EPPING |
Postcode district | CM16 |
Dialling code | 01992 |
Police | Essex |
Fire | Essex |
Ambulance | East of England |
UK Parliament | |
Epping is a small market town and civil parish in the Epping Forest district in the west of the County of Essex in England. It is located 6.4 miles (10.3 km) south of Harlow, 15.3 miles (24.6 km) north-west of Brentwood and approximately 17 miles (27.4 km) north-east of Charing Cross. The town retains a rural appearance being surrounded by Epping Forest and working farmland, and has many very old buildings, many of which are Grade I and II listed buildings. The town also retains its weekly market which is held every Monday and dates back to 1253[2]. In 2001 the parish had a population of 11,047[3] although this has increased marginally since then.
Epping is widely known in Germany for being the home of Peter, David, Betty and Helga, featured in many textbooks used to teach English to German children. It has been twinned with the German town of Eppingen in north-west Baden-Württemberg since 1981[4]. Although the once-famous Epping Butter, which was highly sought after in the 18th and 19th centuries, is no longer made, the equally well-known Epping sausages are still manufactured by Church's Butchers who have been trading on the same site since 1888.
Geography
Epping lies approximately 17 miles (27.4 km) north-east of the centre of London towards the northern end of Epping Forest on a ridge of land between the River Roding and River Lea valleys.
Most of the population live in the built up area centred on and around the High Street (B1393) and Station Road. About a thousand people live in the small village of Coopersale which, while physically separated from Epping by forest land, is still part of the civil parish. A few dozen households make up the hamlets of Coopersale Street and Fiddlers Hamlet. Much of the eastern part of the present parish was until 1895 in the parish of Theydon Garnon.
The Town lies just north-east of junction 26 (Waltham Abbey, Loughton A121) of the M25 motorway and south-west of junction 7 (Harlow) of the M11 motorway.
Changing face of Epping
Epping is currently experiencing the biggest threat to-date to its rural status, with a number of sites (the largest being St. Margaret’s Hospital) being proposed for redevelopment in to new housing estates.
The various developments would see Epping’s housing stock rise by around 20% and has caused strong opposition from residents who wish to retain Epping’s rural ‘charm’, they state the town does not have the infrastructure to cope with a large influx of new residents and vehicles. Residents point to the regular traffic congestion, lack of parking spaces, low water pressure and total lack of an NHS dentist as examples.
Transport
Epping is served by a number of bus routes, serving many surrounding towns and villages including Harlow, Thornwood Common, Abridge, Waltham Abbey,Romford and Brentwood. The number 620 bus, operated by First Group, travels daily from Epping to the Anglo European School, Ingatestone.
Epping is served by London Transport rail services, and is the eastern terminus of the Central Line of the London Underground. The Central Line now terminates at Epping. However prior to 1994, it used to serve stations at North Weald, Blake Hall and Ongar were services terminated. The station has a car park with 508 spaces and is the second largest car park on the London Underground network[5], a toilet, a ticket machine, a pay phone as well as seats for sitting outside the station when waiting for a bus.
Main Line train services are available from a number of neighbouring towns, with the closest stations to Epping being Roydon, Harlow and Chingford, these are served by the West Anglia Main Line and are operated by National Express East Anglia. However there is no direct public transport to Roydon and Chingford stations from Epping, making Harlow station the most accessible.
Bus
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. |
Route Number | Route | Operational Details |
7 | Ivy Chimneys to Chelmsford | Monday to Friday, 1 journey |
213 | Epping to Waltham Cross via Upshire | Mon-Sat every 60 minutes |
333 | Epping to Stansted Airport via Harlow | Mon-Sat every 30 minutes (only serves Epping during peak hours) |
381/382 | Toot Hill to Harlow Bus Station via Epping Green | Mon-Sat, few journeys |
500 | Old Harlow to Romford Station via Ongar | Mon-Sat every 60 minutes |
501 | Old Harlow to Brentwood High Street via Ongar | Mon-Sat every 60 mins, Sunday every 2 hours (Not extended to Brentwood on Sundays) |
502 | Epping to Ongar via Epping Green | Mon-Fri 2 journeys |
523 | Loughton to North Weald Market via Waltham Abbey | Saturday, 1 return journey |
541 | Loughton to Epping St Margarets Hospital/Harlow | Mon-Sat every 60 minutes, Sunday every 2 hours (extended to Harlow on Sundays) |
620 | Epping to Ingatestone | Schooldays |
H1 | Loughton to Harlow | Mon-Fri every 60 minutes, Saturday 4 journeys |
Train
Service | Route |
Central Line | Epping to West Ruislip via Central London |
Central Line | Epping to Ealing Broadway via Central London
|
Government
Epping is part of the Epping Forest parliamentary constituency, represented by Conservative front bench spokesperson Eleanor Laing. From 1924 to 1945, the old Essex Epping division (which included Woodford, Chingford, Harlow and Loughton as well as Epping) was represented by Winston Churchill. It now sits in the Epping and Theydon Bois division of Essex County Council. The town is divided into two district council wards. Epping Hemnall encompasses most of the town south-east of Epping High Street (B1393) including Ivy Chimneys, Fiddlers Hamlet and Coopersale. The rest of Epping lies in Epping Lindsey and Thornwood ward, as does Thornwood in the adjacent parish of North Weald Bassett. Both wards elect three councillors each.
As well as the County and District Councils, Epping has a Town council consisting of 12 councillors, six each elected from Epping Hemnall and Epping Lindsey wards.
Epping Forest District Council’s headquarters are located in Epping High Street.
Schools
- St John's School, the only secondary school in Epping, is now designated as a specialist Engineering College. The school has an active charity fundraising group led by a Student Executive team. In 2006 two students were awarded the Rotary Prize for 'Service to School' by the local Epping Rotary Club.
- Coopersale Hall School, a private primary school at the end of Flux's Lane, Epping.
Famous inhabitants
Notable residents of Epping include singer Rod Stewart[6], football player and manager Glenn Hoddle, actor and television presenter Bradley Walsh[7] and actor Nick Berry[8].
Dave Gahan, lead singer of Depeche Mode, was born in Epping.[9]
TV presenter and comedian Griff Rhys Jones lived in Epping as a child, where his father was a doctor.[10]
Television presenter Ben Shephard lived and attended nursery school in Epping.[11]
Twin towns
- Eppingen, Germany
Trivia
Epping Town F.C. were the local side until they became defunct in 1984.
On the 27th of April 2004 The Prince of Wales visited Copped Hall and inspected the restoration work of the Copped Hall Trust.
Epping's famous market was held every Friday from 1575 up until just after the First World War at which point it returned by to being every Monday.[12]
References
- Epping Forest District Council (2005). Key Facts: 2001 Census (PDF).
- Epping Town Guide. Plus Publishing Services (on behalf of Epping Town Council. 2002.
- Jenkins (2001). Churchill. Macmillan. pp. 391–392. ISBN 0-330-48805-8.
{{cite book}}
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- Parish Profile: Epping - information about Epping from the 2001 census (PDF file)
- ^ Parish Profile : Epping
- ^ http://www.eppingtowncouncil.gov.uk/Epping%20Town%20Information/Guide%2007-08.pdf
- ^ Parish Profile : Epping
- ^ Epping Town Guide
- ^ Epping station to be refurbished and improved | Transport for London
- ^ Rod Stewart: A Man of Wealth and Taste : Rolling Stone
- ^ bradley walsh | Sunday Herald, The | Find Articles at BNET.com
- ^ You've got m@il: Nick Berry Answers your e-mails - Daily Mirror - HighBeam Research
- ^ David Gahan - AOL Music
- ^ Camden New Journal - Books: Griff Rhys Jones - Semi Detached: Pulling Up Roots in Surburbia
- ^ http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=ru&u=http://www.kinopoisk.ru/level/4/people/1282783/&sa=X&oi=translate&resnum=9&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3DBen%2BShephard%2BGMTV%2BEPPING%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG
- ^ http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=42715
External links
- Epping Town Council
- Epping Forest District Council
- Essex County Council
- Royal British Legion, Epping and District branch
- Epping Tennis Club
- Epping Sports Centre
- Epping Cricket Club
- Epping Golf Course
- Epping Forest - Information about Epping Forest, which is owned and managed by the City of London Corporation
- Epping Weather - Weather records from the Epping Weather station
- Epping in Google maps
- Epping to Ongar - Chronicles the history of the now defunct Ongar branch line.
Other Links
- Epping Forest Pipe Band
- Plainly Say No - The official website of the campaign against Bellway Homes' purposed development of 351 homes on part of the St. Margaret’s Hospital site.