Braughing

Braughing

Braughing

Human settlement in England


Braughing /ˈbræfɪŋ/ is a village and civil parish, between the rivers Quin and Rib, in the non-metropolitan district of East Hertfordshire, part of the English county of Hertfordshire. Braughing gave its name to a county division in Hertfordshire, known as a "hundred". This was a rural district from 1935 to 1974.[1] The population at the 2011 Census was 1,203.[2] This includes Bozen Green, Braughing Friars and Brent Pelham.

St Mary, Braughing, a Grade I listed building.[3]
Quick Facts Population, Civil parish ...

History

Prehistory

There is some evidence of human activity in the Mesolithic, Neolithic and Bronze Age, but settled habitation began in the Iron Age, around the 3rd century BC. It was possibly a trading post, situated on the navigable extreme of the Rib, providing a route to the larger River Lea. In the late Iron Age (100BC - 43AD) it was the site of the largest 'Celtic' mint discovered in Europe.[4]

Roman times

There were significant Iron Age and Roman settlements at Wickham Hill, near Braughing. This is situated at the junction of several major Roman roads, including Ermine Street (now the A10), Stane Street (now the A120) and the Great Chesterford Road. This covers at least 36 hectares.

When the River Rib is in full flood, bricks, tiles and other more interesting artefacts from the Roman settlement are washed onto its banks.[5][6]

Saxon times

After the Roman period it was settled by the Anglo-Saxons: the earliest form of the name Braughing is Breahinga, Old English for the people of Breahha, who was probably a local leader. It is mentioned in the Domesday Book (1086) at Brachinges.

Gatesbury

Little remains of this hamlet, which lies to the east of the B1368 close to the Puckeridge junction. Originally part of Westmill parish, Gatesbury is now within the parish of Braughing. Its name originates from the Gatesbury family, who held the manor from the late 12th century up to the 15th century, when it was passed to the FitzHerberts.

Customs

Old Man's Day

On 2nd October 1571,[7] as the funeral bell was being tolled, the coffin of a local farmer, Matthew Wall, was being carried down Fleece Lane towards the Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin.

Wall's fiancée and other mourners were deeply distressed. As they made their way to the funeral service, one of pallbearers slipped on the damp autumn leaves and they dropped the coffin - waking the young man. Confused and wondering where on earth he was, he began frantically hitting the inside of the wooden case with his fist. The mourners removed the lid and were overjoyed to find him alive.[8]

Matthew had probably been in a coma after suffering from what is believed to be a form of epilepsy.[9] A year later, he married his fiancée; he lived many more years and had two sons. When he did die in 1595,[10] his will made financial provision for Fleece Lane to be swept each year, after which the funeral bell, and then a wedding peal, were to be rung. The money, invested in 'Braughing Parish Charities' also paid for his grave to be pegged with brambles to prevent grazing sheep from damaging it.[11]

The 2nd October is still known as 'Old Man's Day'. The tradition continues and schoolchildren now sweep the leaves from the lane, the bells are rung, and a short service is held at Matthew Wall's graveside.[12]

Sausages

The Braughing Pork Sausage was first made in 1954 by Douglas White and his wife Anna. The recipe remained the same until the company was sold to Musk's of Newmarket.[13] Local sausages are served in the village's pubs.[14]

Wheelbarrow race

On the second weekend of July the Braughing Wheelbarrow race takes place. This event started in 1964 with teams of two pushing a wheelbarrow round a 400 metre course through the village streets, starting and finishing in the village ford.[15]

Transport

Braughing Station in 1961

There was a station on the ex-Great Eastern Railway St Margaret's - Buntingford branch which closed in 1964. The station featured in the comedy film Happy Ever After which starred David Niven and George Cole in 1953. The location was temporarily renamed Rathbarney, an Irish hamlet.

Famous residents

  • John Brograve, (1538–1613), a lawyer and politician, was the Member of Parliament for Preston, and was custos rotulorum, keeper of the county records of Hertfordshire for thirty years.
  • Brigadier Richard Hanbury was High Sheriff of Hertfordshire in 1960.
  • Brodie Henderson, (1869 – 1936), was in charge of railway lines used to transport Allied troops and supplies during the First World War and worked for many railroad corporations across South America, Australasia and Africa. He was High Sheriff of Hertfordshire in 1924.
  • George Meriton (born in Braughing, circa 1564 and died 1624) was a churchman who became Dean of Peterborough in 1612 and Dean of York in 1617.
  • Vera Strodl Dowling (1918–2015), pilot
  • Charles Ward (born in Braughing in 1875) was an English cricketer who died in 1954.
  • Sally Wentworth, the pseudonym used by Doreen Hornsblow (1930s –2001), was a romantic novelist and writer of seventy novels in Mills & Boon from 1977 to 1999.

See also


References

  1. "Braughing RD through time | Administrative history of Local Government District: Hierarchies, boundaries". Archived from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 2012-04-13. A Vision of Britain through time. URL accessed 8 March 2008
  2. "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  3. M. Landon, forthcoming, 'Making a Mint: comparative studies in British coin mould', publ. Archaeopress
  4. [permanent dead link] Francis Frith Photographic website. URL accessed 8 March 2008.
  5. [Dr Isobel Thompson,2002,Braughing Extensive Urban Survey, publ. Hertfordshire County Council]
  6. The dates of Matthew Wall's "funerals" are recorded on a tapestry on a wall in the parish church.
  7. Jones-Baker, Doris (1987). Tales of Old Hertfordshire. Newbury , Berkshire: Countryside books. pp. 51–55. ISBN 9781846742699.
  8. "Back From the Dead: 8 Unbelievable Resurrections From History". HistoryCollection.co. 28 August 2017. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  9. "Back From the Dead: 8 Unbelievable Resurrections From History". HistoryCollection.co. 28 August 2017. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  10. "Old Man's Day - a Famous Braughing Tradition". Herts Memories. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  11. Additional information on this item was given to me by a former churchwarden of Braughing parish, Owen Spencer-Thomas, 1964-1970.
  12. "About the Braughing Sausage Company - the Home of the Famous Braughing Sausages". Archived from the original on 28 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-10-01. The recipe is now owned by Musk's, producer of Newmarket sausages. Braughing Sausage Company website accessed 1 October 2010.
  13. Review of a local pub on Yelp
  14. "Braughing Wheelbarrow Race". www.braughingwheelbarrowrace.com. Retrieved 18 September 2020.

51°54′N 00°02′E


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