Country: | England |
Official Name: | Sawbridgeworth |
Coordinates: | 51.814°N 0.15°W |
Label Position: | top |
Population: | 8,458 |
Population Ref: | (2011 Census, parish)[1] |
Civil Parish: | Sawbridgeworth |
Shire District: | East Hertfordshire |
Region: | East of England |
Shire County: | Hertfordshire |
Constituency Westminster: | Hertford and Stortford |
Post Town: | Sawbridgeworth |
Postcode District: | CM21 |
Postcode Area: | CM |
Dial Code: | 01279 |
Os Grid Reference: | TL481151 |
Static Image Name: | St Mary the Great, Sawbridgeworth, Herts - geograph.org.uk - 358893.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | St Mary the Great, Sawbridgeworth |
Sawbridgeworth is a town and civil parish in Hertfordshire, England, close to the border with Essex. It is 12miles east of Hertford and 9miles north of Epping. It is the northernmost part of the Greater London Built-up Area.
Prior to the Norman conquest, most of the area was owned by the Anglo-Saxon Angmar the Staller.
The Manor of "Sabrixteworde" (one of the many spellings previously associated with the town) was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. After the Battle of Hastings it was granted to Geoffrey de Mandeville I by William the Conqueror. Local notables have included John Leventhorpe, an executor of both King Henry IV and King Henry V's wills, and Anne Boleyn, who was given the Pishiobury/Pishobury estate, located to the south of the town.
The Great Hyde Hall mansion and surrounding land was acquired by Sir Walter Lawrence, the master builder, in the 1920s. In 1934, he instituted the Walter Lawrence Trophy for the fastest century in county cricket.[2] He built a cricket ground and pavilion in the grounds where the great and the good of the cricket world came to play against Sir Walter's home team, which often included his three sons: Jim, Guy and Pat. Sir Walter also had two daughters: Molly and Gipsy. Great Hyde Hall was sold in 1945 and became a school. It is a Grade II* listed building and has now been divided into housing.
Much of the town centre is a conservation area; many of the buildings date from the Tudor, Stuart and Georgian periods.
Great St Mary's Church is a Grade I listed building; "of special interest as a substantially unaltered large medieval parish church, typical of the Hertfordshire type, and with an outstanding collection of memorials of the highest artistic quality". It was built in the 13th century (although a church on the site existed in Saxon times) and includes a Tudor tower containing a clock bell (1664) and eight ringing bells, the oldest of which dates from 1749.[3] It is thought to be called 'Great' St Mary's to distinguish it from St Mary's, Gilston. Ralph Jocelyn of Hyde Hall, who was Lord Mayor of London in 1464 and in 1476, is buried here; images of many of his family and other locals have been engraved on brass, and the church is popular for enthusiasts of brass rubbing. The ghost of Sir John Jocelyn, known for his love of horses, is reputed to appear riding a white horse on the old carriage drive every 1 November.[4]
The town's prosperity came from the maltings, some of which now house antiques centres. Among the maltsters were George Fawbert and John Barnard; in 1839 they set up the Fawbert and Barnard charity to fund local children and their education, funding a local infant school that still exists today.
By the time of the Norman conquest, or soon after, Sawbridgeworth's rich farming land was fully developed for cultivation as was possible with the means available at the time: it was the richest village community in the county. Many important medieval families had estates here. The land was divided among them, into a number of manors or distinct estates; the lord of each manor had rights not only over this land but also over the people who farmed it. The number of manors increased during the Middle Ages, by a process of subinfeudation, that is the granting out of a part of an existing manor to a new owner so that the new manor was created. Many manors sprang from the original Domesday Book holding of the de Mandeville family. The first came to be called Sayesbury manor, from the de Say family who inherited it from the de Mandevilles in 1189. The many important people who held these manors built themselves houses with hunting parks around them; when they died their tombs enriched the parish church, so that today St Mary's has one of the finest collections of church monuments in the country.
During the Second World War RAF Sawbridgeworth, which is not in the civil parish, operated Supermarine Spitfires, Westland Lysanders, North American Mustangs and de Havilland Mosquito, among other types - for a complete history of the airfield, see the book Where the Lysanders were ....., by Paul Doyle, published in 1995 by Forward Airfield Research Publishing.[5] The Walter Lawrence & Son Ltd joinery works, located between the canal and the railway, built over 1,000 Mosquito fuselage shells and wing skins for de Havilland during the Second World War.[6] Subsequently, it reverted to making joinery and doors for the building trade. The joinery works was closed in about 1982 and houses were built on the site.
Sawbridgeworth was the birthplace of composer Bernard Rose (1916–1996) and the actor Stephen Greif (1944–2022).
Sawbridgeworth has been twinned with Bry-sur-Marne in France since 1973, and Moosburg an der Isar in Germany since 2018.[7]
Sawbridgeworth is in the parliamentary constituency of Hertford and Stortford. Since the formation of the constituency in 1983, it has elected Conservative Members of Parliament, though the town has been represented by Conservative MPs since 1922, and the town acts as part of a Safe seat. The current MP is Julie Marson, elected in 2019.
Sawbridgeworth has three tiers of local government, at parish (town), district, and county level: Sawbridgeworth Town Council, East Hertfordshire District Council, and Hertfordshire County Council. The town council has twelve councillors. The hamlet of Spellbrook is included within the administrative boundaries of the town.
Sawbridgeworth Town Council | |
House Type: | Parish council |
Leader1 Type: | Mayor |
Leader1: | Reece Smith |
Party1: | Conservative |
Election1: | 20 May 2024[8] |
Leader2 Type: | Deputy Mayor |
Leader2: | Salvatore Pagdades |
Party2: | Conservative |
Election2: | 20 May 2024[9] |
Leader3 Type: | Town Clerk |
Leader3: | Christopher Hunt |
Election3: | 2021 |
Last Election1: | 2023 |
Next Election1: | 2027 |
Meeting Place: | Sawbridgeworth Town Council, Sayesbury Manor Cottages, Bell Street, Sawbridgeworth, CM219AN |
The role of mayor is largely ceremonial in Sawbridgeworth, and is usually held by a different councillor each year. Full Council meetings are chaired by the Mayor. The Mayors since 2012 have been:
Councillor | Party | From | To | Deputy | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barry Hodges | May 2012 | 28 May 2013 | Unknown | ||
Angela Alder | 28 May 2013 | 27 May 2014 | Andrew Wincott | ||
Eric Buckmaster | 27 May 2014 | 23 May 2016 | Barry Hodges (2014-15), Tom Reeks (2015-16) | ||
David Royle | 23 May 2016 | 22 May 2017 | Ruth Buckmaster | ||
Ruth Buckmaster | 22 May 2017 | 21 May 2018 | Angela Alder | ||
Angela Alder | 21 May 2018 | 13 May 2019 | Heather Riches | ||
John Burmicz | 13 May 2019 | 18 May 2020 | David Royle | ||
Annelise Furnace | 18 May 2020 | 24 May 2021 | Greg Rattey | ||
Greg Rattey | 24 May 2021 | 15 May 2023 | Craig Chester (2021-22), Ruth Buckmaster (2022-23) | ||
Ruth Buckmaster | 15 May 2023 | 20 May 2024 | Reece Smith | ||
Reece Smith | 20 May 2024 | Incumbent | Salvatore Pagdades | ||
Following the 2023 Sawbridgeworth Town Council election the composition of the council is as follows:
Party | Councillors | ||
---|---|---|---|
8 | |||
2 | |||
1 | |||
1 | |||
Total | 12 |
Sawbridgeworth | |
Subdivision Type: | Urban District (19011974) |
Hq: | Sawbridgeworth |
Start: | 1 April 1901 |
End: | 31 March 1974 |
Replace: | East Hertfordshire |
Membership Title1: | County Council |
Membership1: | Hertfordshire |
Populationfirst: | 2,085 |
Populationlast: | 7,000[10] |
Populationfirstyear: | 1901 |
Populationlastyear: | 1971 |
The parish of Sawbridgeworth was in the hundred of Braughing.[11] From 1835 the parish was included in the Bishop's Stortford Poor Law Union.[12] It therefore became part of the Bishop's Stortford Rural Sanitary District in 1872. Under the Local Government Act 1894 elected parish and district councils were created. Sawbridgeworth Parish Council came into office on 31 December 1894, and the parish was included in the Hadham Rural District. Sawbridgeworth was made an urban district on 1 April 1901, making it independent of the Hadham Rural District. It was decided that the whole parish of Sawbridgeworth was not suitable for becoming an urban district, and so the more rural western part of the parish was made a separate parish called High Wych on the same day, which remained in the Hadham Rural District.[13]
Until 1914 Sawbridgeworth Urban District Council met at offices on Bell Street (sometimes called Cock Street).[14] [15] In 1914 the council moved to the upper floor of the town's fire station at 5 Church Street, which had been built in 1905. In 1937 the council built itself new offices on The Forebury, holding its first meeting in the new building on 5 July 1937.[16]
Sawbridgeworth Urban District Council was granted a coat of arms on 20 July 1962.[17]
The urban district was abolished under the Local Government Act 1972, becoming part of East Hertfordshire on 1 April 1974. A successor parish (and Sawbridgeworth Town Council) was created for the former urban district.[18] The urban district council's former offices on The Forebury are now used as the town's library, whilst Sawbridgeworth Town Council is based at Sayesbury Manor on Bell Street.[19]
The town has an on-call fire station, in Station Road, with one fire engine. Sawbridgeworth had its own fire brigade from 1897 until it was merged into the National Fire Service in 1941.[20] In 1948 control of the local fire brigade passed to the Hertfordshire Fire Brigade, since renamed the Hertfordshire Fire and Rescue Service, run by Hertfordshire County Council.[21]
Sawbridgeworth adjoins the border between Hertfordshire and Essex. The village of Lower Sheering is across the county boundary into Essex, and adjoins Sawbridgeworth along its eastern edge, east of the railway station and of the River Stort. It has a Sawbridgeworth postal address, but is in the Epping Forest District of Essex.
Underlying the town at some depth is the London Clay stratum, with a thick layer of Boulder clay laid down during the ice ages, including the Anglian. The soil on top of this is a loam, with glacial erratics of Hertfordshire puddingstone conglomerate found around the town.
Sawbridgeworth has a secondary school, the Leventhorpe Academy, which also offers a public swimming pool and leisure centre. There is are also two primary schools and one infant school in Sawbridgeworth.
Sawbridgeworth is within the BBC London and ITV London region. Television signals are received from the Crystal Palace TV transmitter,[22] BBC East and ITV Anglia can also be received from the Sandy Heath transmitter.[23]
Local radio stations are BBC Three Counties Radio, Heart Hertfordshire and East Herts Radio, a community-based station.[24]
The town is served by the local newspapers, Bishop's Stortford Independent and Hertfordshire Mercury.[25] [26]
Sawbridgeworth Town FC, a non-league football club, was established in 1897. The Men's 1st Team currently play in the Spartan South Midlands League, step five of the English non-league system. Home matches are played at Crofters End, Sawbridgeworth.
Sawbridgeworth Cricket Club field three senior sides on a Saturday and seven colts sides, from ages nine to fifteen. The 1st XI plays in the Hertfordshire Cricket League. The main ground is Town Fields, situated behind Bell Street. The second ground is at Leventhorpe Academy.
Sawbridgeworth has tennis and bowls clubs.
Sawbridgeworth is home to 309 Squadron of the Air Training Corps.[27] Additionally, the 1st Sawbridgeworth Scout Group, which was established in 1908, is located in the town.
The A1184 road runs through the town. The River Stort Navigation flows north–south along the eastern edge of the town, parallel to the railway, and past the Maltings.
The town is served by Sawbridgeworth railway station, located on the West Anglia Main Line between London Liverpool Street and Cambridge. The station and all trains serving it are operated by Greater Anglia.
There are bus services to Harlow, Bishops Stortford, and Stansted Airport, operated by Arriva Herts & Essex.