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The village of Bow From "The Copartnership Herald", Vol. I, no. 7 (September 1931) |
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Here, in a remote period,
veiled in the mist of antiquity, some folks came and
settled on the rising ground alongside the River Lee; and
in the course of time the cluster of homesteads that
arose formed a hamlet of the parish of Stepney. It was
known as Stratford, a name derived from the street or
paved way to a ford; the crossing, however, being
practicable only at times in consequence of the river
being often in flood. To the banks on either side the
name was applied, but after the building of the
bow-shaped bridge when the highway was diverted from Old
Ford to this place, the Essex side of the bridge was
distinguished as Stratford Langthorne, from the Abbey of
Langthorne in West Ham, and the Middlesex side was
identified with the bridge itself and became described as
Stratford-atte-(at the) Bow, and later Stratford Bow, and
finally, Bow. The church of St. Mary Stratford Bow, as it is still ecclesiastically called, was consecrated in 1719 on its separation from its mother church of Stepney, to which it had been a chapel of ease. Six hundred years ago, in 1311, a licence was granted by the Bishop of London to the inhabitants of Bow "to build a chapel for being so far distant from the parish church and the roads in winter being impassable by reason of the floods," and this was carried out, Edward III granting for the purpose a piece of land on what was the Kings highway. The terms of episcopal licence provided that the inhabitants should attend Stepney Church on all great holidays, and contribute towards its repairs. To put an end to the many disputes that ensued, the inhabitants, in 1475, compounded by paying 24s. per annum in respect of the repairs and acknowledging their church to be a chapel of ease to Stepney by agreeing to attend there on St. Dunstans Day, and to join the parishioners of Stepney on the Wednesday next after Pentecost in their procession to St. Pauls. This annual excursion in Whitsun week may or may not have been the cause of local rejoicing and revelry, yet it is a curious fact, believed to be unnoticed hitherto, that on the following day was held Bow Fair, or, as it was called in olden days, "Green Goose Fair." Taylor, the water-poet, wrote in 1630:
And he then proceeded to make not a few uncomplimentary allusions to the conduct and behaviour of the crowd resorting there. This fair, abolished some seventy years ago, was held near the church, the locality being indicated by Fairfield Road. Until a hundred years ago the church was not in sole posssession of the island site it occupies to-day. Formerly at the east end, adjoining the brick wall of the narrow graveyard, stood Sir John Jolles school - a gabled building - and a small market-place where there was a cage, or lock-up, for law-breakers; and at the west end, screening the church from the view of those approaching it from London, were seven ancient tenements. The Essex highway passing the south side of the church formed the village street with its inns and shops, while on the north side of the church, on the way leading to Old Ford, were the residential houses.
by Sydney Maddocks |
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