Colchester then and now
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| "The area would probably have also looked similar
to this in 1605 or even 1405" - Patrick Denney, historian |
What a difference 200 years has made...
Colchester's landscape is currently going through major change. The Hythe,
the garrison, north Colchester and St Botolphs are seeing development
on a mammoth scale which will make those areas almost unrecognisable in a decade.
But Colchesters biggest transformation took place after the Napoleonic
Wars, as a new historical map shows. Vicky
Passingham reports.
The Colchester area shown on the map is a very different place to the one we
know today.
The road network is familiar, so are the names of the villages, but there the
similarity ends.
There is no railway, certainly no busy A12 dual carriageway cutting across the
countryside north of the town and a distinct lack of urbanisation.
Welcome to the borough of Colchester in 1805. As part of the Old Series of Ordnance
Survey inch-to-the-mile maps, it provided a vivid snapshot of life in early
19th century north Essex.
But far from looking back to the past, this map is part of a new series aiming
to help make the past more accessible in the present.
The key feature of this Timeline Historical map is that it exactly matches the
scale and coverage of the same modern-day Ordnance Survey Landranger map of
Colchester.
Used together, the maps offer a unique way of comparing past and present life.
Spurred on by the threat of a French invasion, which Nelsons victory in
1805 helped prevent, the governments original plan was to prepare detailed
maps of the vulnerable southern coastal regions.
Before long, this had changed into a massive national project on a scale not
attempted since the Domesday Book.
The full survey of England and Wales was not to be completed until 1874.
Colchester historian Patrick Denney says the map offers an insight into Colchester
life long before 1805.
"The area would probably have also looked similar to this in 1605 or even
1405,"he said.
As for Colchester, times were good in 1805 with it full of soldiers who were
stationed in the barracks and traders were doing good business.
Lexden, Mile End, Greenstead and Stanway were villages in their own right, but
they relied heavily on Colchester for the market. With a population of about
10,000, Colchester had its highest number of residents since Roman times.
For Mr Denney, though, there is a very important historical feature to the map
aside from it showing Colchester before urbanisation encroached into the surrounding
villages.
It is the abundance of heathland. Boxted Heath, Bergholt Heath, Mile End Heath
and Lexden Heath were important areas of open land to which many villagers in
1805 had common grazing rights.
All that ended after the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 which brought an end to
the Napoleonic War.
The war years sent grain prices sky high and the government accelerated its
Parliamentary Enclosure policy to turn common heath land into agricultural use.
It was to change the face of rural Britain forever and most of the hawthorn
hedgerows which today divide the fields were planted during that time.
It also meant farewell to the many heaths around Colchester as they were ploughed
over for crops. The Colchester landscape, hardly changed since medieval times,
was to be lost forever.
Then houses came - and the rest is history.
For more information on Timeline maps, visit the Cassini Maps website at:
timelinemaps.co.uk
This feature first appeared in the Evening
Gazette on 03/07/06
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© Cassini Publishing Ltd 2006
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| Now and then - the Timeline map of Colchester, above,
has been designed to exactly match the scale and coverage of the same modern-day
Ordnance Survey Landranger map of Colchester. |
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Ordnance Survey Mapping © Crown
Copyright Media AM21/06
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