Standon
Adjacent Parishes: Albury, Bengeo, Braughing, Great Munden, Little Hadham, Little Munden, Much Hadham, Sacombe, Thundridge, Westmill
It is in the Braughing Hundred and the Ware Union
In 1845 part of this parish became the ecclesiastical district of High Cross
Puckeridge is a village which is part in Braughing parish and part in Standon parish

The Village Street
from A History of the Parish of Standon
STANDON, a parish (formerly a market town) in the hundred of Braughin, county of Hertford, 8 miles (N.E.) from Hertford, containing 2135 inhabitants. The living is a discharged vicarage, in the arch-deaconry of Middlesex, and diocese of London, rated in the king's books at £14.13.4., and in the patronage of the Rev. Henry Law. The church, dedicated to St. Mary, is an ancient building, with a tower on the north side. There are places of worship for Baptists and Wesleyan Methodists.
About five miles from Ware, on the Cambridge road, in this parish, is St. Edmund's College, established for the education of the sons of the English nobility, clergy, and gentry, of the Roman Catholic religion. The building was erected in 1795, under the direction of Mr. James Taylor, architect, and consists of a range of buildings four stories high, and, with its two wings, three hundred feet long; more than eighty students can be conveniently accommodated. The course of education is commercial, classical, and theological: the institution is under the management of a president and vice-president, and there are eight professors and masters. The usual period for continuing at college is twelve years; the first seven are devoted to history, the mathematics, the ancient and modern languages, &c., and the remaining five are appropriated to logic, metaphysics, theology, and divinity. The occasion of founding this institution was the expulsion of the English Roman Catholics from their college in Douay, at the commencement of the French Revolution.

Mounting Stool and School, Standon
(Published by Frith, possibly
1950s?)
A free school for the instruction of poor children was endowed with £33 per annum, by Thomas Fisher, in 1612, and other benefactions. The market, which was on Friday, was granted by Charles II., together with two fairs; a pleasure fair is held on the 25th of April. The ancient Ermin-street runs through this parish.
Topographical Dictionary of England 1831

From Robert
Morden's Map 1695 (1753 or 1772 edition)

Paper Mill Lane, Standon
from A
History of the Parish of Standon
Book: A History of the Parish of Standon
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Always be on the alert for the unexpected source. This picture of The Old Paper Mill, Standon is on the lid of a tin (late 1930's) which once held Sharp's toffees. |
Education: St Edmund's College, Old Hall Green

Standon Parish Church (Published
by Frith, no date)
Web Site: Tom Charney has a small website (www.sadleir.org) dedicated to Sir Ralph Sadleir (1507-1587) the knight and statesman who served Henry VIII thru Elizabeth I. He was associated with Standon, and a section of the site contains information on the village, including a postcard published by Miss Sarah Ann Smith, Stationer, of Puckeridge. (1912 Kelly's directory).
See also Vital Records
If you know of other books, websites, etc, relating to this place, please tell me.
Last Updated February 2005