Stevenage
Adjacent Parishes: Aston, Graveley, Great Wymondley, Hitchin, Ippollitts, Knebworth, Letchworth, Little Wymondley, Shephall, Walkern
It is in Broadwater Hundred and the Hitchin Union

Detail of Charles Smith's
map of Hertfordshire, 1808
STEVENAGE, a town on the Great North Road, has shifted from
its original position. It once stood farther N.E. and close to the church; but
after a terrible fire which destroyed a large proportion of its houses the
village was gradually rebuilt more directly on the famous old coaching road.
The first paper mill in England is said to have been built in this parish.
Several of its ends were standing when the regular coaches were on the road.
The old Church of St Nicholas, ¾ mile N.E., is reached through an avenue of limes and chestnuts, headed by a new litch-gate. It is largely Early English. Note the octagonal pillars and pointed arches of the nave and the two small chapels attached to the chancel. The font at the W. end is under an Early Norman arch. There are several modern windows of stained glass, and a good brass, early sixteenth century, in the chancel. The church at the S. End of the town was designed by Sir A. W. Blomfield about forty years back, but has since been much enlarged. Half a mile farther S. on the main road are six almost equidistant mounds, thought to be of Danish origin.
At the old Castle Inn, E. side of High Street, great numbers of persons have been shown on the rafters in a barn the coffin of Henry Trigg, whose will was proved in 1724; one of its provisions was that his body should be disposed of in that way. Little more than a mile N.W. from the station, at Redcoats Green, stood, until 1893, "Elmwood House," the home of the Hermit of Hertfordshire. This man, James Lucas, was descended from a good family, but for reasons never satisfactorily explained he lived alone, and in a most filthy condition, from October, 1849, to April, 1874. A concise and reliable account of this peculiar man is issued by Messrs. Paternoster and Hales of Hitchin.
Hertfordshire - Little Guide - 1903
William Austin's Hearse, Stevenage, circa 1906.
The family ran an undertaking business for six generations
from Hertfordshire
in Old Photographs
Book: The History of Stevenage
Book: The Book of Stevenage
Book: Stevenage History & Guide
Book: Stevenage - A photographic history (A collection of Frith views)
Book: Stevenage Past
Book: Stevenage - A History & Celebration

Stevenage High Street - Frith
STE 26 - circa 1950
Book: Tudor Churchwardens' Accounts
Book: The Hellard Almshouses and other Stevenage Charities
Book: Stevenage Official Handbook, circa 1990
Article: Monks Wood and Whomerley Wood - Field Survey

St Nicholas Church - Frith
Postcard posted in 1908 [No 44265 Frith
Year 1899]
Museum: Stevenage Museum - web site stevenage.gov.uk/museum
Web Site: St Nicholas Church, Stevenage

Postcard by H.G. Mathews, High Street, Stevenage - circa
1910??
Memorial Inscriptions: A list of the memorials in two cemeteries is on the Jeffery.Knaggs Homepage.
| Quick links to
extra postcard images. click on thumbnail picture |
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Todds Green Stevenage |
Church Lane |
Church Lane Pond |
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Stevenage Green |
High Street |
Hitchin Road |
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The Avenue |
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See also Vital Records
If you know of other books, websites, etc, relating to this place, please tell me.
Last Updated January 2008