 |
| Red spot approx location of Stisted. |
"Stisted, is a market town and parish in the hundred of
Lexden. about 47 miles north east of London by the road through Braintree,
and 44 miles through Witham. it is 18 from Chelmsford. It stands partly upon
the low ground on the north side of the river Blackwater, and partly upon
the side of an agreeable hill, which rises on the same side. It is indebted
for it's existence, according to morant, to an abbey formed there. other antiquaries
ascribe its origin to the romans and contend that this place is the canonium
of antonius. Several coins and other roman antiquities have been found in
the neighbourhood, sufficient to prove that it had been a roman villa. The
manor was, in the reign of Edward the Confessor, the property of Cole, a saxon
- and it subsequently passed to King Stephen who, with Queen Maud, founded
an Abbey here for cistercian monks in the year 1140. The town was formerly
noted for it's woollen and cloth trade and particularly for a superior kind
of baize - distinguished by the name ' Stisted White '.
The parish of great Stisted contains, by the census of 1831, 3277 inhabitants
, having increased it's population 758 since the year 1801."
[ abridged from pigot + co 1832 ]