Hertfordshire eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 212 pages of information about Hertfordshire.

Hertfordshire eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 212 pages of information about Hertfordshire.

TRING is the most westerly place of any importance in Herts.  The station (L.&N.W.R.) is nearly 2 miles E. from the town, which is sheltered on the N.W. by the chalk hills, a fresh spur of which crops out 3 mile N.E. at Aldbury (q.v.).  The church (Perp.) stands near the centre of the town and is fortunate in having been restored under the direction of Mr. Bodley in 1882.  It is an embattled, flint structure; the tower has a corner turret and is, like that at Hitchin, unusually massive.  Note (1) the clustered columns of the nave, (2) the quaint corbels, (3) the large, imposing monument to Sir William Gore and his wife (d. 1707 and 1705 respectively); Sir William was Lord Mayor of London; (4) good Perp. windows in each aisle.

Tring was formerly a considerable centre of the straw-plait industry, which is still pursued to a less extent.  The place is of great antiquity, Treung hundred dating from the days of Alfred the Great.  William I. gave it to Robert Earl of Ewe, and Stephen kindly bestowed it upon the monks of Faversham, “in perpetual Alms for the Health of the Souls of Maud his Queen and all faithful People”.  Edward II. granted to Tring market rights.

Tring Park (property of Hon. N. C. Rothschild) is surrounded by perhaps the most exquisite woods—­largely of beech—­in the whole county.  Much altered in modern times, it is said to have been designed by Wren, and to have been visited by Charles II.  The park is well kept, and contains many living curiosities placed here by Lord Rothschild, a lover of natural history.  The Museum, at the top of Akeman Street, containing a fine zoological collection, is the outcome of his lordship’s energy and benevolence.  The Museum House, to which it is attached, is a prettily designed structure of red brick, with gables.

Tring, Little, is a hamlet 11/4 mile N.W. from the town, and Tring Grove, a hamlet 11/4 mile N.E.  The former is near the large reservoirs, upon which several of the rare birds mentioned in the Introduction (Section IV.) were observed.

Trowley Bottom (3 miles N.W. from Redbourn Station, M.R.) is a hamlet a little S. from Flamstead, in one of the most thoroughly rural districts in the county.  The Roman Watling Street (St. Albans-Dunstable road) is 1 mile N.E.

Turnford (11/4 mile S.W. from Broxbourne Station, G.E.R.) is a hamlet in Cheshunt parish, on the New River. Broxbourne Bury Park is 1 mile N.

Two Waters owes its name to its position at the junction of two small rivers—­the Gade and the Bulbourne.  It is in Hemel Hempstead parish, and about 1 mile E. from Boxmoor Station.

Tyttenhanger. (See Tittenhanger.)

Upwick Green (4 miles N.W. from Bishop’s Stortford) is a hamlet on the Essex border. Hadham Hall (see Little Hadham) is 1 mile S.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Hertfordshire from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.