Sunday, January 18, 2026

18th January 2026 Puddingstone

 A WIP or a work in progress.  Chasing puddingstones.  You will see from the walls that these churches used up every bit of stone and Roman tiling in the area.  Then patterned the walls with supporting puddingstone.  Flint is of course also used as is plaster and lathe, giving rise to pargetting as an art form.

And why Puddingstone? because the pebbles in the dark matrix looked like a pudding, Christmas maybe!

There is hardly any stone in Essex, so every scrap that could be found to build a wall was used.  Interestingly brick was also used from as far back as the Romans, that is why you see the reinforcing edges of churches where Roman brick is used and later on brick that came over as ballast was used  from the Netherland.

Ingatestone (I think)

Fairstead Church.  P/S, Roman tile and flint
to be found here

Ingatestone Church.  The puddingstone is layered with Roman tile.



Broomfield Church. Was the stone already in situ and incorporated into the foundations?

Well we did this church in 2008. Paul has as always written it up beautifully.  
I love the paragraph out of the church pamphlet....

“The Roman tiles are a reminder of the story still related fifty years ago. The plan had originally been to build the church at the top of New Barn Lane, called Dragon’s Foot in the tithe maps, there is a depression, now somewhat ploughed out but still deep enough to be a dragon’s footprint. This was the site of a Roman building which still yields numerous hypocaust tiles and bricks, so the story is a delightfully muddled memory of the Saxons trundling cartloads of Roman bricks down to the Green on the orders of their new Norman masters to use as quoins since there were no local stone quarries.”
----------------------
St.Botolph's Pudding stone  ??? at Beauchamp Roding It hardly looks like a pudding stone but it is referenced as a pudding stone on the Megalithic Portal.

The Ugley Green puddingstone

----------------------------------

Saint Mary, the virgin. Great Leighs.  Look at that Norman doorway has someone cleaned it? 
Also, have just stumbled on Beeleigh Abbey, which is situated next to the River Chelmer and the original building is still intact. Also we once walked all this way along the river to Beeleigh but never found the abbey, all I remember is the beautiful demoiselles dragonflies skimming over the water.

Beeleigh Abbey







10 comments:

  1. I must correct your puddingstone comments Thelma. Years ago, in certain parts of England, the peasants worshipped a benevolent deity called Yorkshire Pudding. To honour him, they placed holy puddingstones in their walls. It was said that they protected buildings from malicious spirits and I have no reason to doubt that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Haha. Didn't know that Neil. Weird people up North worshipping puddings.

      Delete
  2. I can't imagine the time and precision it must have taken to build those large buildings out of all of those stones. Amazing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The one thing that old houses are not and that is precisely built Ellen. A built house will reflect the building material around. The houses up here I think used gritstone, which gives them their rather gray look.

      Delete
  3. I can't imagine the perseverance, myself. They had a vision and worked like beavers until it was brought to life. Years and years, I imagine
    You have to respect that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The church probably had a lot to do with it as well Debby, and also because Europe was just over the water to copy and who had fine craft men to inspire the bishops and the nobles.

      Delete
  4. I haven't heard of puddingstone, but I see the resemblance! (To actual pudding, not to Yorkshire Pudding, above.) It looks like a conglomerate of sandstone with bits of harder rock incorporated?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Apparently it is one of the youngest geologically wise. It is very ugly though and definitely Xmas pudding style.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love how these walls are built with a bits of everything available to them. It all comes together nicely. Cali

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes I suppose the buildings weathers well Cali over time.

      Delete

Love having comments!