The Bells of Hatfield Broad Oak, Essex

When William the Conqueror gave the manor of Hatfield Regis to the De Veres, Aubrey De Vere built a monastery next to the small parish church. The townsfolk later extended and beautified their parish church to make it as big as the priory next door. Parishioners and monks fell out violently in 1378, and a wall was built to divide the parish church from the priory church. When Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries, the priory church was destroyed, all that remains are the pillars that used to support the tower between the parish church and the monastic church, and that ramshackle wall between the two churches. Inside the parish church of St Mary the Virgin, look out for the door high up in the wall which used to lead onto the rood screen; carvings of the four evangelists on the pews at the cross aisle, the 18th century candelabra, the chancel panelling after Grinling Gibbons, the wall memorials, and the effigy of Sir Robert de Vere in the chancel, in full armour with crossed legs and drawing his sword. The impressive ceiling in the nave looks like wood, but is in fact made of plaster and was created in the 1840s; the east window is also mid 19th century and was designed by the Master of Trinity College, Cambridge; a copy of this window can be found in Ely Cathedral. The tower holds a ring of eight bells. The front seven were cast in 1782 by Patrick & Osborn, and the tenor was cast in 1935 by Mears & Stainbank. The bells have had little to no maintenance since the 195 rehanging, at which point thee octave was hung in a new oak frame. The 6th and 7th bells were recorded in 2014 as being cracked, but are still rung. A month after these recordings were taken, the church PCC suspended ringing of the tenor due to the belief it was causing masonry to fall within the church. The front 7 can still be rung. The bells are rung from an upstairs ringing chamber. The tenor weighs 17-1-15cwt and is tuned to E. 8 bells, 17-1-15cwt in E.