Hemel Hempstead Hertfordshire Family History Guide

Hemel Hempstead is an Ancient Parish and a market town in the county of Hertfordshire.

Other places in the parish include: Boxmoor, Corner Hall, Two Waters, and Cronchfield.

Alternative names: Hemel Hempsted

Parish church: St. Mary

Parish registers begin:

  • Parish registers: 1558
  • Bishop’s Transcripts: 1604

Nonconformists include: Baptist, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Independent/Congregational, Particular Baptist, Primitive Methodist, Society of Friends/Quaker, and Wesleyan Methodist.

Adjacent Parishes

Parish History

The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870

HEMEL-HEMPSTEAD, a town, a parish, a sub-district, and a district in Herts. The town stands among hills, on a pleasant slope at the river Gade, adjacent to the Grand Junction canal and the Northwestern railway, at the terminus of a branch railway from the Northwestern, 5 miles E of Great Berkhampstead. The railway to it leaves the Northwestern at Boxmoor, is 1¾. mile long, and was authorized in July 1865. The town was known, at Domesday, as Hamelamstede; and some Roman relics were found at it in 1837. It consists chiefly of one street, nearly a mile long; and is somewhat irregularly yet well built. It was incorporated by Henry VIII.; is now governed by a bailiff, chosen annually; is a seat of petty sessions, and a polling place; and has a head post-office, two banking offices, two chief inns, a police station, a town hall, a corn market, a church, five dissenting chapels, a literary and mechanics’ institute, national schools, two endowed schools, and a workhouse. The corn exchange was recently made, by enclosing the space under the town hall. The church is Norman, cruciform, and large, with a lofty spire; was recently restored, at a cost of £3, 600; and contains a very ancient font, a brass of 1480, several marble tablets, and a fine monument to the late Sir Astley P. Cooper, Bart. The West Herts county infirmary, at Marlowes, S of the town, was erected in 1830, by the late Sir John S. Sebright, Bart.; and was endowed by him, first with £100 a year, and afterwards with a donation of £8, 000. A weekly market is held on Thursday; and fairs are held on Holy Thursday, Trinity-Thursday, and the third Monday of Sept. The corn market is one of the largest in the county; and was formerly reckoned one of the greatest in England, £20,000 a week having been often returned for meal alone. Straw plaiting, brewing, tanning, and iron founding are carried on; and lime kilns and numerous paper mills are in the neighbourhood. Pop. of the town in 1851, 2, 727; in 1861, 2, 974. Houses, 586. The parish contains also the townships of Boxmoor and Two-Waters, and the hamlets of Corner-Hall and Crouchfield. Acres, 7, 136. Real property, £29, 513; of which £155 are in gas works. Pop. in 1851, 7, 073; in 1861, 7, 948. Houses, 1, 603. The manor was given partly, by King Offa of Mercia, to St. Albans abbey, partly by Edmund, Earl of Cornwall, to Ashridge college; passed, in the time of Henry VIII., to the Waterhouses; and went from them to the Halseys. Hempstead-Bury House was the seat of the Waterhouses; was, visited by Henry VIII.; and is now represented by only small remains. Gadebridge is the seat of Sir Astley P. Cooper, Bart.; and Marchmont House is the residence of the Dowager Lady Cooper. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Rochester. Value, £709. Patrons, the Dean and Chapter of St. Pauls, on the nomination of the Bishop of Peterborough. The vicarage of Boxmoor is a separate benefice. Dean Field, who wrote on “the Church” in answer to Cardinal Bellarmine, was a native; and two divines, of the name of Dikes, also were natives. The sub-district is conterminate with the parish.

Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].

A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848

HEMPSTEAD, HEMEL (St. Mary), a market-town and parish, and the head of a union, in the hundred of Dacorum, county of Hertford; containing, with the chapelries of Bovingdon and Flaunden, 7268 inhabitants, of whom 5901 are in the town, 19½ miles (W. by S.) from Hertford, and 23 (N. W.) from London. This place appears from the name to owe its origin to the Saxons, by whom, on account of its situation among the hills near the confluence of the rivers Gade and Bulborn, it was called Hean Hampstede, implying a dwelling in a high or elevated situation. It was given by Offa, King of Mercia, to the abbey of St. Alban’s. In Domesday book it is noticed under the names Henamstede and Hamelamstede, from which latter its present appellation is evidently deduced. The town is pleasantly situated on the declivity of a hill, in a fertile valley watered by the river Gade, which has its source within a distance of four miles; and consists chiefly of one street, nearly a mile in length, partially paved and lighted: the houses are irregularly built, but of neat and respectable appearance, and the inhabitants are amply supplied with water. The principal article of manufacture is straw-plat, which affords employment to nearly all the women and children of the labouring class; and there are several corn and paper mills in the vicinity. The Grand Junction canal, by means of which the neighbourhood is supplied with coal from Staffordshire and Leicestershire, and the London and Birmingham railway, pass through Box Moor, within one mile of the town, where is a station. The market is on Thursday, and is one of the largest in the county; a market is also held on the morning of the same day for straw-plat. The fairs are on Holy-Thursday, for cattle and sheep; the Thursday after Trinity-Sunday, for horses, cattle, and sheep; on the last Friday in June, for the sale of wool; and the third Monday in September, which is a statute-fair for hiring servants. The inhabitants received a charter of incorporation from Henry VIII., which was renewed to them by Cromwell on their acceding to the solemn league and covenant. By this charter, the government is vested in a bailiff, who is assisted by a jury of the principal inhabitants, acting as his council; the bailiff is chosen on St. Andrew’s day, but possesses no magisterial authority. The court leet of the lord of the manor is, by permission of the bailiff, held in the town-hall, a long narrow building supported on square wooden pillars; where, also, a meeting of the county magistrates takes place every alternate week.

The parish, exclusively of the two chapelries, comprises 7136 acres, of which 320 are waste land or common. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king’s books at £16. 1. 10½., and in the presentation of the Dean and Chapter of St. Paul’s, London (the appropriators), on the nomination of the Bishop of Lincoln. The great tithes of Hemel-Hempstead have been commuted for £1819, and the small for £501. The church is a spacious cruciform structure, partly in the Norman style, with an embattled tower surmounted by a lofty spire: the chancel is finely groined, and the east window embellished with painted glass; there is also a finely painted window at the west end, presented by the late Sir Astley Paston Cooper, Bart. The building has been enlarged, and a gallery built. The chapelries of Bovingdon and Flaunden were in 1834 separated from the mother church, and endowed. A district church has been erected on Box Moor, and endowed independently of the vicar, who, however, has the presentation; net income, £150. It contains 400 free sittings, the Incorporated Society having granted £400 in aid of the expense. There are places of worship for Baptists, the Society of Friends, Huntingtonians, and Wesleyans. A charity school for boys, endowed with £25 per annum, and a school for girls, which has £13. 10. per annum, have been consolidated. The West Herts Infirmary, at first established at Picott’s-End, in the parish, and supported by subscription, has lately been endowed with £100 per annum for the house surgeon by Sir John Saunders Sebright, who has also erected a spacious building at the south entrance to the town. The union of Hemel-Hempstead comprises 6 parishes or places, and contains 11,499 inhabitants: the poor-house, built in 1836, stands on an elevated and healthy spot overlooking the town, and is calculated to contain 200 paupers.

The remains of the old mansion-house of the Bury family, originally the residence of Sir Richard Combe, a favourite of Henry VIII.’s, consist only of a gateway, from a window over which the king is said to have delivered the charter. In Lockers’ House are some curious apartments, thought to have been built by that monarch, and in the ceilings of which the royal arms are still preserved. There are also some remains of ancient buildings at a place called Heaven’s Gate, on the north-east boundary of the parish. At Picott’s-End, and at Noak Mill, in the vicinity of the town, are saline and chalybeate springs, said to be similar to the waters of Cheltenham; and many petrifactions of sponge and other fossils, susceptible of a very high polish, are found in the vicinity, which abounds likewise with fine specimens of chalcedony. Dr. Hugh Smith, an eminent physician and medical lecturer, was born at Hemel-Hempstead, in the year 1733; and Sir Astley Paston Cooper, Bart., pre-eminently distinguished for his skill in surgery, and who died in 1841, resided in the neighbourhood.

Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848

Parish Records

FamilySearch

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – Cemeteries ( 5 )
Boxmoor Baptist Parish Church, exhumation 16th-19th April, 1984
Author: West Herts Crematorium (Garston, Hertford)

Monumental inscription for St. Mary’s Church, Hemel-Hempstead, Hertfordshire
Author: Strange, J.; Hayward, Valerie

Monumental inscriptions inside the parish church and in the churchyard of St. Mary, Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, England

Monumental inscriptions, Hemel-Hempstead, Hertford, England : abt. 1600-1900

Monumental inscriptions, Holy Trinity, Leverstock Green (Hertfordshire)
Author: Hayward, Valerie; Hertfordshire Family and Population History Society; Church of England. Chapelry of Leverstock-Green (Hertfordshire)

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – Census ( 1 )
Census returns for Hemel Hempstead, 1841-1891
Author: Great Britain. Census Office

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – Church records ( 16 )
Births and baptisms, 1791-1837
Author: Box Lane Chapel (Hemel-Hempstead, Hertfordshire : Independent)

Births and baptisms, 1820-1837
Author: Box Lane Chapel (Hemel-Hempstead, Hertfordshire : Independent)

Births and burials, 1785-1827
Author: Baptist Church (Hemel-Hempstead, Hertfordshire)

Births, baptisms, and burials, 1824-1837
Author: Redbourn Street Chapel (Hemel-Hempstead, England : Wesleyan)

Bishop’s transcripts for Box-Moor, 1843
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Box-Moor (Hertfordshire)

Bishop’s transcripts for Hemel-Hempstead, 1604-1869
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Hemel-Hempstead (Hertfordshire)

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel Hempstead, St Mary, parish registers

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel Hempstead, St Paul, parish registers

Marriage transcripts, 1558-1837
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Hemel-Hempstead (Hertfordshire)

Parish chest materials, 1723-1907
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Hemel-Hempstead (Hertfordshire)

Parish registers for Box-Moor, 1830-1903
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Box-Moor (Hertfordshire)

Parish registers for Hemel-Hempstead, 1558-1949
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Hemel-Hempstead (Hertfordshire)

Parish registers for Leverstock-Green, 1849-1952
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Leverstock-Green (Hertfordshire)

Parish registers for St. Paul’s Church, Hemel-Hempstead, 1878-1936
Author: Church of England. St. Paul’s Church (Hemel-Hempstead, Hertfordshire)

Record of members, 1842-1855
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Hemel Hempstead Branch (Hertfordshire)

Record of members, ca. 1837-1858
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Bedfordshire Conference

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – Church records – Indexes ( 8 )
Computer printout of Hemel Hampstead, Box Lane Independent, Herts., Eng

Computer printout of Hemel Hempstead, Baptist, Herts., Eng

Computer printout of Hemel Hempstead, Herts., Eng

Computer printout of Hemel Hempstead, Redbourn Street Wesleyan, Herts., Eng

Parish register printouts of Hemel-Hempstead, Hertford, England (Independent Church, Box Lane Chapel) ; christenings 1791-1837
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

Parish register printouts of Hemel-Hempstead, Hertford, England (Wesleyan, Redbourn Street Chapel) ; christenings, 1836-1837
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

Parish register printouts of Hemel-Hempstead, Hertford, England ; christenings, 1760-1877
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

Parish register printouts of Hemel-Hempstead, Hertford, England ; marriages, 1813-1881
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – History ( 1 )
The book of Hemel Hempstead & Berkhamsted : the illustrated record of both towns’ past
Author: Robinson, Gwennah; Birtchnell, Percy Charles, 1910-

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – Land and property ( 1 )
Parish chest materials, 1723-1907
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Hemel-Hempstead (Hertfordshire)

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – Military records ( 1 )
Militia lists for the parish of Hemel Hempstead, 1758-1786
Author: Hill, John

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – Poorhouses, poor law, etc. ( 1 )
Parish chest materials, 1723-1907
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Hemel-Hempstead (Hertfordshire)

England, Hertfordshire, Hemel-Hempstead – Taxation ( 1 )
Parish chest materials, 1723-1907
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Hemel-Hempstead (Hertfordshire)

Administration

  • County: Hertfordshire
  • Civil Registration District: Hemel Hempstead
  • Probate Court: Court of the Archdeaconry of Huntingdon (Hitchin Division)
  • Diocese: Post-1844 – Rochester, Pre-1845 – Lincoln
  • Rural Deanery: Pre-1845 – Berkhampstead, Post-1844 – St Albans
  • Poor Law Union: Hemel Hampstead
  • Hundred: Dacorum
  • Province: Canterbury