Hoxton St John, Middlesex Family History Guide

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Hoxton St John is an Ecclesiastical Parish in the county of Middlesex, created in 1830 from Shoreditch St Leonard Ancient Parish; located on New North Road.

Other places in the parish include: Hoxton Old Town and Hoxton New Town.

Alternative names:

Parish church: St. John the Baptist

Parish registers begin:

  • Parish registers: 1826
  • Bishop’s Transcripts: None

Nonconformists include: Baptist, Christians, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, French Protestant, Independent/Congregational, Primitive Methodist, and Wesleyan Methodist.

Adjacent Parishes

Parish History

The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870

HOXTON, a quondam hamlet, seven chapelries, and two sub-districts in Shoreditch parish and district, Middlesex. The quondam hamlet is now part of the metropolis; occupies the space between the old Roman road. now called Old Street road, and the Regent’s canal; lies averagely 1 ½ mile NE by N of St. Paul’s; is within the jurisdiction of the central criminal court; contains the station of the N division of the metropolitan police; and has a post-office, of the name of Hoxton-New-Town, and several receiving post offices, under London N. It was known at Domesday as Hocheston; it has, since about 1810, become closely built and populous; and it is divided into Old and New towns, the former of which contains some old houses, while the latter is entirely modern. Balmes’ House, or Whitmore, in the Old town, was once a moated mansion, and was converted into a private lunatic asylnm. The Haberdashers’ alms houses, in Hoxton, were erected in 1692, and endowed with a legacy of £30, 000 by Robert Aske, Esq.; were rebuilt, in 1825; are now a handsome edifice, forming three sides of a quadrangle, with a chapel and a bronze statue of Aske; and have an income of £3, 550. Fuller’s alms houses, for 28 aged women, were founded and endowed in 1795; Westby s alms houses, for 10 aged women, were founded in 1749; Lady Lumley’s alms houses, for 6 aged persons, were rebuilt in 1822; and there are also Badger’s and Baremere’s alms houses. The workhouse, belonging to St. Luke, Middlesex, is in the New town; and, at the census of 1861, had 694 inmates. Hoxton, in the early part of the 17th century, was regarded as a country village, appears to have been a favourite resort of the citizens, and was famous for cakes and ale, and for custards. The manor has belonged, since before the Norman conquest, to the Dean and Chapter of St. Pauls. The Rev. John Newton lived in Charles square. The chapelries are St. John and Trinity, constituted in 1829; Christchurch, in 1841; St. Andrew, in 1861; St. Saviour, in 1862; St. Anne and St. Mary, in 1865. Pop. of St. J., 20, 579; of T., 6, 511; of C., 7, 610; of St. And., 7, 000; of St. S., 5, 675; of St. Anne, 5, 145; of St. M., 6, 300. Five of the livings are vicarages, and two p. curacies, in the diocese of London. Value of St. J., £780.; of T., C., and St. S., each £420; of the others, each £200. Patron of St. J., the Archdeacon of London; of T., the Bishop of L.; of C., the Vicar of St. John; of St. And., Trustees; of St. S. and St. Anne, alt. the Crown and the Bishop; of St. M., the Lord Chancellor. St. John’s church was built in 1826, at a cost of £13, 000; and has a tower with stages of turrets, and a terminal cupola. An Independent chapel, in lieu of the Barbican one, and at a cost of £6, 000, was built in 1868. There are numerous dissenting chapels, a Jews’ synagogue, and several national and other public schools. The sub-districts are H. New Town and H. Old Town: and they are divided by a line drawn through Pitfield street, Critchill place, and New North road. Acres, of H N. T-, 130. Pop. in 1851, 23,505; in 1861, 26,516. Houses, 3,182. Acres, of H. O. T., 116. Pop. in 1851, 17,431: in 1861, 25, 777. Houses, 3,233

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

A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848

HOXTON (St. John the Baptist), a district parish, in the union of Shoreditch, Tower division of the hundred of Ossulstone, county of Middlesex, half a mile (N. E.) from London. This place, originally a hamlet in the parish of St. Leonard, Shoreditch, having become an extensive and populous district, was constituted a parish by act of parliament in 1830. It is divided into the Old Town and New Town; the former containing a number of ancient and spacious houses, many of which have fallen into decay, and some have been converted into private lunatic asylums: the New Town consists of numerous well-formed streets and neat ranges of modern buildings, occasionally interspersed with cottages; it is well paved, lighted with gas, and amply supplied with water. The principal manufactories are for machinery of various kinds, pins, vinegar, &c.: there is an extensive saw-mill; and on the banks of the Regent’s canal, which passes through the northern part of the parish, are lime and coal wharfs.

The living is a perpetual curacy; net income, £450; patron, the Archdeacon of London. The church was erected in 1826, by the Parliamentary Commissioners, at an expense of £13,000, and is a handsome edifice of light brick, with a cornice and ornaments of stone, and a steeple consisting of successive stages of campanile turrets crowned by a dome. A church, called Christ Church, was erected in the New North Road, by means of the Bishop of London’s fund, and was consecrated June 22nd, 1839; it is a neat building in the early Norman style, and contains 1200 sittings, nearly half of which are free. A district has been assigned to it, and the living has been augmented to £400 per annum out of the Canonry and Prebend Suspension Fund; patron, the Bishop. A third church was completed, in Hoxton New Town, in 1847; it is a neat edifice of Kentish ragstone in the pointed style, with a spire. There are places of worship for Independents, Wesleyans, and Methodists of the New Connexion; and the ancient cemetery of the Jews is in the parish. Viscountess Lumley founded and endowed almshouses for six aged persons, which were rebuilt in 1822. The Haberdashers’ almshouses were founded in 1692, by Robert Aske, who endowed them with estates for the support of 20 poor members of that company, and for the maintenance and education of 20 boys, sons of freemen of the company; the old buildings were taken down in 1825, and the present handsome structure erected on the site. The premises occupy three sides of a quadrangular area, and contain a chapel with a portico of the Grecian-Doric order, having near it apartments for the chaplain and schoolmaster, a schoolroom and dormitory for the boys, and domestic offices; the wings, in front of which is a colonnade, are appropriated to the aged men, who have each a separate house, and are in other respects comfortably provided for. William Fuller, Esq., in 1795, founded and endowed almshouses for twelve aged women, and by additional endowments accommodation is now afforded for twenty-eight. Almshouses near Gloucester-terrace were founded in 1749, by Mrs. Mary Westby, who endowed them for ten aged women.

Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848

Parish Records

FamilySearch

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – Church history ( 1 )
Chequer Alley : a story of successful Christian work
Author: Briggs, Frederick W.

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – Church records ( 7 )
Births and baptisms, 1778-1828
Author: Pavement Chapel (Hoxton : Independent)

Church records, 1800-1836
Author: Hoxton Academy Chapel (Hoxton : Independent)

Parish registers for Hoxton, 1839-1875
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Hoxton (Middlesex)

Parish registers of Christ Church, Hoxton, 1867-1907
Author: Church of England. Christ Church (Hoxton, Shoreditch, Middlesex)

Record of members, 1847-1853
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Hoxton Branch (Middlesex)

Registers of marriages, christenings and burials, 1696-1852
Author: Church of England. Aske’s Hospital Chapel (Hoxton)

Registers of the Aske’s Hospital, Hoxton, Shoreditch, London : marriages, 1696-1753, baptisms, 1731-1744, 1767, and 1639, burials, 1724-1826, 1845, and 1852
Author: Church of England. Aske’s Hospital Chapel (Hoxton); Willis, H. J.

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – Church records – Indexes ( 11 )
Computer printout of Hoxton, Academy Chapel Independent, Lond., Eng

Computer printout of Hoxton, Christ Church, Lond., Eng

Computer printout of Hoxton, French Huguenot, Lond., Eng

Computer printout of Hoxton, Old Town Wesleyan, Lond., Eng

Computer printout of Hoxton, Pavement Chapel New North Road Independent, Lond., Eng

Computer printout of Hoxton, St. Aske Hospital, London, England

Parish register printouts of Hoxton, London, England, (Christ Church), christenings, 1839-1857
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

Parish register printouts of Hoxton, London, England, (Christ Church), christenings, 1857-1876
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

Parish register printouts of Hoxton, London, England, (Christ Church), marriages, 1841-1875
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

Parish register printouts of Hoxton, London, England, (French Huguenot), christenings, 1751-1783
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

Parish register printouts of Hoxton, London, England, (Independent Church, Academy Chapel), christenings, 1800-1836
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – Description and travel ( 1 )
Hoxton Hall : a short history

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – History ( 1 )
Hoxton Hall : a short history

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – Public records ( 2 )
Poor rate books, Hackney, Middlesex, 1764-1851

Poor rate books, Shoreditch, Middlesex, 1688-1871

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – Schools ( 1 )
Report of the committee of Highbury College : with a list of subscribers
Author: Highbury College

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – Taxation ( 2 )
Land tax assessment for Shoreditch-St. Leonard, 1806-1926
Author: Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Middlesex)

Shoreditch rate book for Hoxton New Town liberty, 1819-1848
Author: Shoreditch (Middlesex, England)

England, Middlesex, Hoxton – Voting registers ( 1 )
The register of persons entitled to vote for the Hoxton division of the borough of Shoreditch, 1897-1900

Administration

  • County: Middlesex
  • Civil Registration District: Shoreditch
  • Probate Court: Court of the Peculiar of the Dean and Chapter of St Paul’s Cathedral
  • Diocese: London
  • Rural Deanery: Not created until 1858
  • Poor Law Union: Shoreditch
  • Hundred: Ossulstone (Tower Division)
  • Province: Canterbury