Brodie Waddell
On 22 March 1697, ‘there were a great many fighting Cocks carried through Coxall on horsback in linen baggs’. So wrote Joseph Bufton in one of his eleven surviving notebooks.
But this odd little memorandum was not an isolated scribbling. It was, in fact, just one of about 180 entries in his Coggeshall chronicle, which he began in February 1678 and continued to May 1697. In it, we find festive celebrations, church business, unusual weather, family injuries, highway robberies and much else besides.
The entries from 1693, a fairly typical year, give a sense of the whole:
- 11 Jan. 1693, John Bufton went to combing.
- 4 Feb. 1693, my cousin Sparhawk was carried to prison.
- 15 Feb. 1693, there was a bonfire made by the Crown for the joy that Squire Honeywood got the day of Sir Eliab Harvey and was not cast out of the Parliament and when he came home from Chelmsford through Coxall the night after he was chosen abundance of candles were lighted for joy.
- 24 Mar. 1693, King William went through Kelvedon and went back again through Kelvedon 28 Mar.
- early 1693, the new king’s arms and the 10 commandments new writ were set up in the church.
- 1693, the Quakers made a new burying place in Crouches
- 1 May 1693, the soldiers set up a Maypole at the Woolpack door
- 18 May 1693, the poor did rise because the Bakers would not bake, because some of their bread was cut out the day before for being too light.
- May 1693, my cousin Sparhawk came home.
- beginning of May 1693 Francis Clark broke.
- end of May 1693 the same month the Poor had Badges given them to weare which tis said were made of Pewter and Coggeshall Poor 1693 set upon them.
- 1693, Mr Mayhew sold Coxall Lordship to Mr Nehemiah Lyde of London. 11 May he came first for his rent and 5 Jun kept court and Counsellor Cox was his steward.
- June 1693, our 4th bell was carried to Sudbury to be new shot and brought home and the other were chipt to make them tuneable. They were first rung 6 July.
- 30 Oct. 1693, King William went through Kelvedon.
- 2 Nov. 1693, John Ancil had hung himself but was cut down in time.
- 1693, a new pound was set up on Grange hill and the shambles was repaired.