1
Upminster Gauging Station
The Environment Agency's gauging weir on the River Ingrebourne in Gaynes Park.
Station spec. on http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/hiflows/station.aspx?37018
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 4 Jun 2013
0.11 miles
2
Ingrebourne River in Upminster
The Ingrebourne rises near Brentwood and flows into the Thames at Rainham, a distance of about 27 miles or about 43 kilometres.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 28 Jul 2010
0.12 miles
3
St Matthew, Chelmsford Drive, Hornchurch
Image: © John Salmon
Taken: 27 Feb 2012
0.12 miles
4
St Matthew, Chelmsford Drive, Hornchurch - Sanctuary
Image: © John Salmon
Taken: 27 Feb 2012
0.13 miles
5
St Matthew, Chelmsford Drive, Hornchurch - East end
Image: © John Salmon
Taken: 27 Feb 2012
0.13 miles
6
St Matthew, Chelmsford Drive, Hornchurch - Foundation stone
Image: © John Salmon
Taken: 27 Feb 2012
0.13 miles
7
Hornchurch: St Matthew's Church
The foundation stone for this church, which is in the Parish of Hornchurch and in Chelmsford Drive, was laid in 1956. The Church's website is here http://www.parishofhornchurch.co.uk/st-matthews-church.html
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 28 Jul 2010
0.13 miles
8
St Matthew, Chelmsford Drive, Hornchurch
Image: © John Salmon
Taken: 27 Feb 2012
0.13 miles
9
Doncaster Way
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 18 Jun 2011
0.13 miles
10
London LOOP alongside the River Ingrebourne
Hornchurch Country Park is the former site of Sutton's Farm airfield which opened on 3rd October 1915, from which biplanes of the Royal Flying Corps defended London in the First World War. Lieutenant William Leefe-Robinson took off from the airfield on the night of 2nd September 1916 and shot down the first German Zeppelin airship to crash over British soil. For this action he received the Victoria Cross. The airfield closed after the First World War, but the land was requisitioned in 1923 because of the expansion of the RAF and the airfield opened as a much larger fighter station, RAF Hornchurch. Fighter squadrons from Hornchurch were prominent in the Battle of France over Dunkirk and the Battle of Britain and it became one of the most famous Spitfire stations in Fighter Command. The airfield was ideally located in bomb alley to cover both London and the Thames corridor from German air attacks.
After the War it became the RAF's Aircrew Selection Centre during the 1950s. In 1962 the airfield closed and the site was sold for gravel extraction. In 1980, following ground restoration, including in-filling with landfill, the Greater London Council carried out a massive landscaping project to create Hornchurch Country Park. The road names of the local airfield housing estate commemorate the airfield and its pilots.
A new visitor centre was opened on 3rd October 2015, the 100th anniversary of the original airfield. It includes exhibition space and a cafe and has been named Ingrebourne Valley Visitor Centre as it provides a focal point and gateway to the wider landscape of the Ingrebourne Valley. It is a joint venture between Essex Wildlife Trust and the London Borough of Havering.
The London LOOP follows the entire length of Hornchurch Country Park and the Ingrebourne Valley from Upminster Bridge. This is after crossing Hacton Lane on the way to Upminster Bridge.
The Ingrebourne Valley, in which Hornchurch Country Park is situated, comprises 650 acres of various habitats, including river, open water, marsh, grassland, reedbeds and woodland. It is a Local Nature Reserve and a SSSI.
See http://data.wildlifetrusts.org/sites/default/files/Hornchurch%20Country%20Park%20Info%20&%20Map.pdf for more information about Hornchurch Country Park.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 13 Mar 2017
0.14 miles