Viewranger file here
On Thursday the 19th April 2018 I left home for a 6 mile walk before a late shift at work, after 25 minutes I was parking up opposite the Good Intent pub, Copthall Green in a long layby on Crown Hill at EN9 3SZ.
I walk up the road a little before taking a path on my right into a small wooded area and out into a green.
I now walk along a road for a while, almost took the road below with the horses before noticing my mistake. I do however come back that way!
I was too busy looking about and not paying much attention to my GPS and walk a little way beyond the sign below and have to walk back a little.
I pass by Queen Boadicea's Obelisk in the field on my right. The Obelisk was 
built in the early 18th century at the place where Queen Boadicia reputedly 
committed suicide by eating poisonous berries to avoid capture after her
 Iceni army was defeated by the Romans under governor, Gaius Suetonius 
Paulinus, around AD60-61.
Sadly the land surrounding the Boadicea obelisk is now on private land, although it is visible from the footpath. 
I walk through a muddy field, (mud everywhere today made worse by horses churning it all up) and exit by Obelisk Farm.
| Obelisk Farm | 
I walk over and take a path opposite and across another field.
Now on my left I pass The Temple(Built in 1737) in Warlies Park on Temple Hill.
This folly is the Temple that gives its name to Temple Hill. It was 
built by Richard Morgan in 1737 and is a Scheduled Monument. 
Warlies Park.
 Sir
 Thomas Fowell Buxton was a C19 campaigner to establish Epping Forest, 
his family purchased Warlies in 1851. The house and gardens were sold to
 Dr. Barnardos in 1921, but the family kept most of the land until they 
sold it to the Greater London Council in 1974. When the GLC was 
abolished ownership was passed to the Corporation of London, who manage 
it as part of the Epping Forest Buffer Land
I leave the field onto a road and turn left and up to the top.
Here I meet Warlies Park House, now used as a variety of offices.
Warlies was originally part of the lands belonging to the abbots of 
Waltham before the dissolution of the monasteries. In the 17th century 
it was the home of Samuel Foxe, son of the martyrologist, and Samuel's 
son added to the estate by buying up land and cottages in Upshire.
The estate was held by Christopher Davenport until 1715 and on his 
death was inherited by his daughter, Frances, who enclosed the estate. 
Warlies was landscaped by Richard Morgan in the first half of the 18th 
century. Richard Morgan designed a landscape park with classical rotunda
 and obelisks, influenced by the picturesque school. Viewpoints in the 
park are the 1737 rotunda and two obelisks of a similar age which stand 
about a mile apart and are said to commemorate the death of Boudicca.
Between 1801 and 1814 the estate was owned by James Reed who improved 
the grounds by adding a notable series of plantations. In 1851 Sir 
Edward North Buxton, MP, bought the Warlies estate, some 1300 acres, in 
order to have a house in his constituency. His son, Sir Thomas Fowell 
Buxton succeeded his father as 3rd baronet and after his marriage, 
Warlies became the social centre of West Essex.
The Buxtons sold 
the estate in 1921 and the mansion was a Dr Barnardo's home from 1921 
until 1974, when it was sold to the Greater London Council. The estate 
passed to the Corporation of London in 1986 and is managed by Epping 
Forest District Council and the Corporation as a country park with 
extensive public access. Their value is as buffer land that is free from
 the danger of development and ensures open borders for the Forest to 
the great advantage of wildlife. The house is occupied by small 
businesses.
| Warlies Park House | 
Now I take a path and start to climb a hill up above Warlies Park House.
Now at the top of the hill I walk out onto a car park before noticing my route continues back at the top of the hill, so I back track and walk along a path.
| A view downhill to The Temple again. | 
Now I'm out onto a road where I turn right and walk up to St Thomas Church in Upshire.
St Thomas Upshire sits on the high ground above Waltham Abbey on 
Horseshoe Hill which is recorded as the road between Epping and the 
Augustan monastery of Waltham Abbey. However the history of St Thomas’s 
starts during the latter part of the 19th century when the 
Buxton Family took up residence in Warlies in 1858. When they arrived 
there was already a reading room and a school, attended by 70 pupils, 
and where, divine services for the village were held.
Sir Thomas Buxton and his wife Lady Victoria took a great interest in 
the life of the village taking an active part in the running of the 
school and the use and upkeep of the hamlet’s reading room.  In 1895 
Lady Buxton founded the Mother’s Union in the village in and a few years
 later Sir Thomas commissioned an architect to draw up plans for a 
church in the village and in 1901 Lady Victoria laid the foundation 
stone for the new church.
The church design is a simple arts and craft design with clean lines 
and clear glass giving the interior, despite the dark wood columns and 
beams a light, airy feel.  The arts and craft theme is continued in the 
fixtures and fittings.
The Bishop of Victoria and Hong Kong and the Vicar of Waltham Abbey 
dedicated the finished church St Thomas the Apostle and Martyr in 
September 1902.
It was given the status of a mission church not a parish church, and 
placed under the direction of the Vicar of Waltham Abbey.  In 1903 the 
Bishop of St Albans, within whose diocese the church was situated at 
that time, licenced the Vicar of Waltham Abbey to conduct Divine 
services in the Mission church.
The Buxton family continued to support the church as is evident by 
the donations of the baptismal font and copy of Raphael’s 1517 painting 
The Transfiguration, which still hangs in the church today, along with 
other items such as the church bell, alms dishes and communion rails in 
1910.
From the beginning there was a strong desire amongst the congregation
 for St Thomas’ to be a fully functioning Parish church, which over the 
next decades was rigorously opposed by the Vicar of Waltham Abbey.   In 
view of this Lord Buxton retained ownership of the church and land which
 in turn lead to the establishment of a burial ground at the back of the
 church.
From the outset the congregation were resolved to fund their own 
needs. They did this by an annual sale of works, a tradition which 
continues to this day in the much-loved St Thomas Summer and Christmas 
Fairs.
Founders of the church Lord and Lady Buxton had both died by the end 
of the First World War so the task of overseeing St Thomas’s fell to 
their son, Sir Victor and then his grandson Sir Fowell who decided to 
hand over the responsibility for the church to a board of trustees after
 which the church passed into the care of the newly formed Diocese of 
Chelmsford.
Between the world wars the church continued to thrive adding a Sunday
 school and choir to its regular activities as well as the village guide
 and scout troop to be attached to the church. The church Council also 
continued to press for St Thomas’ to be consecration as a parish.
| Views across London | 
When the Buxtons moved to Norfolk in the 1920s their former house 
became a Barnardo’s home and the children from there could be seen each 
week walking up Horseshoe Hill in crocodile formation to attend church.
During the critical days of 1940-41 when invasion across the channel 
was a real possibility St Thomas’s held daily services of intersession 
while members of the congregation who had not been drafted joined the 
local defence league.
The lynch gate was built in memory of all of those from the village who had died in both world wars and was dedicated in 1950.
Finally in 1956, after 54 years, St Thomas’ was joined with Holy 
Innocent’s church in High Beech some three miles away and given the 
status of a parish church.
Today St Thomas’s is part of the Waltham Abbey joint Benefice and shares its incumbent vicar with St Lawrence’s Ninefields.
I walk out back onto the road and walk a little way past The Horseshoes Pub, and had to walk back where the path is hidden next to the pub.
The path comes out into a field with again, fine views over London.
I follow the path downhill, I see what I thought was a fox in the distance, I was about to take a picture then a saw a man. It turns out it was a red coloured staff dog, well it was a long way off!
I walk along a lane of trees before turning left onto Green Lane.
| A view back to St Thomas Church from Green Lane | 
At the top of a muddy Green Lane I now cross the M25 by a bridge.
I continue on down Green Lane.
I enter Epping Forest.
Epping Forest was afforested in the 13th century, during the reign of 
Henry III. "Forest" in medieval times was a legal term meaning an area 
where the King owned all the deer (and other game) and he alone had the 
right to hunt. The term did not imply woodland: many forests included 
open areas, moors and heaths. Nor did it imply ownership: forests were 
often owned by local gentry with rights of access (to gather wood and 
graze livestock) for commoners. Instead, afforestation was a way of 
asserting dominance – the King had the authority to keep his deer on 
other peoples' land – and of protecting his stock. Laws designed to 
protect both the vegetation and the wild animals were administered by 
forest courts, and abuses of the laws were punishable by fines or 
(rarely) by physical punishments. Foresters, verderers, agisters and 
surveyors were employed to police the system.  Medieval Kings were poor,
 and the fines generated by these laws were a useful source of income, 
and the honorific sinecures were a handy way of rewarding faithful 
service. Furthermore, making the killing of deer illegal except by royal
 decree made venison a rare and precious meat and thus a valuable gift.
From Tudor times, the Crown's interest in forests gradually declined 
leaving them to the landowners, but still with access rights for 
commoners. Over time various Enclosure Acts were passed allowing 
landowners to extinguish these access rights. In the mid-19th century 
local landowners began to enclose Epping Forest. Social reformers of the
 time (including Sir Edward Buxton) objected to this believing that 
access to nature was an essential right, especially for people in urban 
environments. The situation was finally settled by the Epping Forest Act
 of 1878, which appointed the Corporation of the City of London (who had
 brought the land from the Crown) to be Conservators of the Forest, with
 the duty of keeping the forest as an open space for public recreation. 
All the enclosed lands, except those actually built on, were opened 
again. Lopping rights were extinguished but the other rights, including 
the right to graze livestock, were retained. Verderers, originally 
enforcers of forest law, became representatives of the users of the 
forest. The forest was saved, in the words of Queen Victoria "for the 
use and enjoyment of my people for all time".
I pass by Lodge Road Bog North.
Carbon-dating reveals that the first layer of vegetation was laid down 
here more than 4,000 years ago. Ponded back by a Neolithic trackway, or 
just some natural lip of gravel, the area was deepened by road building 
for the various incarnations of nearby Copped Hall since the middle ages.
I leave the forest cross a road and enter the grounds of Copped Hall.
| I cross over the M25 once more | 
Recorded history at Copped Hall starts in the 12th century when there
  was already a substantial building on the site. At that time Copped  
Hall belonged to the Fitzaucher family who served the King as huntsmen.
In 1303 the Copped Hall Estate consisted of 180 acres –  comprising 
parkland, arable land and meadow land.  In 1337 Copped Hall  came into 
the hands of  Sir John Shardlow who conveyed it to the Abbots  of 
Waltham in 1350 in exchange for other lands. The Abbots described Copped
 Hall as "a mansion of pleasure and  privacy". They were granted leave 
by Edward III in 1374 to extend the  park by a further 120 acres on the 
Epping side.
In 1537 the Abbot gave Copped Hall to Henry VIII in the vain  hope of 
saving Waltham Abbey from being dissolved. This failed to  appease Henry
 and the Abbey was dissolved in 1540. Henry VIII visited Copped Hall but
 never lived there. In 1548  his son Edward VI allowed the future Queen 
Mary to live at Copped Hall  where she remained – to a large degree – a 
prisoner, as she was a  Catholic. When Mary became Queen in 1533, Copped
 Hall was leased to  Sir.Thomas Cornwallis. In 1558 it was transferred 
to the Duchy of  Lancaster. In 1564 Queen Elizabeth granted Copped Hall 
to one of her  closest friends – Sir.Thomas Heneage.
There is only one vague drawing indicating what the Copped  Hall of this
 period might have looked like and this shows a row of roof  gables. The
 mansion would have been altered and rebuilt over the  centuries. It 
would have started off as a timber framed building but  would later have
 acquired tall brick chimneys. The external walls of the  principal 
parts would probably have also been rebuilt of brick with corner 
buttresses.
Copped Hall is a stately Georgian mansion, completed in 1758. A new wing
 was added in the 1870's. In 1887, at the age of 19, Ernest Wythes 
inherited Copped Hall. He was immensely rich – his grandfather had made a
 fortune building railways – and he began spending money on the house 
almost immediately. A new stable block was built in 1894. The next year,
 the new wing was pulled down and rebuilt. 
At around the same time the roof line was given a balustrade and 
elaborate chimney tops, the windows were given stone architraves, and on
 the western front, the central portion was given a classical makeover 
by adding stone pilasters and a carved pediment. Elaborate ornamental 
railings and gates were added, and a large stone conservatory was built 
to the south, linked to the main building by a glazed corridor. The 
interior was remodelled and filled with fine art and elegant 
furnishings. 58 staff were employed in the house and gardens. During 
WWI, many of the staff went off to war and the house was used as a 
hospital for wounded soldiers. In 1917 there was a catastrophic fire and
 the main block was burnt out. Mr Wythes and his family never lived 
there again. After his death in 1949 the estate was sold and anything of
 value stripped out. The house remains a ruin although the grounds have 
been saved from developers by the Corporation of London and the house is
 slowly being restored by the Copped Hall Trust with a view to 
establishing relevant educational, cultural and community uses.
I leave Copped Hall behind and continue along the path and down to a road.
I follow the path to my right and along the road for a short way.
I take a path across some fields next to a house and across to Lodge Farm and then along a road past some lovely houses.
I am now walking along the road I almost went wrong at the being of the walk with the horses.Then along the road I was on at the beginning of the walk and out onto the green back to Crown Hill Road.
I am now back at the car, a 6,5 mile walk with the slight diversions, a nice walk now to get back home before work!!