Feering: an Essex village of Tudor brick, ancient church life and a long roadside history

Feering is a village and civil parish in Essex, between Colchester and Witham, where it adjoins Kelvedon on the old London road corridor. The parish has deep historical roots, and there is evidence of a church here in the time of Edward the Confessor. Over the centuries Feering developed as an agricultural parish with a strategic position on one of the principal east-west routes across Essex, later gaining a station on the Kelvedon and Tollesbury Light Railway. The dominant building remains All Saints Church, a Grade I listed parish church notable for its long history and remarkable Tudor brickwork.
Population: 2,103 inhabitants (2021 census).
Distance: about 10 miles west of Colchester and around 10 miles east of Witham.
Traditions and culture: Feering combines the feel of an old Essex parish with the shared village life of the Feering-Kelvedon area, shaped by church, school, local associations and the agricultural setting.
Highlights: All Saints Church, the historic village street, nearby green spaces and walks, and the wider rural landscape of the Blackwater valley area.