Toponymy The first known written use of the term, as 'Hamme', is in an Anglo-Saxon charter of 958, in which King Edgar granted the
Manor of Ham, which was undivided at that time, to Ealdorman Athelstan. A subsequent charter on 1037 describes a transfer of land, which has been identified with East Ham, indicating that the first division of the territory occurred between 958 and 1037. The place name derives from
Old English 'hamm' and means 'a dry area of land between rivers or marshland', referring to the location of the settlement within boundaries formed by the rivers
Lea,
Thames and
Roding and their marshes.
North Woolwich seems likely to have been removed from Ham in the aftermath of the Norman Conquest. The earliest recorded use of the name East Ham, as distinct from Ham or
West Ham, is in 1204 as
EstHam. The names East and West Ham were applied to ancient
parishes in place by the end of the 12th century.
Administration and representation East Ham was originally part of the
hundred of Becontree, part of the
historic county of
Essex. East Ham Local Government District was created in 1878, when the ancient parish of East Ham adopted the
Local Government Act 1858 and formed a
local board of nine members to govern the area. In 1886 the local government district was extended to include the
civil parish of
Little Ilford (also known as
Manor Park), and the board was increased to 12 in number. The
Local Government Act 1894 reconstituted the area as
East Ham Urban District, with an elected urban district council of 15 members replacing the board. In 1900, Little Ilford civil parish was abolished and its area absorbed into an enlarged East Ham civil parish. The
East Ham Urban District of Essex was incorporated as a Municipal Borough on 10 August 1903. As a result of popular pressure, East Ham sought and obtained
county borough status on 1 April 1915. In 1965, under the
London Government Act 1963, it was abolished and merged with the
County Borough of West Ham to form the
London Borough of Newham. The principal offices of Newham Council were at the junction of Barking Road and High Street South in the former
East Ham Town Hall, a
Grade II listed Edwardian structure designed by A. H. Campbell, H. Cheers and J. Smith, which included a landmark clock tower. Built between 1901 and 1903,
Passmore Edwards opened the Town Hall on 5 February 1903. Most council departments moved to Newham Dockside (Building 1000, Dockside Road E16) in 2010. East Ham is also the name of a parliamentary
House of Commons constituency
East Ham, which covers East Ham and neighbouring areas. The current
Member of Parliament (MP) is
Stephen Timms.
Early history Boleyn Castle on Green Street was built in the 16th century and survived until the 1950s.
Economic development In 1859 East Ham railway station opened and, although in 1863 the area was still being described as a
scattered village, the availability of transport resulted in increasing urbanisation, especially from 1890 onwards. The electric services of the
District Railway first served East Ham in 1908.
WWI – East Ham Pals In 1915, the Mayor and Borough of East Ham raised a
Pals battalion of local men. The unit became the
32nd (East Ham) battalion of the
Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment). The battalion was assigned to the
124th Brigade, part of the
41st Division and served on the
Western and
Italian fronts. A full strength infantry battalion of the timed totalled around 1,036 men, and the East Ham Pals are recorded as losing 444 by the time the battalion was disbanded in March 1918. The disbandment occurred as the British Army was so short of manpower that it could no longer maintain as many units, the surviving members of the East Ham battalion were re-assigned to other units to bring them up to strength. == Governance ==