The earliest appearance of the name Hanningfield was in the
Domesday Book of 1086, where it was spelt Haningefelda and Haneghefelda and it is thought to date from the
Anglo-Saxons colonisation period between the 5th-7th centuries, and to mean the open country (feld), of the people (inga), of Hana or Han. In 1870–72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described East Hanningfield as: HANNINGFIELD (EAST), a parish in Chelmsford district, Essex; 3½ miles N of the river Crouch, and 6 SE of Chelmsford r. station. Post town, Chelmsford. Acres, 2, 446. Real property, £3, 323. Pop., 453. Houses, 94. The property is subdivided. The manor belongs to Lord Petre. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Rochester. Value, £417.* Patron, Nottidge, Esq. The church is later English; and consists of nave, chancel, and north chapel, with a steeple. Charities, £13. ==All Saints' Church==