I took my bike on an early train to Elsenham, the stop on the Cambridge to Liverpool Street line just before Stansted Airport, and headed to St Peter, Ugley. This is beyond the M11, a remote estate church with just the hall and farm for company. You have to walk the last 100 yards or so. A surprisingly large late medieval church with a red brick tower, heavily Victorianised inside but with the blessing of some lovely Burne-Jones windows. Gordon Plumb points out that Charles Sewter in his 1975 catalogue of Morris windows does not have an entry for Ugley. He does, however, have one for a window at Oakley - but he notes that no Morris window exists at either Great or Little Oakley. The window had scenes of the Adoration, Nativity, Flight into Egypt and choir of angels in tracery (as here at Ugley). He dates the window to 1882. He also notes that repairs were done to the Adoration in 1905. Gordon concludes that Oakley may be a mistake for Ugley, but further investigation suggests that the windows were originally at Little Oakley, on the other side of Essex in the suburbs of Harwich. The church there is now a private house, and the panels are set rather awkwardly at Ugley. They don't appear to have been originally intended for Ugley church, and so perhaps they were moved here in the 1970s when the church at Little Oakley was closed.