HESTON AND ISLEWORTH
This article (fn. 1) concerns the two ancient parishes of
Heston and Isleworth. They were joined under a
single local board of health in 1875, and united into
one civil parish in 1927, (fn. 2) and their histories long
before this had been so closely intertwined that it is
almost impossible to consider them apart. The town
of Hounslow was divided between the two parishes,
and the medieval manor of Isleworth included the
whole parish of Heston. (fn. 3) Twickenham also lay inside
the manor, but in other ways was more independent.
The village of Isleworth lies on the outside of a
curve in the Thames as the river runs north from
Kingston to Brentford. (fn. 4) The ancient parish of Isleworth is L-shaped, with one arm stretching westward from the village to the River Crane some two
miles off, and the other running north along the
Brent for about two miles. Heston parish lies in the
angle of the two arms. The most ancient part of the
boundaries of the two parishes is possibly that formed
by the Thames and the Brent. Whether the south
point of Isleworth Ait on the Thames has always
belonged to Richmond is unknown: in the 17th
century there were four aits here, whose dividing
channels have since silted up. The boundary along
the Brent has been slightly adjusted several times (fn. 5)
and in the 16th century Isleworth manor and parish
unsuccessfully laid claim to a small piece of commonland across Brentford Bridge. (fn. 6) In the north a stream
running into the Brent once marked the boundary
between the two parishes and Norwood as far west
as Norwood Green. The rest of the northern
boundary is less easy to explain. Heston's western
boundary runs down a lane connecting Cranford and
Norwood, so that the village of Cranford, which was
in existence by 1086, interposes itself between
Heston and its apparently more natural boundary on
the Crane. South of Cranford the Crane forms the
boundary of Heston and then of Isleworth, and this
was the boundary of Isleworth manor by 1299. (fn. 7)
Farther south, where Isleworth and Twickenham
adjoin each other, the division between the lands of
the two villages may not have been finally drawn (fn. 8)
until both had churches. For most of its distance
the boundary follows a stream which once crossed
the heath to the Crane. Where the stream joined the
Crane, the boundary left them both and went straight
to the Thames: this part of it seems to have been
fixed by the 15th century. (fn. 9) How soon the boundary
between Heston and Isleworth was determined is
uncertain: in the west it runs just south of the main
road over Hounslow Heath, then follows a stream
through Hounslow town and crosses the fields apparently without a natural guide to Osterley, where
it runs along a stream. The line across the heath may
not have been fixed before the reign of Henry VIII. (fn. 10)
All the boundaries are shown clearly in the fine and
detailed map of Isleworth hundred (see plate facing
p. 90) which Moses Glover made for the Earl of
Northumberland in 1635. (fn. 11) Another map, which,
however, only marks the demesne lands and features
near them, was made for the earl by Ralph Treswell in
1607. (fn. 12) Few changes have been made since 1635. At
the inclosure of 1818 a small area on the heath formerly belonging to Isleworth was allotted to Heston
as a gravel-pit. (fn. 13) In 1894, after the two parishes had
been formed into one urban district, the part of
Heston north of the Grand Junction Canal (114 a.)
was transferred to Southall urban district, with
which it was now more closely linked. (fn. 14) In 1932 the
urban district (and since 1927, civil parish) of Heston
and Isleworth was made into a borough. (fn. 15) Two years
later all the part of Cranford parish east of the Crane
(361 a.) was added to the borough, and adjustments
were made in its boundaries with Twickenham,
Brentford and Chiswick, and Southall-Norwood. (fn. 16)
As a result, the borough covered 7,218 acres in
1951. (fn. 17) Heston had been estimated at 3,823 acres in
1865 and Isleworth at 3,143 acres. (fn. 18)
The highest part of the district is in the northwest, to the west of Heston village, where the ground
rises to over 100 feet. The higher land stretches past
Heston to what used to be called Syon Hill (i.e. round
Syon Lane). In the east it drops fairly sharply down
to the Brent and to the south it falls, for the most
part more gradually, through Hounslow, Whitton,
and Worton, to the low-lying banks of the Thames.
The higher land of Heston and Syon Hill is mostly
brick-earth, of which a second strip west of Isleworth
village runs from the Twickenham boundary to
Brentford End. Between these two patches of brickearth Taplow gravel forms the soil of the old heath
area and curves up round Syon Hill to Osterley. The
valley of the Brent and its small tributaries is clay,
and the soil round Isleworth is flood-plain gravel
with a narrow strip of alluvium along the river.
Waterways.
The only evidence of any changes
in the course of the Thames past Isleworth is that
ground-levels indicate that a water-course, which in
1607 linked the River Brent to the stream which now
forms the mouth of the Duke's River, (fn. 19) was originally
natural. It may once have formed a channel of the
Thames so that the site of Syon House was on an ait
in the river. The medieval lords of Isleworth owned
weirs in the Thames of which at least one was in the
stretch of the river by Isleworth. (fn. 20) This was called
Isleworth weir, and the stakes at its upper end gave
its name to the Railshead. (fn. 21) The weir had been broken
down by 1538, (fn. 22) but the Duke of Somerset set up
another soon afterwards. (fn. 23) In 1607 there was a semicircle of stakes across the river, but by 1630 the weir
had been destroyed again and there were reported to
be only a few short stakes left. (fn. 24) In 1802 and later the
Duke of Northumberland leased a fishery in the
Thames called Isleworth weir, and in the early 20th
century there were still some stakes embedded in
the river which had probably once been part of the
old weir. (fn. 25) In the 17th and 18th centuries the fishermen of the neighbourhood disputed among themselves about stakes and 'salmon rooms' at Isleworth. (fn. 26)
The course of the Brent between Isleworth and
New Brentford has been changed several times. Some
bends in its course below Brentford Bridge were
straightened between 1699 and 1760, (fn. 27) and when the
Grand Junction Canal was cut in 1798 through
Heston and Norwood to the Brent, it by-passed a
number of other bends both above and below the
bridge. (fn. 28) In some places the old course of the river
has since dried up. The more westerly lakes at Osterley mark the courses of two streams which fell
together into the Brent. Going upstream, the next
tributary of the Thames was a brook which rose near
Sutton and ran through Hounslow to Smallberry
Green, whence, with the addition of some springs, it
fell into the Thames at Isleworth. This was one of at
least two streams in the area called the Bourne. (fn. 29) The
Crane falls into the Thames at the head of Isleworth
Ait. It was called the Fishbourne in the early Middle
Ages, (fn. 30) and Richard of Cornwall made a fish-pond
in it where it is crossed by the main road out on the
heath. (fn. 31) This was called Babworth Pond and gave its
name to Baber Bridge. A crowd of Londoners burst
open the pond and did other damage in the manor in
1264, during the Barons' War. (fn. 32) The pond was afterwards repaired and was reserved to the king's use
when the manor was leased in the later 14th century. (fn. 33) It had been recently filled in in 1520. (fn. 34) Below
Baber Bridge the cut west of the main stream was
made in the 17th century to drive a mill there, and
other small diversions and cuts lower down were
made later. (fn. 35) A stream called the Bourne and later
Burket's Brook ran through Whitton from the heath
quite near the Crane to join it near St. Margaret's: (fn. 36)
part of its course dried up after the Duke's River was
built. The Duke of Northumberland's River, as it is
now called, was first constructed in the 1540's when
the manor of Isleworth was in the king's hands. (fn. 37) It
was designed to reinforce the stream driving Isleworth mill by water brought from the Colne. (fn. 38) It
was dug from Longford, perhaps partly along existing
watercourses, through other royal manors and over
Hounslow Heath to Baber Bridge. The course of the
first section, from Longford Point to between Longford and Stanwell, was altered about 1578. (fn. 39) Henry
VIII's (or the Duke's) river left the Crane again at
the present Kneller Gardens, in Twickenham, and
ran north, crossing the Bourne (i.e. the tributary of
the Crane). This part of its course through Isleworth
appears to be artificial, though the presence of a
moat close by at Worton and the sharp turn in the
river farther north suggests that there may have been
some sort of stream here earlier. The river finally
runs into the Bourne (i.e. the stream flowing through
the town from Smallberry Green) just above the
bridge in St. John's Road. The part of the Bourne
below their junction has become known since the
16th century as part of the Duke's River. The Duke's
River was sold to Middlesex County Council in 1931.
A number of small watercourses derived from the
springs which rose in the two parishes. Among these
should be mentioned the springs north of the London
Road which fed a conduit to Syon Abbey. (fn. 40)
Roads and Bridges.
Probably the most ancient
man-made feature of the modern borough is the
Roman road from London to Staines. (fn. 41) Since it was
made its course has probably only been changed at
Brentford End where the rebuilding of Brentford
Bridge about 1446 and in 1824 made slight diversions
in the highway necessary. (fn. 42) The bridge was in
existence by the 13th century, but its history is
reserved for discussion elsewhere. (fn. 43) Between Brentford and Hounslow the road ran along a causeway in
the 13th century: (fn. 44) this may have been at Smallberry
Green, where the road makes practically its only
bend in the borough in order to avoid a damp area.
Baber Bridge on the west was repaired from the 13th
to the 16th centuries by the lord of the manor as
owner of the fish-pond there. From then on the
obligation seems to have been disputed. The bridge
was still a wooden one in the 17th century. It was
rebuilt in brick in 1798 and was thereafter repaired
by the county. (fn. 45)
The Bath Road, which is post-Roman, branches
out of the Staines Road at Hounslow, and it was this
fact which gave the town its particular importance.
A conference between representatives of the king and
of the French invaders was held here in 1217, (fn. 46) and
since then many kings and other great persons are
known to have passed through the town. From the
16th century there are many references to inns and
posts. (fn. 47) The two roads were turnpiked from 1717
to 1872: (fn. 48) the gates at their junction with Hounslow
High Street are depicted in the plate facing p. 112. In
1824 coaches were said to pass through every halfhour and in 1833 over 200 went through each day,
while a relay of horses was kept in Hounslow for the
king's journeys to and from Windsor. (fn. 49)
The other roads which were made before the
suburban development of the 19th century are of
little more than local importance and form a complex
network linking the various hamlets with each other
and with villages nearby. When the heath and fields
were inclosed in 1818 a few new roads were laid out
but the course of the more important tracks over the
hitherto open lands had long been established and
was not changed. The roads round Osterley seem to
have been altered after the park was made, though
their exact course before then is hard to determine. (fn. 50)
Until the 18th century Syon Lane continued south
of the London Road through what is now Syon
House park to the church. (fn. 51) It was turnpiked in
1767, together with the road through the village and
through Twickenham and Teddington to Hampton
Wick. Pound Lane (now Amhurst Gardens) and the
part of Twickenham Road between it and the
'George', where the other line of the turnpike joined
the Twickenham Road, were also included in the
Act: at this time the north end of Twickenham Road
was only a footpath. Within two years of the Act the
road through the park had been closed and replaced
by Park Road, the Twickenham Road was extended
to the London Road, and the turnpike bar stood
across the junction of the roads: Pound Lane, meanwhile, had been temporarily reduced to a footpath. (fn. 52)
The only other noteworthy change in the course of
the roads outside the villages was the straightening
of Syon Lane in 1779. (fn. 53) In the roads round Isleworth
are a number of bridges, most of them built when
the Duke's River was made and afterwards repaired
by its owner. (fn. 54) Queen's Bridge in the south seems to
be one of these, though its name is said to occur in
1450: (fn. 55) possibly the name was then used for another
bridge called King's Bridge which seems to have
crossed the Bourne (i.e. the tributary of the Crane)
and to have been in a road which was only used by
the king and therefore probably went into Twickenham Park. King's Bridge seems to have been broken
down by the end of the 14th century, though it was
still remembered over a hundred years later. (fn. 56) A
bridge led over the Crane to Feltham on Hounslow
Heath in the 17th and 18th centuries but had gone
by the early nineteenth. The parish put up a bridge
over the Crane at the Railshead in 1672: it seems to
have been a foot-bridge but there was a coach-bridge
a little later, which needed frequent rebuilding in
the 18th century, (fn. 57) and at one stage was apparently
kept locked by a neighbouring householder.
The only crossing of the Thames here before
Richmond Footbridge was opened in 1894 (fn. 58) was
provided by ferries. Syon Ferry and Church Ferry
were both mentioned in the early 16th century. (fn. 59)
They were possibly identical with one another. In
1593 there was a horse ferry. (fn. 60) In the 17th century
Richmond Road led to the ferry in Twickenham
parish where Richmond Bridge now stands, (fn. 61) but by
the 19th century the ferry at the Railshead was
diverting some traffic from it. (fn. 62) The river itself was
and is a highway of great significance to the area and
wharfs in Isleworth are often mentioned in the
Middle Ages and later. (fn. 63) The towpath here is on the
Surrey side, but until 1780 it was on the Isleworth
shore above the Railshead. (fn. 64) Glover shows boats
being towed by horses walking through Twickenham
Park, (fn. 65) but later on barges were always towed by
men along this reach. In 1780, after Richmond
Bridge had been built, a towpath was constructed
along the Richmond bank instead. (fn. 66)
Topography Before 1635.
Isleworth, on the river,
and Hounslow, on the main road, were probably the
earliest settlements in the area. Heston, like Isleworth, centres upon its church, which stands on a
slight hill. The church was probably there by the late
11th century. (fn. 67) None of the other hamlets is mentioned before the 13th century, though most of them
were probably settled earlier. They are North Hyde,
Sutton, Lampton, and Scrattage, in Heston, and
Worton and Wyke in Isleworth. Osterley was apparently never more than a farm-house and Wyke
may not have been much more, though it is mentioned as a township in 1274. The name of Scrattage
is now lost, though it survived until recently in
Scrattage Lane (now Jersey Road), along which its
cottages were scattered. (fn. 68) Brentford probably began
to spread over the bridge to Brentford End in the
later Middle Ages. Part of the villages of Cranford
and Whitton extended into Heston and Isleworth
respectively, but both villages are discussed as a
whole elsewhere. (fn. 69)
The open fields of Isleworth lay to the north and
west of the town. Between Worton, Whitton, and
Hounslow the land was partly inclosed by 1635, and
some of it, on the edge of the heath, may never have
been under open-field cultivation. The manor park
lay on the river bank to the south of Isleworth from
the 13th century. (fn. 70) In the 15th century this was the
site of Syon Abbey for a few years before it was
moved to meadows on the north of the village. (fn. 71)
Heston's name suggests that it may have been
founded on the edge of the heath, (fn. 72) but by the
Middle Ages a broad band of open fields probably
stretched right across from the Cranford boundary
to Wood Lane, broken only by the strip of common
(41 a. in 1635) which ran up to Lampton from the
heath. On the south these fields were bordered by
the Bath Road running along the edge of the heath.
Out on the heath there were two groups of inclosures
by the end of the Middle Ages, both taking their
names from Babworth. The first was an oval of 160
acres (fn. 73) beside the Bath Road. In 1635 it was called
the North Beaver, while the South Beaver and
Beaver Mead ran along the Crane to the north of
Baber Bridge. (fn. 74) To the north of Heston fields, there
was in 1635 the 60-acre common of North Hyde, and
beyond it were inclosures, some of which may never
have been cultivated in open fields. (fn. 75) East of Heston
village the lands of Osterley ('the sheepfold clearing')
and Wyke ('the dairy farm') were also all inclosed
from the time they are first mentioned, (fn. 76) though
there was some common-land to the east of Osterley
which became absorbed into the estate after the
Middle Ages. (fn. 77) South of Wyke there was some openfield land near to the London Road. Altogether, the
conjunction of place-names and geology with the
early history of the estates suggests that the clearing
of the land progressed into this part of the parish
northwards from Hounslow and Isleworth and eastwards from Heston, and that it may have been made
rather for inclosed pasture than for open arable.
Topography, 1635-1849.
The evidence of past
inclosures on the edges of the fields and heath can be
clearly distinguished in Glover's map, but the chief
changes in the medieval pattern by that time were
the larger inclosures for parks at Osterley and Syon
Hill, and to a lesser extent round Syon House (see
plate facing p. 90), as well as in the old park south of
the town. (fn. 78) During the 18th century the park of Syon
House was extended to its present area and a second
smaller park was made on Syon Hill, (fn. 79) while the first
one there reverted to agricultural use. By 1818 most
of the open fields round Isleworth and Worton had
been inclosed for market-gardening, but the fields
north of the London Road were comparatively undiminished. (fn. 80) At the inclosure of that year over
1,300 acres of common-land were inclosed, including
over 1,100 on the heath, together with over 1,000
acres of open fields in Heston and a little over 100 in
Isleworth. Thereafter, though market-gardening
increasingly displaced arable-farming, and a good
deal of brick-working and later gravel-digging went
on in the north, (fn. 81) the topographical history of Heston
and Isleworth is concerned largely with the multiplication of buildings.
In 1635, as Glover's map shows, the village of
Heston consisted of a few houses grouped around a
cross in the road opposite the church and stretching
a little way up the road to the north. The only large
house was Hallplace, in the angle of Heston Road
and Church Road. (fn. 82) There was a large house on this
site until the 19th century. In 1635 there was a
distinct gap between the main village and Heston
End, which was about the same size, at the far end
of New Heston Road. The village grew very little
between 1635 and 1818. By the middle of the 19th
century there were a few larger houses in Heston
End, by then called New Heston, and a National
school by the church, but as late as 1876 the village
was described as consisting of 'three or four irregular
streets converging upon a dirty little triangular green,
in the centre of which is a shabby brick pond'. (fn. 83) The
'Rose and Crown' in Heston Road was the only inn
in the village named in the Inclosure Award of 1818.
The only buildings here which survived in 1958
from before the 19th century seemed to be St. Laurence Cottages in New Heston Road, which are 17th
century, (fn. 84) and some timber barns at Heston Farm,
of which the framework is probably of the same
period.
North Hyde, where there was a medieval farmhouse, (fn. 85) consisted of a few cottages on the edge of the
common in 1635 and of not much more in the early
19th century. The Grand Junction Canal was constructed in 1798 and a powder magazine was built
soon after the inclosure, with docks branching out
of the canal. (fn. 86) The buildings were soon afterwards
converted to other uses, (fn. 87) and the docks have been
filled up. The hamlets of Sutton and Lampton were
about the same size as Heston or Heston End in the
17th century, (fn. 88) and had changed little by the mid19th. The White House at Sutton is timber-framed
and contains 16th-century features, including an
original roof. (fn. 89) Subsequently the walls were cased
with brickwork and several additions and alterations
were made. The 'Black Horse' was at Lampton by
1759. Scrattage, which may once have been a fairsized hamlet, consisted of a few cottages by 1635 and
of two or three farm-houses by the 19th century.
Osterley Park and Wyke Manor were isolated houses.
Farther south Worton may also have declined: by
the early 19th century there was little but the 'Royal
Oak' (licensed by 1743) (fn. 90) on the road to Isleworth,
and a few larger houses built when the neighbourhood was popular with the gentry in the 18th century. The only one of these to survive is Worton
Hall, which has a good stucco front of c. 1800. There
were a few houses in Whitton Dean (the name given
to the part of Whitton in Isleworth) by the 17th
century.

CRANFORD, HESTON AND ISLEWORTH before the final inclosures in 1818 & 1820
The main areas of building from the later Middle
Ages until the 19th century were to the south of Isleworth town and along the London Road (see plate
facing p. 90). The Chapel of All Angels was built
on the south side of the bridge at Brentford End
about 1446 and almshouses were later erected beside
it. (fn. 91) Some of the almshouses seem to have survived
the Dissolution, (fn. 92) but the chapel was pulled down
during the 16th century and its site became the
garden of a house built close by, which was occupied
in 1607 by Sir Thomas Savage (created Viscount
Savage in 1626). (fn. 93) The house seems to have disappeared after 1635 and the garden was built over.
Several inns in Brentford End were mentioned in
the 15th century and later, but none of the old signs
seems to have survived. (fn. 94) Virtually the only buildings west of Field Lane before the 19th century were
the large houses scattered along the road. On the
south the house later called Little Syon stood to the
east of the present Adam gateway to Syon House. It is
said to have been first built in 1592 (fn. 95) and belonged in
the 17th century to Sir Richard Wynn, Bt., a courtier
and the owner of Wyke manor. (fn. 96) It was bought by
the Duke of Northumberland in 1818 and afterwards
demolished. (fn. 97) The 'Coach and Horses' (licensed by
1759) (fn. 98) and the group of houses to the west of the
Adam gate mark the place where the old road once
ran to Isleworth. (fn. 99) Syon Lodge is a late-18th-century house with features brought from elsewhere.
On the north of the road, Syon Park House, where
Shelley went to school, stood to the east of Syon
Lane until it was pulled down in 1953. It was
probably built in the early 18th century. (fn. 1) Half-way
up Syon Lane the house in the old abbey park was
one of the many occupied by gentry in the 17th
century, but later became a farm-house. (fn. 2) Across the
lane Syon Hill House belonged to the Duke of
Buckingham in the late 17th century, but was then
probably little more than a farm-house. (fn. 3) It was
rebuilt by the Earl of Holdernesse about 1755 as 'an
elegant little villa', and a park was laid out to the
south, possibly by 'Capability' Brown. (fn. 4) The house
later passed to the Duke of Marlborough (d. 1817),
who built an observatory which survived until 1923
though the house had been demolished by 1840. (fn. 5) In
the middle of the park (fn. 6) stood a small building from
which a conduit flowed to Syon House. Built in the
15th century for Syon Abbey, the conduit building
survived into the twentieth. (fn. 7) Wyke House farther
north was probably built in the 18th century. (fn. 8) The
next large house along the London Road was Spring
Grove House at Smallberry Green, which is said to
have been in existence in 1645. (fn. 9) Elisha Biscoe, an
18th-century owner, had a good deal of land in
Heston and Norwood. (fn. 10) The house was occupied
from 1791 by Sir Joseph Banks, P.R.S. (1743-1820), (fn. 11)
and later belonged to Henry Pownall, who
played a prominent part in Hounslow affairs, (fn. 12) and
then to Andrew Pears, the soap manufacturer. (fn. 13) It
is now used as a grammar school, but has been rebuilt and altered many times.
In 1635 Hounslow contained very few houses outside the High Street. The town extended from just
west of the track (now Kingsley Road) over Lampton
Field as far as the manor-house and chapel, where
the main roads forked. (fn. 14) Five inns are marked on
Glover's map: the 'King's Head' (on or near the site
of the modern 'Red Lion'), the 'Rose' (on or near the
site of the 'Prince Regent') the 'Wheel' (possibly
near the site of the 'Mail Coach'), the 'Swan' (on
or near the site of 'Henekey's'), and the 'George'
behind it. The 'Wheel', as the 'Katherine Wheel',
was in existence in 1481, and it, the 'Rose', and the
'Swan', with two others not named by Glover,
were there in 1540. (fn. 15) Seventeenth-century references to half a dozen more inns have been found. (fn. 16)
Fourteen were marked in the inclosure awards
of 1818, and there were seven more in 1851. (fn. 17)
There are a few pre-19th-century buildings in the
town, of which nos. 115-19 on the south side of the
High Street and no. 86 on the north were probably
built in the late 17th or early 18th century. (fn. 18)
Most of the houses of Isleworth village lay in 1635
round the two squares, North and South Streets,
Church Street, and the nearer part of Twickenham
Road (see plate facing p. 90). There were few buildings
north of the Duke's River except the church, Rectory,
Vicarage, and Dairyhouse. (fn. 19) Porch House (since demolished), by the church, may have appeared soon
afterwards. (fn. 20) Within the built-up area there were
many gardens, and the houses were widely spaced.
The charity school was already in Lower Square,
near Town Wharf, and the Moat House still stood
between Church Street and North Street on the
probable site of the old manor-house. (fn. 21) Lord Grey
of Warke (d. 1674) occupied a house on the south side
of Swan Street and had recently enlarged its garden
by diverting part of the road. (fn. 22) His house probably
belonged to Sir Thomas Ingram (fn. 23) in the middle of
the 17th century and later passed to the Earls of
Shrewsbury who built a Roman Catholic chapel in its
outbuildings. James Gibbs (1682-1754) is known to
have designed a villa at Isleworth for the Earl of
Shrewsbury. Shrewsbury House, as it was called,
was pulled down in the early 19th century. (fn. 24) Lord
Grey was not the only member of the aristocracy to
live in Isleworth in the 17th century: the large houses
built near the London Road have already been noted,
and from the 16th century an increasing number of
the upper and middle classes were attracted to the
village itself and to the riverside nearby, until, in the
early 19th century, 'the beautiful scenery on both
banks of the river' was 'adorned with elegant mansions and villas'. (fn. 25) The site of the main building of
Nazareth House (i.e. the southerly of the two present
chief buildings) was occupied in 1635, but the road
then ran between it and the river, and there were
other houses farther north. The present building,
formerly called Isleworth House, seems to date from
about the time of Sir William Cooper, chaplain to
George III. It was he who in 1833 had Richmond
Road diverted to its present (1958) course. At the
same time or shortly before, the few houses south
of Swan Street were demolished together with several
at the Railshead, and their sites became part of the
grounds. (fn. 26) Before this there had been a wharf and a
pottery at the Railshead as well as the little group of
houses which continued to stand by the 'Coach and
Horses'. (fn. 27)
In 1635 there were only two houses to the south
of the Railshead. A later house on the site of the
northerly one was called Gordon House, from a 19thcentury owner. (fn. 28) Another owner was T. C. Haliburton (1796-1865), the author of Sam Slick. (fn. 29) He
was followed by the 2nd Earl of Kilmorey (d. 1880),
who rebuilt the house in 1867. (fn. 30) It was afterwards
used as a girls' home by the London School Board
and then became part of the Royal Naval School and
passed with the rest of their property to the Maria
Grey Training College. (fn. 31) The other 17th-century
house was a school kept by Thomas Willis, a grammarian. (fn. 32) It was rebuilt or altered by James Lacy,
Garrick's co-lessee at Drury Lane, and was later
occupied by Sheridan. It was rebuilt about the
1830's by the first Marquis of Ailsa (d. 1846) and
named St. Margaret's. The grounds were also extended to include the part of Twickenham Park in
Isleworth parish and Richmond Road was slightly
diverted away from the house. (fn. 33) Twickenham Park
was the old park of Isleworth manor, but had been a
separate estate since the 16th century, with a house
on the parish boundary. This had been demolished
about 1805 and the estate had been broken up. (fn. 34) Ailsa's
house was replaced in 1853 by one built for the 2nd
Earl of Kilmorey. (fn. 35) He never lived there, and in 1856
it became the home of the Royal Naval School, who
later called it Kilmorey House. They retained the
name of Gordon House for Lord Kilmorey's other
house next door, which has already been mentioned. (fn. 36)
St. Margaret's or Kilmorey House was bombed in
1940 and the school moved away. Gordon House
and the site of St. Margaret's were taken over in
1949 by the Maria Grey Training College, and the
Middlesex education committee have added several
new buildings for the college. (fn. 37)
In Isleworth itself, though there was no very
great expansion in the area of building, more houses
were erected during the 17th and 18th centuries.
John Broad, who worked the Brazil Mill in the 16th
century, lived in a house in the south angle of
Twickenham Road and North Street. It was later
rebuilt and called Silver Hall. After it had been pulled
down at the beginning of the 19th century a house of
the same name was built on the other side of North
Street: (fn. 38) this had also gone by 1958. There was a
house on the site of Gumley House (now part of a
Roman Catholic convent) in Twickenham Road by
1635, but the oldest part of the present building
dates from about 1700. At this period it was rebuilt
or altered by John Gumley, a glass manufacturer and
cabinet maker, for whom James Gibbs is known to
have supplied designs. (fn. 39) Before the side wings were
raised in the 19th century the house consisted of a
central block of two stories and attics, flanked by
single-story wings and approached by a colonnaded
forecourt. (fn. 40) William Pulteney, Earl of Bath (d.
1764), who married one of Gumley's daughters, is
said to have occupied the house later. (fn. 41) George I's
mistress the Duchess of Kendal (d. 1743) had a house
farther north: (fn. 42) it was opened in 1750 as a public
breakfasting house, with dancing, orchestras in the
garden, and fishing in the lake. It had been pulled
down by 1795. (fn. 43)
Virtually all the pre-18th-century buildings in
existence in 1937 (fn. 44) have since been demolished. The
Ingram almshouses and the church tower are the
only survivors which are known to have been erected
before 1700. Van Gogh House and Richard Reynolds
House date from the early 18th century, (fn. 45) together
with Gumley House, which has already been mentioned. Most of the remaining 18th- and early-19thcentury buildings are in Church Street, where, with
the 'London Apprentice' and the ruined church,
they form an attractive riverside group. The 'London
Apprentice' itself and the 'George' were both built
in the 18th century: none of Isleworth's present
inn-signs have been traced back before then. (fn. 46)
After the inclosure of 1818 houses began to be
built in some numbers on the heath where the
cavalry barracks had already been erected in 1793. (fn. 47)
Hounslow chapel and manor-house were pulled
down in the early 19th century, and the same period
saw the destruction of several old houses in Isleworth. (fn. 48) A large workhouse was built in the Twickenham Road for Brentford Union about 1839. It was
pulled down in 1902, and the site and the surrounding area are occupied by the West Middlesex Hospital, which was first opened as an infirmary attached
to the workhouse in 1896. (fn. 49) In neither town, however, did the real changes begin before the coming
of the railway.
Topography Since 1849.
In 1849 the Windsor,
Staines & South Western Railway opened their loop
line from Barnes to Feltham (now part of the
Southern Region) as far as Smallberry Green (now
Isleworth) Station. In the following year the loop was
completed through Hounslow Station. (fn. 50) A third
station at Syon Lane was opened after the Great
West Road was built. (fn. 51) The Western Region goods
line down the Isleworth side of the Brent valley,
with a terminus at Brentford docks, was opened in
1859. Passenger trains ran on it from 1860 to 1915
and from 1920 to 1942. In 1942 the station at Brentford End was closed. The goods station to the north
of the Great West Road was opened in 1929. (fn. 52) The
Hounslow and Metropolitan Railway (now the
District line of the Underground) was opened in
1883 with a station at Thornbury Road and its
terminus on the site of the present bus garage in
Hounslow High Street. (fn. 53) In 1884 the line was extended to Hounslow Barracks so that the terminus
was left on a spur line. (fn. 54) This was closed when a new
station in Kingsley Road was opened in 1909, and in
1925 the names of the three Hounslow stations were
changed from Hounslow Town, Heston-Hounslow,
and Hounslow Barracks to Hounslow East, Hounslow Central, and Hounslow West. (fn. 55) The Piccadilly
line along the same route was opened in 1933 and in
1934 the Thornbury Road station was replaced by
the present Osterley Station, designed by S. A.
Heaps and Charles Holden, in the Great West Road. (fn. 56)
The London United Tramways extended their line
from Kew Bridge to Hounslow in 1901 and to
Barrack Road and along the Twickenham Road in
1902. (fn. 57) In 1935 trolley buses replaced the trams. (fn. 58)
The first motor buses probably ran in 1912. There
were then two routes, between Herne Hill and Isleworth and between Harlington, Hounslow, and
Staines. (fn. 59)
In 1862 Kelly's Directory, while noting how Isleworth had declined in fashion when the court left
Kew and when some of the town's old mansions
were pulled down in the beginning of the century,
foresaw an immense increase in population there and
considered that Hounslow was already a favourable
residence for gentlemen connected with the metropolis. The area round the stations was certainly
being laid out for building and some houses were
going up, but not at the speed attained in some
Middlesex suburbs. (fn. 60) In no decade of the 19th
century were more than 700 new houses built in the
two parishes together. (fn. 61) This may have been partly
because of the competition for land from the marketgardeners, (fn. 62) but the chief reason was perhaps that
most of the new estates were designed for the middle
classes, who failed to come in the expected numbers.
Fifteen years after the railway was opened the houses
of Hounslow were still restricted to the main roads
and one or two side roads, and none at all had been
built to the south of the station. Spring Grove was
one of the most ambitious middle-class projects, and
is said to have been chiefly designed for retired army
officers. (fn. 63) It was laid out in the early 1850's, a church
was built in 1856, and in the same year the rapid rise
of the district was noted as a remarkable result of the
new railway system. (fn. 64) The good beginning was soon
over: by 1865 only a few villas, including Thornbury
House (now Campion House), where H. D. Davies,
the promoter of the estate, lived, stood in their
gardens along the roads round the church, though
there was a rather larger number in the Grove. Very
few houses of the original type were added to the
estate later and though a number of retired soldiers
seem to have lived there at first, the failure of the
project was implicitly acknowledged in 1888. (fn. 65) Close
by, the International College (opened in 1867)
represented another plan which never fulfilled the
original hopes: the building, which was in the Gothic
style, was taken over in 1890 by the Borough Road
Training College. (fn. 66) To the south of Spring Grove
(now Isleworth) Station, Woodlands was a slightly
humbler version of Spring Grove: the houses had
gardens but many were semi-detached. It was first
developed at about the same time (fn. 67) but managed to
sustain its progress more steadily later. It received its
church just after Spring Grove. (fn. 68) The third big
middle-class estate was at St. Margaret's. Lord
Ailsa's estate on the borders of Isleworth and
Twickenham came on the market probably about
1853-6. (fn. 69) By 1865 the roads were laid out but there
were few houses. By the end of the century the estate
was almost fully built over, probably because of the
attractions of the river. Its success was, however,
evidently not great enough to encourage expansion
of the original area, and when Lord Kilmorey's land
to the north and west came on the market after his
death in 1880 (fn. 70) it was covered with semi-detached or
terraced houses closely packed in smaller streets.
There had been some other building of this nature
in old Isleworth in the fifties and sixties, and a little
later there was more to the north of Woodlands and
round Hounslow. (fn. 71)
Though the area round Hounslow Station filled
up as the century advanced, it was not until the very
end that there were any houses to speak of to the
south of the station. North of the High Street
the Bulstrode estate was laid out in 1881, (fn. 72) and the
Metropolitan and District Railway arrived in 1883. (fn. 73)
This gave some impetus to building and may have
promoted the returning prosperity attributed to
Spring Grove in 1888: this seems to have extended
only to the occupation of existing houses, not to the
building of new ones. (fn. 74) When the trams came in
1901 and the District line was electrified in 1905 (fn. 75) the
growth began to reach a new pace and smaller semidetached houses began to surround the original
Spring Grove estate. About 2,000 new houses were
built in the first decade of the 20th century, (fn. 76) mostly
around Hounslow and Isleworth. Heston, Sutton,
Lampton, and the Syon Hill area remained practically unchanged between the early 19th century and
the building of the Great West Road. This was
opened in 1925, cutting through the north end of
Spring Grove and the hamlet of Lampton, but
otherwise crossing virtually open country. The
Great South West Road, completing the by-pass to
the Staines Road and running for part of its course
along an existing track (Dockwell Lane), was opened
at the same time. (fn. 77) The result was immediate, and
within ten years large factories lined the road east of
Syon Lane (see plate facing p. 101), while semidetached houses ran along it farther west and along
the many new roads which were laid out on each side
as far as the junction with the Bath Road. Elsewhere
building spread out from the older areas, while at
North Hyde it continued to advance into the borough
from Norwood. Between 1921 and 1931 over 8,000
new houses and flats were built, nearly doubling the
total number in the district, and by 1951 a further
11,000 had been added. (fn. 78) Since then building has
continued and has filled up much of the unused land
in the west of the borough, around Cranford, the
Great South West Road, and Green Lane. Much of
this has been done by the council, (fn. 79) while estates of
204 houses and flats at Hounslow West and of 222 at
North Hyde Lane have been built for workers at
London Airport by the British Airways Staff Housing
Society. (fn. 80)
Meanwhile there has been much rebuilding in the
old village areas. In Heston some buildings round the
church in Heston Road survive from before the 20th
century but the rest of the village has been virtually
rebuilt. (fn. 81) There are also a few pre-20th-century
buildings in Sutton, Lampton, and Brentford End.
Some are scattered along the London, Staines, and
Bath Roads, and in Hounslow High Street. The
addition of new shop-fronts in High Street, however,
gives it a predominantly 20th-century appearance.
Treaty Road forms a small municipal centre, with
the town hall, library, and public baths, all built in
1905. (fn. 82) The town hall in particular, with its elaborate
entrance feature of terra cotta and glazed tiles, is
typical of its period. On the outskirts of old Hounslow
are the electricity generating station (1904) (fn. 83) in
Bridge Road, and the Hounslow Hospital (1912) and
the Butchers' Charitable Institution (1922) in the
Staines Road. (fn. 84) Much of old Isleworth was demolished before the Second World War, more was
bombed during it, and yet more pulled down afterwards. (fn. 85) In 1951 some 30 acres here were designated
a 'comprehensive redevelopment area', (fn. 86) but in 1958
the rebuilding was only beginning: the area between
Lower Square and North Street was still empty of
buildings but some flats had just been built in the
largest gap in South Street.
Of the remaining open land, a smaller amount
than hitherto was used by 1958 for gardening, which
the uncertainty of building prospects and the high
price of labour locally had rendered less profitable. (fn. 87)
The Osterley estate, except for the part reserved as
parkland and for the part used as a golf-course, was
still agricultural land. (fn. 88) The Wyke Green Golf Club
(founded 1928) occupied some 90 acres to the east of
Syon Lane. (fn. 89) South of it, much of the remaining
open land behind the factories was used as sports
grounds. Wyke Green itself, though reduced to a few
acres, still lay open and unfenced. The park at Syon
House covered some 70 acres. The military exercise
ground on Hounslow Heath had not been used for
this purpose for many years. (fn. 90) Most of it lay waste
and part was being excavated for gravel. The heath
had served as an airfield for a short time after the
First World War. (fn. 91) In 1919 the first commercial
London-Paris service was operated from here and
the first aircraft to fly from Europe to Australia took
off from here, but in 1920 the airport was transferred
to Croydon. (fn. 92) Heston Air Park was opened in 1929
for private flying and was extended to cover 105
acres in 1934. After being acquired by the government in 1937 it was again extended in 1939 to cover
nearly all the land north of Cranford Lane. By 1947
it was no longer used for flying and most of it was
given over to gravel-working. (fn. 93) The aircraft and
kindred factories round its perimeter, however,
which had already played their part in creating a
demand for housing, continued to function after the
airfield had closed. Another large area is covered by
the sewage works at Mogden which were opened by
the urban district on 22½ acres in 1886 and have since
been expanded to cover nearly all the land between
Worton and the Twickenham Road. (fn. 94) The borough
council had some 200 acres of parks and recreation
grounds in 1958. (fn. 95) There are also two or three
cemeteries, none of them large.
The district has become involved in national
history chiefly through the presence of the heath and
the main road. The mustering and reviewing of
armies on the heath is discussed elsewhere, (fn. 96) and it
would be impossible to list the famous people who
have passed through Hounslow. A large number of
notabilities have also lived in Isleworth and some of
them, including the owners of Syon and Osterley
and other large estates, some of the clergy of the
parishes, and several persons connected with local
schools, are mentioned elsewhere in this article. (fn. 97)
The event which was said in 1909 to have stirred
the district most in the preceding 50 years was the
suicide of a local doctor, which occasioned the
'Whitmarsh riots' of 1883 when his partner's windows at Albemarle House (now demolished) were
broken. (fn. 98)