ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY.
Domeday Book accounts for over 118 persons in the manor
of Isleworth, which then included Heston, Hounslow,
and Twickenham. Of these six were cottars and a
few were bordars. Most of the remainder were
described as villeins, mostly holding a virgate or
½ virgate each. Among those who were free were a
Frenchman or some Frenchmen and an Englishman
who were proven knights. (fn. 42) An extent of 1300 lists
24 free tenants, 15 burgesses, 18 persons holding by
apparently semi-free tenures, and between 100 and
200 unfree tenants holding by a variety of customs
and services. (fn. 43) Several persons appear in more than
one category, and in 1312 an inquiry revealed that
since 1300 a dozen customary tenants had acquired
free land and a few free tenants had acquired
customary land. (fn. 44) Another rental made later in the
century reveals a smaller number of tenants and
possibly a less complex system of tenures: (fn. 45) the
earlier one is partially illegible, however, and the
later may not be complete, so that detailed comparison is impossible. In 1378 a freeman of Heston
claimed that according to the custom of the manor
he should be free of villein services for his customary
land: (fn. 46) three years later some of his neighbours
attacked him during the Peasants' Revolt, perhaps
taking the opportunity of general disorder to work
off an old grudge. (fn. 47) In 1385 the king remitted to all
the tenants a customary annual payment of 1d. each
from each man over 15 years old. The total due had
become fixed at 8 marks, but for a long while there
had only been enough tenants to make up the sum if
they all, including children and servants of over 15,
contributed 6d. each. They asserted that this had
caused a general defection of children and servants,
to the detriment of agriculture. (fn. 48) If the figures were
accurate, the adult male population would have
dropped from 1,280 to about 213. In 1547 the
houseling people of Isleworth were said to number
400 and those of Heston 363. (fn. 49) Isleworth seems to
have suffered heavily from the plague in the early
and mid-17th century. (fn. 50) In 1665 149 people died of
it, and there is said to have been a plague-house on
the site of the later union workhouse. (fn. 51) A hundred
and twenty families were said to live in Hounslow in
1650, most of them getting their livelihood from the
traffic on the main road. (fn. 52) In 1664 27 people in the
town were assessed to hearth tax, twelve of them
having five or more hearths. Another 50, all but one
with less than five hearths, were listed as exempt.
In Heston and Isleworth, each excluding Hounslow,
those assessed numbered 59 and 138 respectively,
and those unassessed 110 and 143. In Isleworth 15
persons had ten hearths and over and 36 had five
and over. (fn. 53) There were said to be about 160 families
in Heston parish in 1723 and more than 200 in
Isleworth. (fn. 54) In 1801 their respective populations
were 1,782 and 4,346. Until the middle of the century
the most rapid growth was in Heston, and in 1851,
just after the railway had been built with stations at
Isleworth and Hounslow, Heston had over 4,000
inhabitants and Isleworth between 6,000 and 7,000.
The rate of growth in Isleworth was thereafter well
over 1,000 each decade, reaching a peak of 8,000
between 1901 and 1911. Between then and 1921, the
date of the last census giving separate figures for the
two parishes, the population of Isleworth increased
by less than 2,000. In Heston the growth was less
rapid throughout, and sank to under a thousand a
decade at the end of the century. In 1921 Isleworth,
with nearly 30,000 inhabitants, still had over 13,000
more than Heston. Since then the balance has
probably changed, while the total population of the
borough had mounted to nearly 107,000 in 1951. (fn. 55)
Agrarian history.
There is insufficient evidence
to deduce more than the bare outline of the medieval
history of agriculture in the Middle Ages: such as
there is refers to Isleworth manor and therefore to
the whole area of the parishes of Heston, Isleworth,
and Twickenham. In 1086 there were 6 ploughs in
demesne and the freemen and villeins had 28 more. (fn. 56)
In 1195 the demesne seems to have been stocked
with 10 ploughs, each having 8 oxen. (fn. 57) The carucage
of 1220 was paid in Isleworth on 20 plough-teams. (fn. 58)
A lord of the manor in the late 12th century granted
away a hundred acres in his assarts on the edge of
Hounslow Heath, and it is possible that some of the
larger freeholds which appeared later in the Middle
Ages represented clearances from the waste. (fn. 59) In
1296-7 171 acres of arable were sown in demesne. (fn. 60) Thereafter, as far as can be ascertained from
the very few surviving manorial accounts, the
acreage may have dropped a little by the mid-14th
century. In the half-dozen or so years for which
evidence is available the main crops seem to have been
oats, wheat, and barley, possibly in that order of
importance. About a score of cows were kept, and
some sheep: in 1351-2 157 wethers were sheared, but
there were no ewes. There was also a vineyard
which produced two tuns and one pipe in 1297, but
this seems to have been given up soon after and was
later planted with cherry-trees. At least two ploughservants and a carter appear in all the accounts, and
a shepherd, cowman, and dairymaid in some. In
addition, a good deal of work was done by labour
services: well over a third of the ploughing was done
by services in 1296-7 and 1313-14, and in 1352 160
workers appeared at the lesser harvest boon-work
and 104 at the greater. In addition to the services
owed by most of the tenants, the customary tenants
who held 'workland' or 'acreland' took it in turns
to provide extra workers in the summer.
An indication of heavy mortality in the 14th
century has already been mentioned. In 1351-2 the
demesne was cultivated apparently much as usual,
but by 1361-2 all the demesne arable (152 a.) was
leased on five-year terms, of which that year was
the third. None of the lessees held more than 15
acres. The only works which were not sold were the
mowing ones, and these were still being done in
1463, but by that time the tenants were refusing to
pay for the harvesting works they never performed. (fn. 61)
Some, however, still seem to have been paying for
not doing their boon-works in 1538. (fn. 62) The memory
of the complex system of tenures prevailing in the
manor during the Middle Ages was recalled by
Isleworth Syon's Peace, an agreement made between
the lord of the manor and the copyholders in 1656,
following many disputes. (fn. 63) This laid down the customs
of the manor concerning copyhold, which included
inheritance by the youngest son: this had applied
only to some holdings in the 14th century. (fn. 64) A tallage of £20 a year was remitted to the tenants in
1424. (fn. 65)
The area cultivated outside the demesne in the
Middle Ages is unknown. In 1351-2 94½ virgates of
customary land alone owed ploughing services and
boon-works to Isleworth manor. (fn. 66) In 1635, when the
medieval arable had been diminished by inclosures
for pasture and parkland, there were 2,817 acres of
arable in the whole manor, of which 910 were in
Isleworth and 1276 in Heston. The 1,541 acres of
several pasture no doubt included a good deal which
had once been open field or common meadow. (fn. 67)
An account of the rectory manor for 1324-5 suggests
that the largest tithes were paid that year in barley,
with oats and maslin not far behind. (fn. 68) Labour
services were still owed to some of the lesser manors
in the 15th century. (fn. 69)
Syon Abbey seems to have taken back most of the
nearer demesne lands into its own hands after the
manor was granted to it, (fn. 70) but little is known of their
cultivation before 1508. From then until 1538 are
preserved several accounts of the Dairy, which was
the name given to the abbey's demesne farm. (fn. 71) In
the years for which accounts survive it had a staff
of four or five men and one or more women, and
between 100 and 200 acres were sown out of a probable total in the Dairyfarm at this time of rather over
300. (fn. 72) Oats and wheat were the chief crops, with
some barley, and a good deal of stock of all kinds was
kept: nearly all the produce went straight to the
abbey. In the 1530's, just before the Dissolution,
there was a flock of about 200 sheep, 60 or so pigs,
and about 18 milch cows. After the Dissolution the
demesne passed through various hands and was split
among different lessees. It was never again cultivated
as a whole, but came to be mostly divided among two
or three farms. (fn. 73)
Complaints of inclosures are heard from the 15th
century. Until then, and for some time afterwards,
the arable lands in Heston and Isleworth lay mainly
in open fields, though there were always some
inclosed lands, especially in the north-east. The
situation of the fields is described elsewhere: (fn. 74)
there is no evidence that they lay in two or three
well-defined fields between which all the tenants
rotated their crops in common, though grazing on the
stubble of Link Field is mentioned in 1309. (fn. 75) In the
16th century some lands were thrown open for common grazing between Michaelmas and February. (fn. 76)
The earliest large inclosures may have been of the
meadow and pasture lands round Syon Abbey in
the 15th century: the abbey's park north of the
London Road may have also lain partly on former
arable. (fn. 77) In the later 16th century several people
tried to inclose different bits of land. Two attempts
about 1600 seem to have been defeated by a
group of tenants led by Sir Gideon Awnsham. (fn. 78)
Complaints were also made in 1634 about recent
inclosures of the common lands. (fn. 79) The next two
centuries saw the piecemeal inclosure of nearly
all the open-field land of Isleworth for fruitgrowing and market-gardening. Fruit-growing
seems to have started during the 17th century, and
caused a number of disputes about tithe: one man
with a garden of about 5 acres was said during one
of these disputes to have sold some 3,000 fruit-trees
to his neighbours in 1661 and 1662. (fn. 80) In 1724, in
the course of more litigation, several hundred acres
of arable and common-field land were said to have
been converted to fruit-growing within the past
60 years. This was attributed to the easy watercarriage to London, (fn. 81) but the virtual coincidence of
gardens with the flood plain gravel in 1746 should
also be noticed: (fn. 82) later they spread to other ground
nearby. (fn. 83) Later in the century a good deal of the
produce was taken to London by road. (fn. 84) In 1801
only 360 acres in the parish were said to be sown with
grain: of these, 163 acres were wheat, 102 were oats,
69 barley, and 26 rye. (fn. 85) A few years earlier marketgardens had been estimated at 430 acres and
nurseries at fourteen. By this time raspberries and
strawberries were among the chief crops. Some of
the raspberries were used for distilling, while the
rest of the soft fruit was carried to London on foot by
women who came up from Shropshire and Wiltshire for the fruit season. (fn. 86) Oziers, which were
grown along the river and on the aits and were used,
among other things, to make baskets for the fruit
grown in the market-gardens, are said to have been
another product of Isleworth. (fn. 87)
Agriculture in Heston followed a different course,
and the open fields, in spite of inclosures on their
edges, remained largely untouched until 1818. In
1593 Norden commented on the supreme quality
and good quantity of the wheat grown here, from
which he said the queen's bread was made: (fn. 88)
succeeding writers repeated his praises, perhaps with
little new information, and it is clear that Heston
Field still produced fine wheat in the late 18th
century. Different accounts were given of the
rotation practised, but in neither was there any
fallowing on the common fields, and in one version
wheat was the only grain crop, while in the other it
was the principal one. The cavalry barracks built
on Hounslow Heath in 1793 were said to furnish
the neighbouring farmers with a ready market for
straw, oats, and hay, as well as supplying manure. (fn. 89)
John Robinson (d. 1802), the politician, had a
model farm at Wyke in the late 18th century, (fn. 90) and
Sir Joseph Banks, P.R.S., experimented with roses,
strawberries, and sheep at Spring Grove. (fn. 91) A few
sheep were also kept on Hounslow Heath, but these
'pitiful, starved-looking animals' were very different
from Banks's merinos. (fn. 92) Because of the high production of Heston's open fields the movement for inclosure was directed at the heath rather than the fields,
but the Act passed in 1818 covered both the fields and
commons of Heston, Isleworth, and Twickenham. (fn. 93)
The awards of both parishes were dated 1818. (fn. 94)
The position of open-field land and common immediately before inclosure is shown on the map
facing p. 88. After this, though Heston went on
producing wheat, more land was steadily given over
to orchards and market-gardens there as well as in
Isleworth. (fn. 95) In 1840 Isleworth had 875 acres of
market-gardens, &c., and only 443 of arable, (fn. 96) and
in 1845 one of the growers of the parish was said to
have the largest extent of land under spade cultivation in England. (fn. 97) Strawberries continued to be a
staple crop, and a number of new varieties were
raised in Isleworth in the first half of the century. (fn. 98)
At the time of the 1841 Census 123 women from
Shropshire and Staffordshire were fruit-picking in
Isleworth, and 32 men were there for the haymaking. (fn. 99) Other crops increased with the use of
glass, and at the end of the century both fruit and
flowers were still being grown on a large scale at
Isleworth: one grower had over 100 acres of mixed
fruit-trees and bushes. Heston was noted for cherries,
and round Hounslow and Whitton roses, lilies of the
valley, and other flowers were produced. (fn. 1) By 1906 the
numbers of men coming each year from Buckinghamshire to pick cherries and from Bedfordshire and
Oxfordshire to hoe the market-garden land was said
to be declining, (fn. 2) but some Shropshire women were
still coming to work in Heston as late as about 1935. (fn. 3)
Within the last hundred years, however, first brickfields and then buildings have steadily driven the
industry farther west away from London. (fn. 4) In 1901
and 1921 there were still just over a thousand men
in the two parishes who were employed in farming,
gardening, and other work on the land. (fn. 5) Between
1921 and 1931 the number dropped to 855, and by
1951 there were only 434 persons in all the agricultural occupations. Of these well over half worked in
market- and other gardens. (fn. 6)
Trade and Society.
In 1300 six persons held
four burgages in Isleworth manor by charter. There
were also nine burgesses who held without charter:
one held 4 acres and the others 2 acres each. (fn. 7) By the
middle of the century the four chartered burgages
were still further divided but there were only eight
of the second group of burgesses. (fn. 8) One burgage
is known to have been in Isleworth, (fn. 9) and this seems
the most likely place for them all, since it was not only
the centre of manorial administration but also possibly the largest settlement in the early Middle Ages.
The market and fair granted in 1231 do not seem
to have survived long, however, (fn. 10) and the trading
element in Isleworth probably declined a good deal
as the Middle Ages advanced, though references
to ferries, wharfs, and wharfage dues indicate, as
might be expected, that the river carried traffic to
and from the town. (fn. 11) Hounslow's medieval market
seems to have been hardly more popular and enduring, (fn. 12) but as the traffic on the main road increased
so Hounslow grew with it, and by the great coaching
age of the early 19th century the chief business of
the town was providing relays of post-horses. (fn. 13) With
the opening of the Great Western Railway there was
a short but disastrous depression in the town, and
in 1845 it was calculated that the inn-holders had
1,700 fewer horses than before. (fn. 14) The owner of the
'King's Head', with stabling for 127 horses, went
bankrupt, and he may have been only one among
several to do so. (fn. 15) Though the town did not recover
its greatest prosperity, the railway soon afterwards
gave it a new position as the centre of a growing
suburb. (fn. 16) Hitherto, though the inns had created some
sort of social life, (fn. 17) Brentford and not Hounslow had
been the centre of the country around, and a market
established in the 17th century had passed out of
existence at the height of the coaching age. (fn. 18) Isleworth, like the other riverside villages nearby, had
been a fashionable resort in the 18th century, with
its riverside villas and public breakfast-room, (fn. 19) and
its leading inhabitants fought strenuously in the 19th
century to prevent it from becoming an appendage
of Hounslow. (fn. 20) Hounslow, however, had the first
local newspaper in the Middlesex Chronicle. This
started publication in 1858, was first entirely produced in Hounslow in 1870, and was still in existence in 1958. Isleworth maintained the Middlesex
Mercury from 1871 to 1896, (fn. 21) but a second venture,
the Middlesex Telegraph, which started soon after the
Mercury had closed down, lasted only a few years. (fn. 22)
Workmen's clubs and reading-rooms in both places
went through various vicissitudes, as did the earlier
sports clubs. (fn. 23) By 1890 the first branch of a chain
store had opened in Hounslow, and the High Street
rapidly became established as the shopping centre of
the urban district, as well as of a wider district round
about. (fn. 24) The importance of the High Street was
enhanced by the later demolition of much of Old
Isleworth. The first films were shown in the High
Street in 1909 and the first regular cinema was opened
in 1911 in a building in the Hanworth Road which
had earlier been used, among other things, as a
variety theatre. One of the five existing cinemas
closed in 1957. (fn. 25)
Industries.
In 1635 a proposal to erect a limekiln near the river at Isleworth was opposed by the
inhabitants on the ground that it was 'too fair a seat
for so foul an employment'. (fn. 26) The kiln was probably
not built and the river bank retained its appearance
for many years, but by the time that Hounslow was
becoming the social and commercial centre of a
growing suburb there was a certain amount of
industry settled in the area. The mills are described
elsewhere. (fn. 27) The medieval Manor Mill remained the
only corn-mill until the 19th century, but in the
last hundred years of its life before it was demolished
in 1941 it was said to be one of the largest in England.
The mills built on the Crane and the Duke's River
from the 16th century on did a variety of work, and
the manufacture here of brass, swords, and paper in
the 17th century, and of gunpowder in the 18th and
19th was of more than local importance. The gunpowder from the Hounslow Mills (in Twickenham
parish) was transported by barge from Isleworth
and the fear of explosions periodically disturbed
the town. (fn. 28) Altogether, the mills must always have
employed a fair amount of labour: the flax mill on
the Crane is known to have had 21 pauper children
from London parishes as 'apprentices' in 1821, and
was said to have had 53 a few years before. (fn. 29)
Brick-making is mentioned in the 15th century,
when Syon Abbey leased a brickhouse to a tenant
for 12,000 bricks a year: some of the bricks were
used in building the abbey. (fn. 30) All Angels' Chapel
also had a brickfield which was probably north of
the London Road on the strip of earth which ran
thence past Worton to Twickenham: (fn. 31) bricks were
dug from Conduit Field in this area in the 16th
century. (fn. 32) There was a brickfield near Worton Lane
in the 18th century (fn. 33) but by the 19th all the
brick-making was carried on in the larger brickearth area round Heston and North Hyde. (fn. 34) The
brick-makers were said in 1834 to be drunken in
summer and, like the workers in market-gardens,
out of work in winter, so that they were the class
most liable to distress and were 'the great burden'
of the parish of Heston. (fn. 35) There was less brickmaking here towards the end of the century, but
there were still one or two fields in the early 20th
century. (fn. 36)
A brewhouse, evidently of some size, was built
at the west end of Brentford Bridge about the late
15th century, (fn. 37) and Sir Thomas Gresham bought a
'burgage called a brewhouse' on an unknown site
from the Crown in 1572. (fn. 38) There was a brewery in
Isleworth in the early 16th century. (fn. 39) The brewery
in St. John's Road had already been in business for
some time when it was bought by William Farnell in
1800. (fn. 40) As Farnell and Watson's and later as the
Isleworth Brewery Co. Ltd. it expanded greatly
during the 19th century. It was bought by Watney
Combe Reid & Co. in 1923 and was used in 1958 as a
bottling store. (fn. 41)
Wheels appear to have been made in Hounslow
for the king's service in 1523. (fn. 42) There was a pottery
at the Railshead between about 1750 and 1833, when
it moved to the Hanworth Road. It closed altogether
about 1855. (fn. 43) Heston had no industries except
brick-making before the Norwood Vitriol Works
were set up on the parish boundary in the early 19th
century. (fn. 44) Like the ordnance depot in the same area,
and a gas works later, it closed later on in the century:
this area north of the Grand Junction Canal was
later transferred to Southall-Norwood. (fn. 45) At Isleworth the river and wharfs which already served the
flour- and gunpowder-mills attracted some more
industry, including a cement works. (fn. 46) Though Old
Isleworth has declined as a residential and shopping
centre, and though the flour mills have closed and
the brewery has become a bottling-store, it has
gained some new works and the wharfs are used,
among others, by boat-builders and buildingmaterial merchants. The wharfs and railway at
Brentford End also attracted several factories there,
but there was not a great deal of space available for
them on the Isleworth side of the Brent. (fn. 47) In the
extreme south-west the railway repair works belonged socially to Feltham, Twickenham, and Hanworth as well as, or more than, to Isleworth. (fn. 48)
Pears' soap factory, the first of the big modern firms
to arrive, was built close to the railway station at
Smallberry Green in 1862, and has since much
expanded. (fn. 49) Williams's dye-works were established
in the Hanworth Road in 1878. (fn. 50) Other industries
which were started soon after included mineralwater- and candle-making and laundries. (fn. 51) Parke
Davis & Co. took over the derelict Heston Mill
north of the Staines Road to make chemicals in the
early 19th century, (fn. 52) and several firms came to the
Worton area and the south of Hounslow at about
the same time. (fn. 53) Worton Hall (now a Coal Board
research establishment) was used as a film studio by
various companies between 1913 and 1952. (fn. 54) In the
north, the opening of the Heston Air Park in 1929
had attracted nine aircraft manufacturers and other
firms connected with flying by 1933. (fn. 55) The airfield
was finally closed to flying after the Second World
War and most of it was turned over to gravelworking, but the factories round the edge remained.
The event which had the greatest single effect on the
industry of the area, however, was the opening of
the Great West Road in 1925. (fn. 56) The first factory
there was Firestone's, which was built and opened
in 1928. (fn. 57) Others followed in the next ten years until
they lined the road as far west as Syon Lane, and
stretched up Harlequin Avenue and a little way up
Syon Lane itself. (fn. 58) At the same time more factories
started work in other parts of the borough. In 1911
there were 82 offices, workshops, and factories, and
in 1921 there were 95. (fn. 59) By 1957 the number of
industrial undertakings had risen to nearly 200. (fn. 60) Of
those in the Great West Road area (see plate facing
p. 101), Firestone, Gillette, Macfarlane Lang, and
Pyrene each employed over 1,000 persons in 1958,
their principal products being respectively tyres,
razor-blades, biscuits, and fire-extinguishers. Parke
Davis in the Staines Road and the Unilever concerns
in the old Pears works also had over 1,000 employees
each. Four other factories (Concrete, Dewhurst and
Partner, Fluidrive, and Heston Aircraft) employed
over 500 each, and about 30 employed over 100
each. (fn. 61) The variety of products was very great. (fn. 62)
Other large employers (fn. 63) were the local authority,
with over 500 persons, and the hospitals, with nearly
2,000 working at the West Middlesex Hospital in
Twickenham Road (established 1806), (fn. 64) the Hounslow Hospital (established in Bell Road c. 1875, now
in Staines Road), (fn. 65) and the South Middlesex Hospital in Mogden Lane (established 1937). (fn. 66)
The expansion of industry has not quite kept
pace with the growth of population: in 1921 there
was a net movement each day to work outside Heston
and Isleworth of 11.3 per cent. In 1951 it was 12.6
per cent. Of those working outside in 1921 just over
half (4,437 persons) went into the county of London
each day. In 1951 about this proportion (16,171
persons) worked in other parts of Middlesex, most
of them quite nearby, and a smaller number (11,894
persons) went into London itself. Most of those who
came into the borough to work in 1951 (16,821
persons) lived in neighbouring districts. (fn. 67)