RUISLIP
The ancient parish of Ruislip (fn. 1) lay in the extreme
north-west of Middlesex about 4 miles west of
Harrow and 14 miles from London. The later urban
district of Ruislip-Northwood was substantially coextensive with the ancient parish, and contained
6,583 a. (fn. 2) Both had the shape of an irregular quadrangle lying along a north-west south-east axis and
measuring approximately 5 miles from north to south
with a maximum breadth of 2½ miles. The northern
and eastern parish boundaries followed the boundaries of Hertfordshire and Gore hundred respectively. The other two sides were bounded by Northolt
parish in the south and Ickenham and Harefield to
the west. Ruislip formed part of Uxbridge R.D. until
1904 when Ruislip-Northwood U.D. was constituted. An unsuccessful petition for incorporation as
a municipal borough was lodged in 1953. (fn. 3) In 1965
Ruislip-Northwood U.D. was merged with the
urban districts of Hayes and Harlington and Yiewsley and West Drayton and the municipal borough
of Uxbridge to form the new London Borough of
Hillingdon. (fn. 4)
The subsoil of the parish is predominantly London
Clay with deposits of Reading Sand and Clay. Minor
gravel deposits occur in the extreme north-east and
north-west and to the west around Ducks Hill. A
narrow alluvium deposit follows the course of the
Pinn stream which roughly bisects the parish from
west to east. (fn. 5) North of this stream the ground rises
gradually. Haste Hill, north-east of the 'lido', and a
ridge to the north called the Hogsback rise to over
300 ft. and form part of the north-facing escarpment overlooking the River Colne in Hertfordshire.
The high ground is broken by a north-south valley
in which lies an artificially constructed lake of
some 50 a. This originally served as a compensating
reservoir for the Grand Junction Canal, to which it
was connected by a feeder, and came into operation
in 1816. (fn. 6) The reservoir and the surrounding land,
amounting in all to nearly 100 a., were purchased
from the British Transport Commission in 1951 by
the urban district council (fn. 7) which has since developed
it as a lido. Eleven acres of low-lying ground at the
north end of the lake were constituted a nature
reserve in 1959.
East and west of the 'lido' are extensive areas of
woodland. In 1086 there was sufficient woodland to
support 1,500 pigs, and there was also a park for
wild beasts (parcus ferarum). (fn. 8) At this time, and much
later, what is now Park Wood probably extended
southward at least as far as the Pinn. In 1565
Ruislip Common Wood, which seems to have included Copse Wood and much of what later became part of Ruislip Common to the east, contained
860 a. Of this area only 341 a. were still wooded in
1721, the rest having become open common. (fn. 9) During
the 17th and 18th centuries the total area of Copse
and Park woods was usually given as between 500 and
550 a. (fn. 10) In 1865 Park Wood covered an area stretching
from just north of the Pinn to Haste Hill, and was
bounded by the reservoir and Bury Street to the west
and Frog Lane (Fore Street) in the east. Copse Wood
then stretched from the reservoir to Northwood and
was bounded by Ducks Hill Road to the west. Further
woodland almost covered the area between Ducks
Hill Road and the Harefield boundary. (fn. 11) Copse
Wood covered 335 a. and Park Wood 408 a. in 1750; (fn. 12)
in 1953 their total area was 396 a. (fn. 13) At this date Mad
Bess Wood, between Ducks Hill Road and Harefield
parish, covered 186 a.
North and south of Mad Bess Wood the narrow
area between Ducks Hill Road and the parish
boundary is almost wholly pasture land. South of
the Pinn is a low ridge rising to 200 ft at Windmill
Hill and Kingsend, and then sloping gradually to
the Yeading Brook which runs parallel to the Pinn
roughly mid-way between Eastcote Road and the
Northolt boundary. South of this stream the land
is uniformly flat and was, until the 20th century,
devoted wholly to agriculture. (fn. 14)
From at least the 14th century until the topography of the parish was blurred by 20th-century
development, there were three distinct areas of
settlement. The villages of Ruislip and Eastcote
developed on sites just south of the Pinn in the west
and east of the parish respectively. The hamlet of
Northwood grew up along the north side of the
Rickmansworth-Pinner road which passes across the
north-east of the parish. Apart from this road and
internal networks in areas of scattered settlement to
the east and west, there were only three ancient
roads of any importance. Ducks Hill Road probably
followed the course of the modern road from its
junction with the Rickmansworth road in the northwest corner of the parish. It then ran south through
Ruislip village as Bury Street and continued through
the open fields as Down Barns Road (now West End
Road) to West End in Northolt. (fn. 15) Eastcote Road,
running south of the Pinn, connected Ruislip village
with Eastcote, and Joel Street ran north from
Eastcote to join the Pinner road near the eastern
boundary. Field End Road, running south from
Eastcote Road near the eastern boundary, probably
originated as an access road to the Eastcote open
fields. On Rocque's map of 1754 it appears to mark
the western boundary of East Field. (fn. 16)
Long Bridge at Eastcote, which probably carried
Eastcote Road across the Pinn, was out of repair as
early as 1355. Liability for repairs was vested in the
inhabitants of Ruislip village. (fn. 17) By 1611 the bridge,
responsibility for which had been transferred to the
lord of the manor, was again ruinous. (fn. 18) A brick and
timber structure, maintained at the expense of
King's College, Cambridge, as lords of the manor,
was in existence by 1758. The college was also responsible for the upkeep of Cannons' Bridge and
Parson's Bridge in Bury Street and a wooden bridge
at White Butts on the road to Northolt. The responsibility for Clack Bridge across the Pinn at the
west end of Clack Lane near the western boundary
was divided equally between the college and the
lord of Southcote manor. (fn. 19) All these were cart
bridges, the parish being responsible for repairs to
numerous foot bridges. (fn. 20)
This broad pattern of settlement and communications remained virtually intact until the coming of
the railway at the end of the 19th century and the
laying down of access roads to housing estates at
the beginning of the 20th. The divisions within the
parish are perpetuated in the modern districts of
Ruislip, Eastcote, and Northwood. These, with the
addition of the later developed areas of Northwood
Hills and South Ruislip, comprised the modern
urban district.
The origins and early history of settlement in the
parish are uncertain. No reliably documented finds
of pre-Roman date have been made within its
boundaries, (fn. 21) and the theories of Roman settlement
are largely unsubstantiated. (fn. 22) Further conjecture
has centred upon the exact nature and extent of the
park for wild beasts mentioned at Domesday. (fn. 23)
This most probably covered much of the heavilywooded area north of the Pinn. Its boundaries may
possibly be inferred from otherwise inexplicable
deviations in two of the oldest roads in the parish.
Bury Street, running north from Ruislip village,
curves west towards the Harefield border before
regaining its general northerly direction; Eastcote
Road, running parallel to and south of the Pinn,
makes a wide sweep southward between Ruislip and
Eastcote. Before 20th-century widening traces of a
bank are said to have been visible along the north
side of Eastcote Road. (fn. 24) The construction of the
original closure cannot be reliably dated. (fn. 25) The park
was stocked with deer in 1270, (fn. 26) and seems still to
have been in existence in 1436 when the boundary
palings were repaired. (fn. 27) A suggestion that further
earthworks enclosed the village and some 90 a.
around it (fn. 28) appears to be unfounded, although the
remains of an unidentified earthwork are visible in
the south of Park Wood. Ruislip village itself probably developed from an early settlement south of a
crossing place on the Pinn. (fn. 29) There was a manorial
grange at Northwood in 1248, (fn. 30) which may have
occupied the site of the later Grange. (fn. 31) Northwood,
however, separated from the rest of the parish by
a belt of woodland, was slow to develop. Eastcote
appears as a hamlet by 1323. (fn. 32)

RUISLIP PARISH Before the final inclosure in 1814
By 1565 settlement had assumed the approximate
pattern which it presented when the first detailed
maps of the parish were made in the mid 19th
century. (fn. 33) Ruislip village centred upon the church,
which was in existence by the end of the 12th
century, (fn. 34) and the Manor Farm occupying the site
of an earlier manor-house (fn. 35) at the junction of Bury
Street and Eastcote Road. South and north of the
road junction scattered settlement lay along Bury
Street, and was concentrated near Cannons' Bridge.
Between Bury Street and Harefield parish lay Southcote Farm, near the site of Southcote manor-house. (fn. 36)
A network of minor roads and trackways linked
further farms and cottages along Clack Lane, near
the western boundary, with Field End and Kingsend to the south-west of Ruislip village. The approximate geographical centre of Eastcote was the
junction of Field End Road and Eastcote Road, but
settlement followed no definable pattern. Houses
and farms lay along both sides of the Pinn following
a network of paths and minor roads, chief of which
were Joel Street, Wiltshire Lane, Field End Road,
and Cheney Street.
Almost the whole of the parish south of Eastcote
Road was covered by the open fields. When these
were inclosed under the 1804 Act they contained
about 2,200 a. (fn. 37) The principal fields were Church
Field, south of Ruislip church, Great Windmill
Field, south-east of Ruislip village, Marlpit Field,
which contained 175 a. in the mid 17th century, (fn. 38)
to the east of the present West End Road, Bourne
(Bone) Field to the south, and Roxbourne Field in
the extreme south-west corner of the parish. These
lay in the Westcote division of the parish. In the
Eastcote division were eastward extensions of Great
Windmill Field and Marlpit Field known respectively as Little Windmill Field and Steen (Stone)
Field. Well (Cognorth) Field and East Field lay
south of Eastcote village. Field boundaries appear to
have fluctuated and other field names-Prior's Field,
Alderston Field, Tybber Field, Hill Field, Whitingrove Field-are mentioned in connexion with
smaller areas or without any exact geographical
location. (fn. 39) A dispute in 1519 about inclosure in
Bourne and Windmill fields indicates that the names
of the principal fields and the tenants' rights in them
were established at least as early as the beginning of
the 14th century. (fn. 40) The former open-field area remained unpopulated, except for two or three farmhouses, until the construction of Northolt aerodrome
and the development of estates at South Ruislip after
1914. (fn. 41) In 1962 there was still grassland south of the
Yeading Brook and along the Northolt boundary.
Northwood, separated from the main areas of
development by Park and Copse woods and Ruislip
Common, which in 1754 extended almost across the
whole parish and covered most of the area now
known as Northwood Hills, retains much of its
autonomous character. A few cottages at Northwood
are mentioned in the 1565 survey. Two hundred
years later the shape of the hamlet, composed of a
few farms and dwellings scattered along the Rickmansworth road, had altered little except for the
addition of Holy Trinity church. (fn. 42)
An unusual number of timber-framed buildings,
dating from the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries, has
survived in the parish. More than fifty were listed in
a survey published in 1937 (fn. 43) and many of these,
adapted to modern use, are still in existence. Several
are grouped near the church in the old village of
Ruislip. Nos. 1-3 and 5-7 High Street are two
irregular blocks flanking the west entrance to the
churchyard; the former contains work of c. 1500, but
both have been much altered on their street frontages. An adjacent range of similar date, nos. 9-15
High Street, has a long east front towards the churchyard with a jettied upper story of exposed closestudded timbering and a moulded bressummer.
This building, together with no. 7, was acquired in
1931 by the newly formed Ruislip Village Trust. (fn. 44)
In 1964 a thorough restoration was carried out by
the Trust, the street front being reconstructed and
the interior adapted for use as professional offices. (fn. 45)
The group round the churchyard is completed by
the range of former almshouses in Eastcote Road. (fn. 46)
On the opposite side of High Street the Old Swan
Inn and adjacent houses have been much altered but
are of 16th- and 17th-century construction. A pair
of farm cottages at the junction of High Street and
Bury Street are also timber-framed but were faced
with red brick in the earlier 19th century and are
now used as shops. The Manor Farm, a house of
16th-century origin, (fn. 47) was given to the people of
Ruislip by King's College in 1937 together with
the farm buildings. Two well-preserved weatherboarded barns stand to the west of the house; the
smaller was extensively restored after 1937 and
opened as a branch library. (fn. 48) Several old buildings
survive among modern houses in the Bury Street
area. They include a 16th-century farm-house to the
north of Cannons' Bridge and Little Manor Farm,
the latter incorporating the remains of a medieval
hall. (fn. 49) The Old House near the south end of Bury
Street was refronted c. 1700 and has a coved eaves
cornice and a pedimented doorway. On the east side
of the street are Woodman's Farm and the Plough
Inn. The 'Plough', which has a medieval core, has
been much extended; it was licensed in 1746, as was
the 'Old Swan' in High Street. (fn. 50) There was a tavern
at Ruislip in 1636, (fn. 51) demolished by 1865, and the
'Black Horse' and the 'Bells' are mentioned in 1732
and 1741 respectively. (fn. 52) Other inns licensed at least
as early as this date were the 'Sun', the 'Red Lion',
the 'White Hart', and the 'Leather Bottle'. (fn. 53) The
'Black Pots' stood just north of the present 'Six
Bells' on the west side of Bury Street. It was still
in existence at the 1804 inclosure, (fn. 54) but had been
demolished by 1865. (fn. 55)
The only substantial old house in Northwood is
Northwood Grange at the junction of Green Lane
and Rickmansworth Road; it may occupy the site
of a manorial grange mentioned in 1248. (fn. 56) The present building incorporates a 15th-century block with
a crown-post roof, a cross-wing of the same date,
and a long range of c. 1600. In 1934 the house was
purchased and the lower portion dedicated for the use
of parochial organizations. (fn. 57) After the war the building was acquired by the council which has converted
the upper story into flats. The lower story is still
used for cultural and similar meetings. (fn. 58)
At Eastcote there are many 16th- and 17thcentury timber-framed buildings scattered among
modern residential development. They occur mostly
in the area north of the River Pinn and in Field End
Road. The former include Cuckoo Hill Farm and
Mistletoe Farm in Cuckoo Hill, St. Catherine's Farm
in Catlins Lane, the Woodman Inn in Joel Street,
and Fore Street Farm in Fore Street. Old Cheyney
Cottage in Wiltshire Lane (dated 1663) was demolished c. 1960 but Ivy Farm opposite, which
retained medieval roof timbers, was still standing
in 1968. The Grange in Eastcote High Road is an
extensive house of 16th-century origin with 18thcentury and later additions; towards the road it has
a walled forecourt, a 17th-century cottage, and a
weather-boarded barn. Near it is a timber-framed
house called Ramin with an overhanging gable-end
and a 16th-century barn. Eastcote House, standing
at the junction of Eastcote High Road and Field End
Road, was originally a building of the late 16th or
early 17th century, refaced and extended in the 18th
century. It was the seat of the Hawtrey family, who
settled at Eastcote in the 16th century and were
lessees of Ruislip manor from 1669 until the 19th
century. (fn. 59) The house and grounds were purchased
by the Middlesex County Council in 1937 and leased
to the local authority. (fn. 60) For some years they were
used for garden parties and other social gatherings,
but public use ceased in 1962 and the house was demolished in 1964. In Field End Road are Park Farm,
Field End Farm, and Eastcote Cottage; the two
latter were partly faced with brick in the mid 19th
century. Part of a large timber-framed barn in the
garden of the Retreat has been converted into a
cottage. A nearby house called the Barns, which
may have been of medieval origin, was demolished
in 1967. Eastcote, unlike Ruislip village, shows signs
of residential occupation in the 18th and earlier 19th
centuries. The most imposing house was Hayden
Hall standing in its own grounds to the east of Joel
Street. It was owned by the Franklin family during
the 18th century; (fn. 61) by 1962 it had been leased to the
Middlesex County Council for civil defence purposes. In 1968 it was unoccupied and rapidly becoming derelict. The oldest part of the house is the
central block which is a rebuilding of c. 1700. (fn. 62) This
rectangular red-brick structure, of two stories and
seven bays, has closely set windows, a dentil cornice,
and a steeply pitched hipped roof; the central doorway on the south front is surmounted by a scrolled
pediment. Flanking the original building are two
large Victorian wings. The Old Shooting Box in
Eastcote High Road and Southill Farm in Southill
Lane are both 18th-century houses with symmetrical
red-brick fronts. The mid 19th century is represented by several pairs of smaller residential houses
in Field End Road, formerly known as Eastcote
Villas. (fn. 63)
Between the 16th and the 19th centuries the topography of the parish altered little. By 1754 Ruislip
Common had encroached on Park and Copse woods
in the north and covered the whole of the central
area now known as Northwood Hills. A few dwellings
had been built along Bury Street and at Kingsend
and Field End to the south and west of Ruislip
village. (fn. 64) Some 350 a. in the manor of St. Catherine's (fn. 65)
were inclosed under the first Middlesex Inclosure
Act in 1769. All the land affected lay west of Ducks
Hill Road. It included West Wood (now Mad Bess
Wood) which was common ground. (fn. 66) A further
3,000 a. of the parish were inclosed in 1804. Openfield land lying between Eastcote Road and the
Northolt boundary made up the bulk of this, but
further areas of common land to the north-east of
Park and Copse woods were also included. (fn. 67) Thirtynine acres of the Common were purchased from the
inclosure commissioners in 1805 by the Grand
Junction Canal Co. To this was added a similar area
of Park Wood purchased from King's College in 1807.
Damming works began a few years later, and the
reservoir so formed came into operation in 1816.
Some cottages standing between Park Wood and the
present Reservoir Road were inundated. (fn. 68) Beyond
this, inclosure had little effect on the topography of
the parish. Eastcote was described as a 'deeply
retired and rural' hamlet in 1816, (fn. 69) and Ruislip as
'most romantically situated' in 1826. (fn. 70) About 1825,
however, the Rickmansworth road was turnpiked
just north of its junction with Joel Street, (fn. 71) and in
1887 the Metropolitan Railway was extended from
Pinner to Rickmansworth across the north-east
corner of the parish. A station on this line was
opened at Northwood, and remained the only station
in the parish until that opened in 1904 at Ruislip on the
Harrow and Uxbridge Railway Co.'s line between
Harrow-on-the-Hill and Uxbridge. Electrification followed in 1905, and the Uxbridge line was incorporated
in the Metropolitan Railway system in the same year.
Halts on this line were opened at Eastcote in 1906 and
Ruislip Manor in 1912. The District Railway opened a
through passenger service to the West End and City
along this line in 1910. From 1933 Piccadilly line
trains ran along the same route, and the two lines
operated together for a short time. After the Second
World War this service was provided by the Piccadilly line only. Northwood Hills Station on the
Metropolitan line, which had been electrified in
1925, was opened in 1933. By the following year
three stations on the Great Western Railway's
Birmingham line-West Ruislip (1906), South
Ruislip (1932), and Ruislip Gardens (1934)-were
serving the south of the parish. Following the
extension of the Central line from Greenford to
West Ruislip in 1948 these three stations were rebuilt and the local steam train service adjusted. (fn. 72) A
short section of Western Avenue, the London-
Oxford arterial road opened in 1934, (fn. 73) was driven
across the extreme south-west corner of the parish.
Improved railway communications opened up the
parish for residential building. In the last decade of
the 19th century large houses in their own grounds
began to appear near the new station in Green Lane
and in newly formed roads to the north of it. Between Green Lane and Rickmansworth Road several
streets had been laid out and partly built with smaller
houses and continuous terraces. (fn. 74) By 1900 King's
College had realized the potential value of the manorial estates. Purchases and the taking up of leases
between 1901 and 1905 consolidated their estate
with a view to future building development. A new
road to the west of High Street, giving improved
access to Kings End Fields adjoining Ruislip
Station, was completed in 1907. The first houses
were built in the same year, and the college formed
a company, the Ruislip Building Co., to manage
further developments. An agreement with a private
company, Garden Estates Ltd., replaced this arrangement in 1910, (fn. 75) and houses were advertised at
freehold prices ranging from £700 to £800. (fn. 76) Most
of these appear to have been small detached residences on narrow frontages. In 1911 a town planning competition was organized jointly by the
college and the local authority. Plans by A. and J.
Soutar (fn. 77) were adopted as the basis for the future
development of some 6,000 a. of the parish, and
finally approved by the local government board in
1914. A new company, Ruislip Manor Ltd., took
over the organization of development from Garden
Estates in 1911. (fn. 78) Further roads, including those
across the corner of Copse Wood between Rickmansworth Road and Ducks Hill Road, and Manor Way
and Park Way north of Ruislip Manor Station, were
laid down in 1912-13. Building sites on an estate
between Park Wood and the Pinn were available by
1928, and until the Second World War sales of land
for building purposes brought the college a steady
income. (fn. 79)
Further residential development followed the erection of R.A.F. establishments serving Northolt airfield, which had been established in 1915 on a site
in Ruislip parish west of West End Road between the
Yeading Brook and the Northolt boundary. During
the First World War the airfield served as a
training and defensive base. After improvement
and extension westward into Ickenham parish, it
became an important Fighter Command operational
base in 1939. During the later stages of the war the
base was further extended, and entered service as
London's war-time airport in 1943. From 1945 the
airport was devoted completely to civil aviation.
After 1952, as operations were gradually transferred
to the new London Airport at Heathrow, it ceased
to be the country's major terminal. In 1954 Northolt
officially ceased to be a civil airport and the base
reverted to the R.A.F. (fn. 80)
Despite rapid developments in the south of the
parish and the encroachment of housing estates into
the south of Park Wood and the north of Copse
Wood, the area north of the Pinn retained much of
its rural character. Nearly 100 a. between Copse and
Park woods and the Rickmansworth road were leased
by King's College to the Northwood Golf Club in
1899. (fn. 81) The Gravel Pits, an area of 14 a. adjoining
the golf course to the north-west in the angle of
Ducks Hill and Rickmansworth roads, was scheduled
by the urban district council in 1905 for preservation
as an open space. Between 1905 and 1953 the council acquired a further 660 a. for open spaces, including the area laid down in 1929 (fn. 82) as Haste Hill
Golf Course (1927), King's College Fields between
Park Avenue and the Pinn (1938), Poors Field
between Copse Wood and Ruislip Lido (1939), and
Breakspear Road (1949). (fn. 83) Permanent preservation
of the Manor Farm site and Park and Copse woods
was assured by their transference to the Middlesex
County Council and the urban district council in
1932 and 1936 respectively. (fn. 84) Open spaces in the
parish totalled nearly 1,500 a. in 1953. (fn. 85) Much of
this has been developed by the local authority as
sports and recreation grounds. Ruislip Golf Course
is laid out over the old Clack Lane to the north of
West Ruislip Station. Facilities for most sports are
provided at the Cavendish Recreation Ground and
the adjoining Bessingby Fields south of Eastcote
Station, and an athletics track was laid down in 1953
in King's College Fields. Similar facilities for Northwood and Northwood Hills are provided by the
Northwood Recreation Ground in Chestnut Avenue.
The Ministry of Health Sports Ground is situated
south of Eastcote Station, and the Air Ministry owns
another private sports ground, used by local R.A.F.
units, in Shenley Avenue south of Ruislip Station. (fn. 86)
The open nature of the district attracted several
hospitals to the parish. Mount Vernon Hospital, a
branch of the North London Consumption Hospital
founded in 1860, was built between 1902 and 1904
on a site south of the Rickmansworth road, in the
extreme north-west corner of the parish. Initially the
hospital had 130 beds and was confined to the treatment of tuberculosis patients. It was constituted a
general hospital in 1929, and has since specialized
in plastic surgery and cancer treatments. In 1962 the
hospital had approximately 550 beds. (fn. 87) The first
cobalt unit for the treatment of deep-seated cancer
to be installed in this country was given to the
hospital by a Canadian organization and has been
operating since 1954. (fn. 88) St. Vincent's Orthopaedic
Hospital, which had been established at Clapham in
1910 under the care of the Sisters of Charity of St.
Vincent de Paul, took over a private house in
Wiltshire Lane at the north end of Park Wood in
1912. At this date the hospital comprised 100 beds
housed in wooden huts. These have been rebuilt in
brick, and in 1962 there were 164 beds for orthopaedic cases of all types. (fn. 89) The Northwood,
Pinner and District Hospital in Pinner Road,
Northwood, was originally housed in a small hutlike building erected in 1919 as a war memorial.
A more substantial building was erected in 1925, and
extended in 1930. The hospital now provides beds
for 36 patients, and houses physiotherapy and X-ray
departments. (fn. 90)
After 1930 the pace of development accelerated.
In that year a second town planning scheme covered
those parts of the urban district not included in the
1914 plan. (fn. 91) Private building accounted for a majority of the new houses between the two wars, but
since 1945 more than 2,000 dwellings have been
erected by the council. Among the chief areas of
post-war building were Northwood Hills, Wiltshire
Lane, Woodlands Avenue, and Pine Gardens in
Eastcote, and the Dean estate at South Ruislip. (fn. 92)
About one-half of the council's post-war houses
are situated in South Ruislip. The only industries in
the parish (fn. 93) are also sited in this district on small
industrial areas provided for by the 1914 planning
scheme. The original industrial estate has been
reduced in size and now covers 65 a. south of
Victoria Road. Of this, 30 a. are now occupied by the
United States 3rd Air Division Headquarters. (fn. 94)
These installations, established on their present site
between 1949 and 1951, include a hospital and social
and recreational facilities. (fn. 95) South Ruislip lacks the
residential character preserved in the earlierdeveloped districts north of the Piccadilly line. It
has no shopping centre to compare with High Street,
Ruislip, Field End Road, Eastcote, and Northwood
Hills, and almost no pre-20th-century buildings. (fn. 96)
Many of the houses are compact, semi-detached
dwellings of the standardized type built in the 1930s.
Much of Ruislip and Eastcote, now joined by houses
built along Eastcote Road, is devoted to spacious
residential properties in quiet, tree-lined roads.
Riverside walks have been preserved along both
banks of the Pinn. The rural nature of Northwood,
with extensive views over the rest of the parish, has
attracted much high-class property, particularly in
and around Copse Wood Way, along Green Lane
and at the northern end of Ducks Hill Road.
The Domesday Survey mentions 53 people at
Ruislip. (fn. 97) A mid-13th-century custumal lists more
than 120 tenants. (fn. 98) For a muster of c. 1335 Ruislip
was expected to contribute about 60 footmen, or
approximately 1/20 of the total county force. (fn. 99)
A series of early-15th-century rentals lists between
105 and 130 tenants of the manor. (fn. 1) In 1547 there
were 480 communicants in the parish; (fn. 2) 254 adult
male parishioners took the protestation oath in
1642, (fn. 3) and there were 210 occupied houses in 1664. (fn. 4)
There were said to be about 150 houses in Ruislip
village in 1778, (fn. 5) and the number of inhabitants in
the parish was little more than 1,000 in 1790. (fn. 6) The
total population had reached only 1,413 by 1841,
when there were 136 occupied houses in Ruislip
village, 99 in Eastcote, and 41 in Northwood. Between 1891 and 1901 the number of houses in the
parish, which had remained fairly constant throughout the 19th century, increased from 383 to 703,
while the population rose from 1,836 to 3,566.
Continued residential development almost doubled
the number of inhabitants over the following decade, and further increases accompanied the establishment and extension of Northolt airfield. Between
1921 and 1931 the population rose from 9,112 to
16,042; by 1951 it had risen to 68,288 and by 1961
to 72,791. (fn. 7)
Among well-known residents mention may be
made of Dr. Adam Clarke (1762-1832), an eminent
Methodist theologian, who lived intermittently at
Hayden Hall from 1805 until his death. He was three
times president of the Wesleyan body, and published
a number of theological works, the most important
of which was an eight-volume scriptural commentary. (fn. 8) In 1961 Peter and Helen Kroger were each
sentenced to twenty years imprisonment for operating a spy ring dealing in Britain's naval secrets from
a house in South Ruislip. (fn. 9)