HARROW INCLUDING PINNER
The archiepiscopal manor and ancient parish of
Harrow, of which parish until 1766 Pinner was a
chapelry, covered an area 6½ miles long and 4½ miles
wide in the eastern half of Gore hundred. The parish,
called Harrow in the account that follows to distinguish it from the hamlet of Harrow-on-the-Hill or
Harrow Town, stretched south from the Hertfordshire border to the River Brent. It was bounded by
Elthorne hundred on the west and by Great Stanmore
and Kingsbury parishes on the east. Parts of the
parish, notably Pinner and Harrow-on-the-Hill,
attracted wealthy residents as early as the 17th
century. Harrow School, founded in 1572, contributed to the growth of Harrow-on-the-Hill from the
end of the 18th century. Railways were followed in
the late 19th century by housing estates and factories.
After the British Empire Exhibition of 1924-5, for
which Wembley Stadium was built, the site was
developed and building spread over the south-east
of the parish.
In the 19th century the total area was 13,809 a.,
divided between Harrow (10,027 a.) and Pinner
(3,782 a.). In 1931, when part of Northolt parish was
added, the whole area, then administered by four
district councils, consisted of 13,909 a. In 1961 this
area, divided into wards totalling 13,983 a., formed
part of the municipal boroughs of Harrow (12,555 a.)
and Wembley (6,294 a.). (fn. 1) In 1965 Harrow became
the London Borough of Harrow, and Wembley became part of the London Borough of Brent. (fn. 2) The
account below relates to the area comprised in the
parishes of Harrow and Pinner before the boundary
changes of the 20th century.
Harrow forms part of the London Clay plain, overlain in patches by Claygate and Reading Beds and
Bagshot Sands. Terrace gravels and alluvium are
found along the water-courses. The London Clay
produces gently undulating country with sluggish
streams and bad drainage. The heavy soils once supported dense forest, and, when cleared, were especially
suitable for grass. Hills, like Harrow Hill, Barn Hill,
the Weald, and Pinner, rise where gravels and sands
overlie the clay. Drainage is better in these areas,
which were originally covered with light woodland
and heath. The north, where there are hills of over
500 ft., contrasts with the clay plains of the south, less
than 100 ft. above sea level. The main system of
drainage is that of the tributaries of the Brent, which
flow south-eastward from the Weald and Harrow
Hill. A second system, that of the River Pinn, flows
south-westward from the hills of Pinner and the
Weald. (fn. 3)
Settlement probably began on the higher ground
and later grew from homesteads in clearings by the
streams. There was a Celtic earthwork on Barn Hill (fn. 4)
and possibly another at Pinner. Roman coins, pottery,
and brick- and stonework have been found at Waxwell, Bury Pond (Barrow Point) Hill, and Pinner
Road in Pinner, in the grounds of Bentley Priory in
Harrow Weald, and in the church of Harrow-on-theHill. Honeypot Lane on the eastern border of Kenton
was probably an ancient trackway. There are sarsen
stones in Harrow, of which the most famous,
Sudbury stone and Weald stone, served as mile and
boundary stones, although there is no evidence that
they were so used in the Celtic or Roman periods. (fn. 5)
The most puzzling of the early remains is Grim's
Dyke or Ditch, a ditch and bank visible in north
Pinner and Harrow Weald. Partly because of its
name, an epithet for Woden, the earthwork has
usually been dated to the 5th or 6th century and
variously described as a defensive barrier or a
political or hunting boundary. (fn. 6) Excavations in 1957,
however, uncovered a large amount of Belgic pottery,
dating Grim's Dyke to a much earlier period. (fn. 7)
The Domesday survey mentions 113 people at Harrow; (fn. 8) 223 people were listed for the 1522-3 subsidy, (fn. 9)
and there were 1,545 communicants in the parish
in 1547. (fn. 10) The earliest rental, dated 1553, (fn. 11) lists 122
free and customary head tenants; 623 adult male
parishioners took the protestation oath in 1642. (fn. 12)
There were 484 occupied houses in 1664 (fn. 13) and allegedly
'about 400', of which one-third were in Pinner, in
1795. (fn. 14) The estimate was almost certainly too low, for
there were 504 inhabited houses in 1801, and in 1805
478 houses were listed in claims under the Inclosure
Act. (fn. 15) By 1821 there were 777 houses, by 1851 1,103,
and by 1891 2,993. The population rose from 3,246
in 1801 to 4,093 in 1821, to 6,261 in 1851, and to
15,715 in 1891. From 25,321 in 1901, it rose still more
sharply to 59,006 in 1921, to 135,970 in 1931, and to
277,615, its peak, in 1951. Thereafter it declined to
264,317 in 1961. (fn. 16)
In the Middle Ages there were 12 centres of settlement, excluding the lost hamlet of Norbury. Around
Harrow-on-the-Hill were Pinner, in the north-west
of the parish, Harrow Weald, in the north, Kenton,
Preston, Uxendon, and Wembley, in the east, and
Tokyngton and Alperton in the south-east; closer to
the centre were Sudbury and Roxeth, respectively
south-east and south-west of Harrow-on-the-Hill,
and Greenhill, to the north. (fn. 17)
The hamlets of Harrow parish were linked together
by rough tracks whose upkeep became a heavy burden
upon the tithings and later upon the vestry. Bequests
were made by Robert Hatch, by will proved in 1490, (fn. 18)
for the road from Weald hamlet to Harrow church,
Richard Parson, by will proved in 1539, (fn. 19) for Gore
Lane in Preston, and John Lyon (d. 1592) (fn. 20) for the
highway in Preston between Goreland Gate and Hyde
House. Bequests were also made by Richard Page, by
will proved in 1551, (fn. 21) for East Lane in Sudbury, and
Sir John Lyon, by will proved in 1564, (fn. 22) and John
Lyon of Preston (d. 1592) for Deadman's Hill and its
extension northward. (fn. 23) Some of the road-names are
descriptive: Rough Street in Weald, (fn. 24) Watery Lane
in Alperton, Dirty Lane in Greenhill, (fn. 25) and Mud
Lane (fn. 26) in Pinner. The 'badness' of the route from
Harrow-on-the-Hill to Pinner, Roxborough Lane,
which had to cross a branch of the Yeading Brook at
Hooking Green, was mentioned in 1650, (fn. 27) and in
1734 labourers were sent to mend it and dig ditches.
In 1768 the inhabitants of Harrow parish were fined
£500 for failing to repair Northolt Road but two years
later both this and Uxbridge Road were in very bad
repair. (fn. 28) Anthony Trollope remembered the 'miserably dirty lanes' of his boyhood in the Weald, (fn. 29) and in
1841 the road from Harrow Town to the Weald was
especially poor. Part of the Preston-Kingsbury lane
was flooded and impassable in winter in 1854. (fn. 30)
Harrow-on-the-Hill was itself badly drained: Hog
Lane, whose state had contributed to the cholera
epidemic of 1848, was impassable for school-children
in 1867 and Waldron Road, which joined it, was 'a
ploughed field'. As late as 1898 Pinner could be described as a typical Middlesex village where 'roads are
impassable for mud for 5 months out of 12'. (fn. 31) Among
other hazards a well in the highway of Harrow-onthe-Hill was unfenced in 1724 and dangerous to
travellers. (fn. 32)
The local roads were constantly shifting course.
Inclosure, especially in the 16th and 17th centuries
in the south-east, resulted in many changes, as in
1655 when Richard Page obstructed the old road and
altered the route through Preston East Field. (fn. 33) The
creation of Wembley Park in 1810 also changed the
road pattern, and obstruction in Pinner Marsh and
new paths in Pinner Park and Woodhall was frequent
in the first decade of the 19th century. (fn. 34) In 1759 Oxhey
Lane was a continuation northward of the road (later
Headstone Lane) at Hatch End. (fn. 35) In 1767 because of
the very bad condition of part of Weald Common, (fn. 36)
the lower part of the lane was altered by two landowners to run eastward, along the higher ground. (fn. 37)
Maps of 1759 and 1817 suggest that similar changes
took place elsewhere, for example in Rayners Lane,
Sheepcote Lane, and the entrance to Weald Copse
Farm. Probably the most striking change was in the
Harrow road, the main link with London. Sixteenthcentury bequests clearly distinguish the 'London or
Harrow way' from 'the highway in Hanger Wood',
and Ogilby's map of 1675 shows two routes. The first
ran from Harrow-on-the-Hill, across Sudbury Common, along the Harrow-Greenford boundary to
Vicar's Bridge and thence to Harlesden, Paddington,
and London. (fn. 38) A branch from Wembley Hill through
Hangers Wood to Harlesden was presumably Deadman's Hill, which crossed the river at Stonebridge,
originally by a ford or wooden bridge. The stone
bridge was built between 1660 and 1700 (fn. 39) and it
seems to have diverted the main London road from
the Vicar's Bridge route to Deadman's Hill, which
took the name Harrow Road. By 1801 the route ran
from Stonebridge, along the bottom of Wembley
Green, and across Sudbury Common to Harrow
Town.

HARROW AND PINNER PARISHES In the late 18th century
The London or Harrow road attracted bequests
from John Marshall, by will proved in 1507, (fn. 40)
Thomas Page, by will proved in 1512, (fn. 41) Hugh Enystoo, by will proved in 1548, (fn. 42) and Henry Page, by will
proved in 1558. (fn. 43) John Lyon (d. 1592) left 38 a. in
Marylebone to Harrow School in trust for the repair
of the road. (fn. 44) In 1754 it was said to be so bad that
Harrow residents went to London via Acton (fn. 45) and in
1801, when it was 'narrow and incommodious', an
Act was passed to set up a turnpike trust. (fn. 46) The
trustees, whose survey stressed the inadequate drainage of the road in the south and its narrowness on
Harrow Hill, erected a toll-gate and house near
Harrow pound in 1801, and later erected turnpike
gates at Roxborough and the northern entry to Sheepcote Lane. (fn. 47) After the misuse of funds by the highway
surveyor in 1823, (fn. 48) the Harrow Road Trust was indicted by Quarter Sessions for the very bad state
of the road from Harlesden to Harrow-on-the-Hill.
James Macadam, son of the engineer, was elected
surveyor and another survey described the road as
'circulous, dangerously narrow, confined by high
banks with plantations and houses and with turnings
almost at right angles', and as often impassable at the
Brent crossing. (fn. 49) An Act was passed in 1826 (fn. 50) to make
a more direct road from the 'Swan' at the edge of
Sudbury Common to the crossing at Stonebridge, (fn. 51)
but in the same year the trust was absorbed into the
Metropolitan Roads Commission. (fn. 52) The river was
diverted, the road was resurfaced with stone and the
gradient of Harrow Hill was reduced. In 1830 the
road to Harrow led to nowhere else 'of note' and therefore was not much used and in good repair. Harrow
turnpike house and gate were abolished in 1847, but
the commission administered Harrow Road until
1872. (fn. 53)
There was a slight rise in traffic before the railways killed the coach trade. In 1681 a coach left
Harrow-on-the-Hill daily for Holborn and in 1690
'Mr. Page's waggon' left every other day. It still
took a whole day for a waggoner to drive a team
to London from Harrow c. 1800. (fn. 54) By 1826 there
were two daily coaches from Harrow-on-the-Hill,
from the 'Crown and Anchor' and the 'King's Head'
to and from London. (fn. 55) The 'Crown and Anchor'
coach continued to the 'Queen's Head' at Pinner. By
then Pinner Road (formerly Roxborough Lane) had
been much improved, mainly because of its link with
Rickmansworth. In 1809 an Act (fn. 56) was passed to widen
and improve the turnpike road from Rickmansworth
through Pinner to the Harrow road at Roxborough
and a toll-bar was erected at Pinner Green.
Continuous settlement in the parish probably dates
from the Saxon period. There were three phases:
firstly, settlement in farms and hamlets around village
greens and their gradual growth by encroachment on
the waste; secondly, after Parliamentary inclosure in
1817, building on former waste and common, especially alongside roads, but still within the original
hamlets; thirdly, the development of farm-land as
housing estates and new districts. The first two phases
are dealt with under individual hamlets; the last
phase, which was closely connected with the railways,
is treated in a further section.