LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC SERVICES.
Manorial Government.
The archbishop's jurisdiction over his tenants probably remained undefined (fn. 47) until Cnut in 1020 granted 'sake and soke,
grithbreach, hamsocn, forestall, infangenetheof, and
flymenafyrmth' over his own men and over as many
thegns as the king allowed him. (fn. 48) These liberties
were confirmed by William I, who added toll and
team, (fn. 49) and by subsequent kings. (fn. 50) Henry II added
geld and danegeld, hidage, murdrum fines, works of
bridges, castles, parks, and closes, aid for the army,
wardpenny, bloodwite, childwite, and exemption for
the archbishop's demesnes and villeinage from the
hundred courts. (fn. 51) In 1202 John granted amercements
of men from the archbishop's fees. (fn. 52) Return of writs,
granted in 1235, (fn. 53) was duly noted in the hundred
rolls, together with the observation that the township (villata) of Harrow and the other tenants of the
archbishop had been subtracted from the county and
hundred. (fn. 54)
In 1300 Archbishop Winchelsey threatened the
sheriff with excommunication for freeing distresses
made by his Harrow bailiffs and withdrawing pleas
from the Harrow court to the county court. (fn. 55) A grant
in 1314 made it clear that the archbishop was to have
the fines and forfeitures of all his men and tenants,
wherever they might reside. (fn. 56) Subsequent royal
grants and confirmations, made in 1335, (fn. 57) 1382, (fn. 58)
1399, (fn. 59) and 1463, (fn. 60) set out the franchises and fiscal
privileges in full to obviate the plea of non-user and
to remove ambiguity. Despite a reiterated injunction
against royal officials usurping the duties of the bailiff
of the liberty and permission in 1463 for the archbishop to appoint constables for his own hundreds,
the emphasis throughout was upon fiscal privileges.
The archbishop's men could be tried in the royal
courts but any fines or confiscated chattels had to be
handed over. The 1399 grant even included the
profits of attainder or Praemunire, eleven years after
the property of one of the archbishop's foremost
Harrow vassals, Sir Nicholas Brembre, had been
forfeited to the Crown. (fn. 61) In 1378 the archbishop's
Harrow and Hayes tenants were exempted from contributing to the expenses of the parliamentary knights
of the shire. (fn. 62)
The surrender of Harrow by Cranmer in 1545 and
the grant to Sir Edward North in 1547 included all
the manorial privileges. (fn. 63) The liberty was by now
equivalent to a grant of green wax, the right to fines
and amercements exacted from tenants in the royal
courts and paid to the Exchequer. A series of quietus
rolls from 1617 to 1676 (fn. 64) shows that repayments were
claimed from the King's Bench, Common Pleas,
Sessions of the Peace, and Clerk of the Market,
usually amounting to £3-£12 a year. From 1665 the
'issues before the Barons', presumably in the Exchequer Court, were added, which in 1666 were as
much as £115. Although the rolls show no lapse
in the payments, the proprietors of Harrow manor
in 1667 claimed all the archiepiscopal liberties in
Harrow, quoting the medieval charters. (fn. 65) The claim
was allowed on the basis of the grant to Sir Edward
North, but the last quietus roll dates from 1676 and
in 1680-1 the lords of several Middlesex liberties,
including Harrow, had 'for many years past' been
deprived of 'divers fines' in the King's Bench. (fn. 66)
These had been paid to the court's coroner and
thence to the Exchequer, and the Clerk of the Pipe
had refused the claims of the bailiffs of the liberties.
This time the Attorney General must have disallowed the claims, since no more green wax payments are recorded. Of the archiepiscopal liberties
all that was left, apart from the ordinary manorial
jurisdiction, was the right to take chattels, waifs, and
estrays, which had always been accounted for by the
bailiff of the liberty and not with other perquisites of
court by the beadle. (fn. 67) As late as 1812 Lord Northwick claimed the chattels of a tenant who had been
executed as a felon. (fn. 68)
The bailwick or liberty covered a wider area than
Harrow itself. Tenants by knight service in Hayes (fn. 69)
and Berrick (Oxon.) (fn. 70) held from the bailiwick of
Harrow and owed suit of court there. Perquisites are
recorded in 1236-7 (fn. 71) and courts at Harrow and
Hayes, held by bailiffs or by a serjeant, in 1242; (fn. 72)
a view of frankpledge is listed in 1273-4. (fn. 73) The
earliest extant court rolls for the archiepiscopal
manor of Harrow or Sudbury date from 1315. The
rolls are complete from 1378 to 1721 and the court
books from 1687 to 1913. (fn. 74)
A court was held at Weald Wood in 1316 (fn. 75) and
another at Roxeth in 1529 (fn. 76) but most courts were
probably held at the principal demesne manor of
Sudbury, which from the 14th century was also called
Sudbury Court. (fn. 77) The most important court, the leet
and view of frankpledge, was usually held in the
spring, and a second general court was held in the
autumn. Other courts baron were held during the year,
originally every three weeks. (fn. 78) The annual number
of courts, sometimes 9 (1384, 1395) or 10 (1394) in
the 14th century, was gradually reduced to one or two
by the 17th century. Thus an early-18th-century
custumal listed suit at two general courts, at Easter
and Michaelmas, as an obligation of head tenants. (fn. 79)
From the 14th century suitors could pay 2d. for each
non-appearance or 1s. for relaxation of suit for a year.
Whether the customary under-setters owed suit of
court was one of the points at issue in the 17th and
18th centuries. (fn. 80)
Most customary offences were presented at the
view of frankpledge, when the ale-tasters also made
presentments. Criminal jurisdiction was exercised
in the early views. From 1514 constables were appointed but invariably they reported that all was
well. (fn. 81) The courts exercised the franchisal rights of
the archbishop (fn. 82) until 1631. Thereafter, perhaps
because a new lord coincided with a new steward, (fn. 83)
the only presentments were for default of suit of
court. Business became entirely concerned with
property transactions, while all other jurisdiction
passed to the county and national courts. In 1660
two men who carried off some of Sir Gilbert Gerard's
wood were convicted at the sessions of the peace,
although they were to be punished at the whippingpost in Harrow. (fn. 84)
The chief early officials were the reeves and
beadles, head tenants chosen at the Michaelmas
general court by the homage. Reeves received 50s.
and beadles 10s. a year. The reeve collected all the
rents and presented them for audit; the beadle
collected fines, amercements, and other perquisites
of the court. (fn. 85) Presentments were made according to
tithings, organized by hamlets and represented by
the chief pledges or headboroughs. In 1316 Pinner,
the largest hamlet, had at least three headboroughs,
Harrow Weald and Roxeth at least two, Sudbury
and Wembley two each, and Preston and Kenton
one each. (fn. 86) Alperton, Uxendon, (fn. 87) Greenhill, (fn. 88) and
Hatch End (fn. 89) were sometimes separate tithings. By
the 16th century tithings had crystallized into six,
for Pinner, Harrow Weald, Roxeth, Sudbury, Kenton
and Preston, and Wembley and Alperton. Each had
headboroughs, one or two ale-tasters or ale-conners,
and a constable, all generally elected at the Easter
view of frankpledge. Ale-tasters rarely made presentments in the mid 17th century and appear to have
been dropped soon afterwards. Constables and headboroughs, one of each for each of the six tithings, continued to be appointed until 1896. (fn. 90)
The charter of 1233-40 did not specify perquisites
of court although it mentioned 'homages, pannages,
and other services of the church' among the appurtenances of the rectory. (fn. 91) The court rolls of Rectory or
Harrow-on-the-Hill manor, with a few gaps, are
complete from 1349 until 1678; court books are
complete from 1629 to 1896. (fn. 92) Courts at Harrow-onthe-Hill were probably held at the rectory itself. The
homage could then dine at the lord's expense, (fn. 93) and
a lease of part of the 'rectory house' in 1682 provided
for entertainment for the lord and tenants at two rent
dinners and one audit dinner. (fn. 94) In the 14th century
there was often only one court a year, a view of frankpledge and court baron, held in the winter or spring.
In the 15th century there were more courts (as many
as seven in 1483), when the view could be at any
time, but after c. 1493 there were only one or two,
the view in the spring and a general court or court
baron at any other time. After Sudbury and Rectory
manors passed into the same hands, they were to
some extent worked as a unit. Usually only one court
a year, the view of frankpledge, was held for the
Rectory manor after the mid 16th century, nearly
always on the day after the Sudbury view. Occasionally a court baron, but never a general court, was
also held, again usually one day after a Sudbury
court. Thus the 18th-century custumal mentioned
one general court of the Rectory manor, held at
Easter. (fn. 95)
As with Sudbury court, the fine for non-attendance was 2d. The Rectory court rolls mention several
offences not recorded at Sudbury: two butchers were
presented in 1507 for selling expensive and unhealthy meat and a tawer was presented for selling
shoes which were insufficiently tanned. (fn. 96) In the 14th
century there were many presentments for violence
and failure to perform feudal services. Development
after the mid 16th century followed that of the main
manor. One head tenant was elected by the homage
to act as reeve and beadle, for 6s. 8d. a year. (fn. 97) A
woman was elected in 1507. (fn. 98) There were usually
two headboroughs, two ale-tasters, and a constable.
Two constables are mentioned as early as 1368 (fn. 99) and
constables presented regularly at the view after 1419. (fn. 1)
The Prioress of Kilburn had a court on her
Wembley manor (fn. 2) and courts baron were held by
Wembley manor at the end of the 18th century. (fn. 3)
There is one roll of a court baron of the manor of
Uxendon, held in 1608. (fn. 4)
Parish government: Harrow.
For Harrow,
churchwardens' accounts and rate-books (fn. 5) date from
1729, with gaps for the years 1768-72. The overseers'
accounts are complete from 1739 until 1831, except for
1798-9, and there are poor-rate books from 1684 until
1933. (fn. 6) Accounts of the surveyors of the highway date
from 1768 to 1831 and highway-rate books from 1745
to 1868. (fn. 7) Vestry minutes begin in 1704 with a gap
between 1757 and 1793. (fn. 8) Parish officers, were, however, active long before these dates. Two keepers and
guardians of the goods of the parish church of St.
Mary are mentioned in 1467. (fn. 9) There was a parish
clerk by 1521-2, (fn. 10) and two churchwardens signed
the parish registers as early as 1559. (fn. 11) By 1622 Pinner
had its own parish officers.
A vestry was mentioned in 1701. (fn. 12) The annual
number of vestry meetings (fn. 13) gradually rose from
five or six in the first decade of the 18th century to
twenty in 1829. By the early 20th century the vestry
met every three or five years. The last meeting was
held in 1924, (fn. 14) by which date the vestry had been
superseded by the parish church council, formed in
1911. (fn. 15) Meetings were held at first in inns and later
usually in the chancel and, after 1849, (fn. 16) in the vestry
of the church. The vicar usually presided and attendance varied from six or seven in 1704 to 22 in
May 1724. Most of the business concerned outrelief or the workhouse. The vestry authorized rates
for the church, the poor, and the highways. It kept a
firm control over the parish officers. In 1822, for
example, they were forbidden to incur any expenses
in eating and drinking upon parish business without
previous permission.
The vicar and the vestry each elected a churchwarden. One churchwarden (fn. 17) dealt with Harrow
Town, Roxeth, Sudbury, Wembley, and Alperton,
and the other with Harrow Weald, Greenhill,
Kenton, and Preston. Each collected the churchrate, usually 2d. to 6d. in the £ in the 18th century,
and spent it in a variety of ways, on the church, on
travelling, on killing vermin-pole-cats, for example,
were still being caught in the 1820s-and on the
salary of the parish clerk. The churchwardens continued to pay the salaries of parish officials into the
20th century.
The surveyors of the highway, first mentioned in
1718, were elected annually by the vestry. The office
tended to run in respectable families, notably the
Greenhills, Hills, and Blackwells. (fn. 18) In 1745 there
were three surveyors and three parochial wards:
Harrow Town and Roxeth; Sudbury, Wembley, and
Alperton; and Harrow Weald, Greenhill, Kenton,
and Preston. By 1750 a fourth surveyor had been
appointed, the third ward being divided into Weald
and Greenhill, and Kenton and Preston. (fn. 19) A highway-rate, levied by the vestry, is first mentioned in
1722 when it was 1d. in the £. (fn. 20) By 1780 it had been
raised to 6d. which thereafter remained the usual
rate. (fn. 21) From 1745 the rate was fixed retrospectively
at the Quarter Sessions. After finding the highway
surveyors' accounts unsatisfactory in 1823, the
vestry appointed a salaried man to superintend the
highways and act as an assistant overseer. (fn. 22)
From 1684 (fn. 23) to 1896 (fn. 24) three overseers of the poor
were appointed by the vestry, one for Harrow Town,
Roxeth, and Sudbury, one for Harrow Weald and
Greenhill, and one for Wembley, Alperton, Kenton,
and Preston. (fn. 25) A salaried assistant overseer appointed
in 1832 had to live within ¼ mile of Harrow Town,
to take his instructions from the vestry and the overseers, to interview applicants for relief, to employ
and pay labourers, and to collect rates. (fn. 26) For a short
period from 1744 (fn. 27) two stewards were appointed
each month by the vestry, mainly to deal with the
poor, and they alone signed most of the vestry
minutes. The unpaid stewards, bearing an increasingly heavy burden, were apparently replaced,
probably after 1754, by a master of the workhouse,
who farmed the inmates and, by the 1820s, all the
poor in the parish. His annual payment, £590 in
1795 and £1,400 in 1821, varied with the number of
inmates and the general level of prices; in 1829 the
rate was 4s. 6d. a head a week. The farmer had to
provide for the poor at the workhouse at his own
expense, to provide for the poor of the parish and,
sometimes, to teach the workhouse children. In
return he could benefit from the labour of the workhouse inmates. (fn. 28) A salaried medical officer was appointed as 'surgeon, apothecary, and midwife to the
poor' in 1810. (fn. 29)
The five Harrow constables, (fn. 30) though appointed by
the manor court, received their instructions and, in
1761, their 'new painted staves' from the high
constable, (fn. 31) but were primarily parish officers who
received expenses from the overseers. (fn. 32) Some of
their equipment, including in 1824 a 'new pair of
handcuffs', (fn. 33) belonged to the parish. The beadle, a
salaried official until 1876, (fn. 34) became more completely a
parish official than the constable, being elected by the
vestry and occasionally combining his office with that
of sexton. (fn. 35) He too received expenses, mainly for serving summonses and attending magistrates' courts. (fn. 36)
He also received his uniform, in 1852 a blue cloth
waistcoat and a 'Paris hat'. (fn. 37) Most police action was
executed by the constable but the beadle provided
straw for the cage in 1825 (fn. 38) and was instructed to
apprehend beggars in 1820. (fn. 39)
By the 1850s and 1860s salaried parish officials
included the parish clerk, beadle, collector, lamplighter, organ blower, organist, bell-ringers, vestry
clerk, and sexton. (fn. 40) Salaries were still being paid to
the last four in 1921. (fn. 41) A woman who was elected
sexton in 1866 had to find an assistant, her duties
being mainly confined to pew opening. (fn. 42)
Vagrancy in the 16th and 17th centuries was dealt
with by the county and manorial courts. In 1559 it
was proclaimed in the Harrow court that no unmarried or masterless man or woman was to remain
in the parish for more than 14 days on pain of a fine
of £1. (fn. 43) In 1574 six vagrants taken at Harrow-onthe-Hill were sentenced at the sessions to be flogged
and burnt on the right ear. (fn. 44) By the 18th century
much of the responsibility had passed to the parish
vestry and its officers. A girl who had 'eloped' from
her mistress in 1744 was brought back by force (fn. 45) and
servants who entered clandestinely from other
parishes were sent back. (fn. 46) Many settlement certificates survive, (fn. 47) but the number of removals decreased until by 1834 there was only one. (fn. 48)
During the late 17th and early 18th centuries poor
relief took the form of monthly allowances, usually
in money but occasionally in clothes or fuel. (fn. 49)
Poverty was alleviated by remitting or reducing
rents (fn. 50) and by providing rent-free parish houses for
poor widows. (fn. 51) These 'poor houses' survived until
the vestry's decision to sell them in 1845. (fn. 52) The
church-house also served as a poor-house. (fn. 53) After an
unusually large meeting in 1724 a workhouse was
built in West Street, opposite the Crown Inn, with
material from the old church-house. (fn. 54) Even under
the farming-out system the parish officers exercised
considerable control. In 1822 the churchwardens
and overseers laid down in detail the food to be
given to each workhouse inmate: a breakfast of milk
porridge, broth, or water gruel, dinner and supper of
2 oz. of butter or 4 oz. of cheese with bread, made of
'good second flour', and 'wholesome butcher's meat'
for three days' and pea soup for one day's dinner.
Each person was allowed 3 pints of beer a day. (fn. 55) In
1776 the workhouse was said to accommodate 60
persons. (fn. 56) The average number rose gradually from
32 in 1758 to 43 in 1770 and 1780, and 49 in 1821, but
the figures conceal seasonal variations, for in March
1819 there were 105 inmates. In summer and late
autumn, when winter wheat was sown, numbers
were low, while in winter and spring unemployment
caused a large intake. (fn. 57)
Outdoor relief continued alongside the indoor
relief provided by the workhouse. Money allowances
increased from 19 cases in 1724 (fn. 58) to 69 in 1821. (fn. 59) In
1795 the average allowance was 1s. 6d. a week but
with rising prices this increased and in 1800 an
allowance was made of 1s. 6d. a week for every child
under 14. (fn. 60) In October 1821, compared with 35
people in the workhouse, there were 69 receiving
outdoor relief of from 1s. to 8s. a week. (fn. 61) In 1834,
out of £2,689 spent on the poor, (fn. 62) £1,607 went on
outdoor relief, consisting of £680 paid to widows and
bastards, £424 on casual relief, usually of the sick,
and £503 on labour on the roads. (fn. 63)
To deal with the increased number of unemployed
during the agricultural depression, the vestry reduced outdoor relief and increased parish work, on
the roads and at the mill or picking oakum. (fn. 64) Ablebodied paupers had repaired the highway in the mid
18th century but their wages are not recorded. (fn. 65) In
1817 15 male paupers were paid 1s. 6d. to 2s. a day
for such work. (fn. 66) In 1831 there was a scheme to send
single men from the workhouse to parishioners who
agreed to employ and presumably pay them at a rate
fixed by the vestry. From December 1831 out-relief
was steadily reduced from 7s. a week (already reduced) for a man and his wife, 8s. for a family with
one child, 9s. for two children, 10s. for three children,
and 11s. for five or more children, until by 1835 a
man and wife received 5s. a week, a family with one
child 6s., with two to four children 7s., and with
five or more children 8s. (fn. 67) Paupers with dogs were
refused all relief. (fn. 68)
Apart from charities and exceptional measures (fn. 69)
the burden of poor relief was normally borne by the
poor-rate. (fn. 70) From 1684 (fn. 71) to 1722 twice yearly rates,
usually at 5d. in the £, raised £200-£300 each year.
From 1723 a 6d. rate was usual, the number of rates
varying from one in 1760, which raised £172, to
three in 1740, which raised £521. From 1800 to 1826
there were usually five or six rates, which raised
about £1,660-£2,040 a year, and the number increased from seven in 1827 to ten in 1831 and 1832,
finally bringing the total raised to £3,331. This was
during the depression which affected the ratepaying farmers, as well as the labourers. (fn. 72) Protests
reduced the number of rates to nine in 1833 and
1834, making the amount raised in the year before
the Poor Law Union £2,954. The 1834 Act confined
outdoor relief to the sick and old. The able-bodied
poor were offered work in the workhouse or in the
parish, at wages fixed by the guardians. Harrow
therefore spent less in casual relief and labour on the
roads in 1835 than in 1834; only widows' pensions
cost more. (fn. 73) Under the union there was a decline
from nine 6d. rates in 1835 to five in 1837 and 1839. (fn. 74)
In 1834-5 Harrow raised £2,888, of which £2,272
was spent on the poor; a year later £2,002 was raised
and £1,655 was spent. A sharp increase in 1841 was
due to the opening of the workhouse at Redhill and
to the large numbers applying for outdoor relief. The
poor-rate in Harrow was raised from 2s. 3d. to 3s. in
1841, when the corresponding expenditure mounted
from £1,960 to £2,820. (fn. 75) Expenditure, £2,309 in
1844, continued to rise until a new assessment of
Harrow was made in 1851. (fn. 76)
Parish government: Pinner.
Surviving parish
records for Pinner include churchwardens' accounts from 1622, with gaps from 1757 to 1810, (fn. 77) a
poor-rate book from 1773 to 1781, (fn. 78) and complete
vestry minutes from 1787 to 1925. (fn. 79) Pinner, however,
conducted its own administration long before it
became a separate ecclesiastical parish in 1766. (fn. 80)
From 1622 it had chapelwardens, overseers, and a
parish clerk. (fn. 81) In 1699 Pinner asserted its 'immemorable immunity from [Harrow's] church rate', (fn. 82) and
c. 1702-7 it was said to keep its own poor. (fn. 83) The
vestry existed by 1773. (fn. 84) In the 18th and early 19th
centuries there were usually one to four meetings a
year but by the 1830s there were six to eight. In April
1827 resolutions were signed by one man only, Major
William Abbs; in August there was an attendance of
66 to rescind them. (fn. 85) In the early 20th century the
vestry met once a year, the last meeting being in
1925. (fn. 86) Meetings seem to have been held, at least at
first, in the church (fn. 87) and generally were presided
over by the vicar. In 1810 a chimney, new ceiling,
and window were built for the vestry room, 'it being
before a wretched hole'. (fn. 88)
There were two chapel- or churchwardens, who
in 1696 were entitled 'the churchwardens of the
poor'. (fn. 89) Poor relief was entered in their accounts (fn. 90)
until 1773 (fn. 91) and they continued to pay small sums
until 1815, (fn. 92) after which they were more strictly
confined to church affairs. Surveyors of the highway
were mentioned in 1821. (fn. 93) In 1788 the two overseers
of the poor were to serve for two years. (fn. 94) An assistant
overseer was appointed at £12 a year in 1825 and £21
in 1829. (fn. 95)
From 1773 and probably earlier the vestry instructed the constable, although he was appointed
at Sudbury manor court. (fn. 96) The constable had to
execute special instructions, such as those against
fireworks (1818), drunkenness (1787 and 1830), or
the violation of the Sabbath (1831), (fn. 97) but his main
function was as a police official. Prisoners were kept
in the cage, which from c. 1775 to 1825 stood near
the site of Pinner Metropolitan Police Station. It was
moved and repaired in 1825, and in 1831 was ordered
to be taken to the workhouse premises. (fn. 98) There were
also stocks, at the corner of High Street and Bridge
Street. (fn. 99)
Other parish officials included a salaried sexton,
who in the late 17th century was nominated by the
churchwardens and later elected by the vestry, (fn. 1) and
a salaried parish clerk, who was nominated by the
vicar. (fn. 2) In 1801 'because of the great increase in the
number of rates and other business', a vestry clerk
was appointed at £10 a year, (fn. 3) and in 1810 a poundkeeper was appointed and allowed to take fees for
each beast impounded. (fn. 4) A medical officer for the poor
was paid II guineas a year in 1799 and 35 guineas in
1831. (fn. 5) In 1860 the churchwardens paid an organist,
parish clerk, collector, and vestry clerk. By 1880 a
pew-opener had replaced the last two; (fn. 6) there was a
verger by 1892. (fn. 7)
A 'workhouse' in Pinner, with accommodation for
30 people, mentioned in 1776, (fn. 8) was probably a poorhouse. The decision to erect a workhouse was taken
in 1789 and the proposal 'that the first story shall remain the same height as it now is' may mean that it
was built on to the old poor-house. (fn. 9) The workhouse
stood beside the River Pinn, near the George Inn.
It was converted into tenements in 1858, sold to the
Metropolitan Railway Co. in 1886, and demolished
soon afterwards. (fn. 10) The practice of contracting out
the poor for a fixed sum, in 1791 £240 a year and in
1818 £600, alternated with that of appointing masters
of the workhouse, whose annual salary was £30 in
1794, £40 in 1825, and £13 in 1832. (fn. 11)
Since the 17th century Pinner had provided
varied outdoor relief to its own poor and to those
passing through. (fn. 12) In 1789, for example, it paid for a
burial and for beer at the funeral, for a tin kettle, and
6d. to Mrs. Begg 'for altering Shuffle's girl's stays'. (fn. 13)
Even general poverty was usually relieved in kind: (fn. 14)
in 1799 a quartern loaf each week was allowed for
each child to parishioners earning less than 10s. a
week; pea soup was distributed to 95 families during
the winter of 1799-1800; cheap coal was sold to the
poor in 1806; bread was distributed or sold at a low
price in 1822 and 1825; drink, a butt of old port in
1821 and two dozen pint bottles of wine in 1826,
was bought for the sick; vaccination was another
benefit. Money allowances were also made, especially in the 19th century; in 1821 one man was given
as much as £1 1s. because he had a large family. In
September 1817, 25 people were receiving outdoor
relief. In 1800 all the able-bodied poor were to work
at the order of the parish officers or the master of the
workhouse and, of every 1s. earned, 1d. was to be
returned to adults and ½d. to children. In 1812 those
in the workhouse were to pick oakum, while a list of
able-bodied paupers receiving relief was to be pinned
to the church door and the overseers were to contract with local farmers to employ them. Bad
weather and economic depression caused unusually
large numbers of unemployed in 1817, 1823, and the
1830s. Temporary work was given in road-making
and after 1827 it was usual in winter to send paupers
to work for parishioners at a fixed wage. In October
1832 (fn. 15) all rate-payers were to employ and pay
labourers or to make up the balance in rates. In
December wages were raised from 8s. to 10s. a week,
and one labourer was assigned to every £50 rental of
house, 50 a. of meadow, or 30 a. of arable. Relief was
refused to those with dogs as early as 1826 and a year
later to boys who did not attend divine service twice
each Sunday.
Poor relief was probably financed in the 17th
century out of the church-rate, but from 1773 at the
latest a poor-rate, normally 6d. and occasionally 3d.
in the £, was levied between one and four times a
year. One 6d. rate raised £92 in 1773 and £97 in
1780. (fn. 16) In 1776 £272 was raised, probably by three
6d. rates, of which £245 was spent on relief. (fn. 17)
Pinner's reaction to the depression was not, like
Harrow's, to increase the number of rates, but to
raise the amount: in June 1831 it was 9d. and in
September it was raised to 1s. (fn. 18) In 1835 £820 was
raised and £773 spent on relief. Although only £487
was spent in 1836, (fn. 19) expenditure was £900 in 1844 (fn. 20)
and in 1845 Pinner joined with Harrow vestry in
requesting the Poor Law Commissioners to investigate the heavy cost of the Hendon Union. (fn. 21)
Local government after 1834.
In 1835 (fn. 22)
Harrow and Pinner became constituent parishes of
Hendon Union, created by the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834. Parish overseers were subordinated to the union officials, who included not only
the guardians, of whom four were elected by Harrow (fn. 23)
and two by Pinner (fn. 24) every spring, but a salaried
officer, responsible for outdoor relief. There was
tension between the parish and union and a separate
relieving officer for Harrow was appointed in 1838
following complaints by the vicar that visits to
Harrow were infrequent. The Harrow workhouse
was too small to be used as a union workhouse or as
an infirmary, as proposed by the guardians, and after
1840 it was occupied by children only. Although
Pinner workhouse was used to house paupers until
1858, (fn. 25) the main union workhouse was in Hendon.
Harrow Local Board of Health was created in
1850. Outbreaks of cholera in Hog Lane in 1847 and
1848 resulted, at the instigation of Harrow School
and its surgeon, Dr. Thomas Hewlett, in an inquiry (fn. 26)
which revealed the insanitary conditions of the most
populous part of the parish and the need for such a
board. (fn. 27) It first met under the chairmanship of the
vicar at Dr. Hewlett's house and later at other
private houses or at the Savings Bank. The board
administered about 1,000 a., comprising the whole
of Harrow-on-the-Hill, most of Greenhill and
Roxeth, and north Sudbury. (fn. 28) A clerk was appointed
at £20 a year and a surveyor and inspector of
nuisances at £40 a year. By 1870 there were committees for sanitation, sewage irrigation, slaughterhouses, gas, street-watering, street-naming, and the
fire engine. A medical officer of health was being
paid in 1877, and during the 1880s and 1890s committees were appointed to deal with roads and footpaths, plans and works, finance and rate defaulters,
legal questions and by-laws, boundaries, and allotments. A mortuary, public baths, and a steam roller
were also provided. The board was financed by
general and special district rates, and money was
raised by the sale of crops from the sewage farms.
The River Pinn, which flowed through the centre
of Pinner village, repeatedly flooded and harboured
rubbish. A nuisance removal committee was set up
in 1855, with a salaried inspector, (fn. 29) but in 1861 the
vestry decided not to reappoint it, probably for
financial reasons. (fn. 30) The duties of the committee
passed to Hendon Union Board of Guardians.
A nuisance removal committee for the part of
Harrow parish outside Harrow Local Board District
flourished from 1855 to 1865, when it relinquished
its duties to Hendon Union Board. (fn. 31) The board's
sanitary functions passed to Hendon Rural Sanitary
Authority, which was set up under the Public
Health Act of 1872. (fn. 32)
Until 1863 the responsibility for roads was divided
among several authorities: the Metropolitan Roads
Commission, (fn. 33) Harrow Local Board of Health,
Harrow highway parish, which had four surveyors,
and Pinner parish, which had one surveyor. In 1863
the last two were absorbed into Edgware Highway
Board, created by the Highway Act of that year. (fn. 34)
The board's district consisted of parishes in Hendon
Union, each of which appointed waywardens in place
of the surveyors: Harrow highway parish had two
and Pinner one. (fn. 35) Pinner vestry claimed that its roads
were excellently maintained at moderate expense and
in 1866 it asked for the separation of Pinner from
Edgware Highway District, (fn. 36) but the application
failed and costs steadily increased, especially after
turnpike trusts were transferred from the Metropolitan Roads Commission to Edgware Highway
Board and to Harrow Local Board (fn. 37) in 1872. (fn. 38)
Complaints to the waywardens of the board were
often still referred to the vestry. (fn. 39) After 1879 charges
were apportioned among the parishes according to
their rateable value (fn. 40) and rates were collected in
Harrow by the assistant overseer instead of by the
waywardens. (fn. 41) Harrow and Pinner contributed over
70 per cent. of the district's rates. (fn. 42)
Edgware Highway Board was superseded by
Hendon Rural Sanitary Authority in 1879. (fn. 43) Harrow
vestry accordingly reorganized its rates into categories: the poor-rate, which embraced police and
school board rates; general expenses (highway and
establishment charges); and special expenses of the
rural sanitary authority. Two assistant overseers
were appointed, one for Harrow Local Board of
Health and the other for Harrow Highway District.
The first collected the poor-rate and executed all the
orders of the Local Government Board and the
Board of Guardians of Hendon Union. The second
collected the poor-rate and all separate rates for
Hendon Rural Sanitary Authority, and executed
their orders and those of the Hendon guardians.
Each assistant overseer received £2 10s. for every
£100 collected. (fn. 44)
Under the Burials Act of 1852, (fn. 45) burial boards
were set up in the parishes of Pinner in 1856, (fn. 46) St.
John's, Wembley, in 1883, (fn. 47) St. Mary's, Harrow-onthe-Hill, in 1884, (fn. 48) Holy Trinity, Wealdstone, in
1888, (fn. 49) and Christ Church, Roxeth, in 1899. (fn. 50)
Harrow vestry appointed a boundary committee, (fn. 51)
which recommended in 1869 that perambulations
should take place every 7 years or, where there was
much building, every two to three years. Under the
Lighting and Watching Act of 1833 (fn. 52) lighting committees were set up in Wealdstone in 1889, (fn. 53) and
in St. John's, Wembley in 1890. (fn. 54)
Under the Local Government Act of 1894 (fn. 55)
Harrow Local Board of Health District became
Harrow-on-the-Hill U.D. The parish of Holy
Trinity, Wealdstone, became Wealdstone U.D., (fn. 56)
an area of 2,072 a. To the south, Wembley, Sudbury,
Alperton, Preston, south Kenton, and Kingsbury
parish became Wembley U.D. (fn. 57) Hendon R.D. was
formed out of those parishes in Hendon Rural
Sanitary Authority which had not been converted
into urban districts, the two largest being Pinner
(3,791 a.) and Harrow Weald (2,384 a.). By an Act
of 1899 Harrow Weald Common was to be administered by the Harrow Weald conservators, appointed
by the four new district councils and by the parish
councils of Pinner and Harrow Weald. (fn. 58) Lack of
space induced authorities to press for more land. (fn. 59)
Harrow-on-the-Hill U.D., which was developed
earliest, successfully applied in 1895 for an additional
1,100 a., which gave it the whole of Roxeth and most
of Greenhill, bringing its total acreage to 2,197. (fn. 60) A
small part of northern Greenhill was surrendered to
Wealdstone U.D. Between 1895 and 1914 Wealdstone developed most rapidly of all and therefore
often sought a realignment of boundaries. Initially
it had hoped to include Harrow Weald, but the
opposition of prominent residents proved too powerful. A minor adjustment at Hindes Road in 1902 (fn. 61)
left Harrow-on-the-Hill with 2,028 a., Wealdstone
with 1,061 a., Pinner with 2,782 a., and Harrow
Weald with 2,373 a. In 1912 a petition by Wealdstone for an extra 2,795 a., mostly in Harrow Weald,
was accepted by the county council but disallowed
by the Local Government Board, (fn. 62) and various
schemes for more land were unsuccessfully presented in 1926. (fn. 63) Separation from Kingsbury (fn. 64) left
Wembley with 4,564 a., and in 1928 Harrow-onthe-Hill U.D. gained an extra 101 a., part of Mount
Park estate in Northolt parish. (fn. 65)
Harrow-on-the-Hill U.D.C. at first comprised
nine members. (fn. 66) At the beginning of the 20th
century its nine committees were reduced to three,
arranged according to the permanent officers, the
clerk, surveyor, and inspector, and in 1903 the
number of councillors was increased to 12. (fn. 67) By 1910
there were still three standing committees, as well as
a by-law committee and special committees for Lowlands and Harrow recreation grounds. In the last
years of its existence, 1933-4, the council still worked
through committees attached to the clerk and surveyor, but separate committees for housing, public
health, and maternity and infant welfare had replaced the inspector's committee; there were also
six other committees. Income rose from £6,023 in
1895-6 to £17,900 in 1910 and £37,615 in 1928,
while expenditure mounted from £6,981 to £16,184,
and then to £50,814. (fn. 68)
Wealdstone U.D.C., which consisted of 12 councillors, first met in the boys' school at Wealdstone. (fn. 69)
In 1895 a sanitary inspector and building inspector
were appointed and four committees were formed.
By 1896 there were five more committees, a medical
officer of health, and a collector. The committees had
been reduced to three by 1901 and a new one, appointed in that year, had been absorbed by 1910. In 1933
there were eight standing committees. Income for the
first year was £1,400 and total expenditure £2,805.
By 1910 the figures were £9,505 and £11,958, and
by 1928 £28,547 and £38,018. (fn. 70)
The 12 members of Wembley U.D.C. first met in
the workmen's hall in Wembley. (fn. 71) Three standing
committees had been increased to six by 1896.
Officers included a clerk, a medical officer of health,
a treasurer, and one man to act as engineer, highway
surveyor, inspector of nuisances, and building surveyor. Parish overseers of the poor, 4 for Wembley
and 3 for Kingsbury, were appointed early in 1895,
and an assistant overseer was appointed soon afterwards. The early meetings were often turbulent, (fn. 72)
mainly because Kingsbury, with only three councillors, alleged that all the revenue was spent on
Wembley. Premises on the corner of Harrow Road
and St. John's Road were leased as offices in 1896,
but the heavy expense of the Wembley Park sewerage
scheme caused further dissension and in 1897
Kingsbury became a separate assessment area,
leaving Wembley to pay a special sewerage rate.
In 1900 Kingsbury became a separate district and
Wembley U.D.C. was reduced to nine councillors,
with authority over Wembley civil parish. (fn. 73) The
council formed only three committees in 1910 but a
town planning committee was soon added and in
1911 a building inspector and an assistant surveyor
were appointed. This was the beginning of Wembley's Town Planning Scheme, which was largely put
into effect during the 1920s. (fn. 74) In 1927 Wembley
U.D. was divided into six wards, Alperton, Sudbury,
Kenton, Wembley Central, Wembley Hill, and
Wembley Park, and the number of councillors was
increased to 21. (fn. 75) At the same time four more
committees were appointed. (fn. 76) The income for the
combined parishes of Wembley and Kingsbury in
the year 1895-6 was £3,465. (fn. 77) In 1910 it was £9,806
from Wembley alone. (fn. 78)
Pinner and Harrow formed two-thirds of Hendon
R.D. and by 1926 Pinner's rateable value was greater
than that of all the other parishes together. (fn. 79) The
rural district had eleven councillors, five of them
elected by Pinner and two by Harrow Weald. The
parishes enjoyed some autonomy through their own
councils, each of 9 or 10 councillors. By 1930 the
rural district council employed a clerk, an engineer
and surveyor, a valuation officer, a sanitary inspector,
and a medical officer of health. (fn. 80) Separate parish
accounts recorded income collected by overseers, and
general and special expenses. In 1910-11 the annual
income of Hendon R.D.C. for general expenses was
£6,584 and for special expenses £5,991. Of the latter
£2,800 went to Pinner, mainly to repay loans made for
the sewage works, and £890 was paid to Harrow
Weald. (fn. 81) Ten years later Hendon R.D.C. had a total
income from the parochial general rate of £8,187. Of
this Pinner took £3,811 and Harrow Weald £1,681. (fn. 82)
The special rate was abolished in 1930 and replaced
by one general rate.
A district rate of 2s. 10d. in the £ was levied in the
first year of Harrow-on-the-Hill U.D., as in the last
year of Harrow Board of Health. For the same year,
1895-6, the rate for Wealdstone and Wembley urban
districts was 3s. The peculiar circumstances of
Wembley forced a rate of 7s. in 1898, but there was a
general rise: in Wealdstone to 5s. in 1902 and in
Harrow-on-the-Hill to 4s. in 1903. Thereafter there
was a decline until in 1910 the rate was 2s. 8d. in
Harrow-on-the-Hill, 2s. 9d. in Wealdstone, and 3s.
in Wembley. Rates had risen to a new peak by 1922,
when they were 4s. 10d. in Harrow-on-the-Hill,
4s. 6d. in Wealdstone, 5s. 4d. in Wembley, and
3s. 7d. in Harrow Weald. By 1928 they had dropped
to 3s. 8d. in Harrow-on-the-Hill, 3s. 10d. in Wealdstone, and 2s. 6d. in Wembley. At this date the
district rate represented rather less than half the
total rate. After 1930 different accounting gives only
the total rate, which in 1933 was 8s. 4d. in Harrowon-the-Hill, 8s. 9d. in Wealdstone, 9s. 4d. in Wembley, 8s. 11d. in Harrow Weald, and 8s. 8d. in Pinner. (fn. 83)
In 1929 Hendon R.D.C., frustrated in its townplanning schemes by its boundary with Harrow-onthe-Hill and Wealdstone, proposed a Greater Harrow
Urban District. (fn. 84) Five years later the Middlesex
Review Order replaced the existing authorities by
two new urban districts. Harrow U.D. was formed
by amalgamating the urban districts of Harrow-onthe-Hill and Wealdstone with the parishes of Pinner,
Harrow Weald, and Great and Little Stanmore from
Hendon R.D. Wembley U.D. was formed from the
old urban districts of Wembley and Kingsbury. (fn. 85)
The western boundary was straightened, giving a
small part of Ealing to Harrow and part to Wembley.
The Brent ceased to be the southern boundary and
part of Willesden was incorporated into Wembley.
A rationalization of the boundary between Harrow
and Wembley gave all the playing fields up to
Watford Road to Harrow. (fn. 86) As a result Harrow U.D.
consisted of 12,555 a.; (fn. 87) Wembley was 6,284 a.,
until a further adjustment in 1938 brought its total
to 6,294 a.

Urban District (Later Borough And Later London Borough) Of Harrow
Or, a fess arched vert; in chief a pile gules charged with a clarion or, on the dexter side of the flames proper, and on the sinister side a quill pen sable; and in the base of them shield a hurst of trees growing out of a grassy mount [Granted 1938]
Harrow U.D. was divided into 12 wards: Harrowon-the-Hill and Greenhill, Harrow Weald, Headstone, Kenton, Pinner North, Pinner South, Roxeth,
West Harrow, Wealdstone North, Wealdstone
South, Stanmore North, and Stanmore South, each
with three councillors. (fn. 88) The Harrow (Wards and
Councillors) Order, made in 1948 by the Middlesex
County Council, increased the number of wards to
15 and of councillors to 45. One new ward, Roxbourne, was formed out of Pinner South and Roxeth.
The other two, Belmont and Queensbury, were
created from Kenton,
Stanmore North, and
Stanmore South. (fn. 89) Although incorporation was
mentioned in 1935, (fn. 90) it
was not until 1954 that
Harrow U.D. became a
municipal borough. (fn. 91) In
1935 there were offices at
Harrow Weald for the surveyor's, treasurer's, and
clerk's departments, in
Wealdstone for the valuation and housing departments, and in London
Road, Harrow-on-theHill, for the public health
department. (fn. 92) By 1946
there were council offices
at Harrow Weald Lodge
and in High Street,
Harrow-on-the-Hill, but
Stanmore had replaced
Wealdstone for the third
office. There were at that date five departments,
those of the solicitor and clerk of the council, the
engineer and surveyor, public health, the treasurer,
and valuation. In 1946 there were eight standing
committees, 17 sub-committees, and five other committees. (fn. 93) By 1959 there were 17 committees and
31 sub-committees, which dealt mainly with housing
and education. There were still only five departments, education having replaced valuation, but
these employed 31 senior staff. (fn. 94)

Borough of Wembley
Vert, two seaxes crossed saltirewise passing through a Saxon crown or [Granted 1938]
Wembley U.D., which was incorporated as
Wembley Municipal Borough in 1937, was divided
into 12 wards, Wembley
Central, Wembley Park,
Tokyngton, Alperton,
Kenton, Preston, Sudbury, Sudbury Court, Roe
Green, Fryent, Chalkhill,
and the Hyde, the last four
being formed out of
Kingsbury parish. (fn. 95) At the
first meeting in 1934, (fn. 96) attended by 12 new councillors elected from the
wards, 11 standing committees and 3 sub-committees were appointed.
At incorporation the
governing body was
designated a mayor, 12 aldermen, and 36 councillors.
The foundation stone of Wembley (later Brent)
Town Hall, in Forty Lane, was laid in 1937 and
the building, consisting of offices, public hall, and
library, was opened in 1939. (fn. 97) By 1959-60 there
were 13 standing committees, 10 special committees,
4 sub-committees for education, and five departments. (fn. 98)
In 1937 the rate in Harrow U.D. was 10s. in the £
and in Wembley Borough 10s. 2d. (fn. 99) During the
Second World War it was fixed at 11s. 8d. in
Harrow and 13s. in Wembley, (fn. 1) but it rose to 16s. 10d.
in Harrow by 1948 and in Wembley by 1949.
Harrow's rate dropped slightly in 1952 but reached
a maximum of 20s. 4d. in 1954 and 1955, while
Wembley's rose gradually to 20s. 10d. in 1954. A
new assessment reduced it in 1956 to 12s. 10d. in
Harrow and 13s. in Wembley but by 1961 it was 18s.
in Harrow and 18s. 2d. in Wembley. In 1963
Harrow's rates reached a new maximum of 19s. 10d.
Under a new assessment for 1964 Harrow had a rate
of 7s. 4d. and Wembley one of 6s. 9d., making it the
lowest rated borough in England and Wales. (fn. 2)

London Borough of Brent
Per chevron gules and vert, a chevron wavy argent between in dexter chief an orb and in sinister chief two swords crossed saltirewise or points upwards and in base two seaxes crossed saltirewise passing through a Saxon crown or [Granted 1965]
Under the London Government Act of 1963,
which took effect from 1965, Harrow Municipal
Borough became the London Borough of Harrow,
while Wembley and Willesden were combined as the
London Borough of Brent. In Harrow the wards
were slightly changed but the total acreage remained the same. The new council had 11 committees and 20 sub-committees, mostly connected with
the education and general purposes committees.
Harrow Weald Lodge remained the office of the
town clerk; the departments of the borough engineer
and surveyor and of the architect and planner were
in Stanmore, while that of the borough treasurer
and those for children and for education were housed
in Lyon Road, Harrow. (fn. 3) In its first year the London
Borough of Harrow received £4,251,245 income
out of a total raised from
the rates of £5,758,404. (fn. 4)
In 1966-7 the rate was
11s. 4d. (fn. 5) There were 26
wards in Brent, (fn. 6) of which
Sudbury, Kenton, Preston, Barham, Tokyngton,
Alperton, Queensbury,
Kingsbury, and Chalkhill lay within the old
borough of Wembley. In
1966 a plan was approved, with effect from
1968, to create 31 wards
in all. Sudbury, Barham,
Kenton, Kingsbury,
Queensbury, Tokyngton,
and Alperton were to be
altered; Chalkhill would
disappear, and new wards
were to be created: Roe
Green, Fryent, Town Hall, Wembley Park, Wembley Central, and two unnamed wards in the Sudbury
and Preston area. (fn. 7) In 1965 there were 60 councillors
and 11 committees. Wembley Town Hall, renamed
Brent Town Hall, remained the mayor's parlour and
the centre of local government, although there were
other offices in Willesden and at Brent House and
Chesterfield House on the Harrow Road in Wembley.
The fusion of Conservative, low-rated Wembley
with Labour-controlled and high-rated Willesden
caused difficulties, notably in a bitter dispute over
the development of Chalkhill. (fn. 8) In 1965, when the rate
was 10s. 2d., an estimated £9,699,000 was raised. (fn. 9)
In 1966-7 the rate was 10s. 7d. (fn. 10)
Public services.
Buckets and rakes for firefighting were owned by Pinner parish in 1702. (fn. 11)
Harrow had an engine, which was used with six men
at Uxendon in 1828 (fn. 12) and at the Grove in 1833,
when other engines had to be summoned from
Wembley, Stanmore, and Westminster. (fn. 13) An out
break of fire in 1838 at the headmaster's house at
Harrow School again revealed inadequacies: the
parish's manual engine was aided by another small
engine kept in the yard of Dr. Wordsworth's house,
by the Marquess of Abercorn's engine, and finally
by others from London and Brentford, but water ran
short and the house was burnt down. Expenses
amounted to £93 and after an investigation the vestry
acquired a new engine, repaired the old one, and
cleaned Harrow pond. The two engines, which
were kept in an engine-house in Hog Lane, (fn. 14) were
owned by the vestry until 1864 and afterwards
by Harrow Local Board of Health. (fn. 15) A fire station
was built at the southern end of High Street in
1877 (fn. 16) and extended in 1889. The strength of the
fire brigade was raised to 21 in 1895 and the station
was rebuilt in 1914. (fn. 17) Pinner for some time depended
upon fire hydrants but there was a fire brigade by
1881 and in the 1890s a manual engine was kept at
Pinner Hall and later at the George Inn. A fire
station was opened in 1903 at the Red Lion Inn to
house a steam fire engine. New fire brigade headquarters were opened in 1938 in Pinner Road. (fn. 18) One
aim of Wembley Lighting Committee, formed in
1890, was to provide fire appliances at Wembley
station, in East Lane, and at Alperton, (fn. 19) but it was
not until 1895 that Wembley U.D.C. acquired an
old manual engine from Harrow-on-the-Hill U.D.C.
The equipment was housed in a corrugated iron
shed in St. John's Road and manned by 12 volunteers. The brigade was given uniforms in 1909, when
a permanent fire station was sanctioned. (fn. 20) The fire
station is in Harrow Road, north of Wembley Hospital. Wealdstone U.D.C. set up a fire brigade committee in 1896 and made regular payments to the
fire brigade. (fn. 21) Control of the fire service passed to
the county council in 1948 (fn. 22) and to the Greater London Council in 1965. (fn. 23) In 1968 Kodak had its own
fire service which was sometimes used elsewhere. (fn. 24)
An association for the protection of property
flourished in Harrow from 1801 to 1826. (fn. 25) The
vestry opposed the Metropolitan Police Act in 1839,
fearing heavy expense, (fn. 26) and in 1843 Pinner followed
suit, (fn. 27) but both parishes became part of the Metropolitan Police District. A police station was built in
West Street, Harrow, but despite protests from
Pinner it was not until 1900 that a police station was
opened in Bridge Street, Pinner. (fn. 28) Police stations
were opened soon afterwards in High Road, Wembley, (fn. 29) and in High Street, Wealdstone, and, more
recently, in Northolt Road, South Harrow. (fn. 30)
There was a pesthouse in Harrow by the 18th
century; (fn. 31) it was sold in 1851. (fn. 32) A small infirmary
was built in 1773 on Sudbury Common by John
Hodsdon and Samuel Greenhill for 'such poor
persons as should be afflicted with infectious diseases or labour under dangerous accidents'. Later
the building was used as a casual ward, but by 1850
it was so dilapidated that it was pulled down. (fn. 33) In
1866 a cottage hospital was founded by Dr. W.
Hewlett, mainly to serve Harrow, Roxeth, and
Greenhill. It was managed by a board which included the Vicar of Harrow and the Headmaster of
Harrow School. The hospital originally comprised
two cottages on Roxeth Hill, which provided nine
beds, but in 1868 the landlady gave notice to quit. A
hospital with 11 beds, an operating room, and dispensary, was opened in Lower Road in 1872. A new site
on Roxeth Hill was purchased in 1905 and a new hospital, with 18 beds, was opened in 1907. (fn. 34) In 1910 it
was staffed by a matron and four nurses, and had an
annual expenditure of £799. In 1935, after extensions
in 1925, 1931, and 1934, there were 80 beds, a matron
and 30 nurses. (fn. 35) By 1966 it had 121 beds. (fn. 36) In 1871
Miss Anne Copland founded Copland Village
Hospital in the Harrow Road, opposite Blind (later
Park) Lane. She endowed it with £3,500, and appointed a medical officer at £50 a year and a matron
at £25 a year. The endowment proved inadequate;
after 1875 the hospital was frequently closed and
from 1883 no in-patients were admitted. The hospital
became a dispensary, its property vested in 1913 in
the Charity Commissioners. (fn. 37) A hospital for infectious diseases, later called Roxbourne Hospital, was
opened at Rayners Lane, Roxeth, in 1896. It was
financed by the councils of the surrounding urban
districts. (fn. 38) In 1946 when it had 25 beds it was run
as a unit with a hospital in Stanmore. (fn. 39) After the
National Health Act of that year it became a hospital
for the chronic sick. In 1966 it had 51 beds. (fn. 40)
Patients from Wembley went to London, Harrow,
and Willesden until 1924 when the council's public
health committee started a hospital fund. In 1925
the Copland Charity was incorporated into the
proposed hospital by a Charity Commission Scheme.
A site nearly opposite St. John's Church was
conveyed by George T. Barham in 1926 and Wembley Hospital opened in 1928. It was a voluntary
hospital, built with the help of King Edward VII's
Hospital Fund for London but entirely maintained
by local organizations, chiefly by an area contribution scheme: by 1933 there were 10,409 subscribers,
who paid 6d. a month and were entitled to free
treatment. The hospital opened with 22 beds and
was extended in 1932, 1934, 1937, 1938, 1940, and
1959, (fn. 41) until by 1966 there were 134 beds. (fn. 42) In
1948, when hospitals were grouped under management committees, there was a plan to rebuild
Charing Cross Hospital at Northwick Park. Harrow
and Wembley general hospitals, therefore, were
placed in the Charing Cross Hospital Group. When
a different site was found for Charing Cross Hospital
in 1959, the other two hospitals, together with
Grim's Dyke Rehabilitation Unit for about 40-50
patients, housed in Sir William Gilbert's house in
Harrow Weald (fn. 43) and formerly maintained by the
county council, were transferred to Harefield and
Northwood Group. Roxbourne Hospital, together
with Oxhey Grove in Oxhey Lane, Hatch End, a
hospital with 30 beds for the chronic sick, and
Harrow Chest Clinic in Station Road, belonged to
the Hendon Group. (fn. 44) The Northwick Park site was
reserved in 1961 for a large district hospital for 800
patients under the North-West Middlesex Regional
Board and a clinical research centre for the Medical
Research Council. (fn. 45) Building was in progress in
1967.
The new Harrow Local Board of Health (fn. 46) planned
to bring water to 2,000 people, but its survey in 1850
revealed that Harrow-on-the-Hill could not be
adequately supplied without heavy expense. The
board's sub-committees (fn. 47) registered lodging-houses
and slaughter-houses, and major sewerage works
were completed early in 1853. A surveyor and inspector of nuisances supervised the main sewers and
inspected all private drainage, and in 1852 it was
proposed to borrow £2,000 'for the perfect drainage'
of the district. Since many cottages had to buy water
at ½d. a bucket (fn. 48) or collect rainwater from their
gutters in underground tanks, (fn. 49) the newly formed
Harrow Waterworks Co. was permitted to lay pipes,
and a waterworks was built in Bessborough Road
after an Act had been passed in 1854. (fn. 50) The company
was taken over in 1884 by the Colne Valley Water
Co., (fn. 51) which retained the works but brought most
of the water by pipe from Bushey. (fn. 52)
In 1854 (fn. 53) Pinner vestry and the guardians of
Hendon Union, under the Nuisances Removal Act
of 1846, (fn. 54) resolved to clear the Pinn, to lay pipes and
to unblock footpaths. In 1858 114 orders were made to
clean and build cesspools and privies, many of which
drained into the river. Before the Colne Valley
Water Co. brought piped water, a lake and a pump
house south of All Saints' church supplied the new
Woodridings estate, (fn. 55) whose owners were constantly
pressed to provide adequate drainage. In heavy rain
the Pinn was often discoloured by streams from
slaughter-houses on the hill, and in 1857 it was
reported that 'the blood receptacle of the slaughterhouse is insufficient'. (fn. 56) The Hendon guardians, who
superseded the nuisances removal committee in
1861, appear to have been less assiduous. In 1864 the
vestry complained about the brook at the bottom of
the village and two years later pollution was held
responsible for epidemic sickness. The guardians
promised disinfectant, free medicine for diarrhoea,
and £10 to whitewash the houses of the poor. (fn. 57)
Insanitary conditions were blamed for the 'amount
of epidemic disease there always is in Harrow' by a
surgeon in 1870. (fn. 58) There were frequent complaints
about sewage and drainage under Harrow Local
Board during the 1870s and 1880s, when even
smallpox was attributed to bad smells. The sanitary
committee and surveyor appear to have been
conscientious, although faced with overcrowding and
old buildings as well as farm-yards which were too
close to the town. Gradually the board extended its
powers, controlling building and ordering houses
where smallpox had occurred to be disinfected. (fn. 59) The
Infectious Diseases (Notification) Act had been
adopted by 1889. (fn. 60) Among the authorities which
were responsible for public health in the part of
Harrow parish outside Harrow Local Board District, (fn. 61) Hendon Rural Sanitary Authority (1879-
94) had to provide the sewerage required by the
rapid spread of building, notably at Hatch End and
Roxborough. (fn. 62)
From 1894 to 1934 sewerage and drainage were
divided among four authorities, each with its own
farms and outfall works. Harrow-on-the-Hill U.D.
had inherited sewage farms at Greenhill (fn. 63) and in
Newton (Newden) Field, Roxeth, (fn. 64) and also sewage
tanks on Sudbury Hill. (fn. 65) Wealdstone U.D. built a
large sewage farm just over its eastern border. (fn. 66)
Wembley U.D. inherited a farm at Alperton and
established a new one at Wembley Park. (fn. 67) Hendon
R.D. had a sewage farm and outfall works in Pinner (fn. 68)
and sewage disposal works at Harrow Weald. (fn. 69) The
number of authorities, and especially their conjunction in the built-up area around Wealdstone,
necessitated joint action. Harrow-on-the-Hill's
Greenhill farm originally lay within Wealdstone; (fn. 70)
Wealdstone's works were in Harrow Weald. (fn. 71) In
1897 Willesden tried to build a sewage farm in
Wembley. (fn. 72) Drainage cut across the boundaries and
sometimes, as in the Wembley Park scheme, there
was a clash of interest within a district. The management of the sewage farm at Alperton was described
by a local inquiry investigator in 1899 as terrible. (fn. 73)
Sewage polluted the Brent and led to successful
actions by Greenford and Ealing urban districts
against Wembley in 1897 and 1898. Wembley also
had to pay for a sewerage scheme started by
Hendon Rural Sanitary Authority in Wembley
Park, (fn. 74) on which nearly £25,000 was spent by the
two authorities from 1894 to 1901. This scheme,
which involved tunnelling under Harrow Road, the
railway, and the Grand Junction Canal, was not
finished until 1924. (fn. 75)
Under the West Middlesex Sewerage and Sewage
Disposal Scheme of 1933, 27 sewage works were
replaced by trunk sewers and one central works at
Mogden, which since 1936 have served the whole
area. (fn. 76) The former sewage farms were generally
turned into recreation grounds or allotments, although at Alperton a refuse disposal works was
opened in 1936 on the old site. From 1924 Wembley's
refuse had been sent by barge at considerable expense to Yiewsley and West Drayton. In 1935 a
public cleansing committee of Wembley council was
set up and a cleansing officer appointed. This was
Frank Fitton, who drew up the scheme for a refuse
works and who invented 'Wembley Pudding', which
was made there and sold as animal fodder. (fn. 77)
A public meeting discussed lighting in 1855 and a
local ironmonger, John Chapman, undertook to
build a small gas-works at Roxeth. Harrow Local
Board of Health, which had already noted the problem of lighting in 1850, (fn. 78) encouraged him and in 1856
gas lamps replaced the oil street lamps. The gas-works
were reconstructed in 1872 on the formation of the
Harrow Gas, Light, and Coke Co. Ltd., which was
incorporated in 1873 as Harrow District Gas Co. and,
by an Act of 1894, (fn. 79) joined with Stanmore Gas Co.
to become Harrow and Stanmore Gas Co. In 1924 it
was absorbed by Brentford Gas Co., which in turn
was taken over by the Gas, Light, and Coke Co. in
1926. (fn. 80) Pinner Gas Co., set up by 1881, (fn. 81) built gasworks in Eastcote Road (fn. 82) and was absorbed by the
Gas, Light, and Coke Co. in 1929. (fn. 83)
At first the streets of Harrow-on-the-Hill were
lighted only during the winter. In 1870 the local
board agreed, on conditions, that private roads
should be lighted. (fn. 84) Pinner High Street had six gas
lamps by 1880. In 1894 Pinner's traditional aversion
to high rates prevented it from adopting the Lighting and Watching Act of 1833, (fn. 85) but by 1901 money
was being paid by the parish to the Pinner and
Harrow gas companies. (fn. 86) The ratepayers of Holy
Trinity, Wealdstone, adopted the Act in 1889 and
raised over £100 by a rate of 3¾d. in the £ on houses
and 1¼d. on land. (fn. 87) Those of St. John's, Wembley,
appointed a lighting and fire-fighting committee in
1890 but its estimate of £230 was too ambitious and
in 1893 a more modest target was adopted. Gas mains
and street lamps were beginning to be laid in 1894
although Wembley still had only six gas lamps in
1895. (fn. 88) All the new urban districts and Hendon R.D.
adopted the Lighting and Watching Act and supplied
public gas lighting. Harrow Local Board had an
electric lighting loan account by 1893. (fn. 89) Private Acts
provided for electricity in Harrow in 1894, (fn. 90) and in
Wealdstone, Pinner, and Harrow Weald in 1906. (fn. 91)
Harrow Electric Light and Power Co., which had
a generating station at Harrow-on-the-Hill, was
authorized to supply Wealdstone U.D. in 1911. (fn. 92)
Pinner was supplied by the Colne Valley Electric
Supply Co. in 1913 (fn. 93) and Wembley by the North
Metropolitan Electric Power Supply Co. in 1920. (fn. 94)
Cemeteries were provided by burial boards at
Paines Lane, Pinner, in 1860, (fn. 95) next to St. John's
churchyard, Wembley, in 1885, (fn. 96) at Pinner Road,
North Harrow, in 1887, and at Roxeth Hill and
Eastcote Lane, Roxeth, in 1900. (fn. 97) Local authorities
provided those at Byron Road, Wealdstone, in 1899,
Perivale Lane, Alperton, in 1928, (fn. 98) Pinner Road,
Pinner, in 1931, and Clamp Hill, Harrow Weald, in
1937.