GROWTH OF BRENTFORD.
The town grew
up as Old Brentford in Ealing parish and New
Brentford in Hanwell. It was united under a local
board of health in 1874 and from 1894 lay within
Brentford U.D., later said to consist of 1,091 a.
from Old Brentford and 217 a. from New Brentford. (fn. 53) Despite Brentford's antiquity, there were
no substantial grounds for the claim that it was
the county town, first made in 1789: the county
court had sometimes sat there, as in 1378 and
1608, and Middlesex's parliamentary elections
took place there in the 18th and 19th centuries. (fn. 54)
The name Brentford was recorded from 705
and has generally been assumed to refer to the
ford over the Brent or 'holy water', although it
may have referred to the crossing of the Thames.
The Ham was an Anglo-Saxon name, denoting a
hamm or piece of flat land beside the river. The
parts of the settlement in Ealing and Hanwell
respectively were distinguished as East Brentford
and West Brentford by 1294 and as Old and New
Brentford by c. 1500. (fn. 55) New Brentford, whose
buildings met those of Old Brentford at the
Borough, (fn. 56)
c. 1170 was called Bordwadestone,
presumably Bord's tun or farm, (fn. 57) and some early
13th-century references to Brentford were to Old
Brentford alone. (fn. 58) Bordwadestone or Bordestone
came to be the name of a manor, from the 16th
century called Boston, whose boundary in 1749
was taken as that of St. Lawrence's or New
Brentford parish. Brentford End was the name of
a settlement on the west bank of the Brent, in
Isleworth. (fn. 59)
A Neolithic site, perhaps of a flint workshop,
has been identified at New Brentford. (fn. 60) The
hypothesis that an important Roman north-south
route forded the Thames at Brentford is unproven: (fn. 61) stakes along the foreshore at Old
England, which later was largely covered by a rail
head dock, and to the west at Brentford End were
perhaps used to defend the ford. They are the
only material evidence that Julius Caesar's crossing in 54 B.C. was at Brentford. (fn. 62)
From the late 1st century A.D. Brentford was a
settlement on the road from London to the west.
Habitations, mainly on the high ground north of
the modern High Street, stretched from Old
Brentford for 400 to 600 m. to a point west of St.
Lawrence's church, close to the Brent. (fn. 63) There
was Roman settlement also on the west bank of
the Brent (fn. 64) and Romano-British huts, presumably of fishermen, existed at Old England and on
the Thames foreshore in front of Syon House,
Isleworth. (fn. 65) Agriculture was practised but
apparently there was little material wealth and in
late Roman times all the sites that have been
excavated, except one west of the church, were
deserted. (fn. 66) A single site, at Old Brentford, revealed Saxon occupation. Since the line of the
Roman road did not survive, (fn. 67) Brentford seems
to have been abandoned soon after the Romans
left.
The kings of Wessex and Essex met at Brentford in 705, (fn. 68) Offa, king of Mercia, held a council
there in 780, (fn. 69) and Archbishop Jaenbeorth held
a synod there in 781. (fn. 70) The strategic importance
of the ford over the Thames was shown by the
battle of Brentford, fought on the south bank between King Edmund Ironside and King Canute,
in 1016. (fn. 71) No trace of late Saxon occupation,
however, has been found. (fn. 72)
Old Brentford was probably included with
Ealing in the grant of Fulham c. 704 to the bishop
of London (fn. 73) and New Brentford was part of the
abbot of Westminster's manor of Hanwell by
1157. (fn. 74) Both Old and New Brentford were probably included with their parent manors in
Domesday Book, (fn. 75) and the fact that neither
became a parish suggests that they were not
populous in the 11th and 12th centuries. In
addition to the royal fishery in the Thames
recorded from 996 and an episcopal fishery from
1257, three other fisheries were held by tenants
by 1423. (fn. 76) Gervase of Brentford in 1220 held 5
virgates of villein land at Old Brentford. (fn. 77) In
1383 open fields stretched north and south of the
highway. Besides Sergeaunts free tenement there
were between 9 and 13 villein holdings along the
road. Several lay to the east, near London Style
on the Chiswick boundary, and others near
the Borough, where there was a gravel pit. (fn. 78)
Although the original holdings had been broken
up by 1383, no new dwellings were recorded in
the early 15th century. Tenants then held less
land than those elsewhere in Ealing manor, (fn. 79) but
apparently not because of any urban activities. (fn. 80)
At New Brentford the estate which later became the manor of Boston had been subinfeudated by c. 1170, when the lord founded St.
Lawrence's hospital and chapel near his house
south of High Street. (fn. 81) To the north some land
was kept in demesne; also to the north and to the
west lay commons, while to the south there were
probably marshy meadows, leaving little space
for tenants' holdings. (fn. 82) Thirteenth-century settlement has been uncovered on only one site,
immediately west of the church. (fn. 83) Increasing
traffic, however, was indicated by grants of
pontage in 1224 on merchandise and in 1280
towards Brentford bridge, (fn. 84) and may also have
prompted the grant of a market and fairs in
1306. (fn. 85) Dealings in property, sometimes by
craftsmen, became more common from c. 1300 (fn. 86)
and several sites south of High Street were
occupied during the 14th century. (fn. 87) Pavage was
repeatedly levied for the highway from 1360 (fn. 88)
and another hospital, serving poor wayfarers,
existed by 1393. (fn. 89) The first named inns occurred
in 1384 and 1436. (fn. 90) The foundation of Syon
abbey in 1415 and of a third hospital immediately
west of the rebuilt bridge in 1446 (fn. 91) contributed to
the emergence of Brentford End by the early 16th
century (fn. 92) and perhaps also to neighbouring New
Brentford; in 1502 Syon abbey gave a Brentford
brickmaker a large order. (fn. 93) About 1528 New
Brentford, an urban area almost entirely dependent on imported food, (fn. 94) was rich enough to
support its own priest by subscription. (fn. 95)
There were side streets and still some gaps in
the roadside settlement c. 1530. (fn. 96) High Street
and its buildings ran across the Ham, a common
recorded from 1436. (fn. 97) Part of the Ham north of
High Street was the site of the butts required by
Henry VIII (fn. 98) and was usually known as the Butts
from 1596. (fn. 99) Common continued to surround
New Brentford on three sides until a neck of
waste between High Street and the Brent was
occupied in the 16th and 17th centuries. (fn. 1) Building apparently then severed the Ham from the
Butts, and in 1635 the George and other buildings occupied sites stretching from High Street
to the river. (fn. 2)
Behind two leading inns, the Three Pigeons or
Three Doves, formerly the Crown, and the Red
Lion, an orchard was converted c. 1560 into a
market place. Several times extended, (fn. 3) Market
Place was surrounded by inns: the Three Pigeons,
which ultimately stretched to the Brent, was at
the south-west corner, (fn. 4) the White Horse by 1603
at the north-west, the White Hart to the east, and
the Red Lion at the south-east. (fn. 5) Immediately to
the east the Harrow, later the Castle, occupied a
site reaching from High Street to the Butts. (fn. 6)
Market Place was shown as the first departure
from the linear plan in 1635, when building
extended along both sides of High Street as far as
the Hollows, Kew Bridge Road. (fn. 7) While busy
road traffic was suggested by the large number of
inns, (fn. 8) wharfs and a timber yard (fn. 9) and references to
watermen (fn. 10) also pointed to growing traffic on the
Thames. In the Civil War, fishing and the
expanding market gardens at Brentford suffered
depredation. (fn. 11)
In 1664 there were 136 houses at New Brentford, most of them small: 73 had 2 hearths or less,
of which 29 were not chargeable for hearth tax, 19
had 3 hearths, 15 had 4, 9 had 5, and 7 had 6
hearths. The 6 with 10 or more hearths included
the manor house, at least one inn, and an
unoccupied house. (fn. 12) New Brentford was hard hit
by the plague in 1665, when 103 burials took
place, (fn. 13) but recovered quickly and grew, perhaps
partly because of the uncertificated paupers recorded from 1676. (fn. 14) In 1672 there were 153
houses, those of all sizes having increased in
number. Most of the humbler ones lay south of
High Street, where the 105 houses included 55
with 2 hearths or less and another 38 with less
than 5. The largest houses stood north of High
Street, (fn. 15) as they still did after the total number
had risen to c. 237 houses in 1764 and c. 270 in
1795. (fn. 16)
The survival of common to the west and north
helped to concentrate early growth south of High
Street, although the land there was more often
flooded, as in 1682. (fn. 17) Houses later encroached on
the Ham, until they lined the whole approach
road to the bridge in 1777, (fn. 18) while existing plots
fronting High Street were divided and cottages
were built in yards behind, forming narrow
alleys. By 1688 a gateway with a dwelling overhead gave access to Catherine Wheel Yard, later
Road, with four cottages and access to the river. (fn. 19)
By 1719 an inn called the Boar's Head had been
divided into 4, with at least 8 other cottages
extending to the Ham; another 5 stood in Reindeer Yard, another 4 behind 4 houses in High
Street, and a further 10 behind 2 others. By 1720
inns called the Three Tuns and the Plough had
been divided. Jack of Newbury's Alley existed
west of the church, with 5 and later 6 houses. (fn. 20)
Such infilling continued in spite of the spread of
warehouses and malthouses associated with the
busy corn market. Cottages in the alleys were
smaller than the shops in High Street, where 60
branches of trade catered for travellers and the
hinterland by 1720. (fn. 21) New Brentford won praise
for its shops and pavements, little inferior to
those of London, in 1774, (fn. 22) when the back alleys
passed unremarked. There were then three large
coaching inns: the Harrow, the Red Lion, and the
Three Pigeons, which in 1787 had stabling for
100 horses. (fn. 23)
North of High Street and Market Place, the
Butts extended from the Half Acre in the east to
the Brent in the west and was bounded to the
north by Butts closes, part of the Boston manorial
demesne. The Butts was relatively narrow at the
eastern end, where a large garden limited building
on the western side of the Half Acre to three
houses as late as 1786 (fn. 24) and where there were long
plots behind the premises fronting High Street. (fn. 25)
Farther west, the Butts widened southward into a
large square beside the Brent and was thus Lshaped. A house in the angle of the L was
alienated by the lord of Boston in 1663, (fn. 26) and by
1713 there were five neighbouring houses, two
facing west and three north. (fn. 27) Butts closes were
granted by Goldsmith in 1663 to William Parish,
innkeeper of New Brentford, (fn. 28) who leased the
eastern part as market gardens (fn. 29) and divided the
rest into large plots. The most westerly plot
fronting the Butts was let in 1685 (fn. 30) and built on
by 1691; (fn. 31) two plots to the east were let in 1688, (fn. 32)
when five adjacent plots had been leased. (fn. 33) Some
of them were probably sites for the new houses at
the Butts recorded in 1690. (fn. 34) At the rear the
westernmost plot was let in 1688 (fn. 35) and Brent
House was built c. 1694. (fn. 36) Presentments of a
gravel pit, sawpits, and heaps of timber suggest
continued building on the Butts c. 1700, (fn. 37) where
other houses were erected between 1714 and
1719. (fn. 38) The soil was granted to Parish in 1663,
perhaps with the intention of preserving an open
space, (fn. 39) as ultimately happened. Boston manorial
court resisted encroachments by residents but in
1700 permitted the planting of ornamental lime
trees. (fn. 40) The Butts was a 'pleasant airy place' in
1746, (fn. 41) despite its regular use for markets by
1679 (fn. 42) and parliamentary elections from 1701, (fn. 43)
and increasing traffic between the Half Acre and
Market Place, which was cutting up the surface
by 1797. (fn. 44)
The select character of the area around the
Butts, with Brentford's proximity to Kew Palace,
explain the erection at the corner of the Half Acre
and the later Clifden Road of Clifden House. A
three-storeyed brick mansion with seven bays
and a central pediment, containing fine ceilings
and woodwork, it was built in the mid 18th
century and occupied from 1799 by Henry Agar,
Viscount Clifden. (fn. 45) New Grove Mansions, in the
style of the Greek Revival, was built immediately
to the south c. 1800. (fn. 46) The Butts backed on
orchards, which resembled the 'seat of paradise'
in 1774, (fn. 47) and Brentford itself was considered
'almost a garden' in 1794. (fn. 48)
By 1635 building lined both sides of High
Street as far east as the modern Kew bridge. (fn. 49)
Old Brentford, with 259 houses, was far more
populous than New Brentford in 1664 and, with
135 not chargeable for hearth tax, was also much
poorer. (fn. 50) Houses continued to multiply, while
the linear pattern persisted, with increasing
emphasis on the waterfront. To the north a back
lane skirted the fields by 1575: (fn. 51) many tenements
in High Street extended back to it (fn. 52) and there
may already have been some infilling. South of
High Street the whole riverside was taken for
wharfs, reached by passages such as Smith Hill, a
public way by 1581, (fn. 53) Ferry Lane, and Spring
Gardens. The passages were lined with cottages
and inns, among them the Goat and the Salutation in Ferry Lane, recorded in 1636 (fn. 54) and
1751. (fn. 55) Where road and river lay close together,
tenements often had access to both, such as the
One Tun and the Half Moon and Seven Stars. (fn. 56)
The fields south of High Street, like those near
Ferry Lane, were inclosed and built on piecemeal. (fn. 57) Old Brentford was said in 1769 to be
populated chiefly by poor fishermen and watermen (fn. 58) and in 1774 to have more trade than New
Brentford because the river came up to everyone's doors. (fn. 59) Many small alehouses presumably
catered for such inhabitants, among them the
Mermaid, recorded from 1651, (fn. 60) the Anchor
from 1674, (fn. 61) the Barge from 1751, (fn. 62) the Tackle
Block from 1758, (fn. 63) and the Waterman's Arms
from 1790. (fn. 64) Travellers were served by the larger
coaching inns at New Brentford and from c. 1750
by those at the east end of Old Brentford in Kew
Bridge Road, including the Star and Garter and
the Wagon and Horses. (fn. 65) Old Brentford's growth
stimulated the opening in 1762 of George chapel,
built by local subscribers led by the Trimmer
family. (fn. 66) Chronic poverty led to Mrs. Sarah
Trimmer's successive schemes for educating the
poor from 1786. (fn. 67) Many 18th-century travellers
saw only the handsome shops, Market Place, the
Butts, orchards and market gardens, and a few
aristocratic houses at Old Brentford. (fn. 68) Heavy
traffic on the highway, however, (fn. 69) churning up
mud or creating dust, (fn. 70) had already given much
of Brentford a reputation for dirtiness. (fn. 71) Most
inhabitants lived in weatherboarded cottages,
crammed into yards and alleys such as Spring
Gardens and sometimes constituting districts
such as Troy Town. Many cottages were ramshackle huts in 1765 (fn. 72) and not liable for rates in
1786. (fn. 73) From the Surrey side of the Thames they
were an eyesore: hence the remarks that Brentford in 1765 was the 'ugliest and filthiest place in
England' (fn. 74) and that in 1807 Kew Palace looked
on to the worst part of Old Brentford. (fn. 75) That was
before industrial growth had added to Brentford's unsavoury character.
The late 18th century saw the expansion of the
older extractive and corn-based industries,
notably the potteries, brickworks, and breweries.
The construction of the Grand Junction canal
attracted a new flour mill to Catherine Wheel
Yard and a turpentine factory to the Ham. (fn. 76) At
New Brentford, still constricted to north and
south, new housing was provided on the Ham (fn. 77)
and by further infilling: there were 272 houses in
1801 and 389 by 1851, when there was little
further room. (fn. 78) At Old Brentford the potter
Daniel Turner had put up 14 cottages between
High Street and the back lane by 1778, presumably the Pot House Row of 1786, (fn. 79) and the first 9
cottages of Union Court had been built on a
similar site by 1813. (fn. 80) There were 13 cottages at
Troy Town, 22 at Smith Hill, and 4 in Spring
Gardens, Old Brentford, in 1786. (fn. 81)
Although some businesses failed, the distillery,
breweries, maltings, soap works, and timber yard
expanded along the waterfront, and waterworks
and gasworks were built at the east end of the
town. Displacing housing and shops on both
sides of High Street, (fn. 82) such industries demanded
labour and so led to more house building: 18
cottages were built by Thomas Shackle between
1818 and 1825 at Running Horse Yard, between
High Street and the back lane, (fn. 83) 5 more were
built at Union Court before 1840, (fn. 84) and 17 to the
north of two High Street houses between 1824
and 1837. (fn. 85) Building included work on 25 plots
west of Ealing Road and 19 east of the new North
Road by 1840, (fn. 86) besides the 8 cottages of Bridge
Terrace at the northern approach to Kew bridge
by c. 1826. (fn. 87) Nonetheless there was a shortage of
housing in 1849. (fn. 88)
Drinking, swearing, and gambling were
commonplace by 1819 (fn. 89) and were attacked by the
new nonconformist chapels and by the established church: a new infants' school advocated in
1831 was found in 1834 to be making it easier
for mothers to work and hence neglect their
children. (fn. 90) Later industrial expansion coincided
with the decline of coaching traffic, when the
victualling and retail trades were depressed,
causing some closures and further accentuating
Brentford's working-class character. In 1843
the rapidly growing population was overwhelmingly one of labourers in industry, fishing,
and market gardening, liable to intermittent
unemployment. (fn. 91)
Brentford town, dignified by a new magistrates'
courthouse in Market Place c. 1850, (fn. 92) was treated
as a distinct entity in the census of 1851. (fn. 93) It then
contained a total of 1,750 houses, a figure which
had nearly doubled by 1921, when the U.D.
contained 3,261 dwellings and when further
building was in train. New Brentford, with 389
houses in 1851 and 408 in 1891, grew very little
until the 1920s, building being confined to the
High Street area by industries along the waterfront and by Boston Manor to the north. Meanwhile at Old Brentford, where at first there was
more space and where much land came on the
market in 1872 and c. 1885, the houses increased
from 1,361 in 1851 to 2,224 in 1891, by which
date its population was three times that of New
Brentford. Small brick terraces were erected,
much superior to the flimsy dwellings crowded
into the yards behind High Street, and from 1892
systematic slum clearance accompanied new
building. The building of the Great West Road
in the 1920s brought more estates on to the
market and further industrial growth north of the
town. Much parkland remained but most of the
area was built over and middle-class districts
emerged near the parks in the north-east and
north-west corners of Brentford.
Until c. 1883 there was little building in the St.
George's district of Old Brentford east of Ealing
Road than in the St. Paul's district farther west.
Infilling continued, as at Hales Yard, (fn. 94) until 1913
or later, when terraces were built in Catherine
Place, parallel to Paradise Place and north of
Albany Road. (fn. 95) More dwellings, however, were
in new streets. Plots in Orchard Road, Old
Brentford, were being offered in 1851 by the
National Freehold Land Society. (fn. 96) Brook Road
was laid out northward from behind High Street
and, with the older Distillery, Pottery, and North
roads to the east, was partly built up by 1872. (fn. 97)
All four were linked by cross roads, of which only
New Road near the L. & S.W.R. line, with 53
dwellings in 15 blocks, had been largely built up
in 1872, when surrounding land was sold in
lots. (fn. 98) There was still space to the south in 1883,
when it was secured for St. Paul's recreation
ground. In 1883 25 a. were laid out for building
between Ealing and Pottery roads and the British
Land Co. was laying out c. 77 a. between Ealing
and Windmill roads. (fn. 99) Market gardens on the
Hope-Edwardes estate between the waterworks
and the L. & S.W.R. line were leased for workingclass housing by 1885, when construction was
under way. (fn. 1)
The town's working-class character was confirmed in the late 19th century. The gasworks,
stretching along both sides of High Street, Old
Brentford, for c. 400 m., were reputed the largest
and most repulsive concern, likened to the fabled
Cyclops and dubbed 'king of Brentford'. (fn. 2) In
1867 no town in England was thought to have
more poverty in relation to its size and in 1882 it
was considered as wretched as any place, not
excluding London's east end. Limited space kept
rents high and the worst slums overcrowded, (fn. 3)
many weatherboarded cottages in the yards being
dilapidated and none having proper sanitation. (fn. 4)
After the 18 hovels of Canon Alley had at last
been condemned in 1878, they needed almost
complete reconstruction to bring them up to
standard. (fn. 5) In 1877 Bailey's Row, Old Brentford,
and the 18 Prospect Cottages behind the King's
Arms were nearly as bad. (fn. 6) In 1853 Brentford was
considered a byword for immorality among both
sexes (fn. 7) and in 1867 the worst vice was seen as
drunkenness, encouraged by the large number of
inns. (fn. 8) Many working mothers neglected their
children (fn. 9) and a high infant mortality was attributed to malnutrition. (fn. 10)
Lack of a sewerage system was condemned in
the national press in 1873, when Brentford was
associated with everything 'stagnant and disgraceful' and again labelled the filthiest place in
England. (fn. 11) That mortality was no worse was
ascribed in 1878 to the natural healthiness of the
site. (fn. 12) With the spread of new housing around St.
Paul's and the blighting influence of the gasworks
farther east, St. George's had become the poorest
area in Old Brentford by 1865. (fn. 13) It probably
remained superior to parts of New Brentford,
such as the Ham, inhabited by the very poorest
and often flooded. (fn. 14) At New Brentford there was
also a fluctuating population of barge dwellers. (fn. 15)
Social problems were first tackled by the
churches and the Ragged School Union. After
the foundation of Brentford local board a sewerage system was constructed and some of the
worst slums were condemned. (fn. 16) Municipal
activity increased in the 1890s, when the public
baths and isolation hospital were opened. An
imposing vestry hall, later a county courthouse,
was built in the Half Acre in 1899. (fn. 17) High
mortality, especially infant mortality of 197 per
1,000 and rather more in New Brentford,
prompted a regular attack on slums from 1892. (fn. 18)
Infant mortality had scarcely changed by 1901
but by 1912 had dropped to 74 per 1,000;
meanwhile mortality overall fell from 21 to 8. (fn. 19)
Slum clearance was impeded by lack of alternative accommodation, (fn. 20) until in 1899 the U.D.C.
started four schemes for 762 council houses east
of Ealing Road on either side of the L. & S.W.R.
line. (fn. 21)
At the eastern end of the town a drinking
fountain was set up in 1877 near Kew bridge,
where open markets caused much traffic congestion before an enclosed site was provided in 1893.
The area became still busier with the opening of
the L.U.T.'s terminus in 1901 and of the rebuilt
Kew bridge in 1903, soon followed by the
building of a covered market. (fn. 22)
Widening of High Street and the Half Acre,
before the arrival of tramways in 1905, swept
away many old buildings, including ancient inns.
Although the yards behind changed less than had
been hoped, (fn. 23) some progress was made there, in
particular with the demolition of all of Running
Horse Yard, Moore's Alley, Eaton Court, and
Eaton Buildings in 1911-12. Some of the worst
slums in Troy Town were cleared in 1910. (fn. 24) A
further 465 houses had been cleared by 1914 (fn. 25)
and still more by 1927, when labyrinths of
tenements were a mere memory and Brentford
was no more unhealthy than its neighbours. (fn. 26)
Much housing, however, remained untouched.
After the First World War slum clearance was
again delayed by lack of accommodation for those
displaced. An influx of workers for the new
factories along the Great West Road exacerbated
the housing problem. Brentford U.D.C.'s 146
houses in Ealing and Whitestile roads comprised
almost all the building between 1920 and 1924, (fn. 27)
but thereafter private activity resumed. Much of
northern New Brentford was built up by A. J. A.
Taylor's Boston Land and Investment Co. (fn. 28)
Messrs. Steele planned 40 houses in Boston
Manor Road and the Ride in 1924, a further 430
were planned for the Gunnersbury Park estate
farther east in 1925, and in 1925-6 private
builders were responsible for all the 277 new
houses. (fn. 29)
Expansion was made possible by the Clitherow,
Rothschild, and Hope-Edwardes families, who
sold up as the Great West Road neared completion. Widely spaced factories along the road
were later seen, nostalgically, as symbols of
economic self-confidence, forming an industrial
Arcadia. (fn. 30) Some of the land was secured for
middle-class housing near Gunnersbury Park
and Boston Manor, and much remained open,
notably Boston Manor park (407 a.), Gunnersbury park (183 a.), and Carville Hall park
(161 a.). (fn. 31) Brentford U.D.C., which had wanted
to build on Gunnersbury park, erected 118
houses in Lionel Road in 1928-9 (fn. 32) and 428 on the
Syon estate at Brentford End. (fn. 33) In 1930 Brentford and Chiswick U.D.C. owned 1,520 houses
and flats, when 600 more were needed if the
remaining alleys and courts were to be cleared.
Only 261 more dwellings had been demolished
by 1938 and there were 1,548 council houses in
the borough in 1937, when land was in short
supply. (fn. 34) A few small blocks of flats were erected
in the late 1930s. (fn. 35)
Growth continued until the Second World
War, by which time Brentford was completely
built up. The old market declined, however,
finally closing in 1933, (fn. 36) and by 1929 the town
had clearly been supplanted as a shopping centre
by neighbouring suburbs. (fn. 37) After the Second
World War many factories in the Great West
Road were turned into warehouses or offices,
while by 1954 Brentford's shops were described
as squalid and there was almost no public entertainment. (fn. 38) Among older industries the waterworks, the soap factory, Brentford dock, and the
huge gasworks all closed in the 1950s and 1960s,
before the large market was moved from its
covered site near Kew bridge in 1974. (fn. 39) Falling
employment reduced the demand for housing
and gave opportunities for large-scale rebuilding.
In 1954 Brentford formed three distinct districts. In the north were modern houses, municipal and private, and factories in the Great West
Road. Immediately south of the railway were
streets of terraces dating from c. 1870-1920.
Farther south lay the old town, comprising the
docks area, High Street and the yards behind,
and St. George's district, which included many
slums. (fn. 40) Buildings south of High Street were in
very bad repair; those north of High Street
included many awaiting demolition, among them
some tall weatherboarded 18th-century shops. (fn. 41)
Even the late 19th-century terraces near High
Street had become slums. (fn. 42)
Piecemeal demolition continued, Troy Town
finally being cleared in 1958. (fn. 43) A plan for the
wholesale rebuilding of High Street in 1947
proved too costly but in 1959 a phased scheme
was started along the northern side from St.
Paul's Road to North Road, also taking in
Albany, Ealing, Pottery, Distillery, North and
Walnut Tree roads. By 1959 118 families had
already been rehoused (fn. 44) and by 1978 the whole
northern frontage of High Street had been rebuilt, with clusters of small shops, and the
terraced streets behind replaced by council
houses and flats on new alignments. Work was
still in progress east of Ealing Road and there
were empty plots in St. Paul's Road. Modern
buildings included a county courthouse west of
Alexandra Road, used from 1963 in place of the
former vestry hall in the Half Acre, which itself
was replaced by a police station in 1966. (fn. 45)
The decline of large industries made more land
available. A plan of 1959 for comprehensive
rebuilding on the waterworks site (fn. 46) came to
nothing, but land was appropriated from 1966 by
Hounslow L.B. for tower blocks containing 528
flats. (fn. 47) In 1978 the north side of Green Dragon
Lane had been cleared and Brentford dock replaced by a housing estate of the G.L.C., where
the building of flats was far advanced. Although
the closure of the gasworks had stimulated plans
to make use of the waterfront, the long narrow
strip between road and river was still vacant.
Brentford was called depressed and depressing in
1975. (fn. 48) Much remained to be done in western and
southern New Brentford and at Kew bridge in
1978, when the town had ceased to be a centre of
industry or trade and was inhabited mainly by
council tenants, who worked elsewhere and often
shopped in Ealing or Chiswick.
The scene in 1978 was of decaying slums and
empty sites, juxtaposed with the select Butts and
new municipal housing. Near Brentford bridge
little weatherboarded houses awaited clearance;
to the south the Ham was a wasteland beside
car-repair workshops and the redundant St.
Lawrence's church. There was little activity
along the banks of the Brent or most of the
Thames waterfront. The alleys, no longer lined
with cottages and sometimes overgrown, led to
wharfs that were often deserted, the few exceptions including DRG's new warehousing in Ferry
Lane and the Thames & General Lighterage
Co.'s barge repair yards. High walls and factories
lined the southern side of High Street. On the
northern side older properties survived west of
Market Place, while chiefly modern building
stretched as far east as North Road. Beyond, Mrs.
Trimmer's school and the former St. George's
church, the gasholders, and the waterworks
buildings were all undisturbed, as were the
shabby Kew Bridge Road and the disused Brentford Market.
Behind Market Place the elegance of the Butts
was marred by the use of its central space as a car
park. Large Victorian houses to the north looked
less well kept than those in the Butts, and Clifden
House, pulled down in 1954, had made way for
flats. Brentford football ground was still surrounded by terraced streets but many similar
terraces had disappeared with rebuilding. Near
High Street St. Paul's recreation ground, amid
terraced housing and school buildings, was an
isolated open space. Carville Hall, a low brick
19th-century house in a deserted park, adjoined
the Great West Road to the south. The road
itself, with its flyover on stilts, lined by factories
and generally noisy and windy, formed a barrier
between northern and southern Brentford. The
northern part had large open spaces and less
dense housing: to the west middle-class houses in
Boston Manor Road resembled those of Hanwell;
in the centre council houses and dingy shops in
Ealing Road were hardly distinguishable from
those of South Ealing; and to the east tree-lined
avenues and large houses near Gunnersbury park
extended northward towards those nearer Ealing
common. While southern Brentford was still
distinct, northern Brentford thus merged with its
neighbours.
Notable buildings survive mainly in the
Butts. (fn. 49) On the south side at the eastern end is St.
Raphael's convent, a three-storeyed 18th-century
house of yellow brick, much extended. To the
west are four 18th-century cottages, nos. 16 to
22, of which the first two have been refaced.
Other houses date from c. 1690 or later, are of
brown brick with red-brick dressings, and mainly
consist of two storeys with attics. They include,
in the angle of the L, the double fronted nos. 24
and 26, formerly the cottage hospital, which also
have basements. The three-storeyed no. 40 and
the row formed by nos. 42 to 46, also on the south
side, are 18th-century. The north side of the
Butts includes pairs formed by Chatham House
and Beaufort House (nos. 15 and 17) and the
partly refaced Cobden House and Linden House
(nos. 21 and 23). In Upper Butts, leading northward to Church Walk, are the early 18th-century
Llan Helen (no. 1) and the Cedars, which is
slightly later and has been rendered and reroofed.
A three-storeyed 18th-century house of brown
brick, converted into flats by 1948, survives as
no. 80 on the south side of High Street. Farther
west near the Brent are the shells of the 18thcentury nos. 154-6 and the early 19th-century
nos. 157-8, apparently awaiting demolition. On
the east side of Boston Manor Road, overshadowed by the flyover, some restored 18thcentury houses serve as offices. All are of brown
brick with red-brick dressings, no. 67 being
three-storeyed, nos. 69 and 71 representing a
divided house of two storeys with attics, and nos.
73 and 75 forming a three-storeyed pair with
basements.
Six Protestants were burned at Brentford in
1558. (fn. 50) At the battle of Brentford in 1642 Lord
Ruthven's royalists drove two parliamentary
divisions out of the town and then plundered it,
before withdrawing in the face of larger forces at
Turnham Green. (fn. 51) From 1701 the Butts was the
scene of the county's elections, of which the most
tumultuous were those contested in 1768 and
1769 by John Wilkes, giving rise to inns being
called the Number 45 and the Wilkes's Head, and
in 1802 by Sir Francis Burdett, when large profits
were made by innkeepers. Additional polling
stations were provided in 1832, although declarations of the poll were still made at the Butts until
1885. (fn. 52)
Lord Ruthven, who was also earl of Forth, was
created earl of Brentford in 1644 and died
without male heirs in 1651. William III's general
Frederick Schomberg (1615-90) in 1689 was
created duke of Schomberg and earl of Brentford, which titles became extinct in 1719. The
barony of Brentford, with the earldom of
Darlington, was conferred for life on George I's
mistress Baroness von Kielmansegge (d. 1725) in
1722. The statesman William Joynson-Hicks
(1865-1932) was created Viscount Brentford in
1929. (fn. 53)
The population of New Brentford was 1,443 in
1801 and 2,063 in 1851, when that of Old
Brentford was 6,057. Brentford town, including
some houses in Isleworth parish, was estimated
to have 8,870 inhabitants in 1851 and 11,091 in
1871. Brentford U.D. had 15,171 inhabitants in
1901 and 17,032 in 1921 and the three Brentford
wards of Brentford and Chiswick U.D. had
20,372 in 1931. (fn. 54)