COMMUNICATIONS.
Watling Street or Edgware Road, often called Kilburn Street or Road, (fn. 19)
was the Roman road to St. Albans and beyond.
Almost parallel to it on the east was a route leading
north through Hampstead town and over the heath
to Hendon; in the 16th century and later it was
sometimes identified as Watling Street. (fn. 20) The
boundary described in the charter of c. 970 and the
discovery of a medieval costrel in Holly Hill in 1876
suggest that the route, if not Roman, was old, (fn. 21)
although its precise course was not established until
the 18th century. (fn. 22) The road was usually called
Hampstead Street or the highway to Hampstead or
London. (fn. 23) Its most southerly section was called
Haverstock (Harberstocke) Hill by 1575 (fn. 24) and the
next section Red Lion or Rosslyn Hill after the inn
and house of those names. (fn. 25) High Street, so named
(alte strate) in 1633, (fn. 26) the next section, originally included the part called, after 1831, Heath Street. (fn. 27)
The northernmost section, which by the 19th century was called North End Hill (fn. 28) or Road (fn. 29) and in
the 20th North End Way, passed through North
End and Golders Green. Branching from the main
route at Jack Straw's Castle, a second road, by 1862
called Spaniard's Road, (fn. 30) led from Hampstead town
to Highgate through Cane Wood (Kenwood). It
existed by c. 1672 and was mentioned in 1695. (fn. 31)
Roads crossing North End Way and Edgware
Road c. 1672 (fn. 32) indicated a west-east route, which
was in use by the mid 18th century, (fn. 33) running from
Walm Lane in Willesden, (fn. 34) through Shoot Up Hill
or Mill Lane, Blind Lane, Fortune Green, and
Platt's Lane to Childs Hill and thence along the edge
of the heath. By 1862 the route near the heath had
dwindled to a footpath and Blind Lane had disappeared. (fn. 35) By the mid 18th century West End Lane
led from Edgware Road at Kilburn through West
End to Fortune Green, and Cole Lane and Frognal
Lane linked West End respectively with Shoot Up
Hill and Frognal. (fn. 36) By 1679 Belsize Lane (fn. 37) and by
1714 Upper Chalcot (later England's) Lane existed
as access roads. (fn. 38)
The usual complaints about the state of the roads
led to bequests for repairs in the 15th and 16th centuries. (fn. 39) Hampstead benefited from the John Lyon
and Edward Harvist charities for the whole of
Edgware Road and from the turnpike trust set up in
1710. Under the Metropolis (Kilburn and Harrow
Roads) Act, 1872, Edgware Road was disturnpiked
and administration of the relevant charities passed
to the local authorities and their successors, including Hampstead metropolitan borough and Camden
L.B. (fn. 40) Hampstead Road Trust was established by
Act in 1717 initially for 21 years but extended and
varied by numerous Acts, to keep in repair the road
from Stone's End to Highgate gatehouse and Hampstead, presumably Hampstead Lane and Spaniard's
Road. The trustees used gravel from the heath and
in 1719 levelled a hill there. (fn. 41) There was a tollhouse
on Spaniard's Road near the inn, which in 1966 was
given by the brewers to the G.L.C. and became part
of the heath. (fn. 42)

HAMPSTEAD COMMUNICATIONS
There were abortive attempts in 1778 and 1819 to
build a new north-south route through the centre of
Hampstead parish. The Finchley Road Act was
passed in 1826 and the new turnpike road was
completed in 1835. (fn. 43)
Until 1769, in accordance with an agreement between the lords of Hampstead and Mapesbury
(Willesden) manors, Hampstead paid 5s. a year towards the repair of a brick bridge on Edgware
Road, (fn. 44) presumably Kilburn bridge. (fn. 45) In 1826 Kilburn brook was culverted in West End Lane and the
Fleet was culverted near the southern of the heath
ponds and at the eastern end of Pond Street. (fn. 46)
Regular transport between Hampstead and Holborn or Covent Garden, for the City, and Tottenham
Court Road, for the West End, was advertised by
John Duffield, who leased Hampstead wells in 1700.
Guards were sought for the passengers in 1718 (fn. 47) and
Hampstead stage coaches were often robbed in the
1720s. (fn. 48) In Clarissa Harlowe, whose plot was set
some 20 years before its publication in 1747, the
fleeing heroine chose the coach to Hampstead as
being 'so ready a convenience'. (fn. 49) A coach ran from
the Black Swan, Holborn, and another from James
Street, Covent Garden, in 1740 and 1755, apparently only once a day. By 1768 there were 2 daily
journeys from James Street, 5 in summer and 2 in
winter from Holborn bars, and 2 from Chiswell
Street, Moorfields. (fn. 50)
The service remained too infrequent for daily
business travel until the late 18th century, when the
number of return journeys by short-stage coach rose,
from 14 in 1770 to 18 in 1793 and 43 in 1799. About
43 journeys were still made in 1815. (fn. 51) Hampstead
was the terminus for 10 coaches from the City, together making 17 return journeys a day, in 1825, (fn. 52)
when most of them started from the Bird in Hand
at the top of High Street. With the services to
London's west end, there were perhaps 40 daily
journeys in all. (fn. 53) In 1826-7 Hamilton & Clarke's
coaches ran hourly to the Blue Posts in Tottenham
Court Road and the Mansion House, and Mary
Woodward's to Covent Garden, Oxford Street, and
Tottenham Court Road. The earliest left at 8.0
a.m. (fn. 54) but the frequency of mid-day services suggests that most passengers were not bound for an
office. (fn. 55) Coaches provided the only public conveyance to London until the mid 1830s. (fn. 56) Thirteen
short-stage coaches ran to Tottenham Court Road
or Holborn, or, less often, to Charing Cross, in
1838-9, when all were owned by Alexander Hamilton, who also ran omnibuses. (fn. 57) Hamilton still provided a half-hourly coach service, calling at Jack
Straw's Castle and so presumably coming from
north of the parish, in 1845. (fn. 58) Local journeys could
be made by hackney coaches, which obstructed High
Street in 1783. (fn. 59) Sedan chairs survived until c. 1841,
when there were also three stables for the hire of
hackney coaches. (fn. 60)
Eight omnibuses (fn. 61) made 20 return journeys from
Hampstead to the City in 1834. There were 7 omnibuses in all in 1838-9, owned chiefly by Hamilton,
and perhaps 24 by 1856, when most were acquired
by the Compagnie Générale des Omnibus de
Londres (later the London General Omnibus Co.
or L.G.O.C.). (fn. 62) The route from Hampstead was
that of the coaches, from the Bird in Hand down
High Street and Haverstock Hill to Chalk Farm,
where the Adelaide and Britannia taverns were
popular boarding points, and thence to Camden
Town. (fn. 63) By 1838-9 one of the omnibuses ran along
Edgware Road to Kilburn and in 1856 as many as
ten, along Finchley Road, served Swiss Cottage,
where the Atlas line had been inaugurated c. 1850.
Less than half of Hampstead's c. 800 commuters
could have been carried by public road transport in
the 1850s. (fn. 64) Perhaps many were like a man who rode
daily to his City counting house in 1845 and complained at having to pay three turnpike tolls. (fn. 65)
Omnibuses also had to pay tolls, until the removal of
the metropolitan commissioners' only turnpike gate
within Hampstead, at Haverstock Hill, in 1864. (fn. 66)
Omnibuses routes were pushed farther north with
the spread of building and opening of suburban railway stations after 1855. By 1880 they not only
stretched along Kilburn High Road to Brondesbury
but also served Kilburn and West Hampstead by way
of Abbey Road and the area north of Swiss Cottage
by way of Finchley Road as far as Finchley Road
station. Later omnibuses were extended along
Finchley Road to meet others from Edgware Road
along West End Lane, continuing north to Childs
Hill in Hendon. In the populous south part of the
parish they ran east-west from Chalk Farm along
Adelaide and Belsize roads to Kilburn station. (fn. 67)
Services also became more frequent: in 1890 the
L.G.O.C.'s yellow cars left High Street every 18
minutes and the Adelaide, Haverstock Hill, every
10 minutes, while light or dark green Atlas cars left
Swiss Cottage and red or light blue cars left Kilburn
at still shorter intervals. Less frequently, omnibuses
ran from Kilburn to Willesden green and on 'rural
routes' from Swiss Cottage to Hendon and Finchley,
although they did not extend north of Hampstead
village across the heath. (fn. 68) On the opening of Hampstead tube station the service from High Street to
Oxford Street, one of the oldest in London, was
twice briefly rerouted to run to Bayswater, by way
of Swiss Cottage, and then to Kilburn, before returning to its original line and finally closing in
1907. (fn. 69)
Horse trams, owned by London Street Tramways,
reached Kentish Town in 1871 and Southampton
Road on the Hampstead boundary, by way of Prince
of Wales and Malden roads, in 1880. A line was
opened to the foot of Highgate West Hill and
another from Southampton Road across the boundary and along Fleet Road to South End green in
1887. (fn. 70) A large stables and depot were built near the
terminus, along Fleet Road and with an entrance
from Cressy Road. (fn. 71) In 1901 the L.C.C., which had
taken over London Street Tramways' systems within the county, added a one-way extension from
South End green back to Southampton Road along
Agincourt Road, so forming a loop. (fn. 72) The lines to
and from South End green were electrified in 1909. (fn. 73)
Opposition to trams, as a working-class form of
transport, (fn. 74) prevented them from penetrating farther
into the parish. The line to South End green, which,
with the depot, provided much local employment,
was popular with trippers to the heath. (fn. 75) Tradesmen
and gentry combined, however, in 1881 to resist
proposals for cable trams up Haverstock Hill and
through the heart of Hampstead village to Jack
Straw's Castle. A standing committee of residents
drew attention not only to the threat to property
values but to the steepness and narrowness of the
streets, until the scheme was rejected in 1883, (fn. 76) the
year before cable trams were introduced up Highgate Hill. (fn. 77) Renewed proposals were successfully
resisted in 1885. (fn. 78)
The L.C.C. in turn hoped for tramways to Jack
Straw's Castle and thence back along East Heath
Road to Hampstead Heath station in 1899, but by
that date a further objection was that they would be
made unnecessary by the proposed tube line. (fn. 79) Along
the Willesden boundary there were no trams in
Kilburn High Road, although they operated farther
north, from Cricklewood, and eastward along
Cricklewood Lane almost to the Hampstead boundary at Childs Hill. (fn. 80) In 1874 the vestry opposed a
projected Edgware Road and Maida Vale Tramway
Co. (fn. 81) and in 1911 the L.C.C. decided not to lay
tramlines from Marble Arch to Cricklewood, partly
because Hampstead council gave a high estimate of
the cost of road widening. (fn. 82) Plans for an extensive
network of tramways, along Adelaide and Finchley
roads, were also dropped after opposition from the
council, ground landlords, and residents. (fn. 83)
Trolleybuses replaced the trams which ran to
South End green, by way of the Agincourt Road
circle, in 1938. Operating from London Transport's
Highgate depot, they made way for motorbuses in
1961. (fn. 84)
Motorbuses had replaced horse omnibuses by
1911, when their routes included one which ended,
like the tramway, at South End green. (fn. 85) Hampstead
village and the heath remained free of public road
transport (fn. 86) until an east-west service from Finsbury
Park to Golders Green, entering the parish at the
Spaniards and turning away towards North End at
Jack Straw's Castle, was started in 1922, despite
many objections. (fn. 87) Motorbuses also ran north from
Adelaide Road across Belsize Park to the upper part
of Haverstock Hill, whence they continued as far as
Pond Street, South End Road, and Downshire Hill.
A Sunday service along Downshire Hill drew further
protests in 1928. (fn. 88) No motorbuses ran north of Pond
Street c. 1950, when the routes were otherwise
similar to those of 1930. (fn. 89) There was successful resistance in 1957 and 1962 to a proposed service from
Swiss Cottage to Golders Green by way of Hampstead village, where the streets were too narrow for
double-deckers, despite the lack of any public transport across that part of the borough other than the
North London railway. (fn. 90) A single-decker service
through the village was finally opened in 1968, followed by a circuitous service farther south from
Cricklewood by way of Swiss Cottage to Pond
Street and thence to Archway station in 1972. (fn. 91)
The first railway in the parish was part of the main
line from Euston built in 1837 by the London &
Birmingham Railway Co., which from 1846 formed
part of the London & North Western Railway
(L.N.W.R.). The line crossed southern Hampstead
and ran beneath Primrose Hill in a much admired
stone tunnel, whose turretted entrance front was
designed by W. H. Budden. At first the nearest
station was by the main goods yards across the
boundary at Chalk Farm. (fn. 92) Although the company
was not initially interested in suburban traffic, its
desire to reach the docks led it to promote the East
& West India Docks & Birmingham Junction Railway, incorporated in 1846 and renamed the North
London Railway (N.L.R.) in 1853, which in 1851
extended its line westward from Camden Town to
meet the L.N.W.R. line at Hampstead Road station
(renamed Chalk Farm in 1862 and Primrose Hill in
1950). The N.L.R. proved popular for travel to the
City (fn. 93) and could be used by passengers from Hampstead's first station, opened in 1852 in Belsize Road
by the L.N.W.R. as Kilburn; it was rebuilt in 1879,
with a second entrance in Kilburn High Road, as
Kilburn & Maida Vale, was closed in 1917 but reopened in 1922, with only the High Road entrance,
and in 1923 was renamed Kilburn High Road. The
company opened a second Hampstead station on the
new tracks in 1879, when its original main line was
quadrupled. The station, at the west end of the
Primrose Hill tunnel, was called Loudoun Road; (fn. 94)
it was closed in 1917 but reopened in 1922 as South
Hampstead. (fn. 95)
Congestion near Camden Town led the L.N.W.R.
to promote the Hampstead Junction Railway
(H.J.R.), (fn. 96) which in 1860 opened a northerly bypass
through Gospel Oak and the central part of Hampstead to rejoin the main line at Willesden. The company was managed by the N.L.R. from 1864 and
absorbed by the L.N.W.R. in 1867. Stations in the
parish were opened in 1860 at Hampstead Heath,
Finchley Road (from 1880 Finchley Road &
Frognal) and Edgeware [sic] Road (renamed Edgware Road and Brondesbury in 1872, Brondesbury
(Edgware Road) in 1873, and Brondesbury in
1883). (fn. 97) The line was tunnelled between Hampstead
Heath and Finchley Road and came to be known as
part of the Broad Street to Richmond line, the
N.L.R. having secured more direct access to the
City by means of its Broad Street terminus in
1865. (fn. 98) Trains ran every 15 minutes from Hampstead Heath to the City from its opening, first to
Fenchurch Street and from 1865 to Broad Street. (fn. 99)
West End Lane station (from 1975 West Hampstead) was opened in 1888. (fn. 1)
From 1868 the Midland Railway, which previously had made use of the Great Northern Railway's terminus at King's Cross, ran trains from
Bedford to its own terminus at St. Pancras. The line
entered the parish at Childs Hill, passed southeastward beneath the H.J.R.'s line to a second
station called Finchley Road (closed 1927) and
thence through a long tunnel and Haverstock Hill
station (beyond the boundary, in Lismore Circus;
closed 1916) towards Kentish Town. The Midland's
local service quickly proved successful, (fn. 2) being served
by suburban trains which went on to the City by
way of the Metropolitan line at King's Cross, besides main line trains to St. Pancras. West End
(from 1950 West Hampstead, Midland) station was
opened in 1871; it had previously been a halt, built
to serve a yard and sidings, and remained profitable
only because of the freight traffic. (fn. 3)
Meanwhile, south of the parish, the Metropolitan
in 1863 had opened London's first Underground
railway from Farringdon Street to Paddington, by
way of Baker Street. In 1865 the Metropolitan & St.
John's Wood Railway Co., promoted and in 1882
absorbed by the Metropolitan, was authorized to
construct a feeder northward from Baker Street to
Hampstead, where it was to cross High Street by a
bridge and terminate at Willow Road. The line never
reached the village, where it would have made a
powerful impact, because of financial difficulties. A
single track, running only as far as Swiss Cottage,
was opened in 1868 but there were no through services from the City between 1869 and 1907. A
double-tracked extension to Willesden Green was
opened, however, in 1879, with stations at Finchley
Road, West Hampstead, and, on the Willesden side
of the high road, at Kilburn, and in 1882 a double
track was completed to Swiss Cottage. (fn. 4) In 1888
there was a frequent service from Swiss Cottage to
Baker Street, for both the City and (by omnibus) the
West End, and a half-hourly service to Willesden
Green and beyond. (fn. 5) The line was electrified in
1905. (fn. 6) Under London Transport's new works programme of 1935, a stretch of the Bakerloo line was
built in a tube beneath the Metropolitan line from
Baker Street to Finchley Road, where it took over
two of the Metropolitan tracks to Wembley Park and
its branch to Stanmore. (fn. 7) The new Bakerloo line
opened in 1939, the Metropolitan's station at Swiss
Cottage being replaced in 1940 by one designed by
Stanley Heaps. Alterations were carried out at
Finchley Road, where the platforms were reconstructed in 1939, and at West Hampstead in 1938. (fn. 8)
After further work in the 1970s, the Stanmore line,
renamed the Jubilee line with its own extension
south of Baker Street into the West End, was inaugurated in 1979, when new entrances and a
ventilation tower were built at Swiss Cottage. (fn. 9)
Hampstead's 19th-century railways ran east and
west, except the Underground line through Swiss
Cottage. None crossed the comparatively empty
northern half of the parish, which required a tunnel
under the heights. A railway, albeit less objectionable than tramways, was successfully resisted as
early as the 1860s, when it was alleged that work
would affect the drainage and so harm the vegetation of the heath. (fn. 10) After the Charing Cross, Euston,
& Hampstead Railway had been authorized to build
a tube railway from Charing Cross to Heath Street
in 1893, nothing was done until its powers passed to
the American Charles Tyson Yerkes, who formed
the Underground Group. (fn. 11) There was more enthusiasm for his proposed line to Hampstead, a village
still 'singularly cut off from the west end of London',
than for his planned extension 'burrowing mole-like
under the heath and throwing up stations to mark its
track'. (fn. 12) In the event the longer line, to a rural crossroads at Golders Green but without a station on the
heath, was opened in 1907 as the Hampstead Tube.
There were stations called Chalk Farm, at the foot
of Haverstock Hill, Belsize Park, and Hampstead, at
the corner of High Street and Heath Street. All were
designed by Leslie W. Green in the dark-red glazed
bricks used for all surface stations in the group, and
at Hampstead the platforms were 192 ft. below the
surface, the deepest in London. After the Hampstead Tube had been linked with the City & South
London Railway Co. under an Act of 1913, the line
was known as the Edgware, Highgate & Morden line
and later as the Morden-Edgware line. It formed
part of the L.P.T.B.'s Northern line from 1937. (fn. 13)
A station to serve the summit of the heath, near
Jack Straw's Castle, had been planned by Yerkes
but opposed both by Hampstead vestry and the local
preservationists. (fn. 14) Its site was accordingly moved to
a point just across the boundary, where platforms
but not access shafts were built for a station whose
intended name was changed from North End to Bull
and Bush. The station, which never opened, was
used for storage of archives in the First and Second
World Wars. (fn. 15)
For commuters, the early railways have not retained their importance. Soon after 1900 the N.L.R.
was menaced by competition from the electrified
Metropolitan line through Swiss Cottage, from the
Hampstead Tube, and from the electrification of the
tramways. (fn. 16) A similar loss of traffic by the Midland
led to the closure of Haverstock Hill and Finchley
Road stations. (fn. 17) By 1962 the Broad Street to Richmond line, which still provided a quarter-hourly
service through Hampstead Heath, was under threat.
West Hampstead (Midland) station, where glass had
been replaced by wooden shutters during the
Second World War, was a 'gloomy ruin', whose little
used hourly diesel service contrasted with busy
traffic through the Bakerloo line's West Hampstead.
The Broad Street line, however, was valued as a
route across the borough by residents west of
Finchley Road. Since use was not concentrated at
the daily rush hours, its steady service was reputedly
profitable, (fn. 18) although trains were reduced to run
every 20 minutes from 1962. The service was rerouted to provide electric trains from North Woolwich to Richmond (the North London link), with
peak-hour connexions from Camden Town and elsewhere to Broad Street, in 1985. (fn. 19)