Kilburn, Edgware Road, And Cricklewood.
The name Kilburn, used c. 1134 as Cuneburna, the
royal or possibly cow's stream, (fn. 56) was applied to the
priory built beside the stream and later to the whole
neighbourhood on both sides of Edgware Road.
The western portion, in Willesden parish, has been
treated elsewhere. (fn. 57) Before c. 1134 there was a
hermitage, probably on Edgware Road, where Kilburn priory was built shortly afterwards. (fn. 58) By 1535
the priory buildings included a mansion and a
'hostium', which may have been the priory's guesthouse, (fn. 59) possibly the origin of the Red Lion, traditionally said to date from 1444. The mansion
'opposite the hostium' may have stood on the site
later occupied by the Bell, said to date from c.
1600, (fn. 60) which was part of a freehold estate probably
once belonging to Kilburn priory but detached from
the other priory lands by 1704. (fn. 61) At the northern
end of Edgware Road a substantial dwellinghouse was built in 1522 on the Hospitallers' estate,
presumably Shoot Up Hill Farm south of the
junction with Mill Lane. (fn. 62)
A 13th-century family surnamed de Kilburn presumably lived there, (fn. 63) and in 1296 John de Kilburn
sold his house and 20 a. to the lord of the manor. (fn. 64)
The tenement was still in the lord's hand, leased out
in 1312, but none of the other customary estates
described then can be located in Kilburn, although
John of Eton, who had a piece of land in 1312, later
held a house and land in Kilburn Street. (fn. 65) There
was a house in Kilburn Lane, the southern part of
West End Lane, in 1598 (fn. 66) and a cottage at Shoot Up
Hill, associated with the western, copyhold, portion
of Earlsfield, in 1632. (fn. 67) There was at least one cottage in 'Kilburn Street' or high road in 1637. (fn. 68) By
1646 there were at least 10 houses and 5 cottages in
the area, including the farmhouses of the Shoot Up
Hill, Gilberts, and Liddell estates. (fn. 69) The house on
the Little estate, assessed for five hearths, (fn. 70) was
leased to Thomas Green, an alehouse keeper, in
1653 and 1667 (fn. 71) and by 1674 was occupied by Walter
Green, a farmer. (fn. 72) The Black Lion, built on the
waste bordering the Little estate north of the farmhouse, displays the date 1666. (fn. 73)
By 1714 a medicinal well had been discovered and
exploited near the Bell, which by 1733 opened gardens and a great room for the 'politest companies' in
a pale imitation of Hampstead wells. (fn. 74) The Kilburn
wells did not, in contrast to Hampstead town,
stimulate building and by 1762 there were still only
10 houses, 7 cottages, a tollhouse, a smith's shop,
and 3 public houses on Edgware Road. (fn. 75) Any 17thcentury building in Kilburn Lane had gone by the
1740s and the cottages on Earlsfield in Mill Lane
disappeared between the 1740s and 1762. (fn. 76) Although
Edgware Road shared with Haverstock Hill the
combination of accessibility to London with a rural
setting, (fn. 77) it did not attract gentry and London
merchants in the same way, possibly because it
lacked the height to give fine views.
Building during the 18th century included the
rebuilding of the old farmhouse on the Liddell
estate and the construction of 5 cottages by 1771 and
then their replacement by a new brick house by
1807. (fn. 78) Most of the building was of cottages on waste
along Edgware Road bordering the Liddell and
Little estates. (fn. 79) More extensive building began on
the Kilburn priory estate, which bordered St. John's
Wood in St. Marylebone, where development was
already well in hand by 1819 when Fulk Greville
Howard (formerly Upton) bought it. In the same
year he made an agreement with John Gelsthorp
and Henry Jay, carpenters from Marylebone and
Kilburn respectively, to build on plots fronting an
existing farm lane (Abbey Lane) running south from
West End Lane, with the intention of granting 99year leases once the houses were completed. The
builders were small men with little capital and their
houses were small, pairs joined by a single storey.
Gelsthorp, who also built a range of stables, went
bankrupt in 1821 and Jay in 1825 and the plots were
sold by auction to investors. (fn. 80) Howard made an
agreement in 1819 with George Pocock, a surveyor
who lived on the Marylebone side of Edgware Road,
to take a field on the parish border and build residences for the gentry. He laid out Greville Place, then
in Marylebone, with plots for detached and semidetached villas, six or seven of which had been built
by the time building ceased in 1825. (fn. 81) A group of
houses called Prospect Place had been built fronting
Edgware Road south of the junction with West End
Lane, and a field lane linking West End Lane with
Edgware Road near the parish boundary had been
turned into a private road, later called Kilburn
Priory, by 1829. (fn. 82) Howard's ambitions had not,
however, been realized. As a wealthy man Howard
could afford to wait until the demand for houses
revived but his experience may have been responsible for the behaviour of Samuel Ware, the surveyor
and architect of the duke of Portland's London
estate. (fn. 83) Ware, who already owned property elsewhere in Hampstead, bought the Little estate in
1822 (fn. 84) and began almost immediately to sell off
pieces of it. (fn. 85) By 1841 he had leased the remaining
12 a. bordering Edgware Road to five or more
tenants, one a nurseryman but the others including
a solicitor, who occupied Oak Lodge. The Grange,
possibly in existence by 1841, was occupied by a
retired coachbuilder, Thomas Peters, by 1851. (fn. 86)
Sidney Terrace existed at the north of the estate by
1842, as did Royston Hall on the Gilberts estate. (fn. 87)
Building began again on the Kilburn priory estate
in 1843 when Howard made an agreement with
William Cullum, a china manufacturer, who had
built four substantial houses by 1846 when Howard
died. (fn. 88) In 1845 Howard made an agreement with
James Carter, a Maida Vale builder, who laid out
Springfield Lane (originally Goldsmith's Place,
Osborne Terrace, and Bell Terrace), built Greville
(originally Manchester) Mews and two-storeyed
tenements (Manchester Place) backing the stables
and the Bell and Red Lion, and built some more
'classy' houses in Springfield Villas (later Kilburn
Priory). Carter was still building in 1849 but in 1851
he was superseded by George Duncan, a substantial
developer from Grove End Road on the Eyre estate,
with whom Col. Arthur Upton, heir to the Kilburn
priory estate on Howard's death in 1846, made a
building agreement for 15½ a. In Kilburn Priory,
Priory Road, and St. George's Road, Duncan built
mostly pairs of good-class villas, with some terraces
of shops in Belsize Road, extended westward from
the Eyre estate, a public house in West End Lane
and a church, St. Mary's, built in Abbey Road in
1856. Some 69 houses were built in Kilburn between 1845 and 1850 and another 200 were added
between 1851 and 1857, mostly by Duncan and,
after 1854, by his son John Wallace Duncan, but
about a third by a number of small builders on
underleases. The Duncan houses, Italianate and
three-storeyed, were mostly north of the L.N.W.R.
railway, built through the middle of the estate in
1837, and some of the occupants used Kilburn
station, opened on it in 1852. The main access to
London was by horse omnibus along Edgware Road.
Some larger houses were built on higher ground in
Greville and Mortimer roads, laid out in 1853. By
1860 building was almost complete on the estate. (fn. 89)
There was little growth elsewhere in the area
before 1860. At Shoot Up Hill new farm buildings
replaced old ones, which were converted to a cottage, and a new lodge was built c. 1852. One house
was built in Cricklewood in 1853 (fn. 90) and the Bell was
rebuilt in 1863. (fn. 91) David Tildesley, a Paddington
ironmonger, filled some of the gaps on the Kilburn
priory estate, in St. George's Road and Alexandra
Road, in 1867. (fn. 92)
The estate most directly affected by the railways
was Gilbert's across which the Hampstead Junction
railway was built in 1860. The railway company
acquired some 6½ a. from Gilberts, then held by
Thomas H. Ripley, in 1864-5, and another 10 a.
were sold to the Midland Railway Co. in 1867. (fn. 93)
Royston Hall was replaced by some five houses in
1871-2. The rest of the estate was enfranchised in
1868 (fn. 94) and sold by 1869 to land companies. The
British Land Co., which bought the portion north
of the Hampstead Junction railway, obtained approval in 1869 for the formation of Iverson, Loveridge, and Maygrove roads and Ariel Street. (fn. 95)
Station Road, where six houses were built in 1874-5,
may have been an early name for Iverson Road. By
1878 all four roads had been laid out between the
railway lines and c. 70 houses and a Baptist chapel
built; (fn. 96) another 195 houses had been added by 1882.
In 1879 at the east end of the estate John Edward
Medley of St. John's Wood, who had bought the
plot in 1872, built 11 houses in Medley Road. (fn. 97) The
portion of the Gilberts estate south of the railway
was sold to the United Land Co. which in 1869
obtained approval for Netherwood, Kelson, and
Linstead streets, named after directors of the company. (fn. 98) Netherwood Street was originally called
Royston Road, after Royston Hall, which made way
for it. Some 80 houses were built on the estate between 1871 and 1880. In 1880-1 a board school and
a mission hall were built in Netherwood Street. (fn. 99)
Adjoining the Gilberts estate to the south was the
Little estate, the northern part of which had been
sold off in 1827. (fn. 1) By 1862 it, together with other
parts of the estate to the east, was in the hands of
Donald Nicoll. (fn. 2) He built Palmerston Road in 1865,
which was linked to the United Land Co. estate.
Building, of cramped terraces as on the land company estates, was almost complete by 1871. (fn. 3)
Although plans were drawn up in 1855 to develop
the Powell-Cotton Shoot Up Hill estate, they were
delayed by uncertainty over the course of the railway. (fn. 4) The earliest development on the family's
estates began in the south, north of the existing
L.N.W.R. line and adjacent to the built-up areas of
the Kilburn priory estate. In 1866 plans were
approved for a number of roads on the PowellCotton's Liddell estate, mostly named after places
in Kent near the Powell-Cotton family seat of Quex
Park: Quex, Birchington, and Mutrix roads. A
Roman Catholic church and Wesleyan and Unitarian
chapels were built in Quex Road in 1868-9 (fn. 5) and at
least 55 houses were built on the estate between 1871
and 1885. (fn. 6) In 1874 building spread to the eastern
part of the Powell-Cotton estates at Kilburn Woods,
which lay between West End Lane and the Maryon
Wilson estate. By agreement Col. Henry Cotton laid
out Canfield (later Priory) Road on the boundary
between the estates and some 45 houses were built
there between 1877 and 1882. Acol Road was laid
out to link with the development to the east. Between 1874 and 1886 parallel roads were laid out to
the north and 56 mostly detached and semi-detached
houses built in Acol Road (1877-9), Woodchurch
Road (1878-9), Cleve Road (1882-6), and Chislett
Road (1884-8, later the western section of Compayne Gardens), and 19 stables in Acol Mews (1879)
and West Hampstead Mews (1886-7). (fn. 7)
On the western side of West End Lane, on the
Powell-Cotton (Liddell) estate north of Quex Road,
the Chimes, a large house built in the 1860s by
E. W. Pugin for the painter John Rogers Herbert
(1810-90), for some time insulated the area from
further building. (fn. 8) Building spread northward from
Quex Road west of the Chimes. Kingsgate Road,
named after another place in Kent, stretched northward to the estate border by 1875 and 77 houses
were built there between 1878 and 1888. (fn. 9) On the
remnants of the adjoining Little estate a new lodge
and house were built at Oak Lodge in 1877. (fn. 10) A
road, Eresby Road, was planned across the southern
part of the Little estate between Edgware Road and
Kingsgate Road in 1879 (fn. 11) and 26 houses were built
there between 1883 and 1885; houses and shops
were built by R. Rose on the Oak Lodge estate in
1881. Eleven houses were built in Smyrna Road, on
the Liddell estate, opposite Eresby Road, in 1883
and two roads to the north, Gascony and Messina
avenues, were constructed across both estates; 130
houses were built there between 1881 and 1887. (fn. 12)
Of the Little estate, only the Grange and nursery
lands remained untouched. (fn. 13)
Stables and workshops were built in Kingsgate
Mews and Place from 1886 and another 30 houses
and 6 shops were added in Kingsgate Road 1892-6,
12 houses in Eresby Road 1891-2, and 49 houses in
Mazenod Avenue 1891-6 and flats (presumably
Priory Court) 1899-1900. The last were probably
part of the development on the site of the Chimes
which was given over to the builders in the late
1890s. A block of flats (Douglas Mansions) was built
at the corner of West End Lane and Quex Road in
1896 and another three blocks there (King's
Gardens) in 1897. (fn. 14)
Five houses were built behind the Bell in 1871.
Houses, workshops, and shops were built fronting
Edgware Road on all the estates from 1872. Some
were on the Shoot Up Hill estate, south of the farmhouse, by 1878, and George Verey, lessee of the
farm, was responsible for building houses there in
1881. H. B. Oldrey of Albert Works, Kilburn, rebuilt the Red Lion and built some houses and shops
in Kilburn High Road in 1890 and three houses in
Kilburn Priory in 1893. (fn. 15)
The Liddell and Little estates were built by
several local builders including Henry Stock of
Gascony Avenue and J. Bursill. The Powell-Cottons
controlled the development of the Shoot Up Hill
estate, where Kentish names predominated. Fordwych Road, from Mill Lane to Maygrove Road,
defined the eastern boundary of the estate, and was
linked to Edgware Road by Garlinge Road, planned
in 1880, and Dandelion (later St. Cuthbert's) Road,
planned in 1882. Between 1880 and 1892 some 147
houses, a church, and a school were built in the new
roads. The principal builder was Joshua Parnell of
Fordwych Road. Another 12 houses were built
fronting Shoot Up Hill between 1890 and 1894. In
1911 permission was given for Kingscroft Road on
the site of Shoot Up Hill Farm and the Elms; 7
houses were built there before 1914. (fn. 16)
In the 1890s building on the Powell-Cotton estate
spread north of Mill Lane. (fn. 17) Fordwych Road was
extended north of the lane by 1892 and most of the
57 houses built in the road between 1892 and 1907
were probably in the northern section. (fn. 18) The new
roads, named after Kentish places or places abroad
visited by Maj. Percy Powell-Cotton, were Minster
Road (30 houses between 1891 and 1900), Gondar
Gardens (52 houses between 1892 and 1896 and 5
blocks of flats in 1899), Westbere Road (30 houses
and a school between 1893 and 1904), Sarre Road
(25 houses between 1896 and 1904), Skardu Road
(48 houses in 1897), Manstone Road (15 houses in
1899-1900), and Rondu Road (6 houses in 1900). At
the northern end of the estate c. 23 shops and dwellings were built in the Parade, Cricklewood, and in
Richborough Road in 1885 and between 1892 and
1899. Most of those in Richborough Road and
Ebbsfleet Road, named in 1893, were presumably
built 1901-3. (fn. 19) Some 22 houses were built in Somali
Road between 1904 and 1908 and 6 in Menelik Road
in 1913. By 1913 the only land left unbuilt was on
the northern borders of the Powell-Cotton estate
and at Kilburn Grange, which was acquired as a
public park in 1911. (fn. 20)
There was a greater proportion of the 'fairly comfortable, good ordinary earnings' category in Kilburn
c. 1890 than in any other district of Hampstead. The
most spacious and therefore high-class area was the
Powell-Cottons Kilburn Woods estate, designated
middle-class and well-to-do, with one street, Cleve
Road, upper middle- and middle-class. There was
one other upper middle-class area, Greville Road,
an extension of the Marylebone part of the Kilburn
priory estate. Most of the Hampstead section of that
estate, together with the southern part of the PowellCottons' Liddell estate, was middle-class but the
mews and industrial sections of both estates were of
lower status, as was the housing on the land companies' estates in the centre. Although most houses
were terraced and, by Hampstead standards, densely
packed, the pressure of population and increasing
rents led to some division among families and the
taking of lodgers. In 1887 severe weather and unemployment caused great suffering to the poor in
Kilburn. Booth noted the social decadence of the
whole area, the lack of religious attendance, the
arrival of the Jews, and the prevalence of the artistic
and Bohemian element. (fn. 21) The biggest increase, however, was in the Irish and, compared with elsewhere
in Hampstead, the artistic element was meagre.
H. G. Wells taught from 1889 to 1890 at a school in
Mortimer Road (later Crescent), (fn. 22) and there were
studios at no. 1 Woodchurch Road and nos. 24-6
Greville Road belonging to Seymour Lucas
(1882-1904) and Goscombe John (1860-1952)
respectively. (fn. 23)
Building resumed on the northern borders of the
borough on the Powell-Cotton estate after 1918,
with some 70 houses being built in Westbere,
Somali, Menelik, and Asmara roads between 1922
and 1928. Almost all the building of the 1930s was
of flats on the sites of earlier houses. On the Kilburn
Woods estate it included no. 17 Acol Road in 1932,
Acol Court at the junction with West End Lane in
1934, Kingswood Court to the south in 1935, Cleve
House in Cleve Road in 1935, and Embassy House
at the junction of Cleve Road and West End Lane
in 1936-7. On the Kilburn priory estate Hillsborough Court, a neo-Tudor block decorated with
heraldic motifs in stone, was built for Greville
Estates in Mortimer Crescent in 1933 and Ascot
Lodge was built at the corner of Greville Road and
Place in 1939. Between 1934 and 1938 Fordwych,
Hillcrest, and Kendal courts and Warwick Lodge
were built on the sites of nos. 50-64 Shoot Up Hill,
on either side of Mill Lane. (fn. 24) In 1935 the Westcroft
estate, 290 houses, was built by Douglas & Wood for
Hampstead council just over the border in the
Hendon part of Cricklewood. (fn. 25)
By 1930 the United Land Co.'s estate at Netherwood Street and Palmerston Road was occupied by
unskilled labourers and contained some poverty and
overcrowding. There was overcrowding to a lesser
extent on the adjacent British Land Co.'s estate
which, together with the southern part of the
Liddell estate and parts of the Kilburn priory
estate, was mostly occupied by skilled workers. (fn. 26)
The cosmopolitan and Irish elements continued to
grow in the area, which did not particularly attract
European artist refugees. Artists in the district between the wars included the painters Sir Frank
Dicksee (1853-1928) at no. 3 Greville Place and
David Bomberg (1890-1957), the cubist and vorticist, at no. 10 Fordwych Road 1930-3 before
moving to Lymington Road, then to Greville Place,
and finally to Belsize. John Drinkwater (1882-1937),
the poet, lived at North Hall, Mortimer Crescent,
from 1934. Harry St. John Philby (1885-1960),
diplomat and traveller, lived with his family, including the future spy Kim, at no. 10 Acol Road from
1930 to 1949. (fn. 27)
Bomb-damage was widespread during the Second
World War, possibly because the railways were an
obvious target. (fn. 28) It combined with overcrowding in
densely packed back-to-back houses to necessitate
extensive rebuilding. The first post-war borough
council estate was Kilburn Priory or Gate, which
started in 1948 with plans for 94 flats on 2½ a. off
Kilburn Priory near the southern border. The first
60 flats were opened in 1951, the rest, designed by
J. B. K. Cowper, in 1957. In 1953 Sidney Boyd
Court, three blocks containing 80 flats, was opened
on the east side of West End Lane, between Woodchurch and Acol roads. (fn. 29) Forty-three dwellings were
under construction in Springfield Lane, Kilburn, in
1954. (fn. 30) At the other end of the district the Templar
House estate, 112 flats by Frank Scarlett on 3½ a. at
Shoot Up Hill, between Garlinge and St. Cuthbert's
roads, which had been cleared for flats before the
war, was opened in 1954. (fn. 31) On a smaller scale were
flats in Garlinge Road, designed in 1967-9 by David
Hyde-Harrison (fn. 32) and old people's homes, designed
on a hexagonal system, on 1 a. at the corner of Priory
and Woodchurch roads in 1967. (fn. 33) In 1969 the whole
of the area bounded by Edgware Road, West End
Lane, and the railway lines was made a general
improvement area. (fn. 34) The first phase, a council
estate called Florence Cayford, later Webheath,
designed by the borough architect Sidney Cook, was
opened in two stages, in 1970 and 1972, to house
400 people on a site cleared of the notorious slums
in the Netherwood Street and Palmerston Road
area. (fn. 35) In 1975 on the Kingsgate estate to the south
146 new houses were built in the area south of
Gascony Avenue and west of Kingsgate Road, and
there was building in Smyrna Road. (fn. 36)
In 1947 the L.C.C. announced a scheme for 104
flats in Kilburn Vale. The estate, south of West End
Lane, which involved the demolition of some of the
earliest building in the area in Kilburn Vale and
Abbey Lane, was opened c. 1951. In 1948 the L.C.C.
began clearing the area between Greville Road and
Mortimer Place and Crescent, which it replaced
with the Mortimer Crescent estate, eight smallscale, brick blocks of flats, which were opened c.
1955. (fn. 37) A second phase of the Kilburn Vale estate,
north of West End Lane, bound by Mutrix and
Quex roads and involving the demolition of the
eastern part of Birchington Road, was completed by
1984. (fn. 38) In 1984 two estates in the area belonged to
the Cicely Davies housing association, 16 flats in
converted houses at nos. 6 and 8 Woodchurch Road,
and 70 flats on the Priory Road estate. (fn. 39)
A high proportion of the population, especially in
Kilburn, lived in council houses. There was said to
be a 40 per cent increase in the number of homes in
West Hampstead and Kilburn between 1966 and
1971, and overcrowding fell: it had been 0.96 per
room in Kilburn ward and 1.45 in Priory ward in
1921, was 0.92 and 0.88 respectively in 1951, and
was 0.78 and 0.70 respectively in 1971. The improvement was, however, aided by a decline in population
from 26,286 in the two wards in 1921 to 24,085 in
1971. After the war immigrants were numerous: the
Irish still came and there were West Indians and
Indians and Pakistanis, all of whom tended to have
larger families than average, a characteristic noted in
Kilburn ward in 1971. Nevertheless, the proportion
of households (4,200) to population (10,181) in Kilburn ward was less than in Hampstead Town ward
and there were many people living singly. (fn. 40)
In spite of the large-scale redevelopment, traces
remained in 1987 of most of the phases of the area's
history. The Bell and Red Lion, though rebuilt in
1863 and 1890 respectively, (fn. 41) still stood on their
original sites, as did the Black Lion, rebuilt in 1898
and a listed building. Also listed were the early 19thcentury nos. 1-5 Greville Place and nos. 24 and 26
Greville Road, remnants of the earliest building
estates on the Kilburn priory estate, and nos. 13-19
(odd) Greville Place and no. 37 Greville Road, from
the mid 19th century. (fn. 42) Edgware Road contained
examples, mostly of terraces fronted by shops, from
every decade from the 1860s. As building spread
northward the earlier stucco and stock brick gave
way to the red-brick terraced and semi-detached
houses of the northern Powell-Cotton estate. The
northern area at Cricklewood was homogeneous,
entirely residential except for the shops in Edgware
Road, but Kilburn was a mixture of elegant stuccoed
Regency villas, Victorian stock-brick terraces, mansion flats of the 1890s, post-1945 council blocks,
small-scale industry, and shops. In Kilburn High
Road the fish shops, public houses, and small factories and shops selling exotic vegetables and saris
reflected the successive waves of immigrants that
have given Kilburn its cosmopolitan flavour.