Growth before 1850.
There is no firm evidence
of pre-Roman settlement in the parish, which has
yielded many Romano-British finds. (fn. 77) Hendon was
first mentioned in a charter purporting to date from
972-8, (fn. 78) by which time a settlement had presumably
grown up at Church End, on a well-watered
eminence (fn. 79) where the parish church, with its Norman
font, is situated. The same charter mentions land in
the north of the parish called Lotheresleage, (fn. 80) whose
name had disappeared by the end of the Middle
Ages, as had that of Blechenham, an estate to the
south which was first mentioned in a charter
reputedly dating from 959. (fn. 81) In 1321 trees still
covered many slopes. There were woods called
Highpark and Downage, the latter near Church
End, (fn. 82) while Cricklewood and Highwood Hill, first
recorded then, gave their names to later hamlets. (fn. 83)
The survival of some early-14th-century names in
those of later fields (fn. 84) indicates that the common
fields lay north of Church End. Parts of the parish
may never have had a common-field system; the
presence of large areas of woodland in the 16th
century, both in compact 'groves' and in hedgerows,
suggests that small fields were assarted in the
south. (fn. 85)
Most of the cultivated land seems to have been
inclosed by 1574, when there were common fields
called Sheveshill, Shoelands, Dinge, and Forty near
the Hale. (fn. 86) The last to survive was Sheveshill, near
the site of Burnt Oak Underground station, which
disappeared between 1828 (fn. 87) and 1843. (fn. 88) There were
no large commons or heaths, although in 1754
manorial waste at Golders Green stretched for some
distance on either side of the main road from
Hampstead; (fn. 89) the name, apparently derived from
that of a local family, the Goodyers, was first
recorded in 1612. (fn. 90) In 1754 there were also greens
at Lower Hale and at Gibbs Green near by; at
Holcombe Hill, Mill Hill, and Drivers Hill; near
Burton Hole farm; at the Hyde; at Temple Fortune;
in Cricklewood Lane (Cowhouse Green); and at
Golders Hill. (fn. 91) As early as 1711 the lord's quit-rents
were increasing each year through new admissions
to the waste (fn. 92) and by the early 19th century the
amount of common land had declined considerably, (fn. 93)
while Golders Green was inclosed for villas. As a
result animals were often grazed on the roads and
in 1835 they broke down the fences at Clitterhouse. (fn. 94)
An attempt in 1878 to sell Brent Green, the last
piece of manorial waste in southern Hendon, was
defeated by local residents, and the land was
bought by the parish as an open space. (fn. 95)
Most of the early inhabitants lived in hamlets on
the gravel-topped hills. Until the late 19th century
the low-lying and poorly drained western part of the
parish contained little but isolated farm-houses. (fn. 96)
There were two small settlements on Edgware
Road: the Hyde, recorded in 1281, (fn. 97) and Cricklewood, mentioned in 1294. (fn. 98) The Hale, in the northwest corner (healh) of the parish, was an element in
a personal name in 1294. (fn. 99) The Burroughs, named
after the hill on which it stands, was recorded in
1316, (fn. 1) Highwood Hill in 1321, (fn. 2) Mill Hill in 1374, (fn. 3)
and Childs Hill in 1593. (fn. 4) The hamlet of Golders
Green originated, like Mill Hill and the Hyde, as
a group of cottages on waste ground on each side of
a main road; Brent Street, recorded in 1613, was
similarly situated. (fn. 5) There was an inn c. 1274 (fn. 6) but
its location is unknown.
Hendon's proximity to London made it a favoured
site for country houses, although few that were built
before the 18th century have survived. The abbots
of Westminster had a house there by 1285. (fn. 7) John
Norden (1548-1625), the topographer, who is
believed to have lived at Hendon House, Brent
Street, (fn. 8) said that Sir John Fortescue (d. 1607),
Chancellor of the Exchequer, often stayed at
Hendon Place, the Herberts' manor-house. (fn. 9) Hendon
House, Brent Street, a gabled building probably of
the 16th century, had 16 hearths in 1664. (fn. 10) It was
the residence of Sir William Rawlinson (1640-
1703), a Commissioner of the Great Seal, from
1691 (fn. 11) and afterwards of his daughter, whose second
husband was Giles Earle (?1678-1759), the politician. (fn. 12) The house was rebuilt in the early 19th
century and demolished in 1909. (fn. 13) Copt Hall, Page
Street, was rebuilt between 1624 and 1637, as the
seat of a branch of the Nicholl (Nicoll) family, and a
building of similar date at Mill Hill may have been
Cookes farm-house, which also belonged to the
Nicholls. (fn. 14) Several other farm-houses were rebuilt in
the 16th and 17th centuries. The sole survival is
Church Farm House, Church End, a gabled brick
building dating probably from the early 17th century
and one of the most complete examples of Middlesex
vernacular architecture of its time. It was bought by
Hendon U.D. in 1944 and restored in 1954 for use
as a local history museum. (fn. 15) Farm-houses of
similar date included Dole Street, a weatherboarded building demolished in 1937, (fn. 16) and
Clitterhouse. (fn. 17)
In 1754 the chief hamlets in the north part were
the Hale, Highwood Hill, and Mill Hill, the smallest
being the Hale. At Lower Hale, on the Edgware
border, there were no more than six houses, (fn. 18) of
which the most prominent was Lower Hale or Hale
Grove farm-house, a substantial building with an
early-18th-century frontage which survived into the
early 20th century (fn. 19) and may have been a capital
messuage belonging to Edward Nicholl in 1732. (fn. 20)
Upper Hale, a short distance to the south-east, was
a larger collection of buildings at the junction of
Deans, Hale, and Selvage lanes; it included Hale
farm-house and the Green Man, which was first
recorded in 1751. (fn. 21) The Hale remained a distinct
hamlet until the 1920s. (fn. 22) The largest farm-houses
near by were Stoneyfields, Shakerham, Goldbeaters,
Bunns, and Coventry. All had disappeared by 1970,
except for some of the Coventry farm buildings,
which formed part of Mill Hill golf club.
In contrast to the Hale, a purely agricultural community, the Mill Hill ridge was occupied by
fashionable houses, many of them built for London
merchants. By 1814 Mill Hill was a considerable
village and, like Highwood Hill, boasted many 'respectable family residences' in extensive grounds. (fn. 23)
Some of the houses, like Littleberries and Ridgeway
House, had been built in the 17th and early 18th
centuries but most of them dated from c. 1800,
when the area's popularity reached a peak, on account
of its woods, its views, and its proximity to London. (fn. 24)
The first notable resident was Rachel, Lady Russell
(1636-1723), a friend of Queen Anne, who lived
on or near the site of the later Highwood House,
after the execution of her husband William, Lord
Russell, in 1683. (fn. 25) Another well-known early
resident was the actress Mary Porter (d. 1765), who
moved to Highwood Hill after her retirement in
1745. (fn. 26)
The survival of several large houses at Mill Hill
has helped to preserve an opulent and spacious air.
At Highwood Hill the largest is Highwood House,
a classical building of brick and stucco, with slightly
projecting wings and a semicircular Ionic porch. It
was built shortly before 1817 for William Anderson, (fn. 27)
bought by Sir Stamford Raffles, founder of Singapore, in 1825, and inhabited by his widow from 1826
until 1858. (fn. 28) In 1954 it was restored for use as a
nursing home. (fn. 29) The grounds contained Lady
Russell's well, whose water was compared favourably in 1807 with that issuing from the Cheltenham
springs. (fn. 30) To the east, at the other side of Nan
Clarke's Lane, Hendon Park stood with an adjoining
farm-house in 1756. (fn. 31) To its north-west the site of
an old earthwork, described in 1756 as a proper place
to build on, had been levelled to make way for a
farm-house by 1764 (fn. 32) and replaced by Moat Mount
House by 1796. (fn. 33) The only other large house north
of Highwood Hill was Hyver Hall, in existence by
1863. (fn. 34) Two smaller late-18th- or early-19th-century
villas survived in 1970: Highwood Ash, a stuccoed
house which contains parts of a timber-framed
building, and Highwood Lodge, with bargeboarded gables, Tudor windows, and a battlemented
wing. They stood, with some cottages, around the
junction of Marsh Lane and the road leading to the
Ridgeway. Of the two inns at Highwood Hill
licensed in 1751 (fn. 35) the Rising Sun survived, much
rebuilt, in 1970 but the Three Crowns, an 18thcentury bow-fronted building, had been demolished
in 1937. (fn. 36)
South of Highwood Hill lies Holcombe Hill,
where a forge, mentioned in 1839, (fn. 37) and some
weatherboarded cottages form a group at the
northern end of Lawrence Street. The Plough, a
small weatherboarded inn which existed in 1751, (fn. 38)
was demolished in 1931. (fn. 39) A large green at Holcombe
Hill in 1754 (fn. 40) disappeared, like much of the waste
on either side of the Ridgeway, between 1754 and
1828. (fn. 41) Of the two farms at the foot of Lawrence
Street, mentioned in 1796, (fn. 42) Uphill, an early-19thcentury building, was demolished in 1931 (fn. 43) but
Lawrence Street farm-house, a large red-brick
building of the early 18th century, survives among
the semi-detached villas of Goodwyn Avenue.
On the Ridgeway itself Holcombe Hill marked
the beginning of a line of buildings which by 1754, (fn. 44)
stretched intermittently on either side of the road
for about a mile to Drivers Hill. The area became
known as Mill Hill village, to distinguish it from
the 20th-century suburb called Mill Hill Broadway. (fn. 45)
South-east of Holcombe Hill is Holcombe House, a
stuccoed villa designed in 1775 by John Johnson for
John William Anderson (d. 1813), afterwards Lord
Mayor of London and a baronet. The interior contains some elaborate late-18th-century plaster work
and a staircase with a wrought-iron balustrade.
A domed Grecian temple in the grounds was
demolished soon after the Second World War. (fn. 46) In
1970 Holcombe House was surrounded by the
buildings of St. Mary's abbey, of which it had
formed a part since 1881. (fn. 47) Almost opposite, on the
north-east side of the Ridgeway, stood the late-18thcentury Belmont House. (fn. 48) To the south-east
Ridgeway House, an early-18th-century building, (fn. 49)
was the home in 1754 of Peter Collinson (1694-
1768), naturalist and antiquary, (fn. 50) and c. 1802 of the
botanist Richard Anthony Salisbury (1761-1829). (fn. 51)
It was taken over by Mill Hill school on its formation
in 1807 but was demolished in 1825, although the
garden, visited by Linnaeus, survived for another
ten years. (fn. 52) In 1970 a wall-plaque marked the site of
the house.
The site of Ridgeway House is occupied by the
main block of Mill Hill school, which was built in
1825-7 to the designs of William Tite. (fn. 53) The twostoreyed building presents a severe aspect to the
Ridgeway but the main front, facing south across
playing fields, has a bold Ionic portico. The sanatorium, a plain gabled building designed by T. Roger
Smith, was built c. 1877. Further additions to the
school were made at the end of the 19th century: the
red-brick chapel in the basilican style was built to
the designs of Basil Champneys in 1898 and a group
of buildings including the tuck shop and the Murray
scriptorium, named after the lexicographer J. A. H.
Murray (d. 1915), a master at the school from
1870 to 1875, (fn. 54) was begun in 1902 to the designs of
T. E. Colcutt. The Winterstoke library, adjoining
the scriptorium, was built before 1912 to Colcutt's
designs (fn. 55) and the McClure music school was
designed by Martin Briggs, a native of Mill Hill. (fn. 56)
The style of both buildings, with their steeplypitched roofs and mixture of vernacular and classical
motifs, resembles that employed at the same time
in Hampstead Garden Suburb. (fn. 57) The war memorial
gateway on the Ridgeway front was designed by
Stanley Hamp, Colcutt's partner, in 1919. (fn. 58) The
boarding houses of the school are in Wills Grove,
some of them dating from the early 20th century and
others, like Hamp's neo-Georgian Burton Bank, (fn. 59)
from a later period.
Two large houses stood in 1754 near the junction
of the Ridgeway and Milespit Hill. (fn. 60) The Clock
House (fn. 61) occupied the site of the residence later
known as the Priory, while opposite was Littleberries, a large and plain brick building probably
built by George Littlebury, who bought the site in
1691. (fn. 62) A pedimented Ionic temple, with baroque
plasterwork inside, was later built in the grounds
and alterations and additions to the house were
carried out by J. F. Pawson before 1850. (fn. 63) After its
purchase by a religious community in 1885 some
elaborate fittings were sold (fn. 64) but in 1970 a mid-18thcentury wrought iron staircase and an early plaster
ceiling in the Gilt Room remained in situ. Littleberries, like Holcombe House, became surrounded
by later buildings. A smaller 18th-century house
called Jeanettes occupied an adjacent site until the
early 1930s, when it made way for an extension to
the convent's vegetable garden. (fn. 65) At the southeastern end of the Ridgeway, at the top of Bittacy
Hill, stood Bittacy House, a plain stuccoed villa
described as modern in 1828. (fn. 66) It was demolished
in 1950 (fn. 67) and replaced by Watchtower House. (fn. 68)
Between the mansions of Mill Hill many smaller
villas and groups of cottages survive. One group
stands at the corner of Hammers Lane and the
Ridgeway, and in Hammers Lane itself there are
two stuccoed villas of c. 1800, called West Grove
and Sunnyside. The Three Hammers was mentioned
in 1751 (fn. 69) but the old weatherboarded building was
replaced soon after 1925. (fn. 70) Opposite Belmont there
is a pair of brick and weatherboarded cottages, one
of them containing a shop and post office. To the
east, the King's Head, a three-storeyed brick
building (fn. 71) mentioned in 1751, (fn. 72) was demolished in
1949, when the site was incorporated in the playingfields of Belmont school. (fn. 73) Farther east Church
Cottages, with St. Paul's church and school, survive
from the 1830s. More weatherboarded houses face
Mill Hill school and include the Grove, with
features of c. 1700, which was restored in 1912 as a
residence for masters at the school, (fn. 74) and Rosebank,
the meeting-place of late-17th-century Quakers. (fn. 75)
A larger cluster of buildings by the village pond and
green, where Milespit Hill meets the Ridgeway,
includes Nicholl's alms-houses and some modern
houses on the site of the Angel, an inn mentioned
in 1751. (fn. 76) Shops, cottages, and a Methodist chapel
were built north of the pond in the 19th century on
an inclosed part of the green. The weatherboarded
Adam and Eve stood at the junction of the Ridgeway
and Burton Hole Lane in 1751 but was replaced
soon after 1915. (fn. 77) It served the small hamlet of
Drivers Hill, which consisted in 1754 of a few
cottages around a green, all of which have disappeared. Burton Hole Lane, recorded in 1754, (fn. 78)
leads downhill from the Ridgeway to Burton Hole
farm-house, a small 18th-century weatherboarded
building. (fn. 79)
Several small groups of cottages and farm-houses
stood on the southern slopes of the Mill Hill ridge.
In Page Street, mentioned in 1588, (fn. 80) the cottages
which stood near Copt Hall at the junction with
Bunns Lane in 1754 (fn. 81) have all disappeared. Among
them was Old Goodhews farm-house, a large 18thcentury brick building with a mansard roof,
demolished soon after 1928. (fn. 82) At the foot of Bittacy
Hill the hamlet of Dollis, mentioned in 1574, (fn. 83) consisted in 1754 (fn. 84) of two groups of farm buildings,
together with the Harrow, an inn recorded in 1751 (fn. 85)
but converted before 1796 (fn. 86) into a private house.
Dollis Farm was demolished in 1932. (fn. 87) Near-by
farm-houses in 1754 included the later Dole Street,
Elm (or Rose), and Sanders Lane (or Devonshire)
farms, all west of Bittacy Hill, while east of the road
stood Bittacy, Frith, and Partingdale (Pattengale)
farms. The last forms the nucleus of the house in
Partingdale Lane known as Partingdale Manor, a
substantial brick building, mostly early-19thcentury. Residences south of Mill Hill include
Featherstone House, in Wise Lane, a small brick
building refronted in the 18th century, and Chase
Lodge, formerly Page Street House, of brick and
stucco with a projecting Ionic porch, built by 1802. (fn. 88)
Arrandene, in Wise Lane, a cottage with bargeboarded gables much altered in the later 19th
century, (fn. 89) was probably built soon after 1800.
The high ground in the centre of the parish was
occupied by the three hamlets of the Burroughs,
Church End, and Brent Street. By 1597 there was a
cross-roads at the Burroughs, (fn. 90) where the workhouse and other buildings later stood around a pond
at a point where the ground sloped steeply to the
south, north, and west. Houses which survived the
construction of Watford Way through the crossroads in 1927 were nos. 9-15, an early-18th-century
group in brick, no. 42 (Burroughs House), a larger
brick building, and early-19th-century terraced
cottages stretching along the road towards Church
End. The White Bear, mentioned in 1751, (fn. 91) was
rebuilt in 1932. (fn. 92) Burroughs Lodge, west of the
cross-roads, was gabled and probably once a farmhouse, with early-19th-century alterations; its site is
occupied by Richmond Gardens. (fn. 93) Grove House,
one of the largest seats in the parish, stood in
extensive grounds to the north of the Burroughs by
1753. (fn. 94) It was a stuccoed building, altered in the
early 19th century and demolished in 1934, when the
grounds became a public park. (fn. 95) Burroughs, or
Grove, Farm, also demolished, was a small weatherboarded building at the cross-roads. (fn. 96)
Church End consisted in 1754 (fn. 97) of a cluster of
small buildings around St. Mary's church, including
Church End Farm (later called Hinge's and the
Model Dairy farms), Church Farm, (fn. 98) the weatherboarded Greyhound inn on the site of the old
church house, (fn. 99) and several weatherboarded cottages.
The hamlet, away from main roads, retains something of its rural character among acres of suburban
housing. To the south were Daniel's alms-houses
and Ravensfield House, a stuccoed building of
c. 1800, which made way for a bus garage in 1912. (fn. 1)
Some substantial houses were built in Parson
Street, near Hendon Place and the Vicarage, (fn. 2) in the
18th century. The largest was Hendon Hall, at the
corner of Ashley Lane, described as new in 1756. (fn. 3)
Its body is a plain brick three-storeyed block with a
six-bay front and moulded wooden windowsurrounds; the most notable feature, however, is a
massive portico extending the whole height and
almost the whole width of the house, with a pediment supported by four Corinthian columns of
brick. The portico is said to have been added by
Brian Scotney, the occupier in 1796, (fn. 4) and to have
been brought from Wanstead House (Essex), sold
for demolition in 1823. (fn. 5) The house was altered in
the mid-19th century, when the front to Parson
Street was given its Renaissance aspect, and refitted
for C. F. Hancock, a London jeweller, in 1889. (fn. 6) It
was later leased as a school and became a hotel in
1912, receiving large neo-Tudor extensions before
the Second World War. (fn. 7) A ceiling painting by
Tiepolo, supposedly a study for the painting of
Olympia and the Four Continents in the Residenz,
Würzburg (Germany), was discovered in 1954 and
sold to an American; two other large ceiling
paintings, in the drawing room and the red room, by
unknown artists, are still in situ. (fn. 8) Hendon Hall is
said to have belonged for a time to David Garrick,
lord of the manor 1765-79, but there is no evidence
that he lived there. (fn. 9) The grounds contained an
octagonal brick temple and many other ornaments
celebrating his connexion with the theatre. (fn. 10) The
only surviving monuments are small obelisks in the
hotel courtyard, inscribed with poems in praise of
Garrick and Shakespeare, taken from a larger
monument which stood until c. 1957 in Manor
Hall Road. (fn. 11)
South of Hendon Hall was Downage House, or
Downage Wood House, an 18th-century brick
building occupied in 1754 by Lady Torrington; (fn. 12) it
was altered in the 19th century (fn. 13) and demolished in
1928. (fn. 14) Down House, a neighbouring late-18thcentury stuccoed building, was demolished in
1876. (fn. 15) Parson Street and its northern continuation,
Holders Hill, on account of the wooded, undulating
countryside, attracted many villas. Among them was
Holders Hill House, a cottage orné built to the
designs of Robert Lugar before 1811 (fn. 16) and pulled
down later in the century. (fn. 17)
South-east of Church End lay a settlement at
Brent Street, which in 1754 (fn. 18) stretched south along
the road of that name towards the Brent. It was the
largest hamlet in the 18th century and retained its
identity until the late 19th, when building linked it
with Church End and the Burroughs. Brent Street,
while lacking the grandeur of Mill Hill, was noted
for handsome dwellings, (fn. 19) the largest of which was
Hendon House. (fn. 20) Fosters and Brent Lodge were
two 18th-century brick houses at the corner of
Butchers Lane, later Queen's Road; the first became
a Christian Science reading room in 1930 and the
second, enlarged in the early 19th century and renamed St. Peter's Ouvroir, was demolished in
1957. (fn. 21) Goodyers, near by, was built in 1774. (fn. 22) At
the foot of Brent Street another group of substantial
houses included, on the north bank, Brent Bridge
House, an 18th-century stuccoed building, later the
seat of the Whishaws, part of which survives as the
Brent Bridge hotel. Brook Lodge, south of the river,
was an 18th-century farm-house converted by
Charles Whishaw into a gentleman's residence
shortly before 1828 (fn. 23) and demolished in 1935, after
serving as an annexe to the hotel. (fn. 24) Among other
houses near Brent Bridge in 1754 were those later
known as Bridge House, Holmebush, and Decoy
House (so named after a decoy on the Brent). (fn. 25) In
the lane leading to Renters Farm, Shire Hall was
mentioned in 1712, (fn. 26) rebuilt in the Renaissance
manner c. 1850, and demolished c. 1920. (fn. 27) Many
cottages and shops clustered about the junction of
Brent Street and Bell Lane, including the Bell,
mentioned in 1751 (fn. 28) and considerably altered by
1970. Villas built between Bell Lane and Parson
Street in the early 19th century, (fn. 29) almost linking the
hamlet of Brent Street with Church End, have all
been demolished.
Two small hamlets lay among rich grassland west
of the high ground at the centre of the parish: Colin
Deep, by a ford over Silk stream, and the Hyde, on
Edgware Road at its junction with Kingsbury Road.
The former consisted in 1594 of only four houses (fn. 30)
and was always very small. The Hyde, divided
between Hendon and Kingsbury, contained about a
dozen cottages and farm-houses in 1597. (fn. 31) It had
not grown much by the mid 18th century, (fn. 32) but
some villas with small gardens were built c. 1800,
including Cowleaze House, Rose Cottage, and Hyde
Cottage. (fn. 33) In 1863 the Hendon part of the Hyde
also contained Hyde, Manor, and Rookery farms. (fn. 34) A
weatherboarded ale-house called the George was
mentioned in 1756, when it also served as Daniel
Weedon's farm-house. (fn. 35) The Hyde was the sole
hamlet along Edgware Road between Cricklewood,
at the southern extremity of the parish, and
Edgware bridge at the north. Two isolated inns
stood along the road: the Bowl and Pin near
Edgware bridge existed in 1751 (fn. 36) but by 1803 had
been replaced by the Bald Faced Stag, farther south, (fn. 37)
while the Welsh Harp near Brent bridge, mentioned
in 1803, seems to have been the Harp and Horn
recorded in 1751. (fn. 38) The Old Welsh Harp, so named
to distinguish it from the Upper Welsh Harp built
farther north in the 19th century, came to be much
frequented by day trippers from London; (fn. 39) it was
rebuilt in 1937. (fn. 40) Scattered farm-houses along the
Brent valley, away from the main centres of population, included Decoy Farm, demolished in 1935, (fn. 41)
Renters Farm, Upper and Lower Guttershedge
farms, and Cockmans in the Wood, in Cool Oak
Lane, on the Kingsbury border. The last, a farm in
1754, (fn. 42) later became known as Woodfield House; it
was occupied from 1852 to 1858 by Passionist
fathers and was demolished in 1940. (fn. 43)
The largest hamlet south of the river Brent in
1754 was Childs Hill, where small houses and
cottages stood together on the northern slopes of
Hampstead Heath. Few wealthy residents lived
there, many of the inhabitants being brick-makers. (fn. 44)
No inn was recorded before the Castle, mentioned
in 1796 (fn. 45) and rebuilt in the late 19th century. After
1828 Finchley Road ran through Childs Hill, intersecting Cricklewood Lane by the Castle inn, where
several houses were built in the years before 1850. (fn. 46)
Among the very few villas built near by in the early
19th century, the Hermitage, a small house in the
Tudor manner on the road to Golders Hill, is the
only survivor.
Cricklewood, a small hamlet in the extreme southwest, lay partly in Willesden parish and consisted in
1754 (fn. 47) of a group of farm buildings near the Crown
inn at the corner of Edgware Road and the road to
Childs Hill. The Crown, mentioned in 1751, (fn. 48) was
rebuilt in 1889. Some early-19th-century villas along
Edgware Road (fn. 49) included Cricklewood House, the
residence before 1798 of William Huntington
(1745-1813), Calvinistic divine and author. (fn. 50) Neighbouring farms were Clitterhouse, (fn. 51) to the north, and
Cowhouse and Westcroft, south of Cowhouse
Green, a stretch of waste near the modern Cricklewood tavern. (fn. 52)
By 1754 there were about 16 houses with small
gardens at Golders Green, near the later site of the
Underground station, (fn. 53) most of them on small
inclosures from the waste. In 1814 Golders Green
contained 'many ornamental villas and cottages,
surrounded with plantations', (fn. 54) and in 1828 detached
houses spread on both sides of the road as far as
Brent bridge. (fn. 55) The green, already much attenuated,
was finally inclosed in 1873-4. (fn. 56) The villas in their
wooded grounds, which gave Golders Green its
special character, disappeared rapidly with the
growth of suburban housing after the extension of
the Underground; they included Alba Lodge,
Golders Lodge, Gloucester Lodge, the Oaks, and
Grove House. (fn. 57) Woodstock House, an early-19thcentury stuccoed building, served as a dormitory
for La Sagesse convent in 1970. (fn. 58) It was formerly
known as Rose Cottage and was occupied from
1816 to 1835 by Sir Felix Booth (1775-1850), head
of Booth and Co., distillers. (fn. 59) In 1751 there were
two inns at Golders Green: the Hoop, commemorated in Hoop Lane, and the White Swan, (fn. 60) much
altered by 1970. North-east of Golders Green the
hamlet of Temple Fortune grew up after the construction of Finchley Road, when the Royal Oak
was built; (fn. 61) some terraces of cottages had appeared
near by by 1863. (fn. 62) Temple Fortune was a solitary
farm-house when first mentioned in 1754; it stood at
the intersection of two minor roads, by a small green
which itself had disappeared by 1863. (fn. 63)
South of Golders Green, where Hodford Farm
once stood, the Hampstead road, later North End
Road, rose to Golders Hill, a hamlet bestriding the
boundary. (fn. 64) In 1754 (fn. 65) common land lined the road
but several encroachments had been made to provide
sites for large houses. In a house, later called the
Manor House, (fn. 66) belonging to the politician Jeremiah
Dyson (1722-76), Mark Akenside (1721-70) the
poet and physician (fn. 67) recuperated in 1758. There he
wrote a much quoted ode on his recovery in which
'Golder's Hill' is apostrophized. (fn. 68) Opposite Dyson's
house, Golders Hill House was built between 1754
and 1796 (fn. 69) in grounds of 27 a. (fn. 70) The house was
enlarged in 1875 to the designs of E. F. Clarke (fn. 71) for
Sir Thomas Spencer Wells, Bt. (1818-97), surgeon
to the queen's household. (fn. 72) It was acquired by the
L.C.C. in 1898 (fn. 73) and destroyed during the Second
World War (fn. 74) but the grounds were preserved as
Golders Hill park. Immediately to the north an
early-19th-century villa, Ivy House, was the home
from 1857 of C. R. Cockerell (1788-1863), the
architect. (fn. 75) From 1913 it was occupied intermittently
by Anna Pavlova (d. 1930), the ballet dancer, who
made some alterations in 1929, before it became a
school of drama. (fn. 76) Wyldes Farm, a little east of
Golders Hill on the slopes of Hampstead Heath, is a
small weatherboarded building with a large weatherboarded barn and outbuildings attached. The house,
known in the 19th century as Collins's Farm or
Heath Farm, was occupied by the painter John
Linnell (1792-1882), who is said to have entertained
William Blake there and added a room in 1826, (fn. 77) by
Charles Dickens as a young man, (fn. 78) and by Sir
Raymond Unwin, co-planner of the Hampstead
Garden Suburb, from 1906 until his death in 1940. (fn. 79)
There were 400 communicants in the parish in
1547, (fn. 80) and 344 persons took the protestation oath
in 1642. (fn. 81) Of 228 persons assessed for hearth-tax in
1664, 5 lived in houses with ten or more hearths. (fn. 82)
In 1801 the total population was 1,955 and there
were 373 houses. The population was 3,110 in 1831
and had reached 3,333 by 1851, when there were
585 houses. (fn. 83)