EDMONTON
Edmonton, (fn. 1) noted for its witch and devil, for John
Gilpin and its 18th-century fairs, lay about 7 miles
from London on the main road to Ware and the
north. Southgate, known for its elegant mansions
and the cricketing Walker brothers, lay some 2¼
miles west of Edmonton village. Edmonton parish
was a compact rectangle in shape, approximately 5
miles long and 2¼ miles from north to south until
the Act for inclosing Enfield Chase in 1777 (fn. 2) added
1,231 a. jutting into Enfield from the north-west
corner. About 1860 part of the Chase allotment,
which was owned by the lord of the manor and the
tithe owners of Enfield, was assigned to Enfield
parish, leaving Edmonton with a very irregular
boundary and a small isolated piece of land at
World's End, which was transferred to Enfield in
1926. Southgate, a separate local government unit
from 1881, received a strip of land from Enfield in
the north-west between 1931 and 1951 and there
were minor boundary changes with Wood Green in
1892 and with Friern Barnet by 1951. The total
acreage varied little, rising from 7,480 a. in 1831 to
7,491 a. in 1901 and 7,660 a. in 1951. (fn. 3) Edmonton and
Southgate united with Enfield to form the London
Borough of Enfield in 1965. (fn. 4)
The eastern boundary followed the river Lea,
whose tributaries formed part of the boundary with
Enfield. (fn. 5) Tottenham mark, mentioned many times
in the 13th century, (fn. 6) was a ditch or hedge between
Tottenham and Edmonton. (fn. 7) Bounds Green and
Waterfall Road formed part of the boundaries in the
south-west with Tottenham and Friern Barnet but
the rest of the western boundary with East Barnet
(Herts.) and the northern one with Enfield ran
through woodland containing only estate boundaries
and the gates of the Chase. (fn. 8) The portion of Enfield
Chase allotted to Edmonton after 1777 was marked
by straight lines bearing no relation to natural
features.
Apart from the alluvium forming Edmonton
marsh along the eastern border the eastern half of
the parish is mainly valley brickearth. Flood plain
gravel covers the north-east and pushes tongues
southward along Fore Street and westward along the
river valleys. In the west London Clay is predominant with large outcrops of plateau gravel in the
west and north. (fn. 9) Most of Edmonton is flat with
a gentle rise from 36 ft. in the marshy Lea valley to
304 ft. in the north-west. Streams drain from the
west to the river Lea. (fn. 10)
In 894 the Danes sailed 20 miles up the Lea (fn. 11) but
during the Middle Ages the marshy river banks
restricted navigation. Edmonton marsh formed a
band about ½ mile wide, bordered and crossed by
innumerable watercourses. (fn. 12) An Act of 1571 (fn. 13)
authorized the City of London to make the Lea
navigable as far as Ware (Herts.). The New Cut, as it
was called, was used for barges, mostly transporting
grain from Hertfordshire to London (fn. 14) and there is
little evidence that it benefited Edmonton until the
late 18th century and the nineteenth. A new straight
canal was begun a little to the west of the meandering
river in 1770. (fn. 15) The Lee Conservancy Board, (fn. 16)
which was established in 1868, was taken over by
the Metropolitan Water Board in 1904. The course
of the river was obliterated by the construction of
Banbury reservoir in southern Edmonton and
Tottenham in 1903 (fn. 17) and by the much larger
William Girling reservoir in Edmonton and
Enfield in 1951. (fn. 18)
The two main tributaries of the Lea which run
eastward through Edmonton are Pymme's and
Salmon's brooks. Pymme's brook, which throughout
the Middle Ages was called the Medesenge (fn. 19) and
afterwards sometimes Millicents brook (1675) (fn. 20) and
Bell brook (1765) (fn. 21) enters Southgate at Arnos Park,
where in 1567 it was known as Hawland brook, (fn. 22)
and flows to meet the network of watercourses along
Edmonton marshes. Bounds (1659) (fn. 23) or Bounds
Green brook, which enters New Southgate with the
North Circular Road, joins Pymme's brook at the
eastern end of Arnos Park. Salmon's brook, (fn. 24) in the
13th century called Stebbing, (fn. 25) enters Edmonton at
Bush Hill (fn. 26) and flows to Edmonton Green, where it
turns south and then east at approximately the site
of the former town hall. In the 16th century it was
joined by a tributary near the later junction of
Brettenham and Brookfield roads and thence
flowed southward along John a Marsh Green to
join Pymme's brook at Watery Lane (later Angel
Road). (fn. 27) The tributary (which is treated below)
had largely disappeared by 1801 and most of the
portion between Edmonton Green and Pymme's
brook was culverted between 1897 and 1920.
Thereafter Salmon's brook ran due eastward from
Edmonton Green to the edge of the marsh, whence
it flowed south to join Pymme's brook by a drainage
channel near the border with Tottenham. (fn. 28)
Merryhills brook in the north and Hounsden
gutter at the south of Edmonton's portion of
Enfield Chase both ran eastward across Southgate
and Winchmore Hill to join Salmon's brook in
Enfield. In the 16th century a stream, probably
Bridgewater, which was described in 1322 as south
of the Hyde, (fn. 29) flowed south-eastward from a point
near Fords Green to Fore Street, where it turned
northward for a short distance before striking east
to join Salmon's brook near the later Brettenham
Road. (fn. 30) By 1801 most of it apparently had disappeared in the lakes and streams of Pymmes Park (fn. 31)
and by 1895 it terminated at Morees pond west of
Fore Street. (fn. 32) In the 16th century a stream,
possibly the medieval Hakebrook (fn. 33) and called in
1605 Hobb Hale (fn. 34) and in 1826 Bury Street stream, (fn. 35)
formed the boundary with Enfield from Bush Hill
to a point almost due north of Bury Farm. Thence
it ran southward to cross Bury Street, form the mill
stream of Sadlers mill, and flow eastward close to the
later Nightingale Hall farm, whence it followed the
road south to John a Marsh Green before turning
east again towards Edmonton marsh. (fn. 36) In the 19th
century it became a tributary of Salmon's brook
after the changes to the latter's southern section. (fn. 37)
Unidentified watercourses include Melflet in the
13th century, (fn. 38) Church brook in the 14th century, (fn. 39)
and Rowes brook in 1616. (fn. 40)
Almost all the streams have been straightened and
often diverted into underground sewers. Pymme's
and Salmon's brooks were widened and deepened
in 1766 and 1772. (fn. 41) After severe flooding in 1881
Salmon's brook, which had formed a pond at
Edmonton Green, and Pymme's brook at Montagu
Road were confined between concrete walls. In
1921 Pymme's brook was culverted and its western
course straightened. (fn. 42)
The New River, which was constructed in
1608-13 to bring drinking water from Chadwell and
Amwell (Herts.) to Islington, crossed Edmonton
parish from Bush Hill to Bowes. At Bush Hill a
wooden aqueduct carried the river across a stream,
presumably Salmon's brook. The Gordon rioters
threatened to destroy the aqueduct in 1780 (fn. 43) and in
1784 it was removed and the landscape remodelled. (fn. 44)
The New River was dependent on the contours and
in the southern portion of Southgate and Bowes
Park it followed a very meandering course until
1857-8, when an embankment was constructed to
carry it across the valley of Pymme's brook. (fn. 45)
Edmonton was noted in Jacobean literature.
Elizabeth Sawyer, married to a local labourer, was
suspected of felony in 1615 (fn. 46) and apparently hanged
for killing by witchcraft. Her story, told to a minister
who visited her in prison, was published in a tract
in 1621, which immediately became the basis for the
play, the Witch of Edmonton, by Ford, Dekker, and
William Rowley. Another popular play, the Merry
Devil of Edmonton, was probably written by
Michael Drayton and first performed c. 1606.
According to the play's preface the protagonist
Peter Fabell was commemorated on a monument in
Edmonton church. (fn. 47) Presumably he was Peter
Favelore (d. 1360). (fn. 48)
During its heyday, in the 18th and early 19th
centuries, several literary and artistic people lived
in Edmonton, where there were good communications and wealthy patrons. Charles Lamb (d. 1834),
who moved there from Enfield in 1833, remarked
on the frequency and cheapness of coaches to
London. (fn. 49) Alexander Cruden (1701-70), author of
the biblical concordance, was in his youth the tutor
of a gentleman at Elm Hall, Southgate. (fn. 50) John T.
Smith, the artist and author, came to live in
Edmonton in 1788 at the invitation of Sir James
Winter Lake of the Firs. (fn. 51) The duke of Chandos was
the patron of Isaac Hunt, whose son James Henry
Leigh Hunt (d. 1859) was born in Southgate in
1784. John Keats (d. 1821) lived in Church Street
from 1805 and from 1810 until 1815 was apprenticed
to the local doctor, Thomas Hammond. (fn. 52) Henry
Crabb Robinson (d. 1867), diarist, lived at Southgate
in 1812 (fn. 53) and Thomas Hood (d. 1845), poet, at
Winchmore Hill from 1829 to 1832. Among painters
John Clayton (1728-1800) came from a Bush Hill
family and Abraham Cooper (1787-1868) was a
child at Edmonton, where his father was an innkeeper. (fn. 54)
Sir John Moore (d. 1702), Lord Mayor of London
in 1681, lived in Southgate c. 1674 (fn. 55) and Reuben
Bourne (d. 1695), author of a play set in Edmonton,
had property there and probably came of an Edmonton family. (fn. 56) Natives (fn. 57) included Brook Taylor
(1685-1731), mathematician; Robert Taylor (1784-
1844), deistical writer; J. D. G. Pike (1784-1854),
Baptist author; Sir William Maule (1788-1858), the
judge; H. W. Woolrych (1795-1871), biographer
and legal writer; J. A. Dorin (1802-72), Indian
administrator; and Frances Broderip (1830-78),
daughter of Thomas Hood and herself an author.
The father (d. 1760) of Nathaniel Bentley (1735?-
1809), the beau known as 'Dirty Dick', had a country
house at Edmonton. Charles Molloy (d. 1767),
journalist and dramatist, may have spent his last
years at Edmonton, where he was buried, (fn. 58) and
Isaac Taylor (1730-1807), the engraver, retired
there in 1780.

EDMONTON c. 1600
Most of the prominent people associated with the
parish since the mid 19th century are treated below.
The painter George Patten died in 1865 at his
house at Winchmore Hill. (fn. 59) The Hebraist C. D.
Ginsburg (1831-1914), the authority on Old
English language and literature, Professor R. W.
Chambers (1874-1942), and Benjamin Waugh
(1839-1908), the philanthropist and a founder of the
National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Children, lived in the area. (fn. 60)