Growth before 1851.
A mesolithic tool has been
found at Winchmore Hill, (fn. 14) people lived near
Ermine Street from c. 100-350 A.D., (fn. 15) and a few
fragments of Roman pottery were discovered at the
Ridgeway, near the Bourne in Southgate. (fn. 16) Nevertheless continuous settlement probably dates from
the Anglo-Saxon period, as the name Edmonton
(Adelmetone) indicates. (fn. 17)
Early habitations were probably along Fore
Street, particularly on the gravel west of the road,
watered by wells (fn. 18) and by the east-flowing streams
that served as public sewers. Upper Edmonton,
at the junction with Silver Street, and Lower
Edmonton, at the junction with Church Street,
represent the earliest concentrations of dwellings.
Few named medieval houses can be located (fn. 19) but
they were usually near a church; (fn. 20) Gisors Place or
Polehouse, Pymmes, and Caustons were probably
near Silver Street by the mid 14th century.
Thurstones stood on the east side of Fore Street, next
to Salmon's brook, by 1423 (fn. 21) and Trumpton Hall
between Fore Street and Langhedge field by 1500. (fn. 22)
Cookes existed on the south side of Silver Street by
1461 (fn. 23) and the Lyon stood in 1523 on the east side of
Silver Street from Fore Street. (fn. 24) Goodhouse was in
Fore Street by 1548 (fn. 25) and Paycock or Peacock Farm
in Church Street by 1559. (fn. 26)
Upper and Lower Edmonton were served by
open-field systems mostly west of Fore Street.
More open fields probably lay to the north,
primarily serving the manorial demesne farm north
of Bury Street. At least one other house existed
in Bury Street in 1269 (fn. 27) and Fullers was there by
1467. (fn. 28)
Winchmore Hill, Wynsemerhull in 1319, probably originated as a hamlet served by assarted
fields which existed by the 13th century. (fn. 29) The
Vikers family had a house there in 1349 (fn. 30) and
Dacres tenement existed there in 1546. (fn. 31) The house
by Highgate, mentioned in the 13th century, was
probably near by. (fn. 32)
Southgate, the south gate of Enfield Chase, was
first mentioned 1166 x 1189 (fn. 33) and South Street, the
road leading to the gate, in 1321. (fn. 34) Houses seem to
have been erected there by 1321 and one of them,
Ryneshamstall, was so named in 1338. (fn. 35) Pottery
probably dating from the 13th century has been
found south of the Bourne. (fn. 36) No medieval field
system was associated with Southgate, whose
inhabitants were woodmen rather than farmers.
There was probably a small agricultural settlement
at Clappers Green by the early 14th century, where
the Clapper and Sigar families held land and Holy
Trinity priory a grange. (fn. 37)
Palmers Green was mentioned as a highway
in 1324. (fn. 38) There are allusions to Palmers field
(1204), (fn. 39) Palmersland (1322), (fn. 40) and Palmers Grove
(1340), (fn. 41) but there is no evidence of settlement
there before the late 16th century. (fn. 42)
In the Middle Ages there were several moated
farm-houses, mainly east of Fore Street, although
one was at Fords Grove and another at Bowes in the
west of the parish. Dephams probably dated from
the 12th century and Fords Grove from the 13th
century (fn. 43) but most were created when land holdings
were consolidated during the 14th century. (fn. 44)
Much building was the work of individuals,
particularly London merchants, who divided up the
common fields. (fn. 45) Plesingtons, Claverings, and
Willoughbies in the east, Bowes in the south-west,
and Weir Hall at Tanners End were probably all
established during the 14th century. Pentridge
Farm in the north-east existed by 1483. (fn. 46)
In the 16th century the main centres of population
were still Lower Edmonton, near the church, and
Upper Edmonton, along Fore Street. About 1535
the tenants of Edmonton manor were divided into
six groups, which, although not yet called wards,
were the precursors of wards which served from the
17th century as parish government divisions. (fn. 47)
Customary rents suggest that Church Street ward,
which paid 57 per cent of the total, was by far the
most populous and Fore Street, paying 21 per cent,
the next. To the north Bury Street ward paid 7 per
cent and in the west Winchmore Hill paid 11 per
cent and South Street and Bowes 2 per cent each. (fn. 48)
Apart from the church no medieval or early Tudor
building suvives in the parish. About 182 houses are
marked on late-16th-century maps, (fn. 49) probably too
few but some indication of the pattern of settlement.
Buildings were concentrated at Lower and Upper
Edmonton, with smaller hamlets at Winchmore
Hill and Southgate. There were a few houses at
Bowes, Bury Street, Tanners End, Marsh Lane, and
Clappers Green, four at Palmers Green, and one at
Bush Hill. The most notable change in the 16th
century took place at Fords Green, where fields were
assarted and houses probably erected at the same
time. Butts Farm stood a little to the north by 1591. (fn. 50)
From the 16th century growth was continuous.
As communications improved more Londoners
acquired houses in Edmonton, some, like one Avery
of Basinghall in 1665, as summer residences for
their families, (fn. 51) others as permanent homes. Brick
was not the only building material, for weatherboarding was particularly common in Southgate
and Winchmore Hill, while dilapidated hovels with
thatch and even turf roofs survived into the late
18th century, when they were depicted in a romantic
manner by the local painter John T. Smith. (fn. 52)
New houses were normally erected on old sites,
bordering the roads and greens, and frequently
several dwellings were built where there had once
been only one. In place of houses set in spacious
gardens, buildings presented an uninterrupted
front to the street, especially along Fore Street and
Edmonton Green. In Silver Street, for example,
there were in 1675 several houses where Cookes
had stood. (fn. 53) In Southgate a site which in 1743
contained only the Woolpack inn was covered by
two houses in 1750, three in 1782, and five in 1824. (fn. 54)
West of South Street a large house was pulled down
by 1769 and replaced by three houses in 1778,
to which two more had been added by 1798. (fn. 55)
The number of houses in the parish increased to 423
in 1664, (fn. 56) about 800 in the late 18th century, (fn. 57) 901
in 1801, and 1,726 in 1851. (fn. 58) Growth therefore
appears to have gathered pace. Although there were
no new centres of population, the older ones
expanded at varying rates.
Of the four wards which existed from the mid 17th
century, Fore Street eventually became the most
populous. There were 88 houses in 1664, (fn. 59) 229
1801, (fn. 60) 368 in 1811, 506 in 1841, (fn. 61) and 611 in
1851. (fn. 62) Polehouse and Trumpton Hall (fn. 63) survived
on their medieval sites and Neales, the home of the
Rogers family, was in Fore Street in 1659. (fn. 64) The
largest houses in the ward in 1664 were Weir Hall,
with 20 hearths, and another with 18 hearths. (fn. 65)
Fashionable residents increasingly settled in Fore
Street during the 18th century, many of them
attracted by the regular coach services. John T.
Smith remarked in 1789 on the inhabitants 'within
their King William iron gates and red brick,
crested piers', who excluded the villa-building
tradesmen from their neighbourhood. (fn. 66) At the same
time crowds of visitors attended the famous
Edmonton fair. (fn. 67) The story of John Gilpin, written
by William Cowper in 1782, shows Edmonton's
popularity as a place of relaxation for Londoners. (fn. 68)
Large houses of the early 18th century in Fore
Street included Eagle House, built in 1713 on the
west side just north of Pymme's brook, and Elm
House, with a mansard roof, on the east; the first
was demolished in 1713, the second in 1952. (fn. 69)
Edmonton House stood opposite Elm House by
1801. (fn. 70) There were two mid-18th-century houses,
nos. 258 and 260, on the eastern side of Fore
Street north of Elm House (fn. 71) and a large old house
opposite, (fn. 72) which may have been Strawberry
House. (fn. 73) Angel Place or Row, four pairs of adjoining
two-storeyed houses with attics, was built in the
18th century on the west side of Fore Street
between the Angel inn and Pymme's brook. (fn. 74)
South of Elm House was Addison House, nos. 224
and 226 Fore Street. (fn. 75) Other houses which had been
built in Fore Street before 1851 included on the
east side Almond House, which was probably
opposite St. James's church, Sycamore House
between Angel Road and Claremont Street, and
Bridge House by Pymme's brook and, on the west
side, Hatford House and Old House near the
junction with Church Road and College House just
north of the Bell. (fn. 76) Many large houses with gardens
and orchards, particularly in the Duck Lane portion
of the street, survived well into the 19th century. (fn. 77)
Silver Street was in many ways an extension of
Fore Street. It contained Pymmes, Weir Hall,
Russell House, a small early-18th-century building, (fn. 78)
and, by 1819, Woodlands. (fn. 79) Millfield House was
built in the late 18th century and occupied in 1796
by the Russian ambassador. (fn. 80) Other houses of the
same period included Bridport Hall and two large
houses opposite Pymmes, which were destroyed
during the Second World War. (fn. 81) There were also
many cottages and shops, including the Parade,
built by 1801. (fn. 82)
Fore Street was never wholly occupied by the
rich. Increasingly, particularly south of Angel Road
and Silver Street, the area came to be covered with
small, overcrowded tenements and lodging houses.
Typhus was prevalent in 1838 at Eaton Place, (fn. 83)
where 9 tenements were built in 1795 and 15
existed in 1801, (fn. 84) and at Orchard Street 30 lodgers
were found in one room in 1844. (fn. 85) Industry,
particularly coach-building, concentrated in the
area. Probably the first example of building beyond
the ancient street front was on the estate of Snells
Park, a three-storeyed house 'of ancient date' (fn. 86)
with park-land stretching on the west side of Fore
Street from the Tottenham border to Church Road,
which was sold in 1848 and covered with small
houses. (fn. 87) Opposite, Claremont Street, where nonconformist chapels were erected in 1818 and 1845,
was built up before 1851. (fn. 88)
Much of Edmonton thus lost its exclusiveness (fn. 89)
and as prosperous traders moved in the gentry
moved out. By 1800 it was inhabited by 'retired
embroidered weavers, their crummy wives and
tightly laced daughters', (fn. 90) and a working-class
character was later widely apparent. (fn. 91) While some
houses in Fore Street still had occupiers of independent means in 1851, others had been converted
into boarding schools. (fn. 92) Silver Street, too, declined
socially: Weir Hall was demolished in 1818 and
Millfield House had by 1851 been taken over by the
West London union school. (fn. 93)
The spread of building in Church Street ward
was at first much slower, although statistics for the
ward as a whole probably conceal rapid growth in
parts, especially at Edmonton Green. The number of
houses rose from 72 in 1664 (fn. 94) to 191 c. 1801, (fn. 95)
210 in 1811, 346 in 1841, (fn. 96) and 374 in 1851. (fn. 97)
Church Street itself contained Wilde's almshouses (by 1662) and Style's (by 1679), Latymer
school (c. 1623) and the girls' charity school (1778),
the workhouse (1732), and the watch-house
(c. 1714), as well as the Rectory and Vicarage
which were rebuilt c. 1600 and c. 1700 respectively.
A house in the ward which was assessed for 18
hearths in 1664 (fn. 98) may have been Hyde House, a
large house near the Rectory in 1750. (fn. 99) Among
several smaller houses (fn. 1) were Bay Cottage, later
Lamb's Cottage, dating from c. 1700, and no. 2A
Church Street, next to the girls' charity school,
built in the 18th century. (fn. 2) The house where Keats
was apprenticed to a surgeon in 1810 was pulled
down in 1931 (fn. 3) but some 37 17th- and 18th-century
buildings survived about Edmonton Green until
after 1937. Numbers 5-9, 17-17A, 33, and 35 on the
north side of the green and nos. 30-4 and 36 on the
south side, though much altered in the 18th century,
were essentially of the 17th century. (fn. 4) By 1806
buildings presented a continuous front on both
sides of the green. (fn. 5) There were 101 dwellings at
Lower Edmonton and 51 in Church Street in 1801.
Of these about eight at Lower Edmonton and two
in Church Street were comparatively recent. (fn. 6)
Marsh Side, at the junction of Bounces and Town
roads, and a few scattered farms in the north-east
also lay in Church Street ward. Plesingtons
(Pleasantine Hall) and Claverings, though rebuilt,
survived on their medieval sites and Dephams was
rebuilt near its old site c. 1679. Two, possibly three,
farms were created during the 17th century.
Cuckoo Hall in the north-east and Causeyware Hall
near Hertford Road in the north probably existed
by 1650; (fn. 7) Nightingale Hall, opposite Claverings,
may have derived its name from John Nightingale
(fl. 1617) (fn. 8) and certainly existed by the mid 18th
century. (fn. 9) There were a few cottages and an inn at
Marsh Side, as there had been c. 1600, but the total
number of buildings, including the farms, was still
only 31 in 1801. (fn. 10)
In the early 19th century Marsh Side continued to
stagnate while building in the rest of Church
Street ward outstripped that in any other district,
including Fore Street. Housing spread westward
along Church Street and in 1849 New Road was
built along the east side of the green, which was soon
lined with houses, by the G.E.R. to take traffic
interrupted by the low level railway. (fn. 11) Building also
spread eastward along Town Road and northward
along Hertford Road. The most striking feature was
the Crescent, 25 adjoining houses with lodges,
erected between 1826 and 1851 as an unsuccessful
speculation by a London solicitor. (fn. 12)
Bury Street ward, in the north of the parish away
from the turnpike roads, had as many as 169 houses
in 1664 but later remained much the most rural
area. It had only 187 houses c. 1801, 239 in 1811, 269
in 1841, and 301 in 1851. (fn. 13) There was an unusually
large number of one-hearth cottages in 1664, (fn. 14)
many of them probably squatters' homes, later
removed from the edge of Enfield Chase. Two
large houses were Bush Hill (31 hearths) and a house
with 17 hearths which was probably Bury Hall.
Bury Street itself changed little in the 250 years
after 1600. (fn. 15) Bury farm-house stood on the site of
the demesne farm and next to Warren Lodge, so
named in 1607. (fn. 16) Salisbury House, although not
named until much later, was described in 1605 as a
two-storeyed mansion house. (fn. 17) Brook House stood
near the site of Sadlers mill and the Stag and
Hounds and a few near-by cottages stood where
there had been buildings c. 1600. Bury Hall was
built by 1627 and Bury House by 1754. (fn. 18) In 1801
there were 52 houses and cottages in Bury Street,
of which 7 were new. (fn. 19) Montefiore's Place in Little
Bury Street, which joined Bury Street and Church
Street, contained brick cottages built in 1789. (fn. 20)
Winchmore Hill, the main settlement in Bury
Street ward, was already one of the biggest hamlets
in the parish c. 1600. The King's Head, a stopping
place of omnibuses from London, encouraged its
growth and there was an active community of early
Quakers. In the early 19th century the discovery of
a well with Epsom Salts brought Winchmore Hill
a reputation as a spa. (fn. 21) The village consisted mostly
of weatherboarded cottages but a few larger houses
were built in the 18th and early 19th centuries. At
the green were Rowantree House and Woodside
House, mid-18th-century and of painted brick,
Roseville, late-18th-century and stuccoed with a
fluted Doric porch, (fn. 22) and Uplands, a brown brick
Georgian house. (fn. 23) Devon House in Church Hill
also dates from the 18th century. (fn. 24) In Vicars Moor
Lane were Rose Cottage, with bay windows and a
pedimented doorway, where Thomas Hood the
poet lived from 1829 to 1832, (fn. 25) and Percy Lodge,
the home of Sharon Turner (d. 1847), historian
and friend of Isaac D'Israeli. (fn. 26) Prospect House on
the north side of the road was built after 1801 but
Moor Park, rebuilt in the 1890s by the brewer Sir
Edward Mann, (fn. 27) and Roseneath, on the south side,
probably both existed before inclosure. (fn. 28) Beaumont
Lodge, at the junction of Vicars Moor Lane and
Wade's Hill, which also probably existed in 1801,
was c. 1840 the largest house in the area and the
home of John Wade, a merchant tailor. (fn. 29) Glenwood
House was built on the west side of Wade's Hill in
the early 19th century and Belmont in Hoppers
Road in the 18th century. (fn. 30)
South-east of Winchmore Hill there were about
nine buildings at Fords Green, eleven in Highfields
Road, and four at Barrowell Green in 1801. A
mansion at Fords Green in 1605 (fn. 31) was possibly the
house where George Fox visited the London
haberdasher Edward Mann in the 1680s. (fn. 32) As Ford
Grove, it was the home of the Goulds and Teshmakers in the 18th century (fn. 33) and of the Busks in the
19th. (fn. 34) There was an alehouse, possibly the
precursor of the Orange Tree, at Highfield in 1611 (fn. 35)
and there was a Highfield House in 1677 and 1703, (fn. 36)
probably in Highfield Road rather than on the site
of the 19th-century Highfield House. (fn. 37) The most
important house in the area was the Firs west of
Firs Lane, (fn. 38) the 18th-century residence of the Lake
family, which was pulled down in 1810 but replaced
by another house of the same name north of
Barrowell Green. (fn. 39) In the northern part of Firs Lane
was Beaulieu, set in grounds adorned with an 18thcentury ruin and grotto and in 1801 the residence
of John Gray. (fn. 40) On the edges of Winchmore Hill,
bounded on the north by the western portion of
Church Street, was an estate belonging to John
Wilde's charity. Apse farm-house probably stood
there by 1662 and in 1805 a new house and cottage
occupied the site of the old farm, perhaps Rowantree House. (fn. 41)
Bush Hill, also part of Bury Street ward, had 11
houses in 1801, including Quakers Row (fn. 42) and the
mansions of John Blackburn and William Mellish,
which were established in the early 17th and early
18th centuries respectively. (fn. 43)
South Street ward, which included Palmers
Green and Bowes, was second only to Fore Street
in its rate of growth. From 94 houses in 1664, (fn. 44) it
increased to 'about 180' c. 1795, (fn. 45) 265 in 1801, 340
in 1811, 424 in 1841, (fn. 46) and 441 in 1851. (fn. 47) In 1664
the largest house in the ward was Broomfield,
assessed for 14 hearths; three others had 12 hearths
each. (fn. 48)
Southgate was settled late because it was so
densely wooded and because wells could not be
sunk in the clay soil, although the New River made
piped water available to the richer landowners.
Attracted by the scenery the wealthy began to settle,
stimulating trade and clearing the woods for farmand park-land. In 1746 Southgate was described as
one of the pleasantest villages in England (fn. 49) and
Leigh Hunt, who was born there in 1784, wrote that
'Middlesex in general is a scene of trees and
meadows, of "greenery" and nestling cottages, and
Southgate is a prime specimen of Middlesex'. (fn. 50) In
the early 19th century, when the gentry were moving
out of Edmonton, attention was often drawn to
Southgate's 'superior residences'. (fn. 51)
Early buildings included Russells in South Street
by 1654, (fn. 52) Minchenden, assessed for 35 hearths in
1672, (fn. 53) and the Cherry Tree inn at Southgate
Green in 1695. (fn. 54) The transformation of Southgate,
however, took place in the 18th century. Among the
mansions Minchenden was rebuilt in 1738; Cullands
Grove was built by the mid 18th century, Grovelands in 1798, and Southgate House c. 1800. At
Southgate Green Arnoside and Essex House
(nos. 3-4) date from the early 18th century, (fn. 55) (nos.
23-32 from 1777, (fn. 56) and Norbury House and
Sandford House (nos. 38-9) from the late 18th
century. (fn. 57) Three houses were built on the site of a
former mansion in High Street between 1769 and
1778 and two others added near by before 1798. (fn. 58)
Eagle Hall, on the west side of High Street, existed
by c. 1783 when Leigh Hunt's father moved there. (fn. 59)
Among late-18th- and early-19th-century brick and
weatherboarded buildings in High Street were
Croft Cottage, Holcombe House, Avington House,
and Brackley House, a three-storeyed stuccoed
house with a pedimented Doric doorcase. In
Blagden's Lane was the Wilderness, a late-18thcentury house of yellow brick with a Doric porch. (fn. 60)
Cannon House in Cannon Hill dates from the early
19th century. Bone Grove, which, like Cullands
Grove, was demolished by J. D. Taylor c. 1840,
stood near Grovelands and was described as
ancient in 1834. (fn. 61) Waterfall Road contained Ivy
Cottage, probably 18th-century like Beaver Hall,
which in the early 19th century housed the
Schneiders, steel manufacturers, and Joseph
Thornton, a wealthy railway contractor. (fn. 62) By c. 1801
there were about 91 houses in High Street, Cannon
Hill, Southgate Green, and Waterfall Road.
The Bourne consisted of a hamlet of cottages c.
1801. At Clappers Green (fn. 63) 6 cottages had been
pulled down in the 1790s and only four were left c.
1801. (fn. 64)
The former Enfield Chase portion of Southgate
experienced the fastest growth in the late 18th and
early 19th centuries. About 1600 there were two
buildings on the edge of the Chase, one of which
made way for Hope House, a long two-storeyed
building used as a dower-house by the Walkers and
Taylors. (fn. 65) There were houses at Chase Side in the
late 17th century (fn. 66) but little settlement took place
until after the Chase had been divided and then
only along the roads at its edges - the modern
Chase Side and Winchmore Hill Road. By c. 1804
there were about 24 buildings at Chase Side and
43 in Winchmore Hill Road, of which about half
were new. In Winchmore Hill Road building was on
the northern side of the road, mostly near Winchmore Hill village. (fn. 67) By 1819, when Eastpole (called
Chase Farm) and Westpole (unnamed) farms existed
in Bramley Road and Oak Lodge off Chase Road,
building was spreading on all sides of Southgate
circus. (fn. 68) College House stood on the north side of
Chase Side by 1851. (fn. 69) The district later known as
New Southgate remained uninhabited except for
Betstile Lodge, which had appeared by 1851. (fn. 70)
Palmers Green grew from a few isolated houses c.
1600 to a village of about 54 buildings, including
two inns, c. 1801. (fn. 71) There were two farms, Hazelwood and Huxley, (fn. 72) and houses on the site
of Eaton Villa, (fn. 73) Hazelwood House (fn. 74) and Hill
House. (fn. 75)
Bowes, a hamlet around the manor-house and
Cock inn, changed little from c. 1600 until the mid
19th century. There were houses near Deadman's
Hill by 1623 (fn. 76) and Truro House was built at the
junction of Green Lanes and Oakthorpe Road in the
1820s. Another small hamlet at Tile Kilns and
Chequers Green grew from 11 buildings c. 1801 (fn. 77)
to 28 in 1851, when it consisted of a farm and
farmworkers' cottages. (fn. 78)
There were 600 communicants in the parish in
1547 (fn. 79) but numbers may have declined later because
of the plague, which claimed 85 out of a total of
145 buried in 1603 and 53 out of 157 buried in
1625. (fn. 80) In 1642 537 adult males took the protestation
oath (fn. 81) and in 1676 there were 483 conformists, 2
papists, and 15 other nonconformists. (fn. 82) The
population, estimated c. 1716 as 'about 600', (fn. 83) had
risen to 5,093 by 1801 and grew steadily during the
early 19th century to reach 9,708 in 1851. (fn. 84)