GROWTH BEFORE 1850.
An oval camp in Hadley
wood, covering 15 a. and from 1850 bisected by the
main line of the G.N.R., is evidence of prehistoric
settlement in the thickly wooded western part of the
parish. (fn. 58) Farther east there were probably Bronzeand Iron-age dwellings near the Lea at Ponders End
and some houses were built west of the Roman
Ermine Street, especially in the region of Bush Hill
Park. (fn. 59) Other Roman finds were at a moated site
south of Queen's Road, called Oldbury Moat and
later filled in, (fn. 60) and at another site, of uncertain date,
by Salmon's brook on the modern Enfield golf
course. (fn. 61)
A church probably existed by 1086, (fn. 62) near the
feld or clearing which gave its name to Enfield. (fn. 63)
Most of the parish seems at that date to have been
covered by woodland, part of which already had
been inclosed as a park. (fn. 64) The park was probably the
area known in 1324 as the Frith or inner park (fn. 65) and
was later called the Old Park, to distinguish it from
the much larger Enfield Chase. In 1650 the Old Park
occupied 553 a. south-west of Enfield Town and its
eastern edge ran from Park Gate to the Edmonton
boundary. It was divided into meadows between
1661 and 1686. (fn. 66)
By 1223 the park, inclosed within a paling, had
been extended almost to the northern parish
boundary at Cattle gate (porta de Catthal'). (fn. 67) This
new outer park was called the Chase in 1326 (fn. 68) but
later was sometimes called Enfield wood. (fn. 69) In 1572
it covered the entire western half of the parish and
was entered from the east by four gates: Park,
Parsonage Lane, Phipps Hatch, and Mores Hatch. (fn. 70)
Two more gates, at the end of New Lane (later
Lavender Hill) and at Whitewebbs, led into the
Chase from the east in 1656, when there were
entrances from the north at Cattle, Hook, and
Coopers Lane gates, from the west at Potters Bar
and Monken Hadley, and from the south at Bourne
gate, Southgate, and Hammonds Hook gate. (fn. 71)
Carterhatch Lane seems to preserve the name of an
earlier gate, suggesting that the Chase may once
have stretched east of the boundary recorded in
1572. (fn. 72) In 1611 500 a. in the north-east of the Chase
were inclosed within the park of Theobalds (Herts.) (fn. 73)
and in 1650 the total area was estimated at 7,904 a. (fn. 74)
In 1658 the eastern boundary of the Chase was
marked by the western and northern limits of the
Old Park as far as Park gate, west of the church.
Thence it followed the later Gentleman's Row,
Chase Side, and Brigadier Hill, crossing Maiden's
brook and running along the line of Flash Road and
around the eastern edge of the modern Whitewebbs
estate. Turning west, it followed Whitewebbs and
Theobalds Park roads to meet the county boundary
at Cattle gate. (fn. 75) There were no further changes
until the Chase was split up in 1779, (fn. 76) an attempt to
do so during the Interregnum having been thwarted
by the Restoration. (fn. 77)
Apart from three lodges, built for keepers but
converted into gentlemen's seats, (fn. 78) the Chase was
virtually uninhabited. In 1593 it contained only
deer, (fn. 79) whose number by 1724 had been reduced by
poachers. (fn. 80) In 1676 the diarist John Evelyn was
impressed that so large a tract near London should
have no building except the three lodges, 'the rest a
solitary desert yet stored with no less than 3,000
deer'. (fn. 81) Accusations of witchcraft between 1591 and
1615 probably arose from suspicious gatherings in
the Chase, (fn. 82) where a chapel had been found
equipped for black masses. (fn. 83) Plotters were said to be
hiding in the woods in 1666 (fn. 84) and gangs of robbers
to lurk there in 1742. (fn. 85)
Medieval settlement was concentrated in the
eastern part of the parish, between the wooded
heights of Enfield Chase and the marshes by the Lea.
Common arable fields were first recorded in the 13th
century (fn. 86) and by 1572 they occupied well over half
of the cultivated land, mostly in the low-lying area
east of the road through Enfield Town to Forty Hill
and Bull's Cross. (fn. 87) Immediately adjoining the Lea
were the common marshes, used for grazing. (fn. 88) The
three northernmost, Rammey, Wild, and Mill
marshes, were all so named by the 14th century. (fn. 89)
To the south were Leathersey, mentioned in 1484, (fn. 90)
and South marsh, mentioned in 1419. (fn. 91) Inclosures in
the 16th century were mainly on the fringe of the
central common field area: (fn. 92) near Enfield Town,
west of Baker Street, east of Ponders End, and in the
north-east of the parish near Painters Lane. After
further inclosures an Act was passed in 1801 and put
into effect in 1803, covering the whole of the parish
east of the former Chase, together with that part of
the Chase which had been allotted to the parish in
1777. (fn. 93)
With a few exceptions, including the manorhouses in the east of the parish, medieval settlement
was on the main routes from north to south. In 1572
most people lived in villages or hamlets along the
road through Enfield Town near the Chase or along
Hertford Road, which ran on flat, lower ground, (fn. 94)
while the intervening fields remained almost uninhabited until the end of the 19th century. (fn. 95) Many
unauthorized cottages were erected c. 1600: in 1605
over 60 were said to have been built during the
previous 50 years (fn. 96) and more had appeared by
1618. (fn. 97) There were 562 houses in 1664, 200 of them
in Enfield Green ward which contained Enfield
Town. The four other wards or quarters which then
served as local government units were Bull's Cross,
with 144 houses, Green Street (otherwise Horsepool
Stones or Enfield Highway), with 100, Ponders End,
with 58, and Parsonage, with 50. (fn. 98) By 1801 the total
number of houses had nearly doubled, to 993, and by
1851 it had reached 1,891. (fn. 99)
Many rich maltmen lived in Enfield in the 15th
and 16th centuries, before local prosperity was
undermined by the Act of 1571 for improving the
Lea. (fn. 1) Large houses were also built, at least from the
16th century, for families attracted by Enfield's
accessibility from London and its royal connexions.
In 1664 nine houses had 10 hearths or more. (fn. 2) The
parish continued to be a fashionable place of residence in the 18th century and in 1832 was noted for
its many handsome seats, most of them in or around
Enfield Town and the roads to its north. (fn. 3)
Enfield Town, so called from the 17th century,
was named from a green south of the parish church. (fn. 4)
A market and fairs were granted in 1303, houses
overlooked the green in 1364, (fn. 5) and Whitelocks Lane
led there in 1511. (fn. 6) South of the green was the
manor-house later known as Enfield Palace, (fn. 7) while
near by other large 16th-century houses included the
Vine, mentioned in 1562. (fn. 8) The Greyhound inn stood
on the eastern side of the green in 1596; (fn. 9) as an
early-17th-century brick building with 'Dutch'
gables it afterwards served as a vestry hall and
magistrates' court but was demolished in 1897. (fn. 10)
The old King's Head, demolished soon after 1897, (fn. 11)
had been built on the north side of the green by
1670 (fn. 12) and the George stood on the south side in
1666. (fn. 13) There was a school-house west of the
churchyard in 1572 (fn. 14) and it survived as a red-brick
building, part of Enfield grammar school, in 1972. (fn. 15)
Much property was destroyed by fire in 1657. (fn. 16)
Enfield Town began to assume its modern layout
after a market-place had been established in 1632 on
the site of the Vine. (fn. 17) In 1670 it contained a market
house, a market cross, a weigh-house, 6 shops on the
west side, and 24 stalls in the market-place. (fn. 18) A
pump existed by 1764. (fn. 19) Although Enfield was
described in 1806 as the skeleton of a market town, (fn. 20)
the early-19th-century market-place was shown as a
busy square, with many buildings used as shops. (fn. 21)
The wooden octagonal market house was replaced in
1826 by a stone Gothic cross, (fn. 22) parts of which were
moved to the grounds of Myddelton House in 1904,
when an octagonal market building on Corinthian
columns was erected to the designs of Sydney W.
Cranfield. (fn. 23) Most of the older buildings in the square
were demolished in the later 19th century.
By 1656 Enfield Town had spread westward along
Church Lane as far as the Chase, northward along
Silver Street, and southward along London Road. (fn. 24)
Most of the larger houses of the 16th and 17th
centuries, like Redlingtons, mentioned in 1641, were
later demolished, (fn. 25) although some survived in
Church Street into the 19th century. Burleigh House
was built c. 1700 west of the market-place but
replaced soon after 1913 by a cinema, with shops
along the street frontage of the grounds. (fn. 26) Chaseside House, a large stuccoed building on the south
side of Church Street, was erected c. 1830 by James
Farrer Steadman on the site of an earlier house and
later also made way for shops. (fn. 27) The Rising Sun inn
stood near by in 1752 (fn. 28) and was replaced by shops in
1933. (fn. 29) The area enclosed by Church Street, Silver
Street, and the New River was never completely
built up; in 1754 most of it was still covered by
private grounds and orchards (fn. 30) and in 1972, apart
from some rows of 19th-century cottages and late19th-century houses, it was largely devoted to
schools' sports grounds.
There were houses on the boundary of the Chase,
north of Park gate, in 1572. (fn. 31) One belonged to
Sir Francis Wroth and another, that of a Mr.
Fortescue, may have occupied the site of the large
timber-framed Fortescue Hall, which bore the date
1608 and was demolished in 1816. (fn. 32) Among smaller
timber-framed houses of the 16th and 17th centuries
was one where Charles Lamb, the writer, came to
live in 1825. (fn. 33) In 1972 the house, no. 17, had an
18th-century plastered facade. Some brick houses
were built near by in the 18th century when the path
facing the Chase became known as Gentleman's
Row. They include the former Little Park, to the
south, a large building with a pedimented centre and
later wings, in 1974 occupied by the council, and,
at the northern end of the row, Archway House, a
pedimented building in grey brick of c. 1750,
through which an arch leads to Love's Row (later
Holly Walk). Gentleman's Row faces Chase Green,
a remnant of the Chase preserved as an open space
when the parish was inclosed in 1803.
North of Gentleman's Row building was sparse
until the end of the 18th century. Some houses on
the edge of the Chase included a cottage called
Wolfes in 1572 (fn. 34) and another called Goddards in
1608. (fn. 35) By 1656 more houses had been built (fn. 36) and
by 1686 the area was known as Chase Side. (fn. 37) Ivy
House was built there, by a pond at the corner of
Parsonage Lane, in the early 18th century and
demolished after a fire c. 1900. (fn. 38) On the inclosure of
the Chase in 1779 Chase Side became a through road
and buildings, including an Independent chapel and
the surviving no. 60, were built on its western side to
face older ones on the east. (fn. 39) Early-19th-century
houses include two more of Charles Lamb's homes:
the Poplars, 1827-29, and Westwood Cottage, 1829-
33. (fn. 40) Gloucester Place, a terrace on the western
side of the road, is dated 1823 and other cottages on
the opposite side are of about the same date. West of
Chase Side Gordon House was built on the Chase
near the top of Gordon Hill. It was named after an
early occupant, Lord George Gordon (1751-93),
instigator of the Gordon Riots, (fn. 41) later belonged to
Sir Thomas Hallifax (1721-89), Lord Mayor of
London and a founder of the bank which became
Glyn, Mills & Co., (fn. 42) and was demolished c. 1860. (fn. 43)
Chase Lodge, to the south, was built after the
inclosure of the Chase. It belonged in 1834 to
T. Cotton, (fn. 44) then to Thomas Holt White, a commentator on Shakespeare, after whom Holtwhite's
Hill is named, (fn. 45) and was demolished shortly before
1911. (fn. 46)
Farther north buildings clustered at the junction
of Chase Side and New Lane (later Lancaster Road)
in 1656 (fn. 47) and by 1754 stretched intermittently from
Parsonage Lane northward to Phipps Hatch gate. (fn. 48)
Some small 18th- and early-19th-century houses
and shops survive in Chase Side and its northern
continuation, Brigadier Hill. The Holly Bush inn
was recorded in 1752 (fn. 49) and a large weatherboarded
house at the bottom of Brigadier Hill is 18thcentury. Other large houses farther up the hill,
including the Cedars, Brigadier House, and Warwick
House, (fn. 50) have been demolished.
Another ribbon of building ran northward from
the eastern end of the town, along Silver Street and
Baker Street where the Rectory, the Vicarage, and
the first manor-house of Worcesters stood in the
16th century, with several smaller dwellings. (fn. 51)
Houses called Blakes and Mortimers Farm stood
near by, while in Parsonage Lane there was another
called Bates in 1608. A house called Woodcock Hall
existed in 1656 (fn. 52) and towards the northern end of
Baker Street there was a stone cross. (fn. 53) The five-bay
front of Enfield Court (later part of Enfield grammar
school), at the northern end of Silver Street, was
built in the late 17th century but afterwards greatly
extended; a riding house was added in 1858 and the
south wing rebuilt in 1864 by Col. Alfred Plantagenet
Somerset. (fn. 54) A chapel was built on the eastern side of
Baker Street in 1689 (fn. 55) and houses extended on both
sides of the road from the town north to New Lane
by 1754. (fn. 56) More houses were built in the later 18th
century, including three in Baker Street in 1774 (fn. 57)
and two which were built speculatively by John
Copeley in 1786. (fn. 58)
Eighteenth-century survivals in Silver Street
include White Lodge, a striking weatherboarded
building with a symmetrical facade and classical
doorcase. From 1862 until 1895 it was the home of
Joseph Whitaker, founder of Whitaker's Almanack. (fn. 59)
No. 90, with a hipped roof, was built c. 1700, and
nos. 60 and 62, a pair south of White Lodge, in the
later 18th century. John Sherwen (1749-1826), the
physician and archaeologist who is said to have
grown the first rhubarb in England, had a house in
Silver Street from the 1770s. (fn. 60) Baker Street, with
the exception of nos. 174 and 278, with their
mansard roofs, has lost its 18th-century appearance.
Large houses which survived until the 20th century
included Fox Hall, north of the Rectory, Lee House,
used as a school in the 19th century under the name
of Gothic Hall, and Holmwood and Pattensweir,
adjacent 18th-century buildings at the corner of
Clay Hill. (fn. 61) Pettins Ware, recorded in 1686, (fn. 62) had
been a name for the northern end of Baker Street at
the junction of the road leading to Clay Hill. In 1719
Henry Gough, M.P., a director of the East India
Company, (fn. 63) bought a house there to which c. 1779
his son Richard, antiquary (1735-1809), added a
library with a Gothic window and fireplace designed
by James Essex. (fn. 64) Richard Gough left his topographical material, including two volumes of notes
on Enfield, (fn. 65) to the Bodleian Library, Oxford, and
in 1806 recalled many pleasing hours of research in
his native parish. (fn. 66) His house, which became known
as Gough Park, was demolished in 1899. (fn. 67) John
Abernethy (1764-1831), surgeon and teacher, and
James Rennell (1742-1830), geographer, both retired
to houses in Baker Street. (fn. 68) The Hop Poles inn at the
corner of Lancaster Road was built in 1909 on the
site of a weatherboarded building. (fn. 69)
Forty Green, near Gough Park, formed a triangular open space at the junction of Baker Street,
Carterhatch Lane, and Forty Hill. Richard atte
Forteye held an estate in Enfield in the 14th
century (fn. 70) and houses bordered the green in 1572. (fn. 71)
Sir Samuel Starling lived in one called Garretts
Place in 1635 (fn. 72) and the White House stood there,
together with some shops, in 1686. (fn. 73) The area
around Forty Green and Forty Hill became fashionable in the 18th century. Brigadier Hall was built on
the south side of the green by William Bridger, a
former Lord Mayor of London, between 1764 and
1779 (fn. 74) and Adelaide House was built to the west
shortly before 1828. (fn. 75) Both have been demolished
but the Hermitage, dated 1704, survives, with a
terrace on the west side of the green called Cottage
Place, built in 1833.
On Forty Hill there were houses in 1572 (fn. 76) near the
Little Park, which was first recorded in 1543 as the
park of Elsing Hall. (fn. 77) The park was later incorporated into the Forty Hall estate and by 1656 had
been turned into farmland. The large 16th- or early17th-century Dower House survives within the
Forty Hall estate, where Forty Hall itself was built
near the site of an older dwelling between 1629 and
1636, (fn. 78) and several houses were erected on the
eastern side of the hill in the 18th century, opposite
the Forty Hall grounds. Worcester Lodge, of c. 1700,
is at the corner of Goat Lane, at the other corner of
which the Goat inn stood in 1911 (fn. 79) before its
replacement by an inn of the same name at Forty
Green. Elsynge House, with Venetian windows on
the ground floor, was built farther north in the late
18th century and the Elms, a large stuccoed house,
in the early 19th. Sparrow Hall, at the top of Forty
Hill, dates from c. 1787 (fn. 80) and Clock House, near by,
has a late-19th-century facade. (fn. 81) George Birkbeck
(1776-1841), the founder of mechanics' institutions,
lived at Forty Hill after 1824. (fn. 82) A church was built
in 1835. (fn. 83)
Clay Hill existed in 1572 as a small settlement near
the bridge over Maiden's brook west of Forty
Green. (fn. 84) The name presumably derived from a
tenement there called Clays and perhaps from
William atte Cleye, who was resident in the parish
in 1274. (fn. 85) The hamlet was reached by a road running
from Forty Green through land inclosed by the mid
18th century (fn. 86) to enter the Chase at Mores Hatch
gate, near the site of St. John's church and the
Fallow Buck inn. The area by the bridge later
became known as Bull Beggars' Hole. (fn. 87) Clay Hill
consisted in the 18th century of houses scattered
along the road on either side of the bridge for almost
a mile. (fn. 88) The Rose and Crown, by the bridge in
1686, (fn. 89) and the timber-framed Fallow Buck, on the
hill to the west, are the oldest surviving buildings.
Bramley House, a large 18th-century house east of
the bridge, was known as Great Pipers (fn. 90) in the 18th
century and in 1972 served as a mental hospital. The
adjacent Little Pipers, an early-19th-century cottage
orné with bargeboarded gables, preserves the name
of a tenement mentioned, with Great Pipers, in
1572. (fn. 91) The Firs, farther east, is 18th-century.
Claysmore, a plain stuccoed house in wooded
grounds west of the bridge, was built in the early
19th century, (fn. 92) extended with a picture gallery
designed by John Hill, a local builder, and later
demolished. (fn. 93) James Whatman Bosanquet (1804-77),
the Biblical chronologist, lived there and was active
in local affairs, financing the building of the near-by
St. John's church. (fn. 94) In 1972 the road which climbed
the hill from the bridge to the church was still lined
by the gardens of large 18th- and 19th-century
houses, although some of the houses themselves, like
the early-19th-century Hill Lodge, (fn. 95) had disappeared. The Italianate Clay Hill House survived,
as did Clay Hill Lodge to the west and Wildwood to
the north.
Buildings were scattered on the edge of the Chase
near Mores Hatch gate and Whitewebbs in 1572 (fn. 96)
and formed a small group at Whitewebbs in 1656. (fn. 97)
The King and Tinker inn and some houses still
stand alone by the old boundary of the Chase near
White Webbs House, which was built on the former
Chase to the south. (fn. 98) The land north of Whitewebbs
Road was inclosed within Theobalds Park in 1611
and later turned over to farming. It can be distinguished from the Chase itself by its old farmhouses, the most noteworthy being the Glasgow Stud
farm-house, a 17th-century gabled building with an
elaborately carved contemporary fireplace. (fn. 99) White
Webbs farm-house, 18th-century and with a hipped
roof, stands about ½ mile farther east.
Cockfosters, mentioned in 1524, (fn. 1) was the only
hamlet in the western part of the parish before the
inclosure of the Chase. The settlement was isolated
on the edge of the woodland about half way along
the road between Southgate (Edmonton) and Potters
Bar (South Mimms). Edmund Kendall of Lincoln's
Inn lived in a house called Cockfosters in 1613 (fn. 2) and
there was a small group of houses in 1754, the largest
of which was Buckskin Hall (fn. 3) on the East Barnet
boundary west of the later Chalk Lane. Renamed
Dacre Lodge, (fn. 4) in 1884 it was a plain stuccoed
building reputedly on the site of a hunting box of
James I (fn. 5) and after a fire in 1895 it was rebuilt. (fn. 6)
Norrysbury, to the north, was said in 1890 to stand
near the site of Norris Farm, an outlying part of
Elsing manor. (fn. 7) The only large house within the
tongue of the parish which projected south of
Cockfosters was Mount Pleasant, or Belmont, on the
East Barnet boundary on the site of the residence of
the antiquarian Lord William Howard (1563-1640). (fn. 8)
The Cock inn existed in 1798 (fn. 9) and a church from
1839 but mid-19th-century Cockfosters was still a
remote hamlet. (fn. 10)
The hamlet of Bull's Cross, Bedelescrosse in
1465, (fn. 11) grew up by the cross roads east of Whitewebbs. Its chief buildings were the manor-houses of
Goldbeaters and Honeylands (fn. 12) and a house called
the Dairy House, described as very ancient c. 1656,
whose site is unknown. (fn. 13) There were two new
cottages at Honeylane corner in 1572 and other
houses along the later Bullsmoor Lane. (fn. 14) The Pied
Bull, a timber-framed inn surviving in 1974, existed
in 1752 (fn. 15) and Bullsmoor Place, the house of Col.
Thomas Boddam, in 1800. (fn. 16) The hamlet consisted in
1972 of a few scattered houses and terraced cottages
surrounded by agricultural land. Another cluster of
houses grew up about ¼ mile farther south, at the
junction of Bull's Cross with Turkey Street. Bowling
Green House, on the west side of the road, was
conveyed to Daniel Parker, a London pewterer, in
1678 (fn. 17) but had been demolished by 1823. (fn. 18)
Myddelton House, in 1972 the headquarters of the
Lee Valley regional park authority, was built on an
adjoining site in 1818 by Henry Carington Bowles
to the designs of Messrs. Ferry and Wallen of Spital
Square (Stepney) (fn. 19) and extended before 1873. (fn. 20) On
the east side of the road are Winterton Lodge, an
early-19th-century stuccoed building later divided
into three, and Garnault, a mid-19th-century
Italianate house. Some 19th-century cottages and a
late-17th-century house form an extension of the
hamlet along the road sloping down to Maiden's
brook, which acts as a natural boundary between
Bull's Cross and Forty Hill to the south.
Turkey Street ran eastward across open fields
from the wooded hills around Forty Hill and Bull's
Cross to Hertford Road. Along the street was one of
the main pre-19th-century settlements, containing
ten houses in 1572, two of them new and another
belonging to a London brewer. (fn. 21) A house called
Sweeting existed in 1658 (fn. 22) and the Plough inn, later
rebuilt, by 1752. (fn. 23) In 1754 the cottages in Turkey
Street formed a group near the inn, a little to the east
of the bridge over the New River. (fn. 24) In the mid 19th
century the only substantial house was the 18thcentury Roselands, belonging to the Jones family, (fn. 25)
whose grounds from 1968 were occupied by the
upper school of St. Ignatius's college. In 1972 a row
of small houses of c. 1800, the central pair with a
mansard roof, survived on the south side of the street
amid extensive modern building.
The hamlet of Enfield Wash grew up at the
eastern end of Turkey Street, where Hertford
Road forded Maiden's brook. (fn. 26) Grove House, in
large grounds near the junction with Turkey Street,
was built in the 18th century (fn. 27) and demolished
between 1920 and 1935. (fn. 28) It was visited by the artist
Thomas Rowlandson (1756-1827), a close friend of
the owner Matthew Michell, a London banker. (fn. 29)
Freezy Water farm, commemorated in the name of a
modern district, lay to the north in 1768. (fn. 30) Enfield
Wash was so named in 1675 (fn. 31) but more commonly
known as Horsepool Stones until the 18th century, (fn. 32)
by which time it marked the northernmost end of a
line of houses scattered along Hertford Road for
about 1½ mile. (fn. 33)
Enfield Highway, south of Enfield Wash, by 1754
was the name of a settlement where houses stood
closely together along Hertford Road, between Hoe
Lane and Green Street. (fn. 34) The hamlet was called
Cocksmiths End in 1572 (fn. 35) and again in 1658, when
it contained a house called Drakes. (fn. 36) It extended
eastward towards the marshes along Green Street,
where thirteen houses were recorded in 1572, (fn. 37) and
included a house called Mitchells in 1742. (fn. 38)
The north-east part of Enfield parish, in contrast
to the hillier country west of the open fields,
possessed few large houses. In 1658 traffic along
Hertford Road was served by the Chequers inn at
Horsepool Stones and the Four Swans at Cocksmiths
End (fn. 39) and in 1752 by the Sun and Woolpack, the Fox
and Crown, the Bell, the Red Lion, and the Black
Horse, (fn. 40) all later rebuilt. St. James's church, the
façade of the Bell, and some villas in Hertford Road,
among them nos. 372, 472-4, and 651, survive from
the early 19th century amidst later suburban
housing.
Ponders End stood on Hertford Road about ½ mile
south of Enfield Highway, separated from it by the
old manorial lands of Durants and Suffolks. Probably
the name derived from John Ponder (fl. 1373), whose
own family may have held land on the border of
Enfield and Edmonton c. 1200. (fn. 41) In 1572 the
settlement contained a mansion belonging to Richard
Gaywood of London, a new cottage in Bungeys Lane
(later Lincoln Road), and some houses along South
Street, which led eastward towards the Lea. (fn. 42) A
large 16th-century house called Lincoln House was
reputedly the residence of William Wickham, bishop
of Lincoln and later of Winchester, from 1577 to
1594 (fn. 43) and of Henry Fiennes, earl of Lincoln (d.
1616). (fn. 44) The house was much altered in the early
19th century (fn. 45) and was severely damaged by fire
before 1873. (fn. 46) In 1972 an early-19th-century
stuccoed villa called Lincoln House stood on the
corner of Lincoln Road. Eagle House, later
demolished, was built near by c. 1750 by Richard
Darby of Gray's Inn. (fn. 47) The Goat, Two Brewers,
and White Hart inns existed in 1752. (fn. 48) A hamlet
called Scotland was mentioned in 1607 (fn. 49) and there
were some houses at Scotland Green, a little to the
north of South Street, in 1754. (fn. 50) Romantic drawings
of derelict cottages at Scotland Green, with others at
Bull's Cross and Green Street, were published by
J. T. Smith of Edmonton in 1797. (fn. 51)
The hamlets along Hertford Road marked the
eastern limit of settlement until the 19th century.
A few farmhouses stood alone amid the open fields,
with the moated manor-houses of Durants and
Elsing, (fn. 52) but there were no buildings on the marshy
ground by the Lea, apart from those connected with
river traffic, like the flour mill at the end of South
Street (fn. 53) and the Swan and Pike inn farther north at
Enfield Lock. An arms factory which was opened at
Enfield Lock c. 1804 had cottages for 2 foremen and
60 workers by 1828 (fn. 54) but did not lead to rapid
growth until its own enlargement, as the Royal
Small Arms factory, in 1854. (fn. 55)
The western half of the parish, comprising the
former Chase, also remained very thinly populated
before 1830. Some small encroachments made in the
18th century and earlier, notably by main roads near
Monken Hadley and Potters Bar, were said in 1767
to be of little value, consisting only of labourers'
wooden cottages on small plots. (fn. 56) Inclosure did not
radically alter the pattern of settlement within the
former Chase but it wrought great changes on the
landscape: scarcely any trees were left by 1823 (fn. 57) and
the remaining patches of woodland were largely
confined to the estates of Trent Park and other seats
which had been built after inclosure. New buildings
included the farm-houses of Holly Hill and Fernyhill farms, which survive, Home Villa (fn. 58) and other
early-19th-century villas on the Ridgeway, and
isolated houses like Owls Hall at Crews Hill. A small
hamlet grew up at the junction of the Ridgeway and
East Lodge Lane. By 1819 it was called Botany Bay,
probably to emphasize its remoteness, (fn. 59) and by 1868
it consisted of a few brick cottages and a farm-house. (fn. 60)
Despite the emptiness of the Chase, Enfield until
the later 19th century contained more inhabitants
than Edmonton or Tottenham. In 1547 the parish
had 1,000 communicants (fn. 61) and in 1642 the protestation oath was taken by 496 adult males. (fn. 62) In
1676 there were 1,489 conformists, 1 papist, and 10
other nonconformists. (fn. 63) The population increased
from 5,581 in 1801 to 6,636 in 1811 and 8,227 in
1821 but thereafter rose less steeply to reach 9,453
by 1851. (fn. 64) Enfield Town ward or quarter was the
most populous in 1642, with 179 adult males,
followed by Bull's Cross with 112, Horsepool Stones
(otherwise Green Street or Enfield Highway) with
97, Ponders End with 65, and Parsonage with 43. (fn. 65)
By 1811, when there were only four divisions, as
many as 3,055 persons were in Enfield Town, which
included Baker Street, Clay Hill, and the eastern
edge of Chase Side; 1,698 lived in Green Street and
Ponders End ward, in the south-east of the parish,
1,048 in Chase and 835 in Bull's Cross wards. (fn. 66)