GROWTH AFTER 1850.
The opening of the branch
line to Enfield Town in 1849 led to several proposals
for new housing. Residents, however, proved hard
to attract and in the 1850s the population of the old
parish, excluding Forty Hill and Enfield Highway,
declined from 6,990 to 6,543, although the number
of houses rose. (fn. 67) Slow progress was made by the
National Freehold Land Co., the first to draw up a
plan, which bought market gardens west of London
Road in 1852 and offered free season tickets to
London to the purchasers of 'first and second rate'
houses. (fn. 68) Four streets were laid out and named
Essex, Cecil, Raleigh, and Sydney roads, to advertise
the Elizabethan associations of the area. The land
was divided into 462 plots and in 1854 proposed
prices ranged from £400 for detached houses in
London Road to £100 for terraced cottages in
Raleigh Road. (fn. 69) The estate was called Enfield New
Town in 1859, (fn. 70) when two rows of cottages were
built in Raleigh Road, (fn. 71) but in Sydney Road plots
remained available in 1865 (fn. 72) and houses were still
under construction in 1874. (fn. 73) When completed, the
estate consisted mainly of detached houses in
London Road, semi-detached villas in Cecil, Essex,
and Sydney Roads, and terraces farther west in
Raleigh Road.
Other new building near Enfield Town was
similarly delayed. The Conservative Land Society
bought a small estate on the south side of Southbury
Road by Oldbury Moat c. 1854 and laid out
Burleigh, Queen's, and Stanley roads. An offer of
free season tickets was fruitless, by 1868 only two
houses had been built, (fn. 74) and in 1897 the streets had
still to be completed. (fn. 75) Meanwhile the North
London Society bought Gordon House, demolished
it, and laid out roads. Nothing had been built by
1858 (fn. 76) but there were houses in Halifax and Gordon
roads by 1868. (fn. 77) An extension of the estate was
planned in the 1880s (fn. 78) and houses were being built
in Gordon Hill, on the site of Gordon House itself,
in 1894. (fn. 79) On the Bridgen Hall estate, at the foot of
Forty Hill, Ridler, Bridgenhall, Morley, and St.
George's roads had been laid out by 1866, (fn. 80) when
63 plots were offered for sale, (fn. 81) but the roads were
not fully built up until after the First World War. (fn. 82)
Growth in the eastern part of the parish in the
1850s was stimulated both by factories and by the
opening in 1840 of a station in South Street to serve
Ponders End. The Royal Small Arms factory was
enlarged in 1854 while in South Street Baylis's crape
works employed nearly 200 people by 1858. (fn. 83) The
population of the ecclesiastical district of St. James,
Enfield Highway, which included Ponders End and
Enfield Wash, trebled from 1,534 in 1851 to 4,954
in 1861, the increase being attributed to expansion
at the small arms factory. By 1871, when the
factory's work-force had again increased and a jute
factory had opened at Ponders End, the population
had risen to 8,027. (fn. 84)
An estate attached to Ponders End mill (later
Wright's flour mill) was put up for sale in 1853 and
some land west of Ponders End station divided into
building lots. (fn. 85) Alma, Napier, and New roads were
laid out there and by 1868 terraced housing stretched
down one side of New Road. Farther north more
people settled at Enfield Highway and Enfield Wash,
both along Hertford Road and new branch roads.
The houses included cottages built in East Road
in 1859 and Amelia and Alpha cottages, dated 1859,
and Rose Cottages, dated 1867, in Hertford Road.
By 1868 there were houses in Jasper, St. James's,
and Grove roads. (fn. 86)
East of Enfield Wash, between the railway and the
Lea, builders catered largely for employees at the
Royal Small Arms factory. A terrace called Government Row was constructed on the east bank of the
Lea Navigation in the shadow of the factory, while
farther west in Ordnance Road officers were accommodated in large, semi-detached stuccoed houses. (fn. 87)
Near by both Medcalf Road, laid out in 1861, (fn. 88) and
Warwick Road were lined with terraces by 1865. (fn. 89)
The area near the factory acquired a character and
life of its own, isolated from the rest of the parish
and with its own church, school, (fn. 90) and two public
houses, the Greyhound and the Royal Small Arms.
North of Enfield Wash the 33-acre Putney Lodge
estate was conveyed by James Bennett to the British
Land Co. in 1867. Mandeville, Totteridge, and
Putney roads had been laid out by 1867, when 296
building plots were for sale, (fn. 91) and 6-roomed houses
were offered in 1869, when the proximity of the
Royal Small Arms factory was stressed. (fn. 92) Plots were
still available in 1893 (fn. 93) but the estate was almost
completely built up by 1897. (fn. 94) In 1887 the Standard
Freehold Land Co. of Woolwich (Kent) sold plots in
Standard Road, near Enfield Lock (formerly
Ordnance Factory) station; they were bought by a
builder from Kilburn (fn. 95) and the street had been built
up by 1897. (fn. 96) A large tract south of Ordnance Road
was acquired for building after the sale of Woodham
Connop's lands in eastern Enfield in 1869 but little
building took place until the 20th century. (fn. 97)
Building began to spread rapidly northward from
Enfield Town in the 1870s. Houses were under
construction around Lancaster (formerly New) Road
in 1869, when Woodham Connop's land near by was
offered for sale. (fn. 98) The popularity of the area was
enhanced by the opening of the G.N.R.'s branch to
Enfield in 1871, the shortening of the G.E.R.'s route
from Enfield Town to London in 1872, and the
introduction of cheap fares. In St. Andrew's parish,
excluding the new parishes of St. John, Clay Hill,
and Christ Church, Cockfosters, the population rose
from 5,087 in 1871 to 11,033 in 1891. (fn. 99) The Birkbeck
Freehold Land Society bought some of the Connops'
land north of Lancaster Road and by 1887 had laid
out ten streets, including Birkbeck Road and Morley
Hill, with kerbed footpaths and full drainage. The
estate, initially called 'New Enfield', was about a
mile from each of the railway stations in Enfield
Town but in 1897 many of the plots remained empty,
despite the society's earlier claim that there was a
demand for cottage property. (fn. 1) More houses were
built near the Birkbeck estate at the end of the 19th
century, also for the working or lower middle class.
By 1896 Rosemary and Primrose avenues had been
laid out to the east, and Gloucester, Brodie, and
Burlington roads to the west. More streets, with
similar terraces, were built on both sides of Lancaster
Road between 1896 and 1913. (fn. 2) Park farm, stretching
north from Phipps Hatch Lane to Clay Hill, was
advertised for building in 1909, when Gordon Hill
station on the G.N.R.'s Hertford extension was
shortly to be opened. (fn. 3) The estate, however, was
acquired by Enfield U.D.C. and opened as a public
park in 1911. (fn. 4)
Bush Hill Park, south of Enfield Town, was
offered for sale in 1871. (fn. 5) The land, advertised as
suited for small houses and close to railway stations, (fn. 6)
was bought by the Bush Hill Park Co., whose
fortunes were said in 1911 to have fluctuated. (fn. 7) When
the estate eventually was built, it was not socially
homogeneous; west of the Enfield Town railway line
there were detached houses, many of them gabled
and tile-hung, in large gardens along tree-lined
streets, while to the east terraces in straight lines
followed the pattern set by the land societies' estates
elsewhere in Enfield. Housing spread rapidly after
the opening of the G.E.R.'s Bush Hill Park station
in 1880. (fn. 8) Main Avenue east of the station, and the
streets leading off it to the north, had been built up
by 1897, (fn. 9) Millais Road in 1899, Poynter Road in
1901-3, and Landseer Road in 1903. (fn. 10) West of the
railway houses stood in Wellington, Village, and
Private roads by 1897; (fn. 11) no. 8 Private Road, designed
by Arthur H. Mackmurdo c. 1883, is notable for its
flat roof and other advanced architectural features. (fn. 12)
Building on former Chase land near Windmill Hill
and the Ridgeway was also encouraged by the
opening of the G.N.R. station in Enfield in 1871.
As in the western part of Bush Hill Park, the houses
were mainly for middle-class commuters. The most
ambitious plan was that begun in 1879 by A.
Culloden Rowan, who constructed Bycullah, Rowantree, and Culloden roads on the 54-acre estate of
Bycullah Park, a house north of Windmill Hill built
in the mid 19th century by J. R. Riddell, a retired
Indian Army officer. (fn. 13) Detached and semi-detached
houses of two types were proposed, one with Gothic
porches and the other with tile-hanging and mock
timber framing; prospective buyers were told that
care had been taken to preserve trees, that the views
were good, and the drainage was thorough. (fn. 14) Despite
the provision of social facilities centred round an
'Athenaeum', progress was so slow that simpler
houses were eventually built. (fn. 15) By 1897 the estate
was complete (fn. 16) and in 1972 it preserved a distinct
'garden suburb' appearance, although blocks of flats
had replaced many of the original houses. Chase
Green Avenue, built in 1880, (fn. 17) joined the Bycullah
estate to Chase Side.

ENFIELD DEVELOPMENT FROM THE MID 19TH CENTURY
In the Ridgeway some houses were built in 1882 (fn. 18)
and farther west, in Slades Hill, building land had
been advertised in 1879. (fn. 19) By 1897 some of the
largest houses in the parish, with fine views westward
over farm-land, lined the Ridgeway as far as the
junction with Holtwhite's Hill. (fn. 20) Claypatch, illustrated in 1899, (fn. 21) was built to the designs of Sydney
W. Cranfield and Ridgemount to those of A. N.
Hart, (fn. 22) who also designed ornate, tile-hung houses
at the top of Windmill Hill in partnership with
P. L. Waterhouse. (fn. 23) At the southern end of the
Ridgeway Uplands Park Road had been built on part
of the glebe land by 1896 (fn. 24) and there were also
houses in the adjacent Chase Ridings by 1897.
Drapers Road, leading from the Ridgeway to
Holtwhite's Hill, had been laid out by 1897, when
plots were advertised, (fn. 25) although little building took
place until c. 1922-5. (fn. 26) The demand for villas was
said to be unlimited and two short streets at the foot
of Holtwhite's Hill, Holtwhite's Avenue and Trinity
Street, the second on land owned by Trinity College,
Cambridge, were soon filled with terraced houses. (fn. 27)
At Hadley Wood, in the extreme west of the
parish, growth was linked with the opening of a
station on the G.N.R.'s main line in 1885. Charles
Jack, tenant of the Beech Hill estate, leased some
land north of Camlet Way in 1884 and laid out
Crescent East, which had 15 large semi-detached
houses by 1888, and Crescent West. Lancaster
Avenue had been laid out by 1901 and in 1914 there
were about 100 houses in the area, including some
along Camlet Way itself. (fn. 28) An abortive plan to build
on the grounds of Beech Hill Park was put forward
in 1899. (fn. 29) Hadley Wood thereafter remained an
isolated upper-middle-class neighbourhood, separated by open country from more populous suburbs.
The estate of Chase Park, near Enfield Town, was
offered as good building land in 1879, the vendors
emphasizing its potential for building. Shirley and
Station roads, adjoining the G.N.R. (later Enfield
Chase) station, had been divided into lots for
building by 1880 (fn. 30) and were soon lined with terraces
but most of the estate was still open in 1897. (fn. 31) Along
Old Park Avenue, leading southward across the
former Enfield Old Park, detached and semidetached houses with gables and mock timber
framing were being built c. 1900. (fn. 32) At its southern
end similar houses were built in the Chine, the
Grangeway, and Old Park Ridings after the opening
of the G.N.R.'s Grange Park station in 1910. (fn. 33) The
area was described as a nascent suburb in 1911. (fn. 34)
The centre of Enfield Town began to assume its
modern, urban appearance at the end of the 19th
century. A row of shops at the corner of London
Road, designed by J. S. Moye, was said in 1878 to
have greatly enhanced the southern entrance to the
town. (fn. 35) The Nags Head inn (later demolished) was
built shortly before 1883 to designs by Ernest Shum
of Bedford as part of a scheme for improving the
approach to the station. (fn. 36) Lloyds Bank had moved
into larger premises in the market-place, designed by
Alexander Stenning, by 1893 (fn. 37) and a new London
and Provincial (later Barclays) Bank, of red brick
and profusely adorned in the Jacobean manner, was
built on the site of the Greyhound in 1897. (fn. 38) The
King's Head was replaced by a gabled, tile-hung
building in 1899 (fn. 39) and the George had been rebuilt,
to incorporate some of the original materials, by
1911. (fn. 40) Most of the older shops were also rebuilt
c. 1900 and new ones built included Town Parade in
Silver Street, dated 1906. The western side of the
market-place remained comparatively unchanged
until the sale of Burleigh House, 'the finest undeveloped area . . . in the district', in 1913 (fn. 41) and the
south side until the construction of Pearson's
department store on the site of the manor-house
(Enfield Palace) in 1928. (fn. 42) In Church Street the
former frontage of Burleigh House was covered with
shops, with a cinema to the rear. Farther west Little
Park Gardens was laid out after Little Park had been
sold to Enfield local board in 1888 (fn. 43) and newly built
houses there were for sale in 1899. (fn. 44) Chaseside
House, on the opposite side of Church Street, was
sold in 1901, after a plan for building on the
northern part of the grounds had already been
produced. (fn. 45) Houses were later built along a western
continuation of Cecil Road and shops along Church
Street. This southern part of the estate became
Enfield Town park, opened in 1903 as the first of
several public parks proposed by the U.D.C. (fn. 46)
With the exception of the new Bush Hill Park
estate, the land on the east side of Enfield Town
station was still largely devoted to farming and
market gardening in 1897. (fn. 47) There was extensive
building on both sides of Southbury Road, however,
immediately before the First World War, while
south of Southbury Road a recreation ground was
opened on former market gardens. Housing here
preceded the extension of tram services to Enfield
Town along Southbury Road in 1911; terraces were
being built in Cecil Avenue and Halstead Road in
1901, in Clive Road in 1904, and in Sketty Road
from 1903 to 1910. (fn. 48) By 1920 the built-up area had
reached its easternmost limit at Clive Road. (fn. 49)
Growth in the eastern part of the parish before the
First World War was less residential than around
Enfield Town. Market gardens and other old sources
of local employment continued to flourish, while
large new industries began to attract a working-class
population. Ponders End, which in 1876 retained
something of its old gentility, (fn. 50) grew rapidly after the
opening of the Ediswan electric light factory in 1886.
There were some houses in Aden and Suez roads,
near the factory, in 1896 (fn. 51) but few others were built
on the marshes east of the G.E.R. line and in 1972
the area was almost entirely industrial.
Most of the new housing at Ponders End was west
of the main railway line, to take advantage of the
opening of the G.E.R.'s line from Lower Edmonton
to Cheshunt in 1891 and the extension of trams along
Hertford Road in 1907. New shops, chapels, and
halls replaced the weatherboarded and mansardroofed cottages which had formerly lined Hertford
Road, both at Ponders End and farther north at
Enfield Highway and Enfield Wash. The first houses
in Nags Head Road, on land formerly owned by the
Connop family, were built c. 1891 and terraces were
also constructed in 1897 and 1907. (fn. 52) New houses in
Garfield Road were advertised in 1892 as near to
Churchbury station, with its excellent service for
workmen. (fn. 53) Houses were built in Lincoln Road in
1893 (fn. 54) and Allens, Orchard, and Church roads on
the former Allen's farm at the corner of South Street
and Hertford Road were planned in 1897, after an
earlier scheme had failed. (fn. 55) Some houses were built
c. 1900 but most of the sites remained vacant until
c. 1930. (fn. 56) Plots at the eastern end of Nags Head Road
were advertised in 1904, when there was said to be a
great demand for artisans' houses in the area. (fn. 57) By
1914 building had spread north from Nags Head
Road to Durants Road, on the former Durants
manor house estate, with building plots in King
Edward's and Alexandra roads being offered by the
Enfield and District Freehold Land Society. (fn. 58) In
1906 the Enfield, Waltham and Cheshunt Building
Society planned Southfield, Clarence, and Northfield
roads, south of Lincoln Road; some of the land was
bought by the General Freehold Land Co. and the
streets had largely been built up by 1910. (fn. 59) Farther
west houses appeared in Norfolk, Suffolk, and
Oxford roads c. 1907-8. (fn. 60) In 1914 nurseries and
market gardens still separated Ponders End from
both Enfield Town and Enfield Highway. (fn. 61) Larger
estates were built in the north-east of the parish at
Enfield Wash and Enfield Lock, near the small arms
factory.
The General Freehold Land Co. was selling plots
formerly owned by the Connop family in Chesterfield
Road, south of Ordnance Road, in 1898 and houses
were built there and in Beaconsfield, Catisfield, and
neighbouring roads from c. 1899 until the First
World War. (fn. 62) North of Ordnance Road the Rosary
estate was mentioned in 1891 (fn. 63) and there were some
houses in Catherine Road in 1897. Forest, Ashton,
and Park Roads had been laid out by 1897 (fn. 64) and two
years later the Canning Town, Silvertown and
Victoria Dock Freehold Land and Building Co. was
selling plots in Forest Road, although none of the
roads was fully built up until the period between the
World Wars. (fn. 65) The United Counties Land, Building
and Investment Society acquired an estate near the
former Freezy Water farm, west of Hertford Road,
in 1881, and laid out Holly, Oakhurst, and
Holmwood Roads; several houses had appeared by
1897 (fn. 66) but there, too, plots remained empty until the
1930s.
Brimsdown station, on the G.E.R. main line, was
opened in 1884. There was a scattering of new
houses in Green Street and the newly-laid-out
Brimsdown Avenue, Osborne Road, and Mayfield
Road by 1897, (fn. 67) although the roads were not
completely built up until after the First World War.
Farther west the British Land Co. acquired a small
estate east of Hertford Road and was selling plots in
Elmore and Riley roads in 1892. (fn. 68) Land was also
being sold in Connop Road in 1891 and in Albany
Road in 1897 and 1901. (fn. 69) When houses were planned
in Albany and St. Stephen's roads in 1901 Enfield
Highway was described as a rapidly increasing
district, with a keen demand for artisans' houses and
a good service of workmens' trains from Enfield
Lock station. (fn. 70) To cater for the increased population
the U.D.C. opened Albany park in 1902 and
Durants park in 1903.
Between 1921 and 1931 the rate of building
slackened and the total population rose by only
11.9 per cent, after increases of 20-30 per cent in the
twenty years before the First World War. (fn. 71) The rate
again increased in the 1930s, especially at Enfield
Highway, where extensive council housing was
undertaken. The two largest estates were south of
Carterhatch Lane, around Central Avenue, and
north of Brimsdown railway station over an area
bounded by Bell Lane, Brimsdown Avenue, Croft
Road, and Redlands Road. In Hertford Road itself
shopping parades replaced earlier, smaller, houses
and shops near St. James's church. Residential
building on the market gardens was encouraged by
the growth of heavy industry along the Lea in
Brimsdown, which had been foreshadowed by the
opening of the power station there in 1907. (fn. 72)
The opening of Great Cambridge Road through
the parish in 1923-4 stimulated much private
building. East of the road 21 estates, for 2,500
houses, were approved between 1931 and 1937 (fn. 73) and
building continued until 1939. (fn. 74) Most of it was
carried out by firms from outside Enfield like
Newman Eyre of Romford (Essex), who built the
286 houses on the Aylands estate (Ayland, Larmans,
Balmoral, and Windsor roads) at Enfield Wash after
1933, and Thomas Blade of Romford, who built the
Longfield estate at Enfield Highway (Longfield,
Winnington, and Dell roads and the Loning), with
284 houses and 4 shops after 1934. Local builders
included Enfield Highway Co-Operative Society,
whose Unity estate consisted of 104 houses in
Meadway and Crossway after 1934, and Oatlands
Estates of Carterhatch Lane, who planned 136
houses in Carterhatch Road, Leyland Avenue, and
Sharon Road in 1932. An Enfield architect, Frank
Lee, designed the Westmoor estate at Brimsdown
in 1937. Private and municipal building radically
changed eastern Enfield in the period between the
World Wars; by 1939 market gardening had been
considerably reduced and the formerly distinct
settlements of Ponders End, Enfield Highway, and
Enfield Wash had coalesced. (fn. 75)
By contrast the old division between Enfield
Town and the eastern part of the parish was
maintained, since on much of the land along Great
Cambridge Road market gardens gave way to
industry, playing fields, and schools. Few council
houses were built around Enfield Town, where the
main area of growth was between Baker Street and
the New River. Newman Eyre was allowed to put up
594 houses on 50 a. east of Churchbury Lane in 1934
and another 286 houses to the north in 1935, while
E. N. Stephens of Willesden obtained permission
for 279 houses on former vicarage glebe land to the
south. The grounds of the Rectory, on the other side
of Baker Street, had been sold in 1926 and
Monastery Gardens built on the site. To the southwest, near Grange Park station, 472 houses and
seven new roads comprising the Uplands estate were
built by Marshall Estates after 1933. (fn. 76)
The south-western corner of the parish changed
after the extension of the Piccadilly line in 1933.
Cockfosters, in 1911 still described as a charming
little village, (fn. 77) appeared more suburban with the
building of a shopping parade near its new station.
Near Oakwood station the South Lodge estate was
developed by John Laing & Co. after 1935 (fn. 78) and
housing covered much of the neighbourhood by
1939. (fn. 79) Farther north growth was limited to the
Hadley Wood area. By 1929 there were houses,
mainly detached, in Wagon Road, as well as along
Cockfosters Road on the edge of the Beech Hill
estate. Although most of Beech Hill Park became a
golf course in 1920 the Greenwood estate, to the
west, was sold in 1925 and by 1939 had been covered
with about 300 houses. Building spread after the
Second World War. Greenbrook Avenue was laid
out in 1948 and Covert Way in 1958; Duchy and
Kingwell roads were laid out in 1954-5 and
Broadgates Avenue was built in 1957. (fn. 80)
The loss of the rural character of the former Chase
was predicted in 1911, on the building of the
G.N.R.'s Hertford extension, (fn. 81) and again in 1934,
after the Piccadilly line reached Cockfosters. (fn. 82) Such
fears proved unfounded, largely because of the
absence of fast roads and Underground railways
from most of the hilly western half of the parish.
Suburban building in the former Chase during the
1930s was limited to its southern fringe, to Hadley
Wood, and a small estate of 102 houses at Crews Hill
built after 1931, (fn. 83) while elsewhere farm-land
survived. Moreover large areas were acquired as
golf courses after the First World War, including
those at Crews Hill, bought from Trinity College,
Cambridge, after 1915, and others at Bush Hill Park
and on the Old Park estate. Crews Hill course, with
the Trent Park and Beech Hill estates and a large
tract of farm-land south-west of the Ridgeway, by
1934 had been included in a North Middlesex
'green girdle' proposed by the county council. (fn. 84)
Later they became part of the wider Green Belt,
with other portions of the former Chase, and in 1937
Middlesex also bought the bulk of the duchy of
Lancaster's estates in the parish, covering 2,000 a.,
to add to the Belt. (fn. 85) Other rural areas, notably the
White Webbs and Forty Hall estates, were acquired
by the U.D.C. as parks after the Second World War,
as was Trent Park.
Growth since the Second World War, restricted
by Green Belt legislation, has largely been confined
to rebuilding by the council and infilling by private
firms. Private builders were particularly active on
former nursery-land in the east part of the parish,
near Enfield Wash and Ponders End. Prefabricated
bungalows were built west of Bull's Cross by the
U.D.C. after 1945 (fn. 86) and later replaced by permanent
houses, forming a large estate on both sides of Great
Cambridge Road, with a small shopping centre in
Kempe Road. Another council estate was built east
of Hertford Road at Enfield Highway, around
Addison Road, in the 1950s and a later one was built
north of Hoe Lane, around Meyer Gardens and
Pentrich Avenue. Tower-blocks of flats were erected
by Enfield L.B. in the late 1960s on the sites of older
terraces west of Ponders End station, at the corner of
Hertford and Ordnance roads, in Holbrook Close
off Goat Lane, and at the western end of Bell Lane,
Enfield Highway. Another large estate of flats was
built on the Hundred Acres, a piece of land
belonging to the parish in Lavender Hill, in the late
1960s. (fn. 87) Another council estate, at Bush Hill Park,
was begun after the demolition of Fifth, Sixth, and
Seventh avenues in 1974, and many expensive
private flats replaced older houses along the
Ridgeway. (fn. 88)
The sky-line of Enfield Town was greatly changed
by the construction of Tower Point, an elevenstoreyed office block covering most of the eastern
side of Sydney Road, in the late 1960s and by a
tower which was being added to the new civic centre
in Silver Street in 1974. Despite such changes and
heavy traffic along Church Street, the centre of
Enfield retains a remarkable number of old
buildings, walled gardens, and leafy walks. Beyond
the church and grammar school on the north side of
the market-place playing fields, bordered by the
New River, form an open space in the heart of the
town. From the cross-roads a few yards east of the
market-place Silver Street leads northward past a
few dignified houses, including the Vicarage amid
ancient trees, while Southbury Road heads eastward
beside gardens along the New River. At the western
end of the main shopping area Church Street crosses
the New River by the foot of Windmill Hill. South
of the bridge the river separates Town park from
Bush Hill Park golf course, a green tract stretching
to Bush Hill on the old Edmonton boundary. North
of the bridge it passes between Gentleman's Row
and Chase Green gardens, where houses, cottages,
and foot-paths recall Enfield as it was in the late 18th
and early 19th centuries.
The population of the parish rose from 9,453 in
1851 to 12,424 in 1861, 16,054 in 1871, and 19,104
in 1881, and then more rapidly to 31,803 in 1891,
42,738 in 1901, and 56,338 in 1911. It had reached
60,738 in 1921, 67,874 in 1931, and a peak of 110,465
in 1951, but was only 109,542 in 1961. (fn. 89)