PUBLIC SERVICES.
A new fire engine was ordered by the vestry in 1838, after it had been found
impossible to hire one by the year, the old system of
rewards was abandoned in 1844, and expenses were
paid out of the waste-land fund. (fn. 64) Tottenham volunteer fire brigade was set up by public subscription
in 1870 and moved from the old engine-house to
Coombes Croft in 1876. There was one manual
engine, with a fire-escape and curricle, in 1892, when
the entire staff was dismissed for insubordination. (fn. 65)
The brigade became the first in England to adopt
petrol motor traction in 1903, when Harringay fire
station was opened in Conway Road and equipped
with a combined chemical fire engine, hose tender,
fire-escape, and motor. (fn. 66) The central fire station,
next to the town hall, was opened in 1905. (fn. 67) Wood
Green had its own fire service, with an engine-house
in High Road, by 1901 and a station in Bounds Green
Road from 1914. (fn. 68) Both brigades became part of the
national fire service in the Second World War and
later part of the Middlesex fire brigade, (fn. 69) itself absorbed in 1965 into the enlarged London fire brigade.
In 1973 the old central fire station was used for
ambulances and Tottenham was served by the
G.L.C.'s station in St. Loys Road. (fn. 70)
Despite Tottenham's vaunted springs (fn. 71) the general
quality of its water was poor until soft water could
be found by sinking wells over 100 ft. deep, through
the clay, towards the end of the 18th century. In
1840 supplies still came from a well and pump on the
Green, given by Thomas Smith when lord of the
manor, from wells sunk at Page Green by the Row
family, from a well and fountain erected opposite
the Bell and Hare by the vestry, and from a well by
the Plough at Tottenham Hale. (fn. 72) A government
inspector, favouring the petition for the formation of
a local board, assumed that Tottenham would be
able to tap an inexhaustible amount of water between the clay and the chalk. (fn. 73)
Tottenham local board claimed to have ensured a
full water supply to all built-up areas in 1853 (fn. 74) but
was forced to extend its works at the Hale in 1856
and thereafter drew on the sewage-enriched marshlands, to the detriment of public health until its
blunder was exposed in 1873. The underground
supply faltered in 1864 and was always intermittent
from 1867, whereupon the wealthy made their own
arrangements with the great water companies, while
others resorted to carriers, cisterns, and private
wells. The board undertook to make adequate provision in 1872, (fn. 75) ignored an inspector's advice to
turn to the companies, and in 1876 installed a pump
at the works, giving Tottenham purer water than any
of its neighbours and permitting the closure of the
pump on the Green in 1883. (fn. 76) In that year work
began on a tower next to a reservoir in the charity
estates' Hill Pond field at Downhills. (fn. 77) In 1892 the
board, while still relying much on wells and on its
works at the Hale and at Downhills, (fn. 78) opened Longwater pumping station on the edge of Wild marsh.
Since 1880, however, the district had become partly
dependent on the New River Co., which itself was
responsible for Wood Green, and on the East
London Waterworks Co., since the two companies
virtually monopolized the flow from the Lea. (fn. 79) The
New River Co. had constructed a reservoir and
filter beds south of Wood Green station by the
1860s (fn. 80) and the East London Co. had covered part
of Tottenham marshes with Banbury and Lockwood
reservoirs, authorized in 1897, by 1904. In that year
the companies, together with the over-burdened
municipal undertaking, were absorbed by the new
Metropolitan Water Board, which thereafter supplied the entire area. (fn. 81)
Sewerage was the worst problem arising from
Tottenham's mid-19th-century expansion. In 1843
the riverside lands were generally malarial and by
1848 some 800 houses discharged their waste into
the Moselle alone. The local board built a works at
Markfield Road, Page Green, contracted for treatment with a manure manufacturer, and in the mid
1850s was as proud of its sewerage as of its water
system. After the contractor's death in 1858 sewage
was dissipated into the land around Page Green,
to the anger of residents, and discharged into the
Lea; the River Lea Trustees obtained a suspended
injunction in 1865 and Tottenham was accused of
killing nearly 4,000 persons by polluting the East
London Co.'s water supply in 1866. Meanwhile the
Moselle and other streams were increasingly contaminated from higher neighbourhoods, proposals
for a joint Lea Valley drainage scheme were stifled
by parochialism, and in 1869 the court of Chancery
refused further suspensions of its ban on dispersing
untreated sewage. The board, deadlocked between
supporters and opponents of plans to pipe waste to a
costly irrigation works in Walthamstow, saw Tottenhams' death-rate rise to 21.4 per thousand in 1871,
worse than in any save the poorest parts of eastern
London. Improvements began with the provision of
a pipe along Lordship Lane from Wood Green in
1872, cleansing of the Moselle after Hornsey had
constructed its own sewer, and an agreement with
the Chemical Manure Co. for treatment of sewage.
After the separation of Wood Green the Markfield
Road works became the responsibility of a joint
committee (fn. 82) and under an Act of 1891 the sewage of
both authorities was passed on from Tottenham to
the Northern High Level sewer in Hackney, part of
the L.C.C.'s main drainage system, for disposal. (fn. 83)
A beam engine, installed at Markfield Road in 1886
and used occasionally until the final closure of the
works in 1964, was to be restored in 1973. (fn. 84)
A refuse destructor was established by Tottenham
U.D.C. on 4 a. immediately north of Down Lane
recreation ground in 1903. (fn. 85) Its furnaces still served
as Haringey L.B.'s cleansing headquarters in 1972.
Wood Green possessed a modern destructor in
Western Road in 1933. (fn. 86)
There was said to be gas-lighting by 1833 and
some 60 gas-lamps lit the entire length of Tottenham
High Road in 1840, when fuel was provided by the
Imperial Gas Co. at Haggerston. After 1847 supplies
came from the new Tottenham and Edmonton Gas
Light & Coke Co., which acquired works in Edmonton. (fn. 87) After absorbing neighbouring undertakings,
the firm became known as the Tottenham District
Light, Heat, & Power Co. in 1914 and as the
Tottenham & District Gas Co. in 1928. (fn. 88) It opened
imposing showrooms at the corner of High Road and
Lordship Lane in 1901 (fn. 89) and later moved its chief
offices to the former Royal Masonic school at Wood
Green, which was renamed Woodall House and
occupied by the company's successor, the Eastern
Gas Board, in 1972. An Act of 1898, empowered the
Tottenham and Edmonton Gas Light & Coke Co. to
provide electricity, which afterwards became the
responsibility of the North Metropolitan Electric
Power Supply Co. (fn. 90)
Tottenham and Edmonton general dispensary
was opened by public subscription at no. 746 High
Road in 1864. Services at first were provided free
but a small weekly charge for membership was later
introduced, (fn. 91) to supplement collections made at local
churches. (fn. 92) There were 941 members, nearly half of
them representing families, in 1907. In 1910 the
trustees were authorized to rebuild the premises,
which remained in use in 1938, when membership
was 404. (fn. 93)
The Prince of Wales's general hospital originated
in the Evangelical Protestant Deaconesses' institution and training hospital, (fn. 94) founded by Dr.
Laseron with help from John Morley of Upper
Clapton and his brother Samuel. Avenue House, on
the south-east side of the Green, was converted and
opened, with a new hospital block, in 1868; the old
house was replaced in 1881 and further extensions
included the John Morley wing, opened in 1887.
The institution had 14 offshoots, including two
hospitals in Ireland, at the time of Laseron's death
in 1894, whereupon subscriptions declined. Under a
Charity Commissioners' Scheme effective from
1899 the voluntary deaconesses surrendered control
to a committee and were replaced by paid, certificated nurses; to mark the change from a training
centre to a general hospital for the district, the
institution was renamed Tottenham hospital.
Further additions were made and, to emphasize that
it served a wide area, the name was again changed to
the Prince of Wales's general hospital in 1907. (fn. 95) After
adjoining property had been bought in 1917, additions included a building for out-patients, opened in
1932, and a new home for 55 nurses. (fn. 96) In 1972 the
hospital lay within the North-East Metropolitan
region and was administered by Tottenham hospital
management committee. It had 200 beds and dealt
with acute cases. (fn. 97)
St. Ann's general hospital was opened, as the
North Eastern fever hospital, by the Metropolitan
Asylums Board in 1892. (fn. 98) The hospital, which had
been established against strong local opposition, (fn. 99)
originated in temporary buildings erected during a
scarlet fever epidemic and occupying 19 a. on the
south side of St. Ann's Road. Permanent blocks
were completed in 1900 and 548 beds were planned
in 1901, by which time the site had been enlarged to
33 a. (fn. 1) The L.C.C. took over responsibility in 1930
and replaced the remaining huts before the Second
World War. In 1948 St. Ann's assumed its modern
name, on becoming a general hospital. In 1973,
when it was under the Tottenham management committee, it occupied 28 a. and had 586 beds. (fn. 2)
Wood Green and Southgate hospital was opened
in 1895 as the Passmore Edwards cottage hospital, (fn. 3)
paid for largely by Passmore Edwards himself. It
stood in Bounds Green Road, on ground bought
from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, and was designed as a small brick, tile-hung building, (fn. 4) with 8
beds for patients from Wood Green, Hornsey, and
Southgate. There were 25 beds from 1904 and 52
from 1922, but plans for a complete rebuilding were
ended by the Second World War. The hospital,
renamed in the late 1930s, (fn. 5) became part of the
Northern group in 1948 and part of the Barnet
group in 1963. After further modernization it had
45 beds in 1973.
In 1972 the Bearsted Memorial hospital, Lordship
Lane, had 38 beds for maternity cases. Tottenham
hospital management committee also administered
medical centres in Park Lane, opened in 1941, and
Lordship Lane, the Woodberry Down health centre
in Green Lanes, a centre for spastics at the Vale
school, and a cardiology unit at the Blanche Nevile
school for the deaf. (fn. 6)
The Alexandra maternity home was founded
during the Second World War by Dr. R. R. P.
Garrow, medical officer of health for Hornsey, in a
private nursing home in Alexandra Park Road. The
home was afterwards acquired by the county council
and later extended to contain 25 beds. It was administered by the North London group hospital management committee in 1972, when there were 25 beds,
and closed during that year, when negotiations
started for its transfer to Haringey L.B. (fn. 7)
The Jewish Home and Hospital at Tottenham was
not founded for local residents. It opened in 1889 as
the Home and Hospital for Jewish Incurables and
occupied houses in Hackney and afterwards in
Walthamstow, offering care and religious facilities
to poor immigrant Jews. In 1899 a committee was
formed under Stuart Samuel, M.P. (later Sir Stuart
Samuel, Bt.), which bought land in Tottenham
High Road where part of a three-storeyed, red-brick
building was opened in 1903. The new home included a concert hall and was designed for 80 patients,
with men on the ground floor and women overhead.
An extension for 34 beds and a synagogue were completed in 1914, the synagogue being consecrated
after the First World War. A nurses' home was
opened in 1938 and a new block in 1964. (fn. 8) The institution had 114 patients in 1972. (fn. 9)
In 1908 the Metropolitan Police had stations at
no. 398 Tottenham High Road and in St. Ann's
Road and built a new one at no. 347 Wood Green
High Road. (fn. 10) All three were still in use in 1972,
although the main Tottenham station was rebuilt in
1913. (fn. 11) Tottenham court house, a neo-Georgian
building by W. T. Curtiss, was opened in 1937 on
the site of Elmslea. (fn. 12)
A burial board, formed in 1854, (fn. 13) continued to
serve the whole parish from offices at no. 586 High
Road after Wood Green became a separate local
board district. Five acres north of the church,
bounded by the Moselle, were opened as a burial
ground in 1858, 3 a. having been consecrated in
1857. Two chapels were built, of Kentish rag with
Bath stone dressings, for Anglican and nonconformist services. (fn. 14) The ground was later enlarged
southward almost as far as the churchyard and northwestward over Tottenham Park to White Hart
Lane. (fn. 15) Burials there included that of the architect
William Butterfield (d. 1900), who restored the
parish church and whose sister lived at Tottenham. (fn. 16)
In 1933 the board bought land for a crematorium
at Enfield and after the Second World War it converted the unused north-western corner of the
cemetery, including the lake which had belonged to
Tottenham Park, into a garden of rest. Tottenham
cemetery, owned by Haringey L.B., covered 57 a.
in 1972. (fn. 17) A mortuary had been opened in Park Lane
by 1890. (fn. 18)
The Public Libraries Act, rejected by the ratepayers of Tottenham in 1889, was adopted for both
Tottenham and Wood Green in 1891. In Tottenham
temporary reading rooms were opened at Eaton House
where the town hall was later built, in 1892. A new
central library, on the site of Stanstead House on the
west side of High Road, opposite the High Cross,
was opened in 1896 and later extended. Reading
rooms at the Chestnuts, St. Ann's Road, were
opened in 1900 and soon converted into a lending
library, which moved to the education offices in
Philip Lane in 1917 and, as West Green library, was
permanently accommodated in Vincent Road from
1931. A second branch library was opened in
Coombes Croft House in 1925 and a third, St. Ann's,
was established in 1931 in Cissbury Road. (fn. 19) Devonshire Hill branch library, Compton Crescent, was
built in 1935. (fn. 20) There was also a reading room at
Bruce Castle from 1907 until 1916. (fn. 21) At Wood Green
a public library was opened at the town hall in 1892
and a reading room at no. 86 High Road in 1895. A
central library, built at the junction of Station and
High roads with a donation from Andrew Carnegie,
opened in 1907. (fn. 22)
Between 1892 and 1931 Tottenham U.D.C.
acquired 356 a. for public recreation. (fn. 23) The first
park, 20 a. of grounds adjoining Bruce Castle, was
opened in 1892 and the second, the 13-acre Chestnuts recreation ground, was bought in 1898. An Act
of 1900 vested the Lammas Lands in the council, (fn. 24)
which had acquired 122 a. in the Marshes between
the Great Eastern railway and the river Lea by
1905, when a further 25 a. east of the river were
conveyed by the Metropolitan Water Board. Immediately west of the railway the 19½-acre Down
field, most of it formerly Lammas Land, was acquired
in 1902 and later became Down Lane recreation
ground. Downhills Park was purchased in 1902 and,
with a further 4 a., totalled some 30 a. in 1905.
Additions after the First World War included an
ornamental garden in Seven Sisters Road, given by
T. A. Mason in 1925, the 10-acre Belmont recreation
ground, bought in the same year, and the 18-acre
Markfield recreation ground in the south-east,
bordering the Lea. The largest addition comprised
54 a. between Lordship Lane and Higham Road,
bought from the Townsend trustees in 1926, opened
as Lordship recreation ground in 1932, and augmented by the gift of a further 43½ a. Tottenham,
Page, and West greens, Ducketts Common, and
other remnants of common land made up a further
15 a.
The spread of housing estates over the centre of
Tottenham in the 1930s left little room for new open
spaces. In 1972 the Markfield sewage pumping
station was being converted into Haringey's first
adventure playground for children. (fn. 25) Tottenham
marshes were sold to the Lee Valley regional park
authority, which took control in 1973, leaving
Lordship recreation ground as the largest public
space in the old parish.
Wood Green U.D. had less need to buy open
spaces, since the district contained 154 a. of the
173 a. which made up Alexandra Park in 1908. In
that year the council bought 26 a. next to Wood
Green town hall, part of which formed Town Hall,
later Woodside, park. A further 42½ a. consisted of
small pieces of waste land, most of which, including
the 6 a. of Wood Green Common, had been laid out
for recreation. (fn. 26) In 1933 the borough contained
342 a. of open space and directly controlled 186 a.;
the New River playing fields accounted for 30 a.,
the White Hart Lane and Albert Road recreation
grounds for 18 a. and 17 a. respectively and the new
Perth Road field for 11 a. (fn. 27)