WANSTEAD
Wanstead lies about 7 miles north-east of the City
of London. (fn. 1) It is a dormitory suburb straddling the
arterial road to Southend and Colchester and forming part of the London borough of Redbridge. The
ancient parish extended from Wanstead Flats north
for about 4 miles to the boundary with Woodford.
The western boundary marched with Leyton and
Walthamstow, and the river Roding formed the
eastern boundary. The south-west of the parish
comprised a spur called the Wanstead Slip which
ran south of Leyton down to the marshes near
Temple Mills, and included a small detached part
locally situated in West Ham. This was more or less
coterminous with the manor of Cann Hall, which
was originally in Leyton but appears to have become
part of Wanstead by the early 13th century. (fn. 2) The
main body of the Wanstead Slip (207 a.) was
merged in Leyton sanitary district in 1875 and was
constituted a separate civil parish (Cann Hall) in
1894. (fn. 3) The detached part of the Slip (38 a.) was
merged in West Ham local government district
in 1875. (fn. 4) In the same area a small adjustment of the
boundary between Wanstead and West Ham had
been made in 1790. (fn. 5) In the south-east corner of the
parish Aldersbrook appears to have been transferred from Wanstead to Little Ilford early in the
16th century. (fn. 6) That substantial change evidently
took place without legal formalities and caused
boundary disputes at later periods. (fn. 7) Later boundary
changes included the transfer of 96 a. of Wanstead
Flats to East Ham in 1901. (fn. 8)
In the mid 19th century Wanstead parish comprised 2,002 a. (fn. 9) A local board of health was formed
for the parish in 1854. In 1931 Wanstead urban
district contained 1,679 a. (fn. 10) In 1934 it was united
with that of Woodford and in 1937 the combined
district became a municipal borough. Wanstead
and Woodford became part of Redbridge in 1965. In
general that year has been taken as the terminal
point of this article.
The land, which is mainly gravel, rises from the
Roding to a height of about 100 ft. in the west. (fn. 11)
Seventeenth-century maps show two streams flowing
across the south of the parish into the Roding. (fn. 12)
These, and the Roding itself, were altered and
diverted in the late 17th and early 18th centuries,
when the owners of Wanstead House constructed
elaborate artificial lakes and watercourses, some of
which still survive. (fn. 13) The Snaresbrook(formerly Sayesbrook), another tributary of the Roding, rose in the
north-west of the parish, to which area it gave its
name. (fn. 14) The river Holt, or Wanstead ditch, entered
the parish from Leyton, where the Woodford road
crosses the boundary, running south-east through
Voluntary Place into the Basin in Wanstead Park.
Immediately north of Blake Hall a branch of it
forked west: that was probably the stream, also
called the Holt, which re-emerged below the Green
Man in Leyton, running south to Cann Hall. (fn. 15)
Neither the Snaresbrook stream nor the Holt is now
visible above ground. (fn. 16) The Eagle pond, Snaresbrook Road, was called Snares pond in 1746. (fn. 17)
It is a prominent feature, favoured by anglers. About
1619 a mineral spring was discovered at Wanstead,
which for a short period became a fashionable spa.
The spring may have been at Bushwood. (fn. 18)
Until the 19th century Wanstead retained much
woodland, part of Epping Forest, small patches of
which still survive at Bushwood and Snaresbrook.
Wanstead Flats form a wide expanse of ancient
heath. North of them are Wanstead Park and Wanstead golf course, which together form a remnant
of a larger park formerly attached to Wanstead
House, demolished in the 19th century.
Roman remains found in and around Wanstead
Park indicate a substantial settlement. (fn. 19) In the
Middle Ages Wanstead was a small, sparsely populated rural parish on the southern fringe of Epping
Forest. In 1086 the total recorded population of the
two manors which later comprised the parish was
only 18. (fn. 20) In 1327 there were 10 persons assessed
for taxation in Wanstead and Little Ilford, taken
together. (fn. 21) As late as 1670 there were no more than
40 houses in Wanstead. (fn. 22) In 1762, however, there
were 112, and by 1796 some 150. (fn. 23) In 1801 the
population was 918. (fn. 24) It rose slowly to 2,742 in
1861, and then faster to 5,119 in 1871. By 1891
the population of the parish was 26,292, but that of
the local board district (excluding Cann Hall) was
only 7,092. In 1931, the last census before the union
with Woodford, Wanstead urban district numbered
19,183 inhabitants. In 1961 the four wards of the
borough lying in Wanstead had a total population
of some 28,000. (fn. 25)
Little is known of the medieval pattern of settlement and no buildings survive from that period.
The original parish church of St. Mary was a few
yards from the present building, which replaced it
in 1790. In the Middle Ages Wanstead House, the
manor-house, probably stood near the church, as it
certainly did in later centuries. Before the 16th
century it was of no great size. The manorial
buildings of Cann Hall seem to have been even more
modest. No other medieval buildings are known by
name except Naked Hall, later Aldersbrook.
From the 16th century Wanstead House, under a
succession of royal and titled owners, was greatly
enlarged. In the 18th century it was rebuilt as a
Palladian mansion dominating the parish. (fn. 26) By then,
however, the village also was growing. Most of the
houses lay north of the park, in the present High
Street and in Wanstead (later George) Lane (now
Eastern Avenue and Nutter Lane). There were
some large houses at Snaresbrook, and cottages at
Mobs Hole, a forest-side hamlet later called Nightingale Green. (fn. 27) Wanstead's communications with the
outside world then depended mainly on the Leytonstone, Woodford, and Chigwell roads, which were
controlled by the newly-formed Middlesex and
Essex turnpike trust. (fn. 28) Leytonstone, leading to
London, was approached by an unnamed avenue,
now Cambridge Park. North of Leytonstone the
main road (now Hollybush Hill and Woodford
Road) led to Woodford and Epping, with a branch
(now New Wanstead and Hermon Hill) to Chigwell
and Ongar. Running south from Wanstead, across
the park and the Lower Forest (Wanstead Flats),
were several paths or tracks. Access to the east was
by South (or Parsons, later Redbridge) Lane over
Red Bridge to Ilford.
Red (formerly Hockley's) Bridge over the Roding
existed in the 16th century and was probably older. (fn. 29)
From the 17th century to the 19th its repair was the
subject of disputes between the parishes of Wanstead
and Barking and the riparian landowners. (fn. 30) It
appears to have been rebuilt about 1642 and again
in 1840–1. (fn. 31) The present bridge, which carries
Eastern Avenue, was built by the Ministry of Transport in 1923–6. (fn. 32)
Many of the larger houses shown on 18th-century
maps were probably new. Wanstead was beginning
to attract wealthy residents, especially those with
interests in London, (fn. 33) and in 1762 70 of the 112
houses in the parish were said to be 'mansions'. (fn. 34)
After Wanstead House the largest residence in
1700 was probably that later called the Grove, or
Wanstead Grove, which lay in spacious grounds
east of High Street. It is said to have been built about
1690 by Sir Francis Dashwood, Bt., son of a Turkey
merchant. (fn. 35) Matthew Wymondesold, owner in the
mid 18th century, was a successful financier. (fn. 36) The
estate was bought in 1759 by Humphrey Bowles,
in whose family it remained for a century. (fn. 37) The
house, at the junction of the Avenue and Grove
Park, was rebuilt c. 1822 but demolished in 1889. (fn. 38)
Two early-18th-century features from its grounds
still survive behind small modern houses in the
Avenue: a red-brick gazebo (at no. 20) and a 'temple'
with an Ionic portico (at no. 14). Bleak (later Blake)
Hall, a large house at the west end of South Lane,
was built c. 1690, and evidently much extended later;
it was demolished in 1909. (fn. 39) Smaller 17th-century
houses included Grove Cottage, Nutter Lane, a
timber-framed building demolished c. 1957. (fn. 40)
Among early-18th-century houses was an impressive group of five in the Mall (the east side of
High Street). (fn. 41) Of those the Manor House (West
Essex Conservative Club) survives, as a red-brick
building of seven bays with an original shell-hood
to the doorway. (fn. 42) The adjoining Sheridan House is
of slightly later date. The other three houses had
by 1971 been wholly or partly demolished, and
shops had been built over their front gardens. West
of High Street was Spratt Hall, which existed by
1746 but was demolished in the later 19th century. (fn. 43)
Reydon Hall and Elm Hall, which stand together
in Eastern Avenue, are large early-18th-century
houses, similar in style to those in the Mall, but
much altered. (fn. 44) In 1971 they were occupied as
flats. Near them, in Nutter Lane, is the Applegarth,
which is said by a plaque on the front to have been
built c. 1710, but has later features. For many years,
up to 1926, it was the home of the Nutter family,
benefactors to the parish. (fn. 45) Several late-18th-century
buildings also survive at Snaresbrook. Nos. 23 and
25 Woodford Road are an attached pair of tall
brown-brick houses with Doric doorcases. Snaresbrook House, in the same road, is a large stucco
building, probably of c. 1800, with later additions.
Willow Holme, Snaresbrook Road, is a three-storey
house, originally one of a pair. In 1971 it was being
extended in matching style. The Eagle hotel,
Woodford Road, is Wanstead's oldest inn. As the
Spread Eagle it is said to have existed in the 17th
century, (fn. 46) but the present building dates from the
18th century. The George (formerly George and
Dragon), High Street, is recorded from 1716, but
was rebuilt c. 1902. (fn. 47) It bears a tablet, dated 1752,
with a cryptic inscription commemorating a cherry
pie. (fn. 48) The Thatched House inn, Leytonstone High
Road, mentioned in 1791, was rebuilt about 1875
100 yd. farther south. (fn. 49) The growth and wealth of
the parish in the 18th century was also reflected in its
public buildings. The church, extended in 1709–10,
was replaced in 1790 by a much larger building. The
first parish school, which still survives, was built
in High Street in 1796. The Assembly rooms, built
c. 1725, have disappeared, and their site is unknown. (fn. 50)
Nearly all the new building in the 19th century
was in the centre and north of the parish. The
demolition of Wanstead House (1823–4) did not
immediately stimulate growth. The manorial demesne could not be broken up, (fn. 51) and this restricted
development in the south of the parish where most
of the demesne lay. It did not, however, prevent the
inclosure by the manor court of the woodland and
waste in and north of the old village. In the 1830s the
court began to make frequent 'voluntary grants'
of small pieces of waste for building purposes. (fn. 52)
Some were in Voluntary Place, which may have
been named from them. The pace of inclosure
quickened after 1840. (fn. 53)
During the earlier 19th century cottages, some
of them built on new inclosures, increased in number,
in spite of opposition from the vestry, which feared
that such building would attract poor to the parish. (fn. 54)
By 1841 more than half Wanstead's dwellings were
cottages. (fn. 55) One or two of the cottages built c. 1800–50 still survived in 1971 on the west side of High
Street. Many of the larger houses built during that
period, as before, were at Snaresbrook. (fn. 56) The most
notable new building was the Royal Wanstead
school, Hollybush Hill (1843). The Merchant Seamen's orphan asylum, Hermon Hill, now Wanstead
Hospital, was erected in 1861. (fn. 57) The Weavers'
alms-houses, New Wanstead, were built in 1859. (fn. 58)
Wanstead was still a village in 1856, when the
railway arrived. During the next twenty-five years
there was building near Snaresbrook station: in
Hermon Hill (fn. 59) and the new roads east of it, and at
New Wanstead, a name now used only for the road,
but originally applied to the whole area between
that road and Cambridge Park. (fn. 60) Between c. 1880
and 1900 building went on steadily on old and new
sites. The rapid development of Cann Hall is
described under Leyton. (fn. 61) The Spratt Hall estate
was cut up for building in 1885–7. (fn. 62) Part of the
Oak Hall estate, in Redbridge Lane West, was cut
up at the same time, and the remainder about 1892. (fn. 63)
The Grove estate was gradually developed after
1889, with houses in Grove Park and the Avenue. (fn. 64)
The Drive estate at Snaresbrook was laid out in
1895–6. (fn. 65) Between 1900 and 1914 new building took
place mainly in the south of the parish. The large
Aldersbrook estate (c. 1900–10) formed a distinct and
isolated township in the triangle between the park,
the flats, and the City of London cemetery. (fn. 66)
The Lake House estate (c. 1908–14) lay west of
Blake Hall Road, between Bushwood and Lake
House Road. (fn. 67) The Blake Hall estate, south of
Cambridge Park, was cut up c. 1909. (fn. 68)
Most building since 1914 has been on the eastern
side of the parish. The opening of Eastern Avenue
in the 1920s was followed by development north
and south of it. In north-east Wanstead Nightingale
farm was sold for building shortly before 1939. (fn. 69)
By then there was little building-land left, and
later building has consisted mainly of in-filling.
During the Second World War most of Wanstead's
houses were damaged and several hundred were
destroyed. The Lake House estate suffered most. (fn. 70)
The houses built in Wanstead between 1860 and
1918 were larger on average than those in neighbouring suburbs, (fn. 71) and included a large proportion
of detached and semi-detached types. Since 1918
the shortage of land and increasing urbanization
have restricted house sizes, and have stimulated the
building of flats, including a tall block at the corner
of New Wanstead and High Street, and others in
Eastern Avenue. In 1971 High Street was in process
of redevelopment as the main shopping centre of
Wanstead. The older buildings, many of them
damaged by bombing, were gradually being replaced
by modern blocks.
Modern development has preserved the lines of
most of the old roads, though some of their names
have been changed. During the early 19th century
Long-Wellesley, the lord of the manor, made several
attempts to close public paths across his park, but
he was only partly successful. (fn. 72) An Act of 1816
authorized the construction of Blake Hall Road in
place of a former track, and gave protection to
certain paths in the park, including three which
later became Overton Drive, St. Mary's Avenue, and
Langley Drive. (fn. 73) The most important modern road
is Eastern Avenue (1925), the arterial road to Southend and Colchester. (fn. 74) Its western end, at Wanstead,
was formed by widening George Lane as far as
Elm Hall and building an extension down to Red
Bridge. Eastern Avenue, and its feeder Cambridge
Park, cuts through the centre of Wanstead, and its
heavy traffic has changed the character of the town.
In 1681 Wanstead was served by a daily coach
from Aldgate. (fn. 75) There were five daily services in
1791: three from Aldgate and two from White-chapel. (fn. 76) In the early 19th century services to the
village did not improve much, but Snaresbrook
was served by frequent coaches along the Woodford Road, and others running to London via
Walthamstow. (fn. 77) Early in the present century there
was a horse bus service between Wanstead and
Leytonstone and another between Wanstead and
Forest Gate. (fn. 78) By 1911 the motor bus route from
Elephant and Castle ended at Wanstead. (fn. 79)
The Loughton branch of the Eastern Counties
railway, opened in 1856, ran through Wanstead,
and Snaresbrook station was built in High Street. (fn. 80)
The branch was electrified in 1947 when it was
taken over by London Transport as part of the
Central (underground) line. (fn. 81) The Central line extension from Leytonstone to Newbury Park, opened
at the same time, included Wanstead station,
Eastern Avenue, built in 1937–8 to the design of
Charles Holden. (fn. 82)
From 1692 Wanstead was within the London
penny post area, with a daily collection and delivery. (fn. 83) There was a receiving house there in
1794. (fn. 84) When the London postal area was divided in
1856 Wanstead became a sub-office of Leytonstone
in the north-eastern (later in the eastern) district. (fn. 85)
At the reorganization of 1917 it was placed along
with Leytonstone in the E. 11 sub-district. (fn. 86) A
branch office was opened in Hermon Hill in 1948,
replacing a previous sub-office in High Street. (fn. 87)
The telegraph was available at Wanstead from
1871. (fn. 88) The National Telephone Co. had a call
office in High Street by 1893. (fn. 89) The company's
exchange, opened in Wellesley Road by 1902,
had passed to the G.P.O. by 1912. (fn. 90)
Gas was first supplied to Wanstead by the West
Ham Gas Co. in 1864. (fn. 91) Electricity was supplied to
the Aldersbrook area by East Ham borough council
from c. 1914. (fn. 92) The rest of Wanstead was first supplied in 1926 by the County of London Electricity
Supply Co. (fn. 93) Before the 19th century water supply
came from wells and pumps. A common well on
the heath (presumably Wanstead Flats) existed
c. 1532. (fn. 94) In 1713 the parish vestry resolved to set up
a street pump for the poor. (fn. 95) The East London
Waterworks Co. extended its mains to Wanstead
in 1857, but as late as 1874 its supply there was very
inadequate. (fn. 96) Wanstead sewage works originated in1883–5, when the local board bought a site beside the Roding in the south-eastern corner of the
parish. (fn. 97)
A fire-engine, given to the parish vestry by Daniel
Waldo in 1729, (fn. 98) remained in service at least until
1778. (fn. 99) A later engine, bought in 1874, was housed
at the George and then at the local board offices in
Church Path. (fn. 100) A new fire station was opened in
Wanstead Place in 1913, and in 1919 the first motor
fire-engine went into service. The fire station was
closed in 1957. (fn. 101) An isolation hospital was built by
the local board in Empress Avenue, Aldersbrook,
in 1893. (fn. 102) It was bombed and closed in the Second
World War. (fn. 103) Wanstead hospital, Hermon Hill, was
opened by Essex county council in 1938, in the
former Merchant Seamen's orphan asylum. (fn. 104) Spratt
Hall (later Christ Church) Green, High Street, was
bought by the local board as a public park about
1860. (fn. 105) Wanstead Park, Wanstead Flats, Bushwood,
and several smaller public open spaces are administered by the corporation of London as conservators of Epping Forest. (fn. 106)
There was a circulating library in Wanstead in
1845. (fn. 107) A parish library for the poor, opened about
1873, offered a selection of 400 volumes on payment of a penny a year; it still existed in 1893. (fn. 108)
Essex county council opened a small branch library
in High Street in 1944 and another in Park Road,
Aldersbrook, in 1950. (fn. 109) The former was in 1969
transferred to a new building in Spratt Hall Road,
erected by Redbridge borough council. (fn. 110)
The Becontree assembly rooms and archery
ground, Bushwood, are said to have originated in
the 1850s. (fn. 111) The premises became a Quaker meeting-house in 1870. (fn. 112) A cricket match in Wanstead Park
was recorded in 1834. (fn. 113) The present Wanstead
cricket club was founded c. 1880, but traces its
descent from an earlier club at Woodford. (fn. 114) It
has supplied several first-class players, including
J. W. H. T. Douglas (1882–1930), captain of Essex
and England. Wanstead golf club, founded 1893,
claims to be the second oldest in Essex. (fn. 115) Its club
house was once part of the out-buildings of Wanstead House. The cricket ground and the golf course
adjoin Wanstead Park. They belong to Wanstead
Sports Ground Ltd., which was formed in 1920
to buy them from the Cowley estate, and to protect
the site from building. The Linkside lawn tennis
club, founded 1913, was an offshoot of the cricket
club. (fn. 116) Cultural societies have included the Wanstead industrial and art association, founded c. 1894,
and surviving in 1913, (fn. 117) and the Aldersbrook local
parliament (fl. 1913). (fn. 118) The Wanstead young men's
association, founded in 1877, merged in 1935 with
the Wanstead literary society to form the Wanstead
literary and debating society (1935–60). (fn. 119)
Among notable residents of Wanstead was James
Bradley (1693–1762), astronomer royal, who was
trained at Wanstead by his uncle James Pound
(rector 1707–24), himself a distinguished astronomer
and friend of Sir Isaac Newton. In 1717 Pound and
Bradley set up in Wanstead Park one of the largest
telescopes in Europe, mounted on a maypole taken
from the Strand. (fn. 120) William Penn (1644–1718),
Quaker leader and founder of Pennsylvania, was
brought up at Wanstead. (fn. 121) Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751–1816), dramatist and parliamentary
orator, lived there c. 1795, probably in the house
in High Street later called Sheridan House. (fn. 122)
Thomas Hood (1799–1845), poet, lived at Lake
House c. 1832–5. (fn. 123) Among several lord mayors of
London living at Wanstead were Sir William
Plomer (d. 1801) (fn. 124) and Sir William Curtis, Bt.
(1752–1829). (fn. 125) Wanstead House had several eminent
residents, including the earl of Leicester in the 16th
century and Sir Josiah Child in the 17th, and many
distinguished visitors. (fn. 126)
Three orphanages were established in Wanstead
in the mid 19th century. The Royal Wanstead
school was founded at Hackney in 1827 as the
Infant Orphan asylum, and was transferred to new
buildings, south of the Eagle pond at Snaresbrook,
in 1843. (fn. 127) The charity, maintained by public subscription, and conducted on Anglican lines, was
originally intended for children from respectable
families under the age of 8, but in 1852 it was
decided to keep boys up to 14 and girls up to
15. (fn. 128) The number of children was about 500–600
during the later 19th century, after which it declined. (fn. 129) It was closed in 1971. The school buildings
form an impressive range, especially when seen
across the pond from Snaresbrook Road. (fn. 130) They
were designed by (Sir) George Gilbert Scott in
Jacobean style, of grey stone with buff stone dressings. (fn. 131)
The Commercial Travellers' school originated in
1845, when Robert Cuffley, himself a traveller, took
the lead in raising funds to provide a school for the
children of deceased or necessitous commercial
travellers. (fn. 132) A house was bought in George Lane and
the school opened there in 1847. By 1854 there were
135 children, and in 1855 the school was moved
to Pinner (Mdx.), where it survived until 1967.
The Merchant Seamen's orphan asylum, established in 1827 at St. George's in the East (Lond.),
was transferred in 1862 to a new building in Hermon
Hill, Wanstead, which provided places for 300
orphans of British merchant seamen. (fn. 133) The building
was taken over in 1921 by the convent of the Good
Shepherd, as a refuge for women and girls, (fn. 134)
and later became Wanstead hospital. (fn. 135) It stands in
a commanding position on high ground, and was
designed by G. C. Clarke as a fine example of the
'Venetian Gothic' style. (fn. 136)