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A1 in London

The A1 in London is the southern part of the A1 road. It starts at Aldersgate in the City of London, passing through the capital to Borehamwood on the northern fringe of Greater London, before continuing to Edinburgh. The road travels through the City and three London boroughs: Islington, Haringey and Barnet, which include the districts of Islington, Holloway, Highgate, Hendon and Mill Hill, and travels along Upper Street and Holloway Road, crossing the North Circular Road in Hendon, a district in the London Borough of Barnet.

A1
The complex junction at the Archway interchange
Major junctions
South endCity of London
North endContinues to Edinburgh
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
Road network

The A1 is the most recent in a series of routes north out of London to York and beyond. It was designated in 1921 by the Ministry of Transport under the Great Britain road numbering scheme, comprising existing roads and streets, mostly historic, and later using stretches of purpose-built new roads in what is now the outer London borough of Barnet. The Archway Road section was built by Thomas Telford using Roman cement and gravel, an innovative technique that was used there for the first time, and is the basis for modern road building.[1][2] The route closely follows the historic route of the Great North Road, though from 1954 it has diverted round the congested suburbs of Finchley and High Barnet along modern roads constructed in the 1920s and 1930s.

The A1 is one of London's main roads, providing a link to the M1 and the A1(M) motorways, and on to the Midlands, Northern England and Scotland. Despite this, its main use is to connect a number of neighbourhoods within north London; less than 5% of its vehicles are through traffic – the bulk is local.[3] The roads along which the A1 route travels are the shared responsibility of the local boroughs, the Greater London Authority, and the British Government via the Department for Transport.

History edit

 
The start of the A1 in London at the time of classification in 1921

The A1 is the latest in a series of routes north from London to York and beyond, and was formed in 1921 by the Ministry of Transport as part of the Great Britain road numbering scheme.[4] The earliest documented northern routes out of London are the roads created by the Romans during the period 43 to 410 AD, which consisted of a variety of "Iters" on the Antonine Itinerary,[5] a combination of which were used by the Anglo-Saxons as the route from London to York, and which became known as Ermine Street.[6] Ermine Street later became known as the Old North Road,[7] and is used within London by the current A10.[8] By the 12th century, because of flooding and damage by traffic on Ermine Street, an alternative route out of London was found through Islington and Muswell Hill, and this was the origin of the Great North Road that would become the A1.[8][9] Until the 14th century the route went up what is now Hornsey Road – the A103 road, but when that became impassable a new route along Holloway Road via Highgate was created in the 14th century.[8][10] The section through Highgate was bypassed in the early 19th century by the creation of a new road, Archway Road, and around the same time a turnpike road, New North Road and Canonbury Road (the A1200 road), was constructed linking the start of the Old North Road around Shoreditch with the Great North Road at Highbury Corner.[11]

The route of the A1 in London originally started at Aldersgate Bars, which marked the boundary of the City of London, and followed the Great North Road mail coach route through Barnet;[12] the route was re-designated in 1954 to follow the East Finchley and Barnet by-passes built in the 1920s and 1930s,[7][13] so within London the coaching route is now mainly only followed when passing through the borough of Islington.[14] During the early 1970s plans to widen the A1 along the Archway Road section were abandoned after considerable opposition and four public inquiries during which road protesters disrupted proceedings.[15] The scheme was finally dropped in 1990.[16]

Governance edit

Responsibility for the roads along which the A1 route travels are shared by the individual local boroughs, the Greater London Authority (GLA), and the British Government. The first organised London-wide authority dealing with roads in London was the Metropolitan Board of Works (MBW), set up in 1856.[17] The MBW replaced the disparate turnpike trusts which had already been amalgamated in 1826 into the single control of Government Commissioners, and was itself replaced by the London County Council (LCC) in 1889.[17] The LCC became the Greater London Council (GLC) in 1965, and during the 1960s when traffic management in London was being modernised, and the London Ringways was proposed, the GLC, which was not in favour of increasing traffic into central London, had control of the inner London roads, while the government, through the Ministry of Transport, which was in favour of widening roads, had control of outer London.[3] These different approaches resulted in the Ministry of Transport widening a stretch of the A1 until it reached the control of the GLC, when the widening abruptly stopped.[3]

Due to the problems associated with two different and opposing bodies having responsibility for London's roads, the government were keen to take control of the major routes, and made plans in 1983 for the Department of Transport to take over 70 miles of road, including significant parts of the A1; when the GLC was abolished in 1986, the Department of Transport took over direct control of the 70 miles of major routes, plus had a significant influence on another 300.[18] In 2000 control of roads in London passed to Transport for London,[19] a department of GLA created in 2000 as part of the Greater London Authority Act 1999,[20] and the major roads, including the A1, were declassified as trunk roads.[21]

Route edit

 
The current route of the A1 (red) and the historic route of the Great North Road (blue)

The route of the A1 in London runs from the northern end of St. Martin's Le Grand in the City to Borehamwood in Hertfordshire, then travels on the northern fringe of Greater London to Bignell's Corner, where it crosses the M25 and becomes a motorway, designated A1(M), which alternates with the dual carriageway A1 as it continues to Edinburgh. The London section of the road passes through part of the City of London and three London boroughs: Islington, Haringey and Barnet. The A1 is one of London's main northern routes,[3] providing a link to the M1 motorway and the A1(M) motorway, and on to the Midlands, Northern England and Scotland. It connects a number of major areas within London, and sections of it serve as the High Street for many of the now-joined villages that make up north London. Even though it is one of London's major roads, less than 5% of its approximate 60,000 vehicles a day are through traffic – the bulk is local.[3]

City of London edit

The current start of the A1 is the modern roundabout at the northern end of St. Martin's Le Grand where it meets Aldersgate Street, near the site of the now demolished General Post Office, London, the headquarters of the Post Office from 1829 to 1910.[22] When originally designated in 1921 the A1 started a little further north along Aldersgate Street at Aldersgate Bars,[12] which marked the boundary of the City, though some later maps indicate it starting at the southern end of St. Martin's Le Grand, near St Paul's Cathedral.[23] The route runs north from Aldersgate along Aldersgate Street which is a modern dual carriageway, and from the 13th century was known as a wide street with fine buildings and travellers' inns;[24][25] these were destroyed or badly damaged during the Blitz, and from 1965 to 1976 the 40 acre (162,000m²) Barbican Estate, an arts complex and residential estate, was constructed along the entire eastern side of the street.[26] At the end of Aldersgate Street stood Aldersgate Bars, which marked the limits of the City of London.[27]

Islington edit

The route enters the London Borough of Islington at Goswell Road becoming a single carriageway running north from the border of the City to Angel through a mix of offices and urban housing. Goswell Road and St John Street were the ancient routes from the City to Islington,[28] with St John Street being the start of the Great North Road until the General Post Office headquarters was built at St Martin's-le-Grand in 1829, whereafter stagecoaches used Aldersgate Street and Goswell Road.[29] The New River originally flowed across Goswell Road, but is now underground and no trace of it can be seen at the surface.[30] The street was reported in 1720 to be "meanly built and inhabited", containing numerous inns and brothels, and it largely remained a slum area until the rebuilding that took place after the Second World War, and in particular the residential development that spread out from the Barbican since 1980.[27]

 
The Peacock Inn by James Pollard, one of several travellers' inns that were on Islington High Street from the 16th to 19th centuries

At the northern end of Goswell Road, the route northwards follows a one-way section to the Angel, turning right into Islington High Street. The southwards route from Islington High Street follows City Road for a short distance before joining Goswell Road via Wakley Street. The earliest reference to Islington High Street is its appearance on a 1590 map of the area. At this time, nine inns (including the Angel, which subsequently gave its name to the area), as well as housing and a public pond were shown lining the street.[31] The Peacock Inn, one of the nine inns, and which operated on Islington High Street from 1564 to 1962, was where Tom of Tom Brown's Schooldays stayed prior to travelling to Rugby School.[32] In 1716 Islington High Street came under the control of the newly formed Islington Turnpike Trust. The Trust grew rapidly and soon had control of most major roads in the area, building a number of major road arteries through the expanding residential areas, including Caledonian Road, Euston Road, City Road and New North Road.[33]

Upper Street, running roughly north from Islington High Street to Highbury Corner, is the main shopping street of Islington, and dates back to at least the 12th century.[34] Livestock herded along the Great North Road for Smithfield Market, would – when passing through what was mainly fields and farmland – pause at lairs built between Upper Street and Liverpool Road by an enterprising farmer, Richard Laycock;[35] Laycock's lairs would be used in 1861 for the site of the Royal Agricultural Hall,[36] and a number of pubs and shops existed along the street to serve farmers and travellers headed for Smithfield.[37] In the 18th century, Upper Street began to develop from an agricultural to a residential area. Ten houses were built in 1768 (later named Hornsey Row), and a further group built immediately south of Hornsey Row in 1792.[38] Liverpool Road, originally called Back Road, was used as an alternative to Upper Street for the Smithfield herders,[39] and both streets have a "high pavement" constructed to protect pedestrians from being splashed by the passing animals; in places, the pavement is approximately 1 m above the road surface.[40]

After reaching the eight-way interchange at Highbury Corner, the A1 turns north-west as Holloway Road. Until the 14th century the route turned off along what is now Hornsey Road – the A103 road – to go through Muswell Hill, but when that became impassable a new route along Holloway Road via Highgate was created in the 14th century.[8][10] The earliest record giving the name of the road as the Holloway dates from 1307. The main stretch of Holloway Road runs through the site of the villages of Tollington and Stroud. The exact time of their founding is not known, but the earliest record of them dates from 1000. The names ceased to be used by the late 17th century but are still preserved in the local place names "Tollington Park" and "Stroud Green";[41] since that time, the area has been known as Holloway. The northern point of Holloway Road is the complex interchange at Archway. The construction of the interchange left a few buildings isolated in the centre of the roundabout, including the Archway Tavern, which appears on the cover of the Kinks' 1971 album Muswell Hillbillies.[42]

Haringey edit

 
John Nash's original bridge over Archway Road

After the Archway roundabout, the A1 enters a cutting, and becomes Archway Road. The original road north went up the very steep Highgate Hill (now the B519) to the village of Highgate. By 1808 this was proving unsuitable for increasingly heavy traffic, and a road, crossing the hill through a tunnel at a shallower gradient, was proposed by a mining engineer, Robert Vazie; a turnpike trust – the Highgate Archway Company – was set up and work started in 1810.[2] The brick built tunnel collapsed during construction on 13 April 1812, and John Nash constructed a brick bridge, using a series of arches like a canal viaduct, to carry Hornsey Lane over what was now a cutting.[2]

Nash's Archway Bridge, a little way south of the current bridge,[43] and the new Archway Road were opened in 1813, though the road surface, being constructed of sand and gravel, proved difficult for heavy traffic.[44] Parliamentary Commissioners took over the road, and John Benjamin Macneill, chief engineer to Thomas Telford, proposed using Roman cement and gravel,[45] an innovative technique that was used for the first time on Archway Road, and is the basis for modern road building.[1][2] The construction was financed by tolls which were abolished in 1876 – traffic increased substantially thereafter, particularly after the introduction of trams on the road.[46]

Between 1897 and 1900, Nash's bridge was replaced with the present cast-iron Hornsey Lane Bridge, designed by Sir Alexander Binnie, accessible from the Archway Road level by a steep flight of steps.[46] Hornsey Lane Bridge, designated a Grade II listed building by English Heritage in 1972,[47][48] is informally called "Suicide Bridge" as it is a known suicide spot.[49] It was the venue for the mental illness campaign group Mad Pride's inaugural vigil in 2000,[50] and was the subject of Johnny Burke's 2006 film The Bridge.[51] When, at the end of 2010, three men in three weeks committed suicide by jumping from the bridge, a campaign was set up by local residents for better anti-suicide measures to be put in place.[49] Hornsey Lane and the bridge marks the boundary between the Inner London Borough of Islington and the Outer London Borough of Haringey.[52]

 
The A1 (Aylmer Road, left) diverging away from the original Great North Road (right)

An inquiry was held into widening the section from the Archway intersection to the Hornsey Lane Bridge to a three lane dual carriageway in 1969 and work started in 1971.[53] It was originally intended to widen a further section of the road, but severe disruption led to the first inquiry being abandoned in 1978,[54] and a second inquiry in 1984, chaired by Air Marshal Sir Michael Giddings, was also abandoned.[55][56] The traffic flow was projected to increase to 180,000 cars a day by 1981, but by 1986 the actual flow was only 30,000 a day.[3]

When originally constructed, Archway Road went through countryside with few buildings - though by 1828 the Woodman pub at the junction with Muswell Hill Road, and the now demolished Wellington pub at the junction with North Hill provided refreshments to travellers;[57] however, with the coming of the railways in 1867 ribbon development started along the road, including the Camra Heritage listed Winchester Tavern with the distinctive attached parade of shops and house with deep arched eaves built by the Imperial Property Investment Co in 1881.[57][58][59] At the northern end of Archway Road, the road re-intersects with the traditional Great North Road route (at this point called North Hill). The roads almost immediately re-diverge, with the Great North Road route heading north as the A1000 towards Finchley, Whetstone and Barnet and the A1 heading west as Aylmer Road.[60]

Aylmer Road is a very short stretch of road, running west for less than half a mile between the junction with the A1000 in Haringey to the junction with The Bishops Avenue in Barnet.[61] The southern side of the road is partly taken up by Highgate Golf Course, while the northern side is a mixture of small shops, flats and allotments.[62] The road is named after Sir Fenton Aylmer,[63] who received the Victoria Cross for his part in the assault on Nilt Fort on 2 December 1891.[64]

Barnet edit

 
View west along Lyttleton Road

After crossing The Bishops Avenue, the A1 becomes Lyttelton Road, which was laid out in 1931 as part of the residential development of the area,[65] and runs east–west along the northern foot of Highgate Hill between Hampstead Garden Suburb and East Finchley. It is for the most part residential; on the northern side stands the Belvedere Court block of flats. Built with the road in the 1930s, the building is now Grade II Listed as an example of 1930s architecture.[66]

After passing playing fields to the south, the A1 briefly becomes Market Place, a former street market that has evolved into a short stretch of shops, then becomes Falloden Way – built between 1914 and 1924 as part of a programme of planned extensions to Hampstead Garden Suburb,[67] and runs on an embankment due to a dip in the ground caused by Mutton Brook, a tributary of the River Brent, which runs parallel to the road for its entire length, mostly along the south side. The north side of the road is occupied by 1930s housing blocks, whilst the southern side is occupied by a narrow strip of parkland following the brook, and by the northern tip of Big Wood and Little Wood – two of the few surviving remnants of the ancient woodland that once covered what is now north London.[68]

The A1 merges with the North Circular Road (A406) and the two routes run briefly together, crossing over the Henlys Corner interchange. Henlys Corner is a junction with the 1820s turnpike road, Finchley Road, which was built to provide a by-pass to the route north from London through Hampstead;[69] the name changes to Regents Park Road on the northern, Finchley, side of the junction. The junction had an £8 million upgrade completed in January 2012,[70] which included Britain's first "hands-free" pedestrian crossing to allow Orthodox Jews to reach the nearby Finchley Synagogue, one of Europe's largest,[71] without operating machinery on the Sabbath.[72] While a synagogue has stood on the site since 1935, the current building dates from 1967.[73]

 
Henlys Corner, where the A1 meets the A406. This junction was modified in 2011 to provide extra filter lanes.

After the Henlys Corner interchange, the routes diverge, with the A406 going south to Brent Cross, while the A1 turns north-west as Great North Way through the leafy suburbs of Mill Hill and Hendon. Great North Way, built in 1926, joins Watford Way carrying the A41, completed in 1927, at Fiveways Corner, and in 1970 a junction with the M1 motorway was created.[74] The A41 and A1 continue together as Watford Way via Mill Hill Circus to Apex Corner,[75] where they separate, with the A41 turning west, and the A1 turning to run straight north. After passing Apex Corner, the A1 runs north and out of London as the dual carriageway Barnet Way (or Barnet Bypass). This dual carriageway was part of a 1920–24 road improvement programme that was mentioned in parliament in 1928 as hopefully being completed by the end of that summer.[76][77]

The northbound carriageway passes the entrance to Scratchwood, an area of ancient forest which is now a local nature reserve, then crosses the A411 from Watford to Barnet at the Stirling Corner roundabout. A 0.6 miles (0.97 km) proposed link road at this roundabout, estimated at £22.8m in 1987, would have provided access to the M1,[78][79] but the plans were subsequently abandoned. The link had been planned during discussions for the Hendon Urban Motorway, which was intended to carry the M1 all the way down to Hyde Park Corner as part of the London Ringways scheme;[80] the interchange would have been junction 3 on the motorway; which is currently the unnumbered junction for London Gateway services.[81]

Past Stirling Corner, the A1 skirts Borehamwood, before turning northeast and running through open countryside to Bignell's Corner. At Bignell's Corner the A1 crosses under the M25 motorway at a large roundabout near South Mimms services. North of Bignell's Corner the A1 becomes the A1(M) motorway for a while, and follows the Great North Road route, running north to Edinburgh.

Construction edit

The A1 route was designated in 1921 by the Ministry of Transport under the Great Britain road numbering scheme.[4] Through the inner boroughs of the City, Islington, and Haringey it uses existing roads and streets; when it reaches what is now the outer London borough of Barnet, some stretches of purpose-built new roads were built,[65] and others have been widened and made into dual carriageways.[3] In 1828, John Benjamin Macneill, chief engineer to Thomas Telford, used Roman cement and gravel to solve problems with wear and tear on the Archway Road section of what is now the A1,[45] an innovative technique that was used there for the first time, and is the basis for modern road building.[1][2]

References edit

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  73. ^ "Finchley Judaism". A History of the County of Middlesex. 6: 91. 1980. from the original on 10 June 2007. Retrieved 18 May 2007.
  74. ^ A P Baggs; Diane K Bolton; Eileen P Scarff; G C Tyack (1976). "Communications". In T F T Baker; R B Pugh (eds.). A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5: Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham. Victoria County History. pp. 2–5.
  75. ^ A-Z London. Sevenoaks: Geographer's A-Z Map Company Ltd. 2002. ISBN 1-84348-020-4.
  76. ^ Roy Porter (5 October 2000). London: A Social History. Penguin UK. p. 501. ISBN 9780140105933. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
  77. ^ "BARNET BY-PASS. (Hansard, 21 June 1928)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 21 June 1928. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
  78. ^ Paul Channon (11 January 1989). "Flying Displays". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Retrieved 17 June 2013.
  79. ^ John MacGregor (18 January 1994). "Transport Schemes". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Retrieved 17 June 2013.
  80. ^ Peter Baldwin; John Porter; Robert Baldwin (2004). The Motorway Achievement: Visualisation of the British Motorway System: Policy and Administration. Thomas Telford. p. 155. ISBN 9780727731968.
  81. ^ Nick Atkinson (2011). "Why is there no junction 3 on the M1 motorway?". guardian.co.uk. The Guardian. pp. Notes & Queries. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
KML is from Wikidata

london, this, article, about, section, road, london, full, extent, road, road, great, britain, southern, part, road, starts, aldersgate, city, london, passing, through, capital, borehamwood, northern, fringe, greater, london, before, continuing, edinburgh, roa. This article is about the section of the road in London For the full extent of the road see A1 road Great Britain The A1 in London is the southern part of the A1 road It starts at Aldersgate in the City of London passing through the capital to Borehamwood on the northern fringe of Greater London before continuing to Edinburgh The road travels through the City and three London boroughs Islington Haringey and Barnet which include the districts of Islington Holloway Highgate Hendon and Mill Hill and travels along Upper Street and Holloway Road crossing the North Circular Road in Hendon a district in the London Borough of Barnet A1The complex junction at the Archway interchangeMajor junctionsSouth endCity of LondonNorth endContinues to EdinburghLocationCountryUnited KingdomRoad networkRoads in the United KingdomMotorways A and B road zonesThe A1 is the most recent in a series of routes north out of London to York and beyond It was designated in 1921 by the Ministry of Transport under the Great Britain road numbering scheme comprising existing roads and streets mostly historic and later using stretches of purpose built new roads in what is now the outer London borough of Barnet The Archway Road section was built by Thomas Telford using Roman cement and gravel an innovative technique that was used there for the first time and is the basis for modern road building 1 2 The route closely follows the historic route of the Great North Road though from 1954 it has diverted round the congested suburbs of Finchley and High Barnet along modern roads constructed in the 1920s and 1930s The A1 is one of London s main roads providing a link to the M1 and the A1 M motorways and on to the Midlands Northern England and Scotland Despite this its main use is to connect a number of neighbourhoods within north London less than 5 of its vehicles are through traffic the bulk is local 3 The roads along which the A1 route travels are the shared responsibility of the local boroughs the Greater London Authority and the British Government via the Department for Transport Contents 1 History 2 Governance 3 Route 3 1 City of London 3 2 Islington 3 3 Haringey 3 4 Barnet 4 Construction 5 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp The start of the A1 in London at the time of classification in 1921The A1 is the latest in a series of routes north from London to York and beyond and was formed in 1921 by the Ministry of Transport as part of the Great Britain road numbering scheme 4 The earliest documented northern routes out of London are the roads created by the Romans during the period 43 to 410 AD which consisted of a variety of Iters on the Antonine Itinerary 5 a combination of which were used by the Anglo Saxons as the route from London to York and which became known as Ermine Street 6 Ermine Street later became known as the Old North Road 7 and is used within London by the current A10 8 By the 12th century because of flooding and damage by traffic on Ermine Street an alternative route out of London was found through Islington and Muswell Hill and this was the origin of the Great North Road that would become the A1 8 9 Until the 14th century the route went up what is now Hornsey Road the A103 road but when that became impassable a new route along Holloway Road via Highgate was created in the 14th century 8 10 The section through Highgate was bypassed in the early 19th century by the creation of a new road Archway Road and around the same time a turnpike road New North Road and Canonbury Road the A1200 road was constructed linking the start of the Old North Road around Shoreditch with the Great North Road at Highbury Corner 11 The route of the A1 in London originally started at Aldersgate Bars which marked the boundary of the City of London and followed the Great North Road mail coach route through Barnet 12 the route was re designated in 1954 to follow the East Finchley and Barnet by passes built in the 1920s and 1930s 7 13 so within London the coaching route is now mainly only followed when passing through the borough of Islington 14 During the early 1970s plans to widen the A1 along the Archway Road section were abandoned after considerable opposition and four public inquiries during which road protesters disrupted proceedings 15 The scheme was finally dropped in 1990 16 Governance editResponsibility for the roads along which the A1 route travels are shared by the individual local boroughs the Greater London Authority GLA and the British Government The first organised London wide authority dealing with roads in London was the Metropolitan Board of Works MBW set up in 1856 17 The MBW replaced the disparate turnpike trusts which had already been amalgamated in 1826 into the single control of Government Commissioners and was itself replaced by the London County Council LCC in 1889 17 The LCC became the Greater London Council GLC in 1965 and during the 1960s when traffic management in London was being modernised and the London Ringways was proposed the GLC which was not in favour of increasing traffic into central London had control of the inner London roads while the government through the Ministry of Transport which was in favour of widening roads had control of outer London 3 These different approaches resulted in the Ministry of Transport widening a stretch of the A1 until it reached the control of the GLC when the widening abruptly stopped 3 Due to the problems associated with two different and opposing bodies having responsibility for London s roads the government were keen to take control of the major routes and made plans in 1983 for the Department of Transport to take over 70 miles of road including significant parts of the A1 when the GLC was abolished in 1986 the Department of Transport took over direct control of the 70 miles of major routes plus had a significant influence on another 300 18 In 2000 control of roads in London passed to Transport for London 19 a department of GLA created in 2000 as part of the Greater London Authority Act 1999 20 and the major roads including the A1 were declassified as trunk roads 21 Route edit nbsp The current route of the A1 red and the historic route of the Great North Road blue The route of the A1 in London runs from the northern end of St Martin s Le Grand in the City to Borehamwood in Hertfordshire then travels on the northern fringe of Greater London to Bignell s Corner where it crosses the M25 and becomes a motorway designated A1 M which alternates with the dual carriageway A1 as it continues to Edinburgh The London section of the road passes through part of the City of London and three London boroughs Islington Haringey and Barnet The A1 is one of London s main northern routes 3 providing a link to the M1 motorway and the A1 M motorway and on to the Midlands Northern England and Scotland It connects a number of major areas within London and sections of it serve as the High Street for many of the now joined villages that make up north London Even though it is one of London s major roads less than 5 of its approximate 60 000 vehicles a day are through traffic the bulk is local 3 City of London edit The current start of the A1 is the modern roundabout at the northern end of St Martin s Le Grand where it meets Aldersgate Street near the site of the now demolished General Post Office London the headquarters of the Post Office from 1829 to 1910 22 When originally designated in 1921 the A1 started a little further north along Aldersgate Street at Aldersgate Bars 12 which marked the boundary of the City though some later maps indicate it starting at the southern end of St Martin s Le Grand near St Paul s Cathedral 23 The route runs north from Aldersgate along Aldersgate Street which is a modern dual carriageway and from the 13th century was known as a wide street with fine buildings and travellers inns 24 25 these were destroyed or badly damaged during the Blitz and from 1965 to 1976 the 40 acre 162 000m Barbican Estate an arts complex and residential estate was constructed along the entire eastern side of the street 26 At the end of Aldersgate Street stood Aldersgate Bars which marked the limits of the City of London 27 Islington edit The route enters the London Borough of Islington at Goswell Road becoming a single carriageway running north from the border of the City to Angel through a mix of offices and urban housing Goswell Road and St John Street were the ancient routes from the City to Islington 28 with St John Street being the start of the Great North Road until the General Post Office headquarters was built at St Martin s le Grand in 1829 whereafter stagecoaches used Aldersgate Street and Goswell Road 29 The New River originally flowed across Goswell Road but is now underground and no trace of it can be seen at the surface 30 The street was reported in 1720 to be meanly built and inhabited containing numerous inns and brothels and it largely remained a slum area until the rebuilding that took place after the Second World War and in particular the residential development that spread out from the Barbican since 1980 27 nbsp The Peacock Inn by James Pollard one of several travellers inns that were on Islington High Street from the 16th to 19th centuriesAt the northern end of Goswell Road the route northwards follows a one way section to the Angel turning right into Islington High Street The southwards route from Islington High Street follows City Road for a short distance before joining Goswell Road via Wakley Street The earliest reference to Islington High Street is its appearance on a 1590 map of the area At this time nine inns including the Angel which subsequently gave its name to the area as well as housing and a public pond were shown lining the street 31 The Peacock Inn one of the nine inns and which operated on Islington High Street from 1564 to 1962 was where Tom of Tom Brown s Schooldays stayed prior to travelling to Rugby School 32 In 1716 Islington High Street came under the control of the newly formed Islington Turnpike Trust The Trust grew rapidly and soon had control of most major roads in the area building a number of major road arteries through the expanding residential areas including Caledonian Road Euston Road City Road and New North Road 33 Upper Street running roughly north from Islington High Street to Highbury Corner is the main shopping street of Islington and dates back to at least the 12th century 34 Livestock herded along the Great North Road for Smithfield Market would when passing through what was mainly fields and farmland pause at lairs built between Upper Street and Liverpool Road by an enterprising farmer Richard Laycock 35 Laycock s lairs would be used in 1861 for the site of the Royal Agricultural Hall 36 and a number of pubs and shops existed along the street to serve farmers and travellers headed for Smithfield 37 In the 18th century Upper Street began to develop from an agricultural to a residential area Ten houses were built in 1768 later named Hornsey Row and a further group built immediately south of Hornsey Row in 1792 38 Liverpool Road originally called Back Road was used as an alternative to Upper Street for the Smithfield herders 39 and both streets have a high pavement constructed to protect pedestrians from being splashed by the passing animals in places the pavement is approximately 1 m above the road surface 40 After reaching the eight way interchange at Highbury Corner the A1 turns north west as Holloway Road Until the 14th century the route turned off along what is now Hornsey Road the A103 road to go through Muswell Hill but when that became impassable a new route along Holloway Road via Highgate was created in the 14th century 8 10 The earliest record giving the name of the road as the Holloway dates from 1307 The main stretch of Holloway Road runs through the site of the villages of Tollington and Stroud The exact time of their founding is not known but the earliest record of them dates from 1000 The names ceased to be used by the late 17th century but are still preserved in the local place names Tollington Park and Stroud Green 41 since that time the area has been known as Holloway The northern point of Holloway Road is the complex interchange at Archway The construction of the interchange left a few buildings isolated in the centre of the roundabout including the Archway Tavern which appears on the cover of the Kinks 1971 album Muswell Hillbillies 42 Haringey edit nbsp John Nash s original bridge over Archway RoadAfter the Archway roundabout the A1 enters a cutting and becomes Archway Road The original road north went up the very steep Highgate Hill now the B519 to the village of Highgate By 1808 this was proving unsuitable for increasingly heavy traffic and a road crossing the hill through a tunnel at a shallower gradient was proposed by a mining engineer Robert Vazie a turnpike trust the Highgate Archway Company was set up and work started in 1810 2 The brick built tunnel collapsed during construction on 13 April 1812 and John Nash constructed a brick bridge using a series of arches like a canal viaduct to carry Hornsey Lane over what was now a cutting 2 Nash s Archway Bridge a little way south of the current bridge 43 and the new Archway Road were opened in 1813 though the road surface being constructed of sand and gravel proved difficult for heavy traffic 44 Parliamentary Commissioners took over the road and John Benjamin Macneill chief engineer to Thomas Telford proposed using Roman cement and gravel 45 an innovative technique that was used for the first time on Archway Road and is the basis for modern road building 1 2 The construction was financed by tolls which were abolished in 1876 traffic increased substantially thereafter particularly after the introduction of trams on the road 46 Between 1897 and 1900 Nash s bridge was replaced with the present cast iron Hornsey Lane Bridge designed by Sir Alexander Binnie accessible from the Archway Road level by a steep flight of steps 46 Hornsey Lane Bridge designated a Grade II listed building by English Heritage in 1972 47 48 is informally called Suicide Bridge as it is a known suicide spot 49 It was the venue for the mental illness campaign group Mad Pride s inaugural vigil in 2000 50 and was the subject of Johnny Burke s 2006 film The Bridge 51 When at the end of 2010 three men in three weeks committed suicide by jumping from the bridge a campaign was set up by local residents for better anti suicide measures to be put in place 49 Hornsey Lane and the bridge marks the boundary between the Inner London Borough of Islington and the Outer London Borough of Haringey 52 nbsp The A1 Aylmer Road left diverging away from the original Great North Road right An inquiry was held into widening the section from the Archway intersection to the Hornsey Lane Bridge to a three lane dual carriageway in 1969 and work started in 1971 53 It was originally intended to widen a further section of the road but severe disruption led to the first inquiry being abandoned in 1978 54 and a second inquiry in 1984 chaired by Air Marshal Sir Michael Giddings was also abandoned 55 56 The traffic flow was projected to increase to 180 000 cars a day by 1981 but by 1986 the actual flow was only 30 000 a day 3 When originally constructed Archway Road went through countryside with few buildings though by 1828 the Woodman pub at the junction with Muswell Hill Road and the now demolished Wellington pub at the junction with North Hill provided refreshments to travellers 57 however with the coming of the railways in 1867 ribbon development started along the road including the Camra Heritage listed Winchester Tavern with the distinctive attached parade of shops and house with deep arched eaves built by the Imperial Property Investment Co in 1881 57 58 59 At the northern end of Archway Road the road re intersects with the traditional Great North Road route at this point called North Hill The roads almost immediately re diverge with the Great North Road route heading north as the A1000 towards Finchley Whetstone and Barnet and the A1 heading west as Aylmer Road 60 Aylmer Road is a very short stretch of road running west for less than half a mile between the junction with the A1000 in Haringey to the junction with The Bishops Avenue in Barnet 61 The southern side of the road is partly taken up by Highgate Golf Course while the northern side is a mixture of small shops flats and allotments 62 The road is named after Sir Fenton Aylmer 63 who received the Victoria Cross for his part in the assault on Nilt Fort on 2 December 1891 64 Barnet edit nbsp View west along Lyttleton RoadAfter crossing The Bishops Avenue the A1 becomes Lyttelton Road which was laid out in 1931 as part of the residential development of the area 65 and runs east west along the northern foot of Highgate Hill between Hampstead Garden Suburb and East Finchley It is for the most part residential on the northern side stands the Belvedere Court block of flats Built with the road in the 1930s the building is now Grade II Listed as an example of 1930s architecture 66 After passing playing fields to the south the A1 briefly becomes Market Place a former street market that has evolved into a short stretch of shops then becomes Falloden Way built between 1914 and 1924 as part of a programme of planned extensions to Hampstead Garden Suburb 67 and runs on an embankment due to a dip in the ground caused by Mutton Brook a tributary of the River Brent which runs parallel to the road for its entire length mostly along the south side The north side of the road is occupied by 1930s housing blocks whilst the southern side is occupied by a narrow strip of parkland following the brook and by the northern tip of Big Wood and Little Wood two of the few surviving remnants of the ancient woodland that once covered what is now north London 68 The A1 merges with the North Circular Road A406 and the two routes run briefly together crossing over the Henlys Corner interchange Henlys Corner is a junction with the 1820s turnpike road Finchley Road which was built to provide a by pass to the route north from London through Hampstead 69 the name changes to Regents Park Road on the northern Finchley side of the junction The junction had an 8 million upgrade completed in January 2012 70 which included Britain s first hands free pedestrian crossing to allow Orthodox Jews to reach the nearby Finchley Synagogue one of Europe s largest 71 without operating machinery on the Sabbath 72 While a synagogue has stood on the site since 1935 the current building dates from 1967 73 nbsp Henlys Corner where the A1 meets the A406 This junction was modified in 2011 to provide extra filter lanes After the Henlys Corner interchange the routes diverge with the A406 going south to Brent Cross while the A1 turns north west as Great North Way through the leafy suburbs of Mill Hill and Hendon Great North Way built in 1926 joins Watford Way carrying the A41 completed in 1927 at Fiveways Corner and in 1970 a junction with the M1 motorway was created 74 The A41 and A1 continue together as Watford Way via Mill Hill Circus to Apex Corner 75 where they separate with the A41 turning west and the A1 turning to run straight north After passing Apex Corner the A1 runs north and out of London as the dual carriageway Barnet Way or Barnet Bypass This dual carriageway was part of a 1920 24 road improvement programme that was mentioned in parliament in 1928 as hopefully being completed by the end of that summer 76 77 The northbound carriageway passes the entrance to Scratchwood an area of ancient forest which is now a local nature reserve then crosses the A411 from Watford to Barnet at the Stirling Corner roundabout A 0 6 miles 0 97 km proposed link road at this roundabout estimated at 22 8m in 1987 would have provided access to the M1 78 79 but the plans were subsequently abandoned The link had been planned during discussions for the Hendon Urban Motorway which was intended to carry the M1 all the way down to Hyde Park Corner as part of the London Ringways scheme 80 the interchange would have been junction 3 on the motorway which is currently the unnumbered junction for London Gateway services 81 Past Stirling Corner the A1 skirts Borehamwood before turning northeast and running through open countryside to Bignell s Corner At Bignell s Corner the A1 crosses under the M25 motorway at a large roundabout near South Mimms services North of Bignell s Corner the A1 becomes the A1 M motorway for a while and follows the Great North Road route running north to Edinburgh Construction editThe A1 route was designated in 1921 by the Ministry of Transport under the Great Britain road numbering scheme 4 Through the inner boroughs of the City Islington and Haringey it uses existing roads and streets when it reaches what is now the outer London borough of Barnet some stretches of purpose built new roads were built 65 and others have been widened and made into dual carriageways 3 In 1828 John Benjamin Macneill chief engineer to Thomas Telford used Roman cement and gravel to solve problems with wear and tear on the Archway Road section of what is now the A1 45 an innovative technique that was used there for the first time and is the basis for modern road building 1 2 References edit a b c M G Lay James E Vance 1 December 1992 Ways of the World A History of the World s Roads and of the Vehicles That Used Them Rutgers University Press p 220 ISBN 9780813517582 a b c d e Jack Whitehead Muswell Hill Road locallocalhistory co uk p 92 Retrieved 7 December 2012 a b c d e f g Mick Hamer 30 October 1986 Running rings round the traffic planners New Scientist 22 23 Retrieved 3 December 2012 a b Chris Marshall 2011 CBRD In Depth Road Numbers How it happened cbrd co uk Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 7 August 2011 Thomas Codrington 1903 Roman Roads in Britain Antonine Itinerary Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Archived from the original on 3 July 2011 Retrieved 23 August 2011 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Thomas Codrington LacusCurtius Codrington s Roman Roads in Britain Chapter 4 penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 23 August 2011 a b Bridget Cherry Nikolaus Pevsner 11 March 1998 London 4 North Yale University Press p 98 ISBN 0300096534 Retrieved 5 December 2012 a b c d Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb 2009 The London Encyclopedia Pan Macmillan p 343 ISBN 978 1 4050 4925 2 Retrieved 23 August 2011 Frank Goddard 2004 Great North Road Frances Lincoln Ltd p 14 ISBN 978 0 7112 2446 9 Retrieved 23 August 2011 a b A P Baggs Diane K Bolton Patricia E C Croot 1985 Communications In T F T Baker C R Elrington eds A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 8 Islington and Stoke Newington parishes Victoria County History pp 3 8 Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb 9 May 2011 The London Encyclopaedia 3rd ed Pan Macmillan p 580 ISBN 9780230738782 Retrieved 5 December 2012 a b Ministry of Transport 1923 List of Class I and Class II Roads and Numbers HMSO A1 The Barnet By Pass A1 M PBHistory co uk Archived from the original on 7 February 2012 Retrieved 6 December 2012 Norman W Webster 1974 The Great North Road Adams and Dart ISBN 978 0 239 00142 9 John Adams 1981 Transport planning vision and practice Routledge amp K Paul ISBN 978 0 7100 0844 2 Road Victories PDF Road Block Archived from the original PDF on 16 February 2008 Retrieved 22 January 2008 a b Denis Smith 2001 Civil Engineering Heritage London and the Thames Valley Thomas Telford p 132 ISBN 9780727728760 Retrieved 4 December 2012 Mick Hamer 1987 Wheels Within Wheels Study of the Road Lobby Routledge p 64 ISBN 9780710210074 Retrieved 4 December 2012 Whitaker s 18 October 2011 Whitaker s Almanack 2012 ed A amp C Black p 451 ISBN 9781408130124 Legislative framework Transport for London Archived from the original on 23 January 2012 Retrieved 6 September 2008 Trunk Roads Hansard 2000 Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb 1 June 2010 The London Encyclopedia Pan Macmillan p 660 ISBN 9781405049252 Retrieved 29 November 2012 Jon Nicholson Nigel Richardson 1 December 2000 A1 Portrait of a Road Harper UK p 6 Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb 1 June 2010 The London Encyclopaedia 3rd ed Pan Macmillan p 14 ISBN 9780230738782 Retrieved 4 December 2012 Henry Benjamin Wheatley Peter Cunningham 24 February 2011 London Past and Present Its History Associations and Traditions Cambridge University Press p 25 ISBN 9781108028066 Retrieved 4 December 2012 History of the Barbican Estate City of London Corporation Archived from the original on 15 March 2007 Retrieved 10 May 2007 a b Philip Temple 2008 Charterhouse Square area Charterhouse Street and other streets Survey of London volume 46 pp 265 279 Retrieved 4 December 2012 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Thomas Cromwell 1828 History and description of the parish of Clerkenwell Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green p 31 Retrieved 4 December 2012 Norman W Webster 1974 The Great North Road 22 23 Patricia Croot 1985 Islington Introduction A History of the County of Middlesex 8 British History Online 1 3 Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 11 May 2007 Patricia Croot 1985 Islington Growth A History of the County of Middlesex 8 British History Online 9 19 Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 11 May 2007 Places of Note London Borough of Islington Archived from the original on 10 November 2004 Retrieved 11 May 2007 Patricia Croot 1985 Islington Communications A History of the County of Middlesex 8 British History Online 3 8 Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 11 May 2007 1811 Medieval Origins BBC Retrieved 12 May 2007 A P Baggs Diane K Bolton Patricia E C Croot 1985 Islington Economic history In T F T Baker C R Elrington eds A History of the County of Middlesex Vol 8 Islington and Stoke Newington parishes Victoria County History pp 69 76 Retrieved 6 December 2012 Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb 9 May 2011 The London Encyclopaedia 3 ed Pan Macmillan p 708 ISBN 9780230738782 William Gaspey 1851 Tallis s Illustrated London J Tallis p 215 Patricia Croot 1985 Islington Growth Canonbury A History of the County of Middlesex 8 British History Online 19 20 Archived from the original on 22 April 2007 Retrieved 12 May 2007 Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb 9 May 2011 The London Encyclopaedia 3 ed Pan Macmillan p 490 ISBN 9781405049252 Chris Corby March 2004 Angel Town Centre Strategy PDF London Borough of Islington Archived from the original PDF on 4 May 2006 Retrieved 12 May 2007 Patricia Croot 1985 Islington Growth Holloway and Tollington A History of the County of Middlesex 8 British History Online 29 37 Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 13 May 2007 Robert Reid 25 July 2013 London Paradise Following the Kinks nationalgeographic com National Geographic Society Archived from the original on 3 June 2019 Jack Whitehead Muswell Hill Road locallocalhistory co uk p 93 Retrieved 30 December 2013 Henry Parnell 1833 A Treatise on Roads Longman Rees Orme Brown Green amp Longman p 163 a b Henry Parnell 1833 A Treatise on Roads Longman Rees Orme Brown Green amp Longman p 165 a b A P Baggs Diane K Bolton M A Hicks R B Pugh 1980 T F T Baker C R Elrington eds Hornsey Including Highgate Communications A History of the County of Middlesex 6 British History Online 103 107 Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 14 May 2007 Historic England Archway Bridge part in the London Borough of Islington 1204360 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 June 2017 Historic England Highgate Archway part in the London Borough of Haringey 1358839 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 June 2017 a b Hornsey Lane Bridge Anti Suicide Campaign Hornsey Lane Bridge Anti Suicide Campaign September 2011 Archived from the original on 20 October 2011 Retrieved 9 October 2011 Rob Dellar 2002 Archive Volume 13 gt Number 4 Believing in Bedlam AsylumONLINE Archived from the original on 19 February 2005 Retrieved 29 November 2012 Special Screenings Rio Cinema April 2006 Retrieved 14 May 2007 THE BRIDGE UK MiniDV 8mins 8 Director Producer Screenplay Johnny Burke There is a 100 year old woman a serial killer in North London Her name is Suicide Bridge High above the Archway Road throwing a heavy shadow over the passing traffic she assists the tragic people who come for her help Streetmap EU Ltd 2012 Map of Hornsey Lane London Streetmap co uk Streetmap EU Ltd 2012 Archived from the original on 13 December 2013 Retrieved 7 December 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link ARCHWAY ROAD ISLINGTON Parliamentary Debates Hansard 28 April 1971 Archway Road Improvement Scheme Parliamentary Debates Hansard 21 March 1978 Air Marshal Sir Michael Giddings Spitfire pilot The Times 28 April 2009 Retrieved 15 April 2010 Archway Road Inquiry Parliamentary Debates Hansard 1984 a b Haringay Council Environmental Services July 2002 Revised Archway Road Neighbourhood Plan PDF haringey gov uk London Borough of Haringey Archived from the original PDF on 28 April 2011 Retrieved 7 December 2012 CAMRA National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors Part Two heritagepubs org uk CAMRA Retrieved 7 December 2012 A P Baggs Diane K Bolton M A Hicks R B Pugh 1980 T F T Baker C R Elrington eds A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 6 Friern Barnet Finchley Hornsey with Highgate Victoria County History pp 122 135 Retrieved 7 December 2012 Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb 2009 The London Encyclopaedia 3rd ed Pan Macmillan p 342 ISBN 9780230738782 Retrieved 5 December 2012 Streetmap EU Ltd 2012 Map of Aylmer Road London Streetmap co uk Streetmap EU Ltd 2012 Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 7 December 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Environment London Borough of Haringey 31 January 2007 Archived from the original on 28 February 2007 Retrieved 16 May 2007 150th Anniversary of the Victoria Cross Norvic Philatelics 21 September 2006 Archived from the original on 17 June 2007 Retrieved 16 May 2007 Col G W A Napier 1998 The Sapper VCs Museum of the Royal Engineers ISBN 0 11 772835 7 a b Character Appraisal The Bishop s Avenue London Borough of Barnet 1 February 1999 Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 8 December 2012 Index of Listed Buildings PDF London Borough of Barnet Archived from the original PDF on 2 February 2007 Retrieved 17 May 2007 Walk the Capital Ring PDF London Borough of Haringey Archived from the original PDF on 21 February 2007 Retrieved 17 May 2007 Big Wood and Little Wood Greenspace Information for Greater London gigl org uk 2006 Archived from the original on 23 December 2012 Retrieved 29 November 2012 Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb 2009 The London Encyclopaedia 3rd ed Pan Macmillan p 291 ISBN 9780230738782 Retrieved 7 December 2012 Jenkinson Kate 16 January 2012 Synagogue thankful for safer crossing at Henlys Corner Hendon amp Finchley Times Retrieved 30 November 2012 Sara McConnell 1 September 2006 Your guide to Jewish London The Times Claire Carter 6 September 2013 UK to get first hands free pedestrian crossing so devout Jews can cross the road the Telegraph Retrieved 8 November 2019 Finchley Judaism A History of the County of Middlesex 6 91 1980 Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 18 May 2007 A P Baggs Diane K Bolton Eileen P Scarff G C Tyack 1976 Communications In T F T Baker R B Pugh eds A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 5 Hendon Kingsbury Great Stanmore Little Stanmore Edmonton Enfield Monken Hadley South Mimms Tottenham Victoria County History pp 2 5 A Z London Sevenoaks Geographer s A Z Map Company Ltd 2002 ISBN 1 84348 020 4 Roy Porter 5 October 2000 London A Social History Penguin UK p 501 ISBN 9780140105933 Retrieved 5 December 2012 BARNET BY PASS Hansard 21 June 1928 Parliamentary Debates Hansard 21 June 1928 Retrieved 5 December 2012 Paul Channon 11 January 1989 Flying Displays Parliamentary Debates Hansard Retrieved 17 June 2013 John MacGregor 18 January 1994 Transport Schemes Parliamentary Debates Hansard Retrieved 17 June 2013 Peter Baldwin John Porter Robert Baldwin 2004 The Motorway Achievement Visualisation of the British Motorway System Policy and Administration Thomas Telford p 155 ISBN 9780727731968 Nick Atkinson 2011 Why is there no junction 3 on the M1 motorway guardian co uk The Guardian pp Notes amp Queries Retrieved 8 December 2012 KML file edit help Template Attached KML A1 in LondonKML is from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A1 in London amp oldid 1209994696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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