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Old Chiswick

Old Chiswick is the area of the original village beside the river Thames for which the modern district of Chiswick is named. The village grew up around St Nicholas Church, founded c. 1181 and named for the patron saint of fishermen. The placename was first recorded c. 1000 as Ceswican ('Cheese farm'). In the Middle Ages the villagers lived by fishing, boatbuilding, and handling river traffic. The surrounding area was rural until the late 19th century.

Chiswick from the river, in Walter Harrison's History of London, c. 1775

The village's main street, Church Street, includes the half-timbered former Burlington Arms pub from the 15th century, and the former Lamb Tap pub. The old Post Office was once the home of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The riverside street, Chiswick Mall, grew from humble beginnings to a row of grand houses, including Walpole House, from the 17th century onwards. The street still floods on high spring tides. Behind the riverfront is the Griffin Brewery, the only survivor of the five malthouses in Chiswick in 1736. Nearby is the 18th century Chiswick Square, the houses in brown brick with red dressings, and the Arts and Crafts Gothic St Mary's Convent.

The village was once the home of the Chiswick Press, where William Morris had some of his books printed. John I. Thornycroft & Company founded their shipyard at Church Wharf at the west end of Chiswick Mall in 1864, building the first naval destroyer, HMS Daring, there in 1893.

Geography edit

 Hogarth's HouseFuller's BreweryWalpole HouseChiswick HouseSt Nicholas Church, ChiswickChiswick Mall
Imagemap with clickable links. Infographic of Old Chiswick, based on c. 1880 Ordnance Survey map. "Chiswick New Town" has started to spread to the north.

Old Chiswick occupies a roughly rectangular area between the river Thames with Chiswick Mall running beside it to the southeast, Church Street to the southwest, Chiswick Lane South to the northeast, and Mawson Lane (now beside the Great West Road) to the northwest, while Chiswick Square is off Burlington Lane, to the west of Church Street. The small island of Chiswick Eyot lies off the downstream half of Chiswick Mall,[1] a street that still floods on high spring tides.[2]

Not far away to the west are Hogarth's House and Chiswick House and Gardens; they are not in the Old Chiswick Conservation Area. Of the other constituent medieval villages of modern Chiswick, Strand-on-the-Green lies to the west; Little Sutton and Turnham Green to the north. The area is in the London Borough of Hounslow; to the northeast is Hammersmith Mall; across the river is Barnes.[1]

History edit

 
Watercolour A Vanished Corner of Old Chiswick, Thomas Matthews Rooke, 1896

The name "Chiswick" was first recorded c. 1000 as Ceswican, with the meaning from Old English of "cheese farm".[3][4] Between 1600 and 1900 the area of the old village was known as "Chiswick town" or locally as "the town". By 1980 the usual name for the area was "Old Chiswick".[5]

Old Chiswick was a definable place with a recorded population by 1590.[5] The community lived beside and from the river; in 1458, the church was dedicated to Saint Nicholas, who was the patron saint of fishermen.[5] The village had a ferry, and people made their living by fishing, boatbuilding, and handling river traffic.[5] The risk of flooding from the tidal river kept the fields of the Chiswick peninsula free of housing until 1900.[5]

St Nicholas Church edit

St Nicholas Church, Chiswick was founded c. 1181. Most of the current church dates from 1882 to 1884, when it was rebuilt to a design by the Gothic revival architect John Loughborough Pearson, except for the surviving west tower, which was built for William Bordall (vicar 1416–1435). There are some fine 18th century wall-mounted monuments in the tower, and an exceptional[6] one in the south chapel to Sir Thomas Chaloner, 1615. The alabaster sculpture portrays Chaloner, chamberlain to king James I; he and his wife are kneeling at a prayer desk under a curtained canopy, held open by men in boots.[6][7]

Church Street edit

The village of Chiswick grew up around the church. Church Street runs northwest from the corner with Chiswick Mall, by the slipway down to the river, past the church which is on the west of the street, up to the junction with Burlington Lane and the Hogarth Roundabout. The oldest surviving secular building is the former Burlington Arms pub, a half-timbered 15th-century building, now a private house; it closed in 1924. The former Lamb Tap pub, closed in 1909, was just to its north.[9] Leading off Church Street westwards is an "informally landscaped intimate cul-de-sac",[10] Pages Yard, with four 2-storey Grade II cottages from the 17th century.[10][11] The old Post Office was once home to the Enlightenment philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau.[12]

Chiswick Mall edit

Chiswick Mall is a riverside street running downstream from St Nicholas Church. It is largely occupied by a series of grand houses, built by the wealthy to take advantage of its riverside setting. The largest and one of the finest is the Grade I listed Walpole House.[13][14]

Chiswick Square edit

Just off Burlington Lane, between the George and Devonshire and St Mary's Convent, is Chiswick Square, one of the smallest squares in London. It is paved, and has a formal arrangement of walls and flowerbeds. Facing the square's entrance is the large 3-storey Grade II listed Boston House, built in 1740, behind its wrought-iron railings at the end. It was refaced later in the 18th century by Viscount Boston with brown brick and red dressings.[15][10] When the house was sold in 1772 it was described as "the great house and offices ... with a great parlour hung with green Embos'd Paper and Prints compleat".[15] It became a young ladies' school, possibly (along with Walpole House) helping to inspire Thackeray to feature such a school in his novel Vanity Fair; after that it became Nazareth House with Catholic nuns.[16] Either side of the square are houses of dark brick, built c. 1680.[15][10] A plaque in the square states that "into this garden Thackeray in Vanity Fair describes Becky Sharp as throwing the dictionary".[16][17]

Breweries and public houses edit

Chiswick was and remains a place for brewing beer. By 1736, there were at least five malthouses in Chiswick. Beer was brewed at the Griffin Brewery and the Lamb Brewery; their old buildings survive. The Lamb brewery, right beside the Griffin, was run by the family of John Sich from 1790 to 1929. A large part of the area of Old Chiswick is still occupied by Fuller's Griffin Brewery.[18][19]

Only two public houses now remain in Old Chiswick, the George and Devonshire on Burlington Lane, just off Church Street, and the double pub the Mawson Arms / Fox and Hounds at the corner of Chiswick Lane South and Mawson Lane.[20]

Industry edit

In 1809, Charles Whittingham founded the Chiswick Press at High House (now Orford House) on Chiswick Mall; in 1818 it moved to College House. This was near the drawdock where loads of old marine rope made of hemp could be unloaded, to be recycled into a strong, silky paper by Whittingham's own paper-making process. The press made small low-priced books of high quality.[21] William Morris used the press for some of his books, including his 1889 romance A Tale of the House of the Wolfings.[22]

John Isaac Thornycroft, founder of the John I. Thornycroft & Company shipbuilding company, established a yard at Church Wharf at the west end of Chiswick Mall in 1864.[23][24] The shipyard built the first naval destroyer, HMS Daring of the Daring class, in 1893.[25] To cater for the increasing size of warships, Thornycroft moved its shipyard to Southampton in 1909.[26]

In 1878, Dan and Charles Mason started the Chiswick Soap Company on Burlington Lane. One of their chemists developed Cherry Blossom boot polish in 1906; a small tin of it retailed initially for one penny, and it became a well-known product.[27] The company became the Chiswick Polish Company in 1926, and Chiswick Products Ltd in 1930. The business was sold to Reckitt and Colman in 1954; it built a new factory at the Hogarth Roundabout in 1967, on the site of the Hogarth Business Park; this was closed and demolished in 1974.[27]

St Mary's Convent edit

In 1896, the Anglican Order of St Mary and St John built what is now St Mary's Convent and Nursing Home on Burlington Lane, consulting with Florence Nightingale about the design of its hospital.[28] It has at its core an Arts and Crafts Gothic building by the ecclesiastical architect Charles Ford Whitcombe. Its chapel has a small square tower with a weather vane atop a slender conical spire; inside the chapel is a classical reredos, ceiling paintings by George Ostrehan, and a tapestry panel by Morris & Co.[29][30] It is now run by the Society of Saint Margaret.[31]

Chiswick New Town edit

 
The former White Swan, Bennett Street, a remnant of Chiswick New Town

Just north of Hogarth Lane, Old Chiswick was extended northwestwards from the 1820s with a grid of small streets as far as Devonshire Road to create "Chiswick New Town". Some 375 houses were built over the next century on the 11-acre plot. The houses were poorly supplied with water and drainage. Some were destroyed by bombing in the Second World War, some by the widening of Hogarth Lane into the A4 dual carriageway, and the rest by the 1950s slum clearance, leaving only one building, the White Swan pub, also called "The Dirty Duck". The building started out as "Florey's Brewhouse" on Bennett Street in 1834, built for Charles Florey. In 1882 it was sold to the brewers Crowley Bros., and renamed "The White Swan". The surviving facade is most likely of that date. The arch allowed costermongers to bring donkeys and carts through to stables behind the pub. Charrington's closed the pub in 1979.[32]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hounslow 2018, pp. 9–14.
  2. ^ Hounslow 2018, p. 6.
  3. ^ Room, Adrian (1988). Dictionary of Place-Names in the British Isles. Bloomsbury.
  4. ^ "Plea Rolls of the Court of Common Pleas. CP 40/629; Year 1418". The National Archives. pp. third entry – Chesewyk is the home of John Meryman, carpenter, a defendant.
  5. ^ a b c d e BHO 1982.
  6. ^ a b Historic England. "Church Of St Nicholas And Attached Walls (1189405)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 3 April 2015.
  7. ^ Clegg 1995, pp. 17, 43, 103.
  8. ^ "A brief history of St Nicholas". St Nicholas Church, Chiswick. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  9. ^ Clegg 1995, pp. 35, 43, 94–95.
  10. ^ a b c d Hounslow 2018, p. 19.
  11. ^ Cherry & Pevsner 1991, p. 404.
  12. ^ "Historic Church Street Post Office To Be Turned into Flat". Chiswick W4. 5 September 2021. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  13. ^ Hounslow 2018, p. 34.
  14. ^ Clegg 2021.
  15. ^ a b c Clegg 1995, p. 37.
  16. ^ a b Clegg 1995, pp. 35–37.
  17. ^ "Plaque: Chiswick Square". London Remembers. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  18. ^ . Fuller's. Archived from the original on 29 July 2019. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  19. ^ Clegg 1995, pp. 84–87.
  20. ^ Clegg 1995, pp. 94–95.
  21. ^ Clegg 1995, pp. 88–89.
  22. ^ "The House of the Wolfings". William Morris Gallery. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
  23. ^ Arthure, Humphrey (n.d.). Thornycroft Shipbuilding and Motor Works in Chiswick. p. 24.
  24. ^ Arthure, Humphrey (March 1982). Life and Work in Old Chiswick.
  25. ^ Lyon, David (1996). The First Destroyers. pp. 40–41. ISBN 1-84067-364-8.
  26. ^ Clegg 1995, pp. 87–88.
  27. ^ a b Clegg 1995, pp. 91–92.
  28. ^ Clegg 1995, p. 115.
  29. ^ Hounslow 2018, p. 20.
  30. ^ 'Hounslow' in London 3: North West by Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner (Yale University Press, 1981) p. 394
  31. ^ "Welcome". Saint Mary's Convent Chiswick. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  32. ^ Bott, Val; Wisdom, James (1981). "The White Swan, Chiswick". Brentford and Chiswick Local History Society. Retrieved 21 July 2021.

Sources edit

chiswick, area, original, village, beside, river, thames, which, modern, district, chiswick, named, village, grew, around, nicholas, church, founded, 1181, named, patron, saint, fishermen, placename, first, recorded, 1000, ceswican, cheese, farm, middle, ages,. Old Chiswick is the area of the original village beside the river Thames for which the modern district of Chiswick is named The village grew up around St Nicholas Church founded c 1181 and named for the patron saint of fishermen The placename was first recorded c 1000 as Ceswican Cheese farm In the Middle Ages the villagers lived by fishing boatbuilding and handling river traffic The surrounding area was rural until the late 19th century Chiswick from the river in Walter Harrison s History of London c 1775 The village s main street Church Street includes the half timbered former Burlington Arms pub from the 15th century and the former Lamb Tap pub The old Post Office was once the home of Jean Jacques Rousseau The riverside street Chiswick Mall grew from humble beginnings to a row of grand houses including Walpole House from the 17th century onwards The street still floods on high spring tides Behind the riverfront is the Griffin Brewery the only survivor of the five malthouses in Chiswick in 1736 Nearby is the 18th century Chiswick Square the houses in brown brick with red dressings and the Arts and Crafts Gothic St Mary s Convent The village was once the home of the Chiswick Press where William Morris had some of his books printed John I Thornycroft amp Company founded their shipyard at Church Wharf at the west end of Chiswick Mall in 1864 building the first naval destroyer HMS Daring there in 1893 Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 St Nicholas Church 2 2 Church Street 2 3 Chiswick Mall 2 4 Chiswick Square 2 5 Breweries and public houses 2 6 Industry 2 7 St Mary s Convent 2 8 Chiswick New Town 3 References 4 SourcesGeography edit nbsp Imagemap with clickable links Infographic of Old Chiswick based on c 1880 Ordnance Survey map Chiswick New Town has started to spread to the north Old Chiswick occupies a roughly rectangular area between the river Thames with Chiswick Mall running beside it to the southeast Church Street to the southwest Chiswick Lane South to the northeast and Mawson Lane now beside the Great West Road to the northwest while Chiswick Square is off Burlington Lane to the west of Church Street The small island of Chiswick Eyot lies off the downstream half of Chiswick Mall 1 a street that still floods on high spring tides 2 Not far away to the west are Hogarth s House and Chiswick House and Gardens they are not in the Old Chiswick Conservation Area Of the other constituent medieval villages of modern Chiswick Strand on the Green lies to the west Little Sutton and Turnham Green to the north The area is in the London Borough of Hounslow to the northeast is Hammersmith Mall across the river is Barnes 1 History edit nbsp Watercolour A Vanished Corner of Old Chiswick Thomas Matthews Rooke 1896 The name Chiswick was first recorded c 1000 as Ceswican with the meaning from Old English of cheese farm 3 4 Between 1600 and 1900 the area of the old village was known as Chiswick town or locally as the town By 1980 the usual name for the area was Old Chiswick 5 Old Chiswick was a definable place with a recorded population by 1590 5 The community lived beside and from the river in 1458 the church was dedicated to Saint Nicholas who was the patron saint of fishermen 5 The village had a ferry and people made their living by fishing boatbuilding and handling river traffic 5 The risk of flooding from the tidal river kept the fields of the Chiswick peninsula free of housing until 1900 5 St Nicholas Church edit Main article St Nicholas Church Chiswick St Nicholas Church Chiswick was founded c 1181 Most of the current church dates from 1882 to 1884 when it was rebuilt to a design by the Gothic revival architect John Loughborough Pearson except for the surviving west tower which was built for William Bordall vicar 1416 1435 There are some fine 18th century wall mounted monuments in the tower and an exceptional 6 one in the south chapel to Sir Thomas Chaloner 1615 The alabaster sculpture portrays Chaloner chamberlain to king James I he and his wife are kneeling at a prayer desk under a curtained canopy held open by men in boots 6 7 nbsp Engraving by Robert Blemmell after Jacob Schnebbelie 1807 showing the church before its Victorian era rebuilding and the fisherman s village Slut s Hole that stood below it 8 nbsp St Nicholas Chiswick rebuilt 1882 4 with early 15th century tower nbsp Monument of Sir Thomas Chaloner 1615 nbsp Richard Tayler memorial 1716 in the church tower nbsp Stone recording St Nicholas Churchyard wall rebuilt 1623 1831 1884 Church Street edit The village of Chiswick grew up around the church Church Street runs northwest from the corner with Chiswick Mall by the slipway down to the river past the church which is on the west of the street up to the junction with Burlington Lane and the Hogarth Roundabout The oldest surviving secular building is the former Burlington Arms pub a half timbered 15th century building now a private house it closed in 1924 The former Lamb Tap pub closed in 1909 was just to its north 9 Leading off Church Street westwards is an informally landscaped intimate cul de sac 10 Pages Yard with four 2 storey Grade II cottages from the 17th century 10 11 The old Post Office was once home to the Enlightenment philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau 12 nbsp Church Street from the north with the former post office where Jean Jacques Rousseau had lodgings 18th century nbsp Ferry House 18th century nbsp Wistaria House 18th century nbsp Pages Yard 17th century nbsp The former Burlington Arms 15th century Chiswick Mall edit Main article Chiswick Mall Chiswick Mall is a riverside street running downstream from St Nicholas Church It is largely occupied by a series of grand houses built by the wealthy to take advantage of its riverside setting The largest and one of the finest is the Grade I listed Walpole House 13 14 nbsp Engraving by George Cooke after William Havell 1834 Looking upriver a boat is unloading goods near some small shops nbsp The Old Vicarage with St Nicholas Church on the left nbsp Bedford House nbsp Walpole House the largest of the grand houses on Chiswick Mall nbsp Strawberry House with Morton House on right Chiswick Square edit Just off Burlington Lane between the George and Devonshire and St Mary s Convent is Chiswick Square one of the smallest squares in London It is paved and has a formal arrangement of walls and flowerbeds Facing the square s entrance is the large 3 storey Grade II listed Boston House built in 1740 behind its wrought iron railings at the end It was refaced later in the 18th century by Viscount Boston with brown brick and red dressings 15 10 When the house was sold in 1772 it was described as the great house and offices with a great parlour hung with green Embos d Paper and Prints compleat 15 It became a young ladies school possibly along with Walpole House helping to inspire Thackeray to feature such a school in his novel Vanity Fair after that it became Nazareth House with Catholic nuns 16 Either side of the square are houses of dark brick built c 1680 15 10 A plaque in the square states that into this garden Thackeray in Vanity Fair describes Becky Sharp as throwing the dictionary 16 17 nbsp From Chiswick Square to the George and Devonshire along Burlington Lane nbsp Boston House Chiswick Square built 1740 Breweries and public houses edit Further information Fuller s Brewery Chiswick was and remains a place for brewing beer By 1736 there were at least five malthouses in Chiswick Beer was brewed at the Griffin Brewery and the Lamb Brewery their old buildings survive The Lamb brewery right beside the Griffin was run by the family of John Sich from 1790 to 1929 A large part of the area of Old Chiswick is still occupied by Fuller s Griffin Brewery 18 19 Only two public houses now remain in Old Chiswick the George and Devonshire on Burlington Lane just off Church Street and the double pub the Mawson Arms Fox and Hounds at the corner of Chiswick Lane South and Mawson Lane 20 nbsp Griffin Brewery from Chiswick Lane South nbsp The Red Lion inn closed 1916 Prospect Cottage and Griffin Brewery Chiswick Mall nbsp The George and Devonshire on Burlington Lane nbsp The Mawson Arms Fox and Hounds on Chiswick Lane South and Mawson Lane nbsp The Lamb Tap Lamb Brewery and Burlington Arms all now with other uses Industry edit In 1809 Charles Whittingham founded the Chiswick Press at High House now Orford House on Chiswick Mall in 1818 it moved to College House This was near the drawdock where loads of old marine rope made of hemp could be unloaded to be recycled into a strong silky paper by Whittingham s own paper making process The press made small low priced books of high quality 21 William Morris used the press for some of his books including his 1889 romance A Tale of the House of the Wolfings 22 John Isaac Thornycroft founder of the John I Thornycroft amp Company shipbuilding company established a yard at Church Wharf at the west end of Chiswick Mall in 1864 23 24 The shipyard built the first naval destroyer HMS Daring of the Daring class in 1893 25 To cater for the increasing size of warships Thornycroft moved its shipyard to Southampton in 1909 26 In 1878 Dan and Charles Mason started the Chiswick Soap Company on Burlington Lane One of their chemists developed Cherry Blossom boot polish in 1906 a small tin of it retailed initially for one penny and it became a well known product 27 The company became the Chiswick Polish Company in 1926 and Chiswick Products Ltd in 1930 The business was sold to Reckitt and Colman in 1954 it built a new factory at the Hogarth Roundabout in 1967 on the site of the Hogarth Business Park this was closed and demolished in 1974 27 nbsp Chiswick Press trademark nbsp The torpedo boat Maelstrom at the John I Thornycroft amp Company yard in Chiswick 1873 St Mary s Convent edit In 1896 the Anglican Order of St Mary and St John built what is now St Mary s Convent and Nursing Home on Burlington Lane consulting with Florence Nightingale about the design of its hospital 28 It has at its core an Arts and Crafts Gothic building by the ecclesiastical architect Charles Ford Whitcombe Its chapel has a small square tower with a weather vane atop a slender conical spire inside the chapel is a classical reredos ceiling paintings by George Ostrehan and a tapestry panel by Morris amp Co 29 30 It is now run by the Society of Saint Margaret 31 nbsp Chapel tower and weather vane St Mary s Convent 1896 nbsp Wrought iron gate nbsp Is it nothing to you all ye that pass by nbsp Doorway Chiswick New Town edit nbsp The former White Swan Bennett Street a remnant of Chiswick New Town Just north of Hogarth Lane Old Chiswick was extended northwestwards from the 1820s with a grid of small streets as far as Devonshire Road to create Chiswick New Town Some 375 houses were built over the next century on the 11 acre plot The houses were poorly supplied with water and drainage Some were destroyed by bombing in the Second World War some by the widening of Hogarth Lane into the A4 dual carriageway and the rest by the 1950s slum clearance leaving only one building the White Swan pub also called The Dirty Duck The building started out as Florey s Brewhouse on Bennett Street in 1834 built for Charles Florey In 1882 it was sold to the brewers Crowley Bros and renamed The White Swan The surviving facade is most likely of that date The arch allowed costermongers to bring donkeys and carts through to stables behind the pub Charrington s closed the pub in 1979 32 References edit a b Hounslow 2018 pp 9 14 Hounslow 2018 p 6 Room Adrian 1988 Dictionary of Place Names in the British Isles Bloomsbury Plea Rolls of the Court of Common Pleas CP 40 629 Year 1418 The National Archives pp third entry Chesewyk is the home of John Meryman carpenter a defendant a b c d e BHO 1982 a b Historic England Church Of St Nicholas And Attached Walls 1189405 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 3 April 2015 Clegg 1995 pp 17 43 103 A brief history of St Nicholas St Nicholas Church Chiswick Retrieved 2 June 2021 Clegg 1995 pp 35 43 94 95 a b c d Hounslow 2018 p 19 Cherry amp Pevsner 1991 p 404 Historic Church Street Post Office To Be Turned into Flat Chiswick W4 5 September 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Hounslow 2018 p 34 Clegg 2021 a b c Clegg 1995 p 37 a b Clegg 1995 pp 35 37 Plaque Chiswick Square London Remembers Retrieved 10 July 2021 History and Heritage Fuller s Archived from the original on 29 July 2019 Retrieved 29 July 2019 Clegg 1995 pp 84 87 Clegg 1995 pp 94 95 Clegg 1995 pp 88 89 The House of the Wolfings William Morris Gallery Retrieved 14 July 2021 Arthure Humphrey n d Thornycroft Shipbuilding and Motor Works in Chiswick p 24 Arthure Humphrey March 1982 Life and Work in Old Chiswick Lyon David 1996 The First Destroyers pp 40 41 ISBN 1 84067 364 8 Clegg 1995 pp 87 88 a b Clegg 1995 pp 91 92 Clegg 1995 p 115 Hounslow 2018 p 20 Hounslow in London 3 North West by Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner Yale University Press 1981 p 394 Welcome Saint Mary s Convent Chiswick Retrieved 9 July 2021 Bott Val Wisdom James 1981 The White Swan Chiswick Brentford and Chiswick Local History Society Retrieved 21 July 2021 Sources editBolton Diane K Croot Patricia E C Hicks M A 1982 Chiswick Growth In T F T Baker C R Elrington eds A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 7 Acton Chiswick Ealing and Brentford West Twyford Willesden London British History Online pp 54 68 Clegg Gillian 1995 Chiswick Past Historical Publications ISBN 0 94866 733 8 Clegg Gillian 2021 Grand Houses Brentford amp Chiswick Local History Society Retrieved 3 June 2021 Cherry Bridget Pevsner Nikolaus 1991 The Buildings of England London 3 North West London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 071048 9 OCLC 24722942 Hounslow November 2018 OLD CHISWICK Conservation Area Appraisal Consultation Draft PDF London Borough of Hounslow Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Old Chiswick amp oldid 1206147820, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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