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Radlett

Radlett is a village in Hertfordshire, England, between Elstree and St Albans on Watling Street, with a population of 8,042.[1] It is in the council district of Hertsmere in the south of the county, and is covered by two wards; Aldenham East and Aldenham West. It is located inside the M25 motorway.

Radlett

Flint Cottages, Radlett
Radlett
Location within Hertfordshire
Population8,042 (2016 census)
OS grid referenceTQ165995
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townRADLETT
Postcode districtWD7
Dialling code01923
PoliceHertfordshire
FireHertfordshire
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Hertfordshire
51°41′06″N 0°19′05″W / 51.685°N 0.318°W / 51.685; -0.318Coordinates: 51°41′06″N 0°19′05″W / 51.685°N 0.318°W / 51.685; -0.318

Locality

Radlett lies in the valley of Tykes Water, a stream that runs north from Aldenham Reservoir to the River Colne. Now entirely surrounded by the Metropolitan Green Belt, it is subject to significant 'infill' development and there is pressure to relax the Green Belt restrictions.[2][3]

Radlett is located 14 miles (22.5 km) north west of the centre of London. It is one of the wealthiest places in Britain[4] and the second most expensive town to buy a house outside London.[5] The town contains many substantial detached houses with large gardens. In the older centre there are also a few streets with Victorian semi detached and terraced houses.

Watling Street, which is the main road through Radlett, has a wide variety of local shops and restaurants, as well as some national chain stores, a Post Office inside the local Budgens supermarket, and the Radlett Centre[6] with a 300-seat auditorium for various performances. Attached to the Radlett Centre is the local Public Library.

There are two public houses in Radlett: "The Red Lion" and “No.58”.

History

Pre-Roman period

Radlett is situated on the ancient Watling Street, one of the oldest trackways in Britain. Various archaeological finds of Mesolithic and Neolithic flints provide evidence that the Radlett area was inhabited in the Stone Age; the land was densely wooded and remained so until the Middle Ages. The Catuvellauni tribe settled in parts of Hertfordshire, near St Albans and Wheathamstead in about 80BC, although no trace of settlement has been found in or near Radlett itself. The name Radlett appears to come from the Old-English rad-gelaete meaning a junction of the roads and it is likely that the settlement grew at the point where the ancient route from Aldenham to Shenley crosses Watling Street.[7]

Roman period

During the Roman occupation of Verulamium, the area from Radlett to Brockley Hill was home to a number of major potteries, which supplied not only the Roman capital but other parts of the province.[8][9] One of these potteries is known to have existed on Loom Lane.[10] Roman-era clay pits are still in evidence at the southern end of the village, in the area around Cobden hill and Tabard RFC. In addition, there is evidence of a Roman villa with a bath building, barn and tile kiln dating from 2nd to 4th century AD, in the area of Netherwylde Farm.[11]

Post-Roman period

Wratten notes that the area was settled by the Saxons by the sixth century, with suggestions that a Saxon church was established on the site of Aldenham Church in King Offa's time. For most of recorded history, the land to the East of Watling Street was administered separately to that on the West.[12]

The Domesday survey of 1086 confirms that most of the land was in the possession of the Abbey of Westminster, though parts of Titeberst (land to the east of Watling Street) were claimed by St Albans. The two major tenants were listed as Geoffrey de Mandeville and Geoffrey de Bec and they leased part of their holdings to tenant farmers. The land was densely forested but was gradually cleared throughout the medieval period for agricultural use and the population lived in dispersed farm settlements adjacent to field strips or scattered around the periphery of common land which made up a substantial part of the southern and western area of the Parish.[13]

It is known that in the thirteenth century, gallows were erected jointly by the Abbots of Westminster and St Albans 'in a certain spot called Keneprowe' (now Kemp Row), for trials conducted at Aldenham.[12]

Radlett seems to have consisted of two farms: Darnells (first mentioned in 1358) and Gills Hill on the west side of Watling Street; and the estates of Aldenham Lodge, Newberries and Organ Hall on the east, plus Newlands (first recorded in 1291) and a few cottages. There are records of at least two other medieval moated homesteads within the Parish – Penne's Place and Kendals, but tantalisingly little physical evidence.[12]

The first recorded reference of Radlett comes from 1453 and it was usually spelt with one T until the mid-nineteenth century. With the dissolution of the monasteries in 1536, the disputes over land ownership in the Parish between St Albans Abbey and Westminster Abbey ceased to be viable and the land was sold to create revenue for the Crown.[14]

Modern period

In 1823 the town was the site of the Radlett murder, a notorious crime which became the subject of numerous books and stage plays. The victim, William Weare, was killed on Gills Hill Lane (subsequently popularly known as Murder Lane), with the site gaining such notoriety that it became a tourist attraction for some time.[12]

 
The modern ticket office at Radlett station, dating from the 1970s, contrasts with the ornate shelter above the cycle storage area.

In 1860 the Midland Railway was extended from Bedford into London and a station was built at Radlett connecting it with London.[citation needed] On 8 December 1865 the Ecclesiastical Parish of Radlett was created out of the eastern part of Aldenham and this marks the start of the modern history of the village. Development could only start when the landowners sold off their land for this purpose and this started in the final decade of the 19th century when land to the west of Watling Street was sold off. In 1910 the estate of Aldenham Lodge to the north of Shenley Hill was released for development and in 1935 the Newberries estate. Newberries mansion was demolished in the 1950s and Aldenham Lodge in 1964.

Handley Page Ltd opened a grass airfield just north of the town in 1929 for the production of aircraft. By 1939 Radlett Aerodrome was upgraded to have three hard runways for use in the production of Handley Page Hampden and Handley Page Halifax bombers during the Second World War. Post-war the airfield was used for production of Handley Page Hastings transport aircraft and Handley Page Hermes airliners. The SBAC held air shows here in 1946 and 1947 which subsequently moved to Farnborough. The Handley Page Victor bomber prototype was built here, with the main runway being extended in 1952 to allow flight testing, and there is now a road on this site named in its honour next to a DPD depot. Handley Page went bankrupt in 1969 and the airfield closed in 1970.[15]

The 1948 Olympic Marathon went through Radlett. It was an out-and-back course from the Empire Stadium, Wembley.[16]

In 1977 Eddie Kidd the stunt rider jumped over 14 London Double Decker buses at the former Radlett Aerodrome.[17]

The introduction of the Metropolitan Green Belt in the 1950s set a legal framework limiting further outward growth beyond the then existing limits of the village, and since then new development has been restricted to infilling within the built-up area. Despite this, many new houses continue to be built in former large gardens, and the population now stands at over 8,000.[citation needed]

 
Radlett fire station

In 2005, and 2006, there was a large campaign[18] in the village, and surrounding areas to save the Fire Station, which was opened 100 years ago.[citation needed] The campaign failed, and the station closed in October 2006. The campaign continued for a while after the closure, however the fire station has now been demolished.[19][20]

Transport

Radlett lies close to the M25 and M1 motorways and the A1 trunk road. There is a 24-hour metro-style commuter rail service on the Thameslink route that connects Radlett railway station to central London including St Pancras International taking from as little as 21 minutes, Farringdon (27 mins), City Thameslink and Blackfriars. From Radlett there are also direct train services to London Gatwick and London Luton airports, whilst London Heathrow is a thirty-minute drive away. Radlett is part of Transport for London's (TfL) Oyster card and contactless payment travel system.[21]

There are two main buses that run through Radlett, both operated by Uno. Route 602 runs roughly east–west connecting Watford, Radlett, St Albans and Hatfield and route 601 running roughly north–south connecting Hatfield, St Albans, Radlett and Borehamwood.[22]

Religion

2011 Census data

Radlett had an official Jewish population of 28.3 per cent,[23][24] a high proportion compared to the rest of England and Wales.

Area All people Christian (%) Buddhist (%) Hindu (%) Jewish (%) Muslim (%) Sikh (%) Other (%) No religion (%) Not stated (%)
England and Wales 56,075,912 58.87 0.45 1.52 0.49 5.05 0.79 0.43 25.24 7.17
Radlett 8,163 41.46 0.31 3.11 28.31 1.37 0.21 0.60 14.46 10.18

Places of worship

 
Radlett Reform Synagogue

There are four churches in Radlett: Christ Church, an Anglican church on Watling Street founded in 1864; St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in the Crosspath; St. John's Anglican church, a sister church of Christ Church, in Gills Hill Lane; and The United Free Church in Station Road. The United Free Church was formed by uniting the Methodist and United Reformed Churches in Radlett.

There are two synagogues: the Radlett United Synagogue which serves the Orthodox Jewish community, and the Radlett Reform Synagogue (formerly Radlett & Bushey Reform Synagogue) which serves the Reform Jewish community.

Education

There are twelve schools in Radlett, catering for children aged from 2 to 11 years old:

  • First Place Nursery: An independent school for 80 children aged from 3 months to 5 years old.
  • Rexton House Nursery: An independent nursery with 3 sites in the Radlett area. One site provides day care, and 2 just morning sessions from children age 2 years.
  • Bhaktivedanta Manor School. An independent primary school that promotes Vedic and Vaisnava culture for 21 children aged from 4 to 10. (Located in the nearby hamlet of Letchmore Heath.)
  • Edge Grove School: An independent day and boarding school for 333 children aged from 3 to 13½.
  • Fair Field Junior School: A state foundation school for 240 children aged from 7 to 11.
  • Hertsmere Jewish Primary School: A state voluntary aided school for 480 children aged from 3 to 11.
  • Newberries Primary School: A state funded school for 208 children aged from 4 to 11.
  • Radlett Lodge School: An independent special school for 55 children with autism aged from 4 to 19. Run by the National Autistic Society. Accommodation for 14 boarders.
  • Radlett Nursery and Infant School. An independent school for 122 children aged from 2 to 7 (closed and replaced by a day nursery in 2005).
  • Radlett Preparatory School. An independent school for 420 children aged from 4 to 11, founded in 1935. The school currently has 21 classes of average 60 children per year.
  • St John's Church of England Infant and Nursery School: A state controlled school for 224 children aged from 3 to 7. Which is linked to Fair Field Junior School.[25]

As there are no mainstream secondary schools in Radlett, from the age of 11 Radlett's children attend schools in towns in the surrounding area, mostly travelling by dedicated bus services.

Sport

Radlett has a football club (Belstone F.C.), that currently competes in the Herts Senior County League Premier Division.

 
Radlett Cricket Club

Cricket is played at Brunton Memorial Ground, which is the home ground of Radlett Cricket Club, and is also the venue for most Middlesex Second XI matches. It is now the training facility of Middlesex County Cricket Club and the ground hosted all their home Royal London Cup fixtures in 2019.[26]

Radlett is the home of Tabard RFC, who play in London North West 2. The club has senior men's and women's teams as well as junior and mini rugby sections. There are two full size pitches, one of which is floodlit, and subsidiary pitches for junior rugby.

Radlett Lawn Tennis & Squash Club is one of Hertfordshire's most successful and largest tennis and squash clubs with 11 tennis courts - eight of which are floodlit, and four glass back squash courts.[27]

Local groups and societies

Radlett has a number of very active local groups and societies. These include:[28]

  • Radlett Art Society
  • Radlett Choral Society
  • Radlett Horticultural Society
  • Radlett Light Opera Society (now Radlett Musical Theatre Company)
  • Radlett Music Club
  • Radlett Players (amateur dramatics) (now Radlett Theatre Company)
  • Radlett Rotary Club
  • Radlett U3A
  • The Radlett Society & Green Belt Association
  • 1st Radlett Scouts
  • 4th Radlett Scouts
  • Radlett District Girlguiding
  • Radlett and District Museum
  • RARE: Radlett Action for Racial Equality[29]

Twinning

Radlett is twinned with Louveciennes, France[30] and Lautertal, Germany.[31][32]

Notable people

Current:

Past:

References

  1. ^ "Radlett: Hertfordshire's most affluent town that's perfect for the rich and famous". HertsLive. 7 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Loosening the green belt will not end UK's housing woes | Letters". TheGuardian.com. 25 September 2017.
  3. ^ "Redefining the green belt to tackle the UK's housing crisis". 4 September 2018.
  4. ^ "Where Britain's wealthiest live". Financial Times. 10 May 2019.
  5. ^ "These are the most expensive places to buy in the UK". Rightmove. 14 June 2019.
  6. ^ "Radlett Centre". Radlett Centre. 18 March 2014. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  7. ^ "Radlett (South) Conservation Area Appraisal 2012" (PDF).
  8. ^ Branigan, Keith, 'The Catuvellauni' (Alan Sutton Publishing, 1985) p. 147
  9. ^ Castle, Stephen A., 'Roman Pottery from Radlett, 1959', Herts. Arch., iv (1976)
  10. ^ Page, William, "A Romano-British Kiln Discovered at Radlett" (PDF)., St. Albans and Herts Architectural and Archaeological Society 1900.
  11. ^ "Historic England Pastscape Monument record 362062".
  12. ^ a b c d Wratten, Donald (1997). The Book of Radlett and Aldenham (3rd ed.). Baron Birch.
  13. ^ "Radlett (South) Conservation Area Appraisal 2012, based on Wratten 1997" (PDF).
  14. ^ "Radlett (South) Conservation Area Appraisal 2012, citing Wratten" (PDF).
  15. ^ "Control Towers". Control Towers. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  16. ^ Course history 17 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Limited, Alamy. "Stock Photo - Apr. 08, 1978 - Eddie Kidd breaks world record motor cycle jump: Cockney stunt ace 18 year old Eddie Kidd, today broke the world record when he jumped over 14 double decker". Alamy. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  18. ^ "BBC - Beds Herts and Bucks - Read This - Radlett Fire Station: The battle continues". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  19. ^ "7,000 sign petition, Borehamwood Times". Borehamwoodtimes.co.uk. 31 May 2007. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  20. ^ "Number of house fires rise in Radlett following closure of fire station". Watford Observer. 28 October 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  21. ^ "Oyster card scheme extension agreed". BBC News. 30 November 2018.
  22. ^ "Timetables | Uno". www.unobus.info. Retrieved 5 March 2020.
  23. ^ "Aldenham West Demographics (Hertsmere, England)".
  24. ^ "Aldenham East Demographics (Hertsmere, England)".
  25. ^ . Schoolsfinder.direct.gov.uk. 15 October 2012. Archived from the original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  26. ^ "2020 Season Fixtures Are Out!".
  27. ^ "Radlett Lawn Tennis & Squash Club | Tennis & Squash Club". Rltsc.com. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  28. ^ "Directory". Aldenham Parish Council. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  29. ^ . radlettactionracialequality.org. 23 August 2020. Archived from the original on 1 November 2020.
  30. ^ Sylvain Brairait honoré Meersburg 5 novembre 2022
  31. ^ "Lautertal web site". Lautertal.de. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  32. ^ Archived copy 30 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ Binnie, Adam (4 January 2010). "EastEnder Lacey Turner has moved back in with her mum and dad in Radlett". Watford Observer. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  34. ^ Mulderrig, Amie (29 May 2012). "Almost half the houses in Radlett now worth £1 million or more". Borehamwood Times. Retrieved 20 November 2020.

External links

  Media related to Radlett at Wikimedia Commons

    radlett, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, 2007, le. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Radlett news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Radlett is a village in Hertfordshire England between Elstree and St Albans on Watling Street with a population of 8 042 1 It is in the council district of Hertsmere in the south of the county and is covered by two wards Aldenham East and Aldenham West It is located inside the M25 motorway RadlettFlint Cottages RadlettRadlettLocation within HertfordshirePopulation8 042 2016 census OS grid referenceTQ165995Civil parishAldenhamDistrictHertsmereShire countyHertfordshireRegionEastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townRADLETTPostcode districtWD7Dialling code01923PoliceHertfordshireFireHertfordshireAmbulanceEast of EnglandUK ParliamentHertsmereList of places UK England Hertfordshire 51 41 06 N 0 19 05 W 51 685 N 0 318 W 51 685 0 318 Coordinates 51 41 06 N 0 19 05 W 51 685 N 0 318 W 51 685 0 318 Contents 1 Locality 2 History 2 1 Pre Roman period 2 2 Roman period 2 3 Post Roman period 2 4 Modern period 3 Transport 4 Religion 4 1 2011 Census data 4 2 Places of worship 5 Education 6 Sport 7 Local groups and societies 8 Twinning 9 Notable people 10 References 11 External linksLocality EditRadlett lies in the valley of Tykes Water a stream that runs north from Aldenham Reservoir to the River Colne Now entirely surrounded by the Metropolitan Green Belt it is subject to significant infill development and there is pressure to relax the Green Belt restrictions 2 3 Radlett is located 14 miles 22 5 km north west of the centre of London It is one of the wealthiest places in Britain 4 and the second most expensive town to buy a house outside London 5 The town contains many substantial detached houses with large gardens In the older centre there are also a few streets with Victorian semi detached and terraced houses Watling Street which is the main road through Radlett has a wide variety of local shops and restaurants as well as some national chain stores a Post Office inside the local Budgens supermarket and the Radlett Centre 6 with a 300 seat auditorium for various performances Attached to the Radlett Centre is the local Public Library There are two public houses in Radlett The Red Lion and No 58 History EditPre Roman period Edit Radlett is situated on the ancient Watling Street one of the oldest trackways in Britain Various archaeological finds of Mesolithic and Neolithic flints provide evidence that the Radlett area was inhabited in the Stone Age the land was densely wooded and remained so until the Middle Ages The Catuvellauni tribe settled in parts of Hertfordshire near St Albans and Wheathamstead in about 80BC although no trace of settlement has been found in or near Radlett itself The name Radlett appears to come from the Old English rad gelaete meaning a junction of the roads and it is likely that the settlement grew at the point where the ancient route from Aldenham to Shenley crosses Watling Street 7 Roman period Edit During the Roman occupation of Verulamium the area from Radlett to Brockley Hill was home to a number of major potteries which supplied not only the Roman capital but other parts of the province 8 9 One of these potteries is known to have existed on Loom Lane 10 Roman era clay pits are still in evidence at the southern end of the village in the area around Cobden hill and Tabard RFC In addition there is evidence of a Roman villa with a bath building barn and tile kiln dating from 2nd to 4th century AD in the area of Netherwylde Farm 11 Post Roman period Edit Wratten notes that the area was settled by the Saxons by the sixth century with suggestions that a Saxon church was established on the site of Aldenham Church in King Offa s time For most of recorded history the land to the East of Watling Street was administered separately to that on the West 12 The Domesday survey of 1086 confirms that most of the land was in the possession of the Abbey of Westminster though parts of Titeberst land to the east of Watling Street were claimed by St Albans The two major tenants were listed as Geoffrey de Mandeville and Geoffrey de Bec and they leased part of their holdings to tenant farmers The land was densely forested but was gradually cleared throughout the medieval period for agricultural use and the population lived in dispersed farm settlements adjacent to field strips or scattered around the periphery of common land which made up a substantial part of the southern and western area of the Parish 13 It is known that in the thirteenth century gallows were erected jointly by the Abbots of Westminster and St Albans in a certain spot called Keneprowe now Kemp Row for trials conducted at Aldenham 12 Radlett seems to have consisted of two farms Darnells first mentioned in 1358 and Gills Hill on the west side of Watling Street and the estates of Aldenham Lodge Newberries and Organ Hall on the east plus Newlands first recorded in 1291 and a few cottages There are records of at least two other medieval moated homesteads within the Parish Penne s Place and Kendals but tantalisingly little physical evidence 12 The first recorded reference of Radlett comes from 1453 and it was usually spelt with one T until the mid nineteenth century With the dissolution of the monasteries in 1536 the disputes over land ownership in the Parish between St Albans Abbey and Westminster Abbey ceased to be viable and the land was sold to create revenue for the Crown 14 Modern period Edit In 1823 the town was the site of the Radlett murder a notorious crime which became the subject of numerous books and stage plays The victim William Weare was killed on Gills Hill Lane subsequently popularly known as Murder Lane with the site gaining such notoriety that it became a tourist attraction for some time 12 The modern ticket office at Radlett station dating from the 1970s contrasts with the ornate shelter above the cycle storage area In 1860 the Midland Railway was extended from Bedford into London and a station was built at Radlett connecting it with London citation needed On 8 December 1865 the Ecclesiastical Parish of Radlett was created out of the eastern part of Aldenham and this marks the start of the modern history of the village Development could only start when the landowners sold off their land for this purpose and this started in the final decade of the 19th century when land to the west of Watling Street was sold off In 1910 the estate of Aldenham Lodge to the north of Shenley Hill was released for development and in 1935 the Newberries estate Newberries mansion was demolished in the 1950s and Aldenham Lodge in 1964 Handley Page Ltd opened a grass airfield just north of the town in 1929 for the production of aircraft By 1939 Radlett Aerodrome was upgraded to have three hard runways for use in the production of Handley Page Hampden and Handley Page Halifax bombers during the Second World War Post war the airfield was used for production of Handley Page Hastings transport aircraft and Handley Page Hermes airliners The SBAC held air shows here in 1946 and 1947 which subsequently moved to Farnborough The Handley Page Victor bomber prototype was built here with the main runway being extended in 1952 to allow flight testing and there is now a road on this site named in its honour next to a DPD depot Handley Page went bankrupt in 1969 and the airfield closed in 1970 15 The 1948 Olympic Marathon went through Radlett It was an out and back course from the Empire Stadium Wembley 16 In 1977 Eddie Kidd the stunt rider jumped over 14 London Double Decker buses at the former Radlett Aerodrome 17 The introduction of the Metropolitan Green Belt in the 1950s set a legal framework limiting further outward growth beyond the then existing limits of the village and since then new development has been restricted to infilling within the built up area Despite this many new houses continue to be built in former large gardens and the population now stands at over 8 000 citation needed Radlett fire station In 2005 and 2006 there was a large campaign 18 in the village and surrounding areas to save the Fire Station which was opened 100 years ago citation needed The campaign failed and the station closed in October 2006 The campaign continued for a while after the closure however the fire station has now been demolished 19 20 Transport EditRadlett lies close to the M25 and M1 motorways and the A1 trunk road There is a 24 hour metro style commuter rail service on the Thameslink route that connects Radlett railway station to central London including St Pancras International taking from as little as 21 minutes Farringdon 27 mins City Thameslink and Blackfriars From Radlett there are also direct train services to London Gatwick and London Luton airports whilst London Heathrow is a thirty minute drive away Radlett is part of Transport for London s TfL Oyster card and contactless payment travel system 21 There are two main buses that run through Radlett both operated by Uno Route 602 runs roughly east west connecting Watford Radlett St Albans and Hatfield and route 601 running roughly north south connecting Hatfield St Albans Radlett and Borehamwood 22 Religion Edit2011 Census data Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Radlett had an official Jewish population of 28 3 per cent 23 24 a high proportion compared to the rest of England and Wales Area All people Christian Buddhist Hindu Jewish Muslim Sikh Other No religion Not stated England and Wales 56 075 912 58 87 0 45 1 52 0 49 5 05 0 79 0 43 25 24 7 17Radlett 8 163 41 46 0 31 3 11 28 31 1 37 0 21 0 60 14 46 10 18Places of worship Edit Radlett Reform Synagogue There are four churches in Radlett Christ Church an Anglican church on Watling Street founded in 1864 St Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in the Crosspath St John s Anglican church a sister church of Christ Church in Gills Hill Lane and The United Free Church in Station Road The United Free Church was formed by uniting the Methodist and United Reformed Churches in Radlett There are two synagogues the Radlett United Synagogue which serves the Orthodox Jewish community and the Radlett Reform Synagogue formerly Radlett amp Bushey Reform Synagogue which serves the Reform Jewish community Education EditSee also List of schools in Hertfordshire There are twelve schools in Radlett catering for children aged from 2 to 11 years old First Place Nursery An independent school for 80 children aged from 3 months to 5 years old Rexton House Nursery An independent nursery with 3 sites in the Radlett area One site provides day care and 2 just morning sessions from children age 2 years Bhaktivedanta Manor School An independent primary school that promotes Vedic and Vaisnava culture for 21 children aged from 4 to 10 Located in the nearby hamlet of Letchmore Heath Edge Grove School An independent day and boarding school for 333 children aged from 3 to 13 Fair Field Junior School A state foundation school for 240 children aged from 7 to 11 Hertsmere Jewish Primary School A state voluntary aided school for 480 children aged from 3 to 11 Newberries Primary School A state funded school for 208 children aged from 4 to 11 Radlett Lodge School An independent special school for 55 children with autism aged from 4 to 19 Run by the National Autistic Society Accommodation for 14 boarders Radlett Nursery and Infant School An independent school for 122 children aged from 2 to 7 closed and replaced by a day nursery in 2005 Radlett Preparatory School An independent school for 420 children aged from 4 to 11 founded in 1935 The school currently has 21 classes of average 60 children per year St John s Church of England Infant and Nursery School A state controlled school for 224 children aged from 3 to 7 Which is linked to Fair Field Junior School 25 As there are no mainstream secondary schools in Radlett from the age of 11 Radlett s children attend schools in towns in the surrounding area mostly travelling by dedicated bus services Sport EditRadlett has a football club Belstone F C that currently competes in the Herts Senior County League Premier Division Radlett Cricket Club Cricket is played at Brunton Memorial Ground which is the home ground of Radlett Cricket Club and is also the venue for most Middlesex Second XI matches It is now the training facility of Middlesex County Cricket Club and the ground hosted all their home Royal London Cup fixtures in 2019 26 Radlett is the home of Tabard RFC who play in London North West 2 The club has senior men s and women s teams as well as junior and mini rugby sections There are two full size pitches one of which is floodlit and subsidiary pitches for junior rugby Radlett Lawn Tennis amp Squash Club is one of Hertfordshire s most successful and largest tennis and squash clubs with 11 tennis courts eight of which are floodlit and four glass back squash courts 27 Local groups and societies EditRadlett has a number of very active local groups and societies These include 28 Radlett Art Society Radlett Choral Society Radlett Horticultural Society Radlett Light Opera Society now Radlett Musical Theatre Company Radlett Music Club Radlett Players amateur dramatics now Radlett Theatre Company Radlett Rotary Club Radlett U3A The Radlett Society amp Green Belt Association 1st Radlett Scouts 4th Radlett Scouts Radlett District Girlguiding Radlett and District Museum RARE Radlett Action for Racial Equality 29 Twinning EditRadlett is twinned with Louveciennes France 30 and Lautertal Germany 31 32 Notable people EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Current Jeff Wayne Composer of Jeff Wayne s Musical Version of The War Of The Worlds Brian Bennett and Hank Marvin of The Shadows Alexander S Bermange composer and lyricist Ted Childs the television producer screenwriter and director whose works include The Sweeney Kavanagh QC Soldier Soldier Making Waves Inspector Morse and its spin off Lewis Pam St Clement actress Lacey Turner EastEnders actress 33 Past Alan Bush British composer pianist and conductor Professor of Composition at the Royal Academy of Music from 1925 to 1978 Richard Baker former BBC newsreader Emile Cammaerts Belgian playwright poet including war poet and author who wrote primarily in English and French Simon Cowell English film record and television producer Alan Hawkshaw music composer and record producer Kirsty Hawkshaw singer and songwriter Rosalind Hill historian Duncan James Blue singer Lauren former Arsenal footballer George Michael spent much of his teen years living with his parents on Oakridge Avenue Michael Michael Britain s biggest criminal supergrass Barry Morgan drummer with the band Blue Mink lived in the Avenue Alison Moyet singer songwriter and performer John Rostill bass guitarist with The Shadows Alex Song former Arsenal footballer 34 Kolo Toure former Liverpool footballer Sir John Vane Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1982 Lived in The Grove Dennis Wise former Chelsea footballer David Ospina Arsenal goalkeeper Harry Winks Tottenham Hotspur F C midfielderReferences Edit Radlett Hertfordshire s most affluent town that s perfect for the rich and famous HertsLive 7 November 2021 Loosening the green belt will not end UK s housing woes Letters TheGuardian com 25 September 2017 Redefining the green belt to tackle the UK s housing crisis 4 September 2018 Where Britain s wealthiest live Financial Times 10 May 2019 These are the most expensive places to buy in the UK Rightmove 14 June 2019 Radlett Centre Radlett Centre 18 March 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2014 Radlett South Conservation Area Appraisal 2012 PDF Branigan Keith The Catuvellauni Alan Sutton Publishing 1985 p 147 Castle Stephen A Roman Pottery from Radlett 1959 Herts Arch iv 1976 Page William A Romano British Kiln Discovered at Radlett PDF St Albans and Herts Architectural and Archaeological Society 1900 Historic England Pastscape Monument record 362062 a b c d Wratten Donald 1997 The Book of Radlett and Aldenham 3rd ed Baron Birch Radlett South Conservation Area Appraisal 2012 based on Wratten 1997 PDF Radlett South Conservation Area Appraisal 2012 citing Wratten PDF Control Towers Control Towers Retrieved 22 March 2014 Course history Archived 17 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Limited Alamy Stock Photo Apr 08 1978 Eddie Kidd breaks world record motor cycle jump Cockney stunt ace 18 year old Eddie Kidd today broke the world record when he jumped over 14 double decker Alamy Retrieved 4 March 2020 BBC Beds Herts and Bucks Read This Radlett Fire Station The battle continues www bbc co uk Retrieved 4 March 2020 7 000 sign petition Borehamwood Times Borehamwoodtimes co uk 31 May 2007 Retrieved 22 March 2014 Number of house fires rise in Radlett following closure of fire station Watford Observer 28 October 2009 Retrieved 22 March 2014 Oyster card scheme extension agreed BBC News 30 November 2018 Timetables Uno www unobus info Retrieved 5 March 2020 Aldenham West Demographics Hertsmere England Aldenham East Demographics Hertsmere England School profile Schoolsfinder direct gov uk 15 October 2012 Archived from the original on 22 March 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2014 2020 Season Fixtures Are Out Radlett Lawn Tennis amp Squash Club Tennis amp Squash Club Rltsc com Retrieved 27 January 2023 Directory Aldenham Parish Council Retrieved 28 March 2019 Radlett Action for Racial Equality radlettactionracialequality org 23 August 2020 Archived from the original on 1 November 2020 Sylvain Brairait honore Meersburg 5 novembre 2022 Lautertal web site Lautertal de Retrieved 22 March 2014 Archived copy Archived 30 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Binnie Adam 4 January 2010 EastEnder Lacey Turner has moved back in with her mum and dad in Radlett Watford Observer Retrieved 4 January 2010 Mulderrig Amie 29 May 2012 Almost half the houses in Radlett now worth 1 million or more Borehamwood Times Retrieved 20 November 2020 External links Edit Media related to Radlett at Wikimedia Commons Aldenham Parish Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Radlett amp oldid 1135910216, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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