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Slade Green

Slade Green is an area of South East London, England, within the London Borough of Bexley. It lies northeast of Bexleyheath, northwest of Dartford and south of Erith, and 14 miles (23 km) east-southeast of Charing Cross.

Slade Green
Slade Green
Location within Greater London
OS grid referenceTQ5376
• Charing Cross14 mi (23 km) WNW
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townERITH
Postcode districtDA8
Dialling code01322
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°28′05″N 0°11′20″E / 51.468°N 0.189°E / 51.468; 0.189

Historically Slade Green was part of the county of Kent. In 1965 it became part of the new ceremonial county of Greater London.

History and development edit

Etymology edit

An Anglo-Saxon dictionary asserts that "Slade" most commonly meant a broad strip of grass-covered land.[1] The London Borough of Bexley suggests the current name most likely derives from Saxon "Slade", with their definition being low-lying ground. An alternative is the Viking "Slad", meaning a place for launching boats. Most sources agree that "Green" was added to reflect the deep colour of the grass-covered ground.[2] Sources differ on when Slade Green was first mentioned with one suggesting the 16th Century.[3]

Prehistory edit

Collectors such as Flaxman Charles John Spurrell discovered diverse palaeolithic fossils around Slade Green, along with flint artefacts that provide evidence of prehistoric human habitation.[4] Pre-war maps indicate a barrow stood near the current Hazel Drive children's play area,[5] and the Museum of London Archaeological Service revealed the presence of a prehistoric cookery pit at Hollywood Way.[6]

Medieval edit

Some sources claim the area is recorded in the Domesday book as Hov, and others suggest this was Hou (later Howbury).[3][7] An early translation states that Howbury was a hamlet on the bank of River Darent, which is approximately 1 km east of the small Slade Green hamlet recorded by 19th Century geographers.[8][9] According to Bexley borough council, this medieval hamlet was held by Askell.[10] Askell the Priest from Abingdon Abbey held estates in various parts of England and bequeathed titles to Hugh d'Avranches, Earl of Chester.[11][12][13]

A moated seigneurial residence was built much closer Slade Green in the High Middle Ages, with its country house completed during the English Renaissance, and these structures were named Howbury Manor.[14][15][3] An adjacent tithe barn, with 17th Century styling, has not been accurately dated.[16] Surrounding green belt marshes contain willows thought to have been planted over 300 years ago to shelter livestock.[17]

See also History of Kent and Kingdom of Kent

Victorian edit

The communities of North End and Slades Green[18] (formerly Slads Green[19]) had remained disjointed throughout the agricultural revolution. Samuel Lewis' 1848 “A Topographical Dictionary of England” states that Slades Green was the smaller hamlet with 66 people.[20][21] While judicial, political and cultural boundaries are continually revised to address various concerns, the tracks of the North Kent Line have been the immovable border between North End and Slade Green since circa 1849.[22][9]

Evidence suggests the region remained sparsely populated yet highly productive throughout the industrial revolution. The 1869-1882 Ordnance Survey recorded a particularly large “Sladesgreen Farm” with its south-west corner occupied by “The Corner Pin” beerhouse.[9][23] The pub was demolished and rebuilt in 1958.[5] The surrounding area was affectionately known locally as “Cabbage Island” in reference to the market gardens located between Moat Lane (formerly Whitehall Lane) and Slade Green Road (formerly Slade Green Lane).[24][25][26] Victorian photographic evidence captures the high crop yield of these agricultural gardens at Slade Green.[27] Historic maps also chronicle an increasing number of clay pits along the railway on the North End side of the tracks.[9] Marshes are a natural source of clays and brick earths, and local firms produced large numbers of London stock bricks throughout the 19th Century. “Furner of Slade Green“ operated the North End brickworks from 1867 to 1911.[28][29] Slade Green gained a National School in 1868,[30] and became a village when St. Augustine's Church opened in 1899.

The isolated Crayford Marshes, which could support barges along the Rivers Thames and Darent, were seen as an ideal location for the 40 acre ammunition works that may have operated from 1879 to 1962.[31][32] Noted mechanical engineer, Hugh Ticehurst MBE, worked at the site from 1893 to 1930.[33] A comparison of historic and contemporary maps confirms that the boundaries of the Victorian site outline the current Darent Industrial Estate or Crayford Ness Industrial Area.[34][35][36][37]

Edwardian edit

Rapid expansion followed the construction of a major rail depot designed to service 100 steam locomotives for South Eastern and Chatham Railway.[22][26] A small station was added to serve the depot and community on 1 July 1900 (its name changed from Slades Green station to Slade Green station in 1953),[18] and by 1910 the complete 'railway village' of 158 houses had been built.[26] It follows that today's much larger and more densely populated Slade Green could be described as a railway town.

By 1902 the secure Thames Munition Works was operated by Armstrong Whitworth and equipped with a Thames pier connected to an internal railway.[38][39]

Bexley borough's archived photos suggest the significance of the village had increased by 1905 and that it had absorbed historically important Howbury Manor.[40][41]

First World War edit

NTWFF Erith, a National Trench Warfare Filling Factory, was constructed next to the larger Thames Munition Works in 1915.[42] For a short time a mortar filling station was connected to Slade Green station by the 1½ mile “Trench Warfare Light Railway”.[43][5][44]

Miss Mary Edith Sheffield, identified only as a superintendent at the Thames Ammunition Works in the Crayford Marshes adjacent to Slade Green, was awarded MBE in King George V's 1918 Birthday Honours.[45]

Interwar edit

Slade Green endured a national tragedy.[46] En-masse explosions at a former Trench Warfare Filling Factory operated by Messrs. W.V. Gilbert, a contractor to the Disposal and Liquidation Commission, caused blinding flashes and the death of 13 workers— 12 teenage girls and one man who was their foreman— on 18 February 1924.[47][48][49][50] The W.V. Gilbert factory was near to or adjoining Thames Munition Works.[51][52] The parliamentary debate that followed showed that the contract did not require a Fair Wages Clause, and was exempt from the provisions of the Explosives Act of 1875.[53] A prominent mass grave at Northumberland Heath stands in memory of the victims.[54]

Development may have stagnated in the interwar years. Records show a Baptist Church was built on Elm road in the early 1930s, and Anti-Aircraft defences were constructed on the edge of Slade Green in the late 1930s.[5][55]

Variant spelling persisted as evidenced by Parliament recording "Slade Green" in 1924 and at least one chartered geographer recording "Slades Green" in 1933.[53][56] Thames Munition Works Ltd. became part of the Vickers-Armstrongs conglomerate in 1927.

Second World War edit

Throughout Second World War the marshes were used for the 4.5-inch HAA (Heavy Anti-Aircraft) Guns of the 6th Anti-Aircraft Division, corresponding with No. 11 Group RAF. The 4th Home Counties Brigade (Kent) formed from volunteers in the surrounding area in 1908, deployed overseas, and manned London's air defences at Slade Green in 1941. The disused command post and circular battery ramparts remain in the marshes between Slade Green and the former munition works. Slade Green was subject to a series of air raids, notably the night of 16 April 1941 when incendiary raids caused many fires and explosions capable of levelling the area; these threats were contained by the brave intervention of residents resulting in the award of three British Empire Medals and a George Medal.[57][58] The Museum of London states that Howbury Manor House, pictured within the moated medieval walls, was bombed during an air raid and then demolished.[59] RAF campaign diaries show Thames Ammunition Works was hit on 12 October 1940.[60] During the war the community was served by a British Restaurant operating from St. Augustine's Church Hall, which supplied up to 250 lunches six days a week to residents, the school, and nearby factories.[58]

Postwar edit

Aerial photographs taken during the North Sea flood of 1953 show the Thames Munition Works.[61][62][63] Explosives operations ended in the 1960s, and Bexley borough council gave planning permission for an industrial estate on the site in the 1970s.[64]

Slade Green emerged as a London suburb in the post-war era following the construction of at least 1050 new dwellings, and a road bridge spanning the North Kent Line.[5][65][66][67]

Notable buildings and structures edit

The Scheduled Ancient Monument known as Howbury Moat or Howbury Manor (c.900), and a Grade II Listed Tithe Barn (c.1600s), are located between Slade Green and Crayford Marshes.[37] According to Historic England, the interior of the medieval moated site includes a 16th or 17th century country house, with some significant surviving architectural details, and it appears to the Secretary of State to be of national importance.[15] Holders of the Manor of Howbury included Bishop Odo, Roger Apylton (aka Appleton) and Sir Cloudesley Shovell.[58] After Apylton had May Place built in Crayford, occupants of the moated site were tenant farmers, and after the building of a new house (Howbury Grange) for the tenant farmer in 1882, by farm labourers, until the building was condemned in 1934.[58] Photographic evidence from 1935 provides a glimpse of Howbury Manor House, which was bombed and demolished during WW2.[59][68] In 2006 the medieval moat site was the subject of an English Heritage sponsored research project by the University of Oxford's Geography Department into techniques of Soft Wall Capping for preservation purposes.[69][70]

Following an investigation by English Heritage, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport listed the Second World War anti-aircraft batteries in Slade Green's London artillery zone.[71][55]

Locally listed buildings are the former Railway Tavern, the Grange and Cottages at Howbury farm, and train sheds with works.[72] Oak Road is a conservation area with Railway workers' cottages dating to 1900.[73] The former Railway Tavern (1a Moat Lane), built by Smith & Sons of South Norwood around 1899, was notable for being illuminated by electricity.[26][74]

St. Augustine's Church was built in 1899 and extended in 1911. Substantial rebuilding was required following a direct hit during a Second World War air raid in 1944, and following a fire in 1991 that destroyed the roof along with much of the internal fabric.[58]

Present and future edit

Social edit

In 2013 the Communities Secretary recognised the endurance of historic county borders. Slade Green is in the historic county of, but not the non-metropolitan administrative county of Kent.

The Howbury Centre was replaced with a new in 2014, which hosts the public library and many social activities.[75][76]

Churches include a Baptist Union Christian Fellowship, and St Augustine's Anglican parish church; a third Pentecostal church meets in the Anglican church hall.

There are two pubs, and other bars at the Slade Green Railway Club and Erith Yacht Club. The latter relocated from Erith to a site on the edge of Slade Green in 1900.[77] Slade Green F.C. last competed in 2009.

Environment edit

The adjacent Crayford Marshes have been recognised as ecologically significant since circa 1980 and are now designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest.[74] The area is popular with bird watchers and video footage shows breeding seals on the waterfront.[78][79] Bexley borough council has discussed intentions to meet the needs of residents as well as the needs of protected amphibians and reptiles.[80] The site of listed HAA batteries is managed by the London Wildlife Trust.[71]

Development edit

Slade Green is identified in the London Plan as being part of Bexley Riverside and has continued as a target for urban regeneration since at least 2011.[74] Current applications include converting rail-side scrubland into modern housing.[81]

Nature conservation at Crayford Ness requires Bexley council to normally resist developments that increase lorry traffic around Slade Green.[82] The town is increasingly a mix of privately owned residential properties benefiting from short commuting times to the City of London.[83] Local industry is confined to the site of the old works and areas adjacent to the large railway carriage depot.

Various types of investors are attracted to Slade Green's unique combination of strategic rail infrastructure and close proximity to national road network via the M25 at the Dartford Crossing. Some commercial developments immediately outside Slade Green are influenced by London Assembly's Bexley Riverside Opportunity and Intensification Area.

Local governance edit

Slade Green is in the electoral ward of North End in the UK Parliament constituency of Bexleyheath and Crayford. Slade Green is represented at the London Assembly by Bexley and Bromley.[84]

Slade Green was part of Dartford Rural District in Kent, as created by the Local Government Act 1894.[85][86] In 1920 the area became part of the Crayford Urban District of Kent.[87][88] In 1965, under the London Government Act 1963, the Crayford Urban District was abolished and its area became part of the present-day London Borough of Bexley in Greater London.[89]

Education edit

Primary edit

Slade Green contains one of two campuses in Haberdashers' Crayford Temple Grove Primary, which is part of Haberdashers' Crayford Academy.[90] Ofsted's report shows the larger Crayford Academy is a good school, with an increasing number of students at Slade Green making good progress.[91] The nearest faith schools for this age group are operated by Trinitas Academy Trust. These primary schools include Christ Church (CofE), which Ofsted reports as outstanding,[92] and St. Paul's (CofE) that has yet to be inspected.[93]

Secondary edit

Slade Green Secondary School, later known as Howbury Grange, closed in 1992 [94] and Bexley Council's Secondary Pupil Referral Unit closed in 2008. The nearest secondary schools are Haberdashers' Crayford Academy, Leigh Academy Bexley, Dartford Grammar School, and Dartford Grammar School for Girls.

Places of worship edit

  • St. Augustine's Church (Anglican)
  • Slade Green Christian Fellowship (Baptist)

Geography edit

Transport edit

Road edit

Slade Green adjoins the main A206 dual carriageway, which follows the River Thames to Greenwich passing near the Blackwall Tunnel. Another efficient route to inner London is the A2 road via Crayford and Hall Place. In the opposite direction, the A206 road terminates near Bluewater after feeding Junction 1A of the M25 motorway.

Rail edit

Slade Green railway station provides the area with National Rail services to Luton via Woolwich Arsenal and London Blackfriars, London Charing Cross via Woolwich Arsenal and Lewisham, London Cannon Street via Woolwich Arsenal, London Cannon Street via Bexleyheath , London Cannon Street via Sidcup, Dartford and Rainham.

Bus edit

Slade Green is served by London Buses routes 89, 99, 428 and N89. These connect Slade Green with areas including Bexleyheath, Blackheath, Bluewater, Crayford, Dartford, Erith, Lewisham, Sidcup, Welling and Woolwich.

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slade, green, area, south, east, london, england, within, london, borough, bexley, lies, northeast, bexleyheath, northwest, dartford, south, erith, miles, east, southeast, charing, cross, location, within, greater, londonos, grid, referencetq5376, charing, cro. Slade Green is an area of South East London England within the London Borough of Bexley It lies northeast of Bexleyheath northwest of Dartford and south of Erith and 14 miles 23 km east southeast of Charing Cross Slade GreenSlade GreenLocation within Greater LondonOS grid referenceTQ5376 Charing Cross14 mi 23 km WNWLondon boroughBexleyCeremonial countyGreater LondonRegionLondonCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townERITHPostcode districtDA8Dialling code01322PoliceMetropolitanFireLondonAmbulanceLondonUK ParliamentBexleyheath and CrayfordLondon AssemblyBexley and BromleyList of places UK England London 51 28 05 N 0 11 20 E 51 468 N 0 189 E 51 468 0 189Historically Slade Green was part of the county of Kent In 1965 it became part of the new ceremonial county of Greater London Contents 1 History and development 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Prehistory 1 3 Medieval 1 4 Victorian 1 5 Edwardian 1 6 First World War 1 7 Interwar 1 8 Second World War 1 9 Postwar 1 10 Notable buildings and structures 2 Present and future 2 1 Social 2 2 Environment 2 3 Development 3 Local governance 4 Education 4 1 Primary 4 2 Secondary 5 Places of worship 6 Geography 7 Transport 7 1 Road 7 2 Rail 7 3 Bus 8 ReferencesHistory and development editEtymology edit An Anglo Saxon dictionary asserts that Slade most commonly meant a broad strip of grass covered land 1 The London Borough of Bexley suggests the current name most likely derives from Saxon Slade with their definition being low lying ground An alternative is the Viking Slad meaning a place for launching boats Most sources agree that Green was added to reflect the deep colour of the grass covered ground 2 Sources differ on when Slade Green was first mentioned with one suggesting the 16th Century 3 Prehistory edit Collectors such as Flaxman Charles John Spurrell discovered diverse palaeolithic fossils around Slade Green along with flint artefacts that provide evidence of prehistoric human habitation 4 Pre war maps indicate a barrow stood near the current Hazel Drive children s play area 5 and the Museum of London Archaeological Service revealed the presence of a prehistoric cookery pit at Hollywood Way 6 Medieval edit Some sources claim the area is recorded in the Domesday book as Hov and others suggest this was Hou later Howbury 3 7 An early translation states that Howbury was a hamlet on the bank of River Darent which is approximately 1 km east of the small Slade Green hamlet recorded by 19th Century geographers 8 9 According to Bexley borough council this medieval hamlet was held by Askell 10 Askell the Priest from Abingdon Abbey held estates in various parts of England and bequeathed titles to Hugh d Avranches Earl of Chester 11 12 13 A moated seigneurial residence was built much closer Slade Green in the High Middle Ages with its country house completed during the English Renaissance and these structures were named Howbury Manor 14 15 3 An adjacent tithe barn with 17th Century styling has not been accurately dated 16 Surrounding green belt marshes contain willows thought to have been planted over 300 years ago to shelter livestock 17 See also History of Kent and Kingdom of KentVictorian edit The communities of North End and Slades Green 18 formerly Slads Green 19 had remained disjointed throughout the agricultural revolution Samuel Lewis 1848 A Topographical Dictionary of England states that Slades Green was the smaller hamlet with 66 people 20 21 While judicial political and cultural boundaries are continually revised to address various concerns the tracks of the North Kent Line have been the immovable border between North End and Slade Green since circa 1849 22 9 Evidence suggests the region remained sparsely populated yet highly productive throughout the industrial revolution The 1869 1882 Ordnance Survey recorded a particularly large Sladesgreen Farm with its south west corner occupied by The Corner Pin beerhouse 9 23 The pub was demolished and rebuilt in 1958 5 The surrounding area was affectionately known locally as Cabbage Island in reference to the market gardens located between Moat Lane formerly Whitehall Lane and Slade Green Road formerly Slade Green Lane 24 25 26 Victorian photographic evidence captures the high crop yield of these agricultural gardens at Slade Green 27 Historic maps also chronicle an increasing number of clay pits along the railway on the North End side of the tracks 9 Marshes are a natural source of clays and brick earths and local firms produced large numbers of London stock bricks throughout the 19th Century Furner of Slade Green operated the North End brickworks from 1867 to 1911 28 29 Slade Green gained a National School in 1868 30 and became a village when St Augustine s Church opened in 1899 The isolated Crayford Marshes which could support barges along the Rivers Thames and Darent were seen as an ideal location for the 40 acre ammunition works that may have operated from 1879 to 1962 31 32 Noted mechanical engineer Hugh Ticehurst MBE worked at the site from 1893 to 1930 33 A comparison of historic and contemporary maps confirms that the boundaries of the Victorian site outline the current Darent Industrial Estate or Crayford Ness Industrial Area 34 35 36 37 Edwardian edit Rapid expansion followed the construction of a major rail depot designed to service 100 steam locomotives for South Eastern and Chatham Railway 22 26 A small station was added to serve the depot and community on 1 July 1900 its name changed from Slades Green station to Slade Green station in 1953 18 and by 1910 the complete railway village of 158 houses had been built 26 It follows that today s much larger and more densely populated Slade Green could be described as a railway town By 1902 the secure Thames Munition Works was operated by Armstrong Whitworth and equipped with a Thames pier connected to an internal railway 38 39 Bexley borough s archived photos suggest the significance of the village had increased by 1905 and that it had absorbed historically important Howbury Manor 40 41 First World War edit NTWFF Erith a National Trench Warfare Filling Factory was constructed next to the larger Thames Munition Works in 1915 42 For a short time a mortar filling station was connected to Slade Green station by the 1 mile Trench Warfare Light Railway 43 5 44 Miss Mary Edith Sheffield identified only as a superintendent at the Thames Ammunition Works in the Crayford Marshes adjacent to Slade Green was awarded MBE in King George V s 1918 Birthday Honours 45 Interwar edit Slade Green endured a national tragedy 46 En masse explosions at a former Trench Warfare Filling Factory operated by Messrs W V Gilbert a contractor to the Disposal and Liquidation Commission caused blinding flashes and the death of 13 workers 12 teenage girls and one man who was their foreman on 18 February 1924 47 48 49 50 The W V Gilbert factory was near to or adjoining Thames Munition Works 51 52 The parliamentary debate that followed showed that the contract did not require a Fair Wages Clause and was exempt from the provisions of the Explosives Act of 1875 53 A prominent mass grave at Northumberland Heath stands in memory of the victims 54 Development may have stagnated in the interwar years Records show a Baptist Church was built on Elm road in the early 1930s and Anti Aircraft defences were constructed on the edge of Slade Green in the late 1930s 5 55 Variant spelling persisted as evidenced by Parliament recording Slade Green in 1924 and at least one chartered geographer recording Slades Green in 1933 53 56 Thames Munition Works Ltd became part of the Vickers Armstrongs conglomerate in 1927 Second World War edit Throughout Second World War the marshes were used for the 4 5 inch HAA Heavy Anti Aircraft Guns of the 6th Anti Aircraft Division corresponding with No 11 Group RAF The 4th Home Counties Brigade Kent formed from volunteers in the surrounding area in 1908 deployed overseas and manned London s air defences at Slade Green in 1941 The disused command post and circular battery ramparts remain in the marshes between Slade Green and the former munition works Slade Green was subject to a series of air raids notably the night of 16 April 1941 when incendiary raids caused many fires and explosions capable of levelling the area these threats were contained by the brave intervention of residents resulting in the award of three British Empire Medals and a George Medal 57 58 The Museum of London states that Howbury Manor House pictured within the moated medieval walls was bombed during an air raid and then demolished 59 RAF campaign diaries show Thames Ammunition Works was hit on 12 October 1940 60 During the war the community was served by a British Restaurant operating from St Augustine s Church Hall which supplied up to 250 lunches six days a week to residents the school and nearby factories 58 Postwar edit Aerial photographs taken during the North Sea flood of 1953 show the Thames Munition Works 61 62 63 Explosives operations ended in the 1960s and Bexley borough council gave planning permission for an industrial estate on the site in the 1970s 64 Slade Green emerged as a London suburb in the post war era following the construction of at least 1050 new dwellings and a road bridge spanning the North Kent Line 5 65 66 67 Notable buildings and structures edit The Scheduled Ancient Monument known as Howbury Moat or Howbury Manor c 900 and a Grade II Listed Tithe Barn c 1600s are located between Slade Green and Crayford Marshes 37 According to Historic England the interior of the medieval moated site includes a 16th or 17th century country house with some significant surviving architectural details and it appears to the Secretary of State to be of national importance 15 Holders of the Manor of Howbury included Bishop Odo Roger Apylton aka Appleton and Sir Cloudesley Shovell 58 After Apylton had May Place built in Crayford occupants of the moated site were tenant farmers and after the building of a new house Howbury Grange for the tenant farmer in 1882 by farm labourers until the building was condemned in 1934 58 Photographic evidence from 1935 provides a glimpse of Howbury Manor House which was bombed and demolished during WW2 59 68 In 2006 the medieval moat site was the subject of an English Heritage sponsored research project by the University of Oxford s Geography Department into techniques of Soft Wall Capping for preservation purposes 69 70 Following an investigation by English Heritage the Department for Culture Media and Sport listed the Second World War anti aircraft batteries in Slade Green s London artillery zone 71 55 Locally listed buildings are the former Railway Tavern the Grange and Cottages at Howbury farm and train sheds with works 72 Oak Road is a conservation area with Railway workers cottages dating to 1900 73 The former Railway Tavern 1a Moat Lane built by Smith amp Sons of South Norwood around 1899 was notable for being illuminated by electricity 26 74 St Augustine s Church was built in 1899 and extended in 1911 Substantial rebuilding was required following a direct hit during a Second World War air raid in 1944 and following a fire in 1991 that destroyed the roof along with much of the internal fabric 58 Present and future editSocial edit In 2013 the Communities Secretary recognised the endurance of historic county borders Slade Green is in the historic county of but not the non metropolitan administrative county of Kent The Howbury Centre was replaced with a new Slade Green amp Howbury Community Centre in 2014 which hosts the public library and many social activities 75 76 Churches include a Baptist Union Christian Fellowship and St Augustine s Anglican parish church a third Pentecostal church meets in the Anglican church hall There are two pubs and other bars at the Slade Green Railway Club and Erith Yacht Club The latter relocated from Erith to a site on the edge of Slade Green in 1900 77 Slade Green F C last competed in 2009 Environment edit The adjacent Crayford Marshes have been recognised as ecologically significant since circa 1980 and are now designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest 74 The area is popular with bird watchers and video footage shows breeding seals on the waterfront 78 79 Bexley borough council has discussed intentions to meet the needs of residents as well as the needs of protected amphibians and reptiles 80 The site of listed HAA batteries is managed by the London Wildlife Trust 71 Development edit For infrastructure investments in Slade Green and surrounding areas see Thames Gateway Slade Green is identified in the London Plan as being part of Bexley Riverside and has continued as a target for urban regeneration since at least 2011 74 Current applications include converting rail side scrubland into modern housing 81 Nature conservation at Crayford Ness requires Bexley council to normally resist developments that increase lorry traffic around Slade Green 82 The town is increasingly a mix of privately owned residential properties benefiting from short commuting times to the City of London 83 Local industry is confined to the site of the old works and areas adjacent to the large railway carriage depot Various types of investors are attracted to Slade Green s unique combination of strategic rail infrastructure and close proximity to national road network via the M25 at the Dartford Crossing Some commercial developments immediately outside Slade Green are influenced by London Assembly s Bexley Riverside Opportunity and Intensification Area Local governance editSlade Green is in the electoral ward of North End in the UK Parliament constituency of Bexleyheath and Crayford Slade Green is represented at the London Assembly by Bexley and Bromley 84 Slade Green was part of Dartford Rural District in Kent as created by the Local Government Act 1894 85 86 In 1920 the area became part of the Crayford Urban District of Kent 87 88 In 1965 under the London Government Act 1963 the Crayford Urban District was abolished and its area became part of the present day London Borough of Bexley in Greater London 89 Education editFurther information London Borough of Bexley Education Primary edit Slade Green contains one of two campuses in Haberdashers Crayford Temple Grove Primary which is part of Haberdashers Crayford Academy 90 Ofsted s report shows the larger Crayford Academy is a good school with an increasing number of students at Slade Green making good progress 91 The nearest faith schools for this age group are operated by Trinitas Academy Trust These primary schools include Christ Church CofE which Ofsted reports as outstanding 92 and St Paul s CofE that has yet to be inspected 93 Secondary edit Slade Green Secondary School later known as Howbury Grange closed in 1992 94 and Bexley Council s Secondary Pupil Referral Unit closed in 2008 The nearest secondary schools are Haberdashers Crayford Academy Leigh Academy Bexley Dartford Grammar School and Dartford Grammar School for Girls Places of worship editSt Augustine s Church Anglican Slade Green Christian Fellowship Baptist Geography editTransport editRoad edit Slade Green adjoins the main A206 dual carriageway which follows the River Thames to Greenwich passing near the Blackwall Tunnel Another efficient route to inner London is the A2 road via Crayford and Hall Place In the opposite direction the A206 road terminates near Bluewater after feeding Junction 1A of the M25 motorway Rail edit Slade Green railway station provides the area with National Rail services to Luton via Woolwich Arsenal and London Blackfriars London Charing Cross via Woolwich Arsenal and Lewisham London Cannon Street via Woolwich Arsenal London Cannon Street via Bexleyheath London Cannon Street via Sidcup Dartford and Rainham Bus edit Slade Green is served by London Buses routes 89 99 428 and N89 These connect Slade Green with areas including Bexleyheath Blackheath Bluewater Crayford Dartford Erith Lewisham Sidcup Welling and Woolwich References edit Slade Bosworthtoller Anglo Saxon Dictionary Boswothtoller Archived from the original on 4 October 2016 Retrieved 15 September 2016 Origins of street and place names in Bexley London Borough of Bexley Archived from the original on 27 August 2016 Retrieved 15 September 2016 a b c Hidden London Hidden London Retrieved 7 September 2016 Juby Caroline London before London Reconstructing a Palaeolithic Landscape PDF CORE Royal Holloway University of London Retrieved 8 August 2018 a b c d e London s Local History Monday 30 March 2015 Edith s Streets Retrieved 12 September 2016 Museum of London summary of archaeological work carried out in 1997 accessed 6 April 2008 Kent The Domesday Book Online Retrieved 12 September 2016 Places in Domesday Book near Slade Green Open Domesday Archived from the original on 12 August 2017 Retrieved 12 September 2016 a b c d Sheet 003 in Map of Kent British History Online Ordnance Survey Southampton 1869 1882 Retrieved 10 September 2016 The Bexley Area in the Domesday Book London borough of Bexley Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Askell The Domesday Book Online domesdaybook co uk Retrieved 12 February 2017 Roffe David Brought to Book Lordship and land in Anglo Saxon England David Roffe Retrieved 12 February 2017 Green Judith 15 August 2002 The Aristocracy of Norman England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521335096 Retrieved 12 February 2017 River Cray and Southern Marshes Area All London Green Grid Greater London Authority Retrieved 13 September 2016 a b Historic England Howbury moated site 1001986 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 7 September 2016 Bridge Martin 2006 Tree Ring Analysis of Timbers from Howbury Barn Moat Lane Slade Green London Borough of Bexley PDF Historic England Centre for Archaeology Retrieved 12 February 2017 Managing the Marshes Vision amp Strategy PDF Bexley Council March 2006 p 22 Archived from the original PDF on 15 September 2016 Retrieved 8 September 2016 a b Kent Rail website page on Slade Green station accessed 6 March 2008 Ordnance Survey and Ordnance Survey of Scotland First Series 1805 accessed 10 September 2016 British History Online record of A Topographical Dictionary of England Slackstead Slawston accessed 5 November 2007 British History Online record of A Topographical Dictionary of England Normicott North Holme accessed 5 November 2007 a b The North Kent Railway Bexley Council Archived from the original on 14 February 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2016 Map abbreviations Ordnance Survey Retrieved 12 September 2016 Review of book An Illustrated History of Slade Green Depot Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine accessed 27 June 2007 commentary by person with family from the area at genealogy com Archived 7 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine accessed 27 June 2007 a b c d Oak Road Conservation Area Consultation Draft Bexley Council February 2008 pdf version accessed 6 March 2008 at http www bexley gov uk service consultations conservationareas phase2 pdfs oak road conservation area pdf permanent dead link Strawberry Pickers in a Field Slade Green c 1905 Bexley Borough Photos 15 August 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2016 Cufley David Dartford Area Brickworks map PDF David Cufley s Family History Home Page Cufley Retrieved 14 September 2016 Brick Making in Bexley London Borough of Bexley Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 10 September 2016 Slade Green Junior and Infant Schools Bexley Council Retrieved 12 September 2016 dead link Thames Ammunition Works London History London History Group Retrieved 13 September 2016 permanent dead link The Thames Ammunition Works South East History Boards KSH History Forum Retrieved 12 September 2016 Memoirs Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers 119 1444 1445 1930 doi 10 1243 PIME PROC 1930 119 027 02 OS Maps Darent Industrial Park Ordnance Survey Retrieved 14 September 2016 Explore georeferenced maps Crayford marshes Map images c 1888 1964 National Library of Scotland Retrieved 14 September 2016 Crayford Marshes and Darent Industrial Estate Geograph Marathon Retrieved 13 September 2016 a b Managing the Marshes Summary of Baseline data page 7 Bexley November 2004 permanent dead link accessed 27 June 2007 Buxton Ian Johnson Ian 2013 The Battleship Builders Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships Seaforth Publishing p 202 ISBN 9781848320932 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Brayley Hodgetts 1909 The rise and progress of the British explosives industry London New York Whittaker p 23 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Howbury Grange Farm Slade Green 1905 Bexley borough photos London borough of Bexley 15 August 2012 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Howbury Grange moat 1910 Was in Crayford now in Slade Green Bexley Borough Photos 15 August 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2016 The National Factory Scheme PDF Britain from Above Historic Environment Scotland Retrieved 13 February 2017 The South Eastern Division s London Suburbs map Kent Rail Retrieved 13 September 2016 Burnham Tom The Trench Warfare Light Railway in Terrier Number 98 Winter 2005 The Colonel Stephens Museum The Colonel Stephens Museum in Tenterden Retrieved 6 February 2017 The London Gazette 4 June 1918 Supplement 30730 Page 6740 The London Gazette Official Public Record Authority Retrieved 13 September 2016 Erith WV Gilbert munitions disaster remembered News Shopper 26 February 2009 Retrieved 13 September 2016 Explosives Disaster Twelve Persons Burnt to Death Breaking Down Cartridges Derby Daily Telegraph Derby England 18 February 1924 p 3 Disposal and Liquidation Commission National Archives Retrieved 9 September 2016 Jones Ian 2016 London Bombed Blitzed and Blown Up The British Capital Under Attack Since 1867 Frontline Books pp 125 126 ISBN 9781473879027 A Tragedy That Rocked The Nation on Whitstable Scene Archived 6 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine accessed 1 October 2007 Slade Green Explosion Memorial National Recording Project Public Monuments amp Sculpture Association Archived from the original on 12 February 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Trench Warfare Filling Factories Grace s Guide to British Industrial History Grace s Guide Ltd Retrieved 9 September 2016 a b Munition Factory Explosion Slade Green Digitised editions of Commons and Lords Hansard Parliament 25 February 1924 Retrieved 9 September 2016 A short History of Slade Green Slade Green Big Local 26 June 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2016 a b Historic England World War II Heavy Anti Aircraft HAA Battery 1393580 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 13 February 2017 Bain James Barnehurst New Bridge Erith North End Erith Slades Green Crayford 1933 Antique Maps Geographia Ltd Retrieved 8 February 2017 Plaque unveiled for men who saved Slade Green from devastation in the Blitz Newshopper 21 April 2011 Retrieved 13 September 2016 a b c d e Thomas E O Slade Green and the Crayford Marshes Bexley Education and Leisure Services Directorate 2001 ISBN 0 902541 55 2 a b Creeks Howbury Manor Slade Green near Dartford Creek on Easter Sunday 1935 front view Museum of London Retrieved 8 September 2016 Battle of Britain campaign diaries Royal Air Force UK Crown Archived from the original on 13 October 2011 Retrieved 13 September 2016 Flooding at the Thames munition works 1953 photograph 1 Britain From Above Historic Environment Scotland Archived from the original on 7 February 2017 Retrieved 6 February 2017 Flooding at the Thames munition works 1953 photograph 2 Britain From Above Historic Environment Scotland Archived from the original on 7 February 2017 Retrieved 6 February 2017 Flooding at the Thames munition works 1953 photograph 3 Britain From Above Historic Environment Scotland Archived from the original on 7 February 2017 Retrieved 6 February 2017 Row over poor state of access road News Shopper Newsquest London amp Essex Ltd 20 April 2010 Retrieved 13 February 2017 Housing Scheme No 22 Willow Road Slade Green c 1955 A History of South East London Suburbs Ideal Homes Archived from the original on 31 December 2018 Retrieved 12 September 2016 Bridge Road West Slade Green 1955 A History of Suburbs in South East London Ideal Homes Archived from the original on 30 December 2018 Retrieved 12 September 2016 Bridge Road Slade Green 1961 A History of Suburbs in South East London Ideal Homes Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 12 September 2016 Creeks Howbury Manor Slade Green near Dartford Creek on Easter Sunday 1935 rear view Museum of London Retrieved 8 September 2016 Soft capping historic walls Archived 12 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine accessed 6 April 2008 Viles H A Wood C 2007 Green walls integrated laboratory and field testing of the effectiveness of soft wall capping in conserving ruins Geological Society London Special Publications 271 1 309 322 Bibcode 2007GSLSP 271 309V doi 10 1144 GSL SP 2007 271 01 29 S2CID 129907317 Retrieved 8 August 2018 a b Piper Linda 20 January 2010 Slade Green Residents celebrate as Second World War ack ack gun emplacement is listed News Shopper Newsquest London amp Essex Ltd Retrieved 13 February 2017 Appendix D2 Locally Listed Buildings London borough of Bexley Archived from the original on 30 May 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Appendix E Conservation Areas London borough of Bexley Archived from the original on 30 May 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2017 a b c Sustainability Appraisal Report of the Erith Western Gateway Development Framework SPD February 2011 Bexley Council Archived from the original on 31 August 2012 Retrieved 12 September 2016 Greener Bexley Greener Bexley Archived from the original on 13 September 2016 Retrieved 7 September 2016 Newsshopper article on plans for the Howbury Centre site accessed 6 March 2008 Erith Yacht Club Erith Yacht Club Retrieved 7 September 2016 Yorke Wendy Mayon White Richard 2013 Exploring the Thames Wilderness A Guide to the Natural Thames A Guide to the Natural Thames A amp C p 191 Ricketts Lee Seals at Erith River Thames London YouTube Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 7 February 2017 All London Green Grid River Cray and Southern Marshes Area Framework London Plan Greater London Authority Retrieved 12 February 2017 Bexley housing Early plans for 50 new flats in Slade Green put to council News Shopper Newsquest 29 April 2019 Retrieved 2 June 2019 Bexley Council Unitary development plan Policy TS9 TS10 London borough of Bexley Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Slade Green development is a gem House builder amp Developer HbD 12 November 2014 Retrieved 12 November 2014 Mayor of London London Assembly Bexley Greater London Authority Retrieved 9 September 2016 Vision of Britain Unit History of Dartford accessed 1 October 2007 Vision of Britain Map of Dartford Rural District permanent dead link accessed 1 October 2007 Vision of Britain Unit History of Crayford Archived 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed 1 October 2007 Vision of Britain Map of Crayford Urban District permanent dead link accessed 1 October 2007 Vision of Britain Unit History of Bexley Archived 12 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine accessed 1 October 2007 Haberdashers Aske s Crayford Temple Grove Primary Overview Archived from the original on 20 September 2016 Retrieved 7 September 2016 Haberdashers Aske s Crayford Academy School Inspection Report Retrieved 7 September 2016 Christ Church Erith C of E Primary School bexley sch uk Trinitas Academy Trust Retrieved 12 September 2016 St Paul s Slade Green C of E Primary bexley sch uk Trinitas Academy Trust Retrieved 2 June 2019 Records of Slade Green Secondary School Crayford Retrieved 7 September 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slade Green amp oldid 1185778839, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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