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Stanmore

Stanmore is part of the London Borough of Harrow in London. It is centred 11 miles (18 km) northwest of Charing Cross, lies on the outskirts of the London urban area and includes Stanmore Hill, one of the highest points of London, at 152 metres (499 ft) high. The district, which developed from the ancient Middlesex parishes of Great and Little Stanmore, lies immediately west of Roman Watling Street (the A5 road) and forms the eastern part of the modern London Borough of Harrow.

Stanmore
Pump at one of the Roman-era ponds at Little Common, which gave Stanmore its name
Stanmore
Location within Greater London
Population23,700 (Stanmore Park and Canons wards 2011)
OS grid referenceTQ1691
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townSTANMORE
Postcode districtHA7, HA8
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°37′05″N 0°18′50″W / 51.618°N 0.314°W / 51.618; -0.314Coordinates: 51°37′05″N 0°18′50″W / 51.618°N 0.314°W / 51.618; -0.314

Stanmore is the location of the former RAF Bentley Priory station – base of the Fighter Command during both world wars – along with its accommodating Bentley Priory mansion, notably the last residence of Queen Adelaide. Some members of the Bernays family were also based here, including Adolphus Bernays and his son and grandson who were both rectors of St John's church; the Bernays Institute and Bernays Gardens are public amenities in the centre of the old village.[1]

The district increasingly developed into a London suburb during the 20th century, and in the latter half housed the Automobile Association's regional headquarters. Today it is a commuter town[2] with a local tube station that is the northern terminus of the Jubilee line,[3] and large green spaces.

Toponymy

The place earliest documented use of the name comes from a charter of 793, when land in Stanmore was granted to St Albans Abbey.[4] The Domesday book of 1086 records the two manors of Stanmore as Stanmere, the name deriving from the Old English stan, 'stony' and mere, 'a pool'.[5][6] There are outcrops of gravel on the clay soil here and the mere, which gave the manors their name, may have been one of the ponds which still exist. One possible candidate is a pond on Stanmore Common still sometimes known as Caesars Pond after a battle believed to have taken place in the vicinity in 54BC.[7]

History

 
Cottrell Cottages, The Broadway (16th century)
 

Rome

An obelisk on Brockley Hill, in the grounds of the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, marks the reputed site of a battle between Julius Caesar's Roman legions and the local Catuvellauni tribe, under Cassivellaunus. This battle is said to have taken place during Caesar's raid in force on Britain, in 54BCE.[8] Britain was conquered after Claudius invaded in 43AD; sometime after this the Romans established a local settlement called Sulloniacis.

Origins of the Manors and Parishes of Stanmore

A manor called Stanmore is first recorded in 793 AD, and the Domesday book of 1086 describes pre-existing manors (estates) of Great and Little Stanmore as having changed ownership in the aftermath of the Norman Conquest.[7] These estates were subsequently served by the ancient parishes of Great and Little Stanmore.

Pre-urban

Until the late 19th century, Stanmore was a small rural community. In the Middle Ages, a monastic community of cell of Augustinian Canons was established at Bentley Priory. It was dissolved in 1536 during the dissolution of the monasteries.[9] One of the really old surviving buildings are the Cottrell cottages built c. 1565. It suggests that the medieval population centre in Stanmore was around the present day Broadway, before the developments among Stanmore Hill in the late 18th.[10]

Stately homes

Between 1713 and 1724, the 1st Duke of Chandos built Cannons house in Little Stanmore. Shortly after, in 1729 Andrew Drummond, the founder of the Drummonds Bank and Jacobite sympathiser, purchased Stanmore House and the Stanmore Park estate as his country residence.[11][12] A new mansion was built for Andrew Drummond at Stanmore Park in 1763: it was designed in neo Palladian style by John Vardy and Sir William Chambers. Zoffany painted the Drummond family in the grounds. The Drummonds leased Stanmore House to the Countess of Aylesford (in 1815) and later to Lord Castlereagh. The Marquess of Abercorn acquired the estate, along with Bentley Priory, in 1839. In 1848, Stanmore House was sold again to George Glyn, 1st Baron Wolverton. The house was later used as a boys' preparatory school. It was demolished in 1938 and the site was taken over by the Royal Auxiliary Air Force as the headquarters of Balloon Command.[13] The history of the area is reflected in street names, such as Lady Aylesford Avenue and Abercorn Road. RAF Stanmore Park closed in 1997 and is now a housing estate.

 
Opera librettist W. S. Gilbert in the library at Grim's Dyke (1891)

The wealthy businessman James Duberley commissioned Sir John Soane to design a large mansion house north of the original Bentley Priory in 1775. This house was added to throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries by various owners. It was significantly extended in 1788, again by Sir John Soane, for John Hamilton, 1st Marquess of Abercorn. The Priory was the final home of the Dowager Queen Adelaide, queen consort of William IV, before her death there in 1849. In 1882 Bentley Priory was acquired by the hotel millionaire Frederick Gordon, who turned it into a country house hotel for wealthy guests.[12][9]

The opera librettist W. S. Gilbert (of the Gilbert and Sullivan duo) lived at Grim's Dyke, a country house located between Stanmore and Harrow Weald. In 1911, Gilbert drowned in the pond at Grim's Dyke. He was cremated at Golders Green and his ashes buried at the churchyard of St. John's Church, Stanmore.[14]

Urbanisation

The railways first reached Stanmore in 1890 when Frederick Gordon opened the Stanmore branch line to improve access to Bentley, in the hope of attracting more affluent customers. Great Stanmore Parish Council stipulated that Gordon's new station building should be of the highest quality, and so Stanmore station (later renamed Stanmore Village) was designed to resemble a small English church, complete with a spire and gargoyles. Trains were run by the London and North Western Railway (LNWR). Gordon also purchased land near the station and laid out a wide avenue—named Gordon Avenue—lined with new superior houses, in the hope of attracting wealthy Londoners to come to live in the country and commute into the city on his new railway. Despite his efforts, Gordon's business ventures at Stanmore were not successful, and in 1899 he sold the railway to the LNWR.[15] Gordon died in 1904 at his Hotel Metropole in Cannes. His body was brought back to Stanmore and buried in the family grave at the church of St. John's Church.[15]

 
The manor house on Old Church Lane built in 1930, separate from an older manor house nearby

In the early years of the 20th century, as the population of London grew, Stanmore was affected by increasing urbanisation and the small rural village was rapidly becoming a suburb of London. In December 1932 the Metropolitan Railway (MR) opened a new electric railway with a station at Stanmore (now the London Underground station on the Jubilee line). This rapid, direct route into London presented strong competition for Gordon's old railway (by now run by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS)), especially as branch line passengers had to change trains at Harrow & Wealdstone for London services. After years of decline, Stanmore Village station was closed by British Railways in 1952.[15]

The war and afterwards

 
Aerial shot of RAF Stanmore Park (1945)

During World War II, Stanmore played an important role. Stanmore had an outstation from the Bletchley Park codebreaking establishment, where some of the Bombes used to decode German Enigma messages were housed. Bentley Priory was taken over by the RAF, and in 1940 the Battle of Britain was controlled from RAF Bentley Priory. RAF Bentley Priory closed in 2009.[16]

In the 1950s the Automobile Associationbuilt and opened a four-storey office building on The Broadway which eventually became the AA regional headquarters for London and the South East. As a major employer for Stanmore, the centre once handled up to 3,000 calls a day. In 1986 the AA moved a few hundred yards to a new building on the Broadway. The abandoned building eventually became derelict and a target for vandalism, graffiti and rubbish.[17] There were plans to build a shopping centre at the site, but due to hurdles it did not go ahead, leaving the building abandoned for several years with its windows broken[18] before it was demolished in 1993.[17] The site lay empty for several years before Sainsbury's secured its development of a supermarket here, opening at the end of 1999.[19][20]

 
Bernays Institute, a parish hall erected by Rev. Leopold Bernays

Bernays Memorial Institute survived demolition[21] and was restored during a period of 18 years until 2009. However the AA call operating centre closed in 1997 when it moved its base to Basingstoke, and in January 1999 it was announced that the break down centre will close with the loss of 140 jobs, causing local backlash and ending the firm's long association with Stanmore.[22] After being sold by the AA the building was used by Carpetright and as offices.

Parish church

 
The Church of St John the Evangelist (1850), seen through the ruin of the 1632 building

The first parish church was the 14th-century St Mary's, built on the site of a wooden Saxon church, which itself may have been built on the site of a Roman compitum shrine.[23][24] It has now completely disappeared; one tomb survives in a back garden.[23][25]

This building was replaced by a new one built in the current churchyard, consecrated in 1632 and dedicated to St. John the Evangelist.[23][24] Built of brick and consecrated by Archbishop Laud, it is one of the relatively small number of churches built in Britain between the medieval period and the eighteenth century.[23] By the nineteenth century, this church had become considered outdated and unsafe. After its replacement, its roof was pulled off and it became a ruin.

A new church was constructed in the Gothic Revival style from 1849 to 1850. Queen Adelaide's last public appearance was to lay the foundation stone of the new church. She gave the font and when the church was completed after her death, the east window was dedicated to her memory.[26]

Stanmore Hall

Built in the 1840s, Stanmore Hall is a Grade II* listed[27] building built as a gothic castle. Located on Wood Lane near the top of Stanmore Hill, Stanmore Hall was developed by Matthew John Rhodes and was owned by balloonist Robert Hollond and his wife Ellen Hollond, who lived for the rest of their lives at the residence. The interiors were redesigned by William Morris later that century. William Knox D'Arcy resided at the Hall, where he died in 1917. One of the pioneers of the oil exploration business, D'Arcy's funeral was attended by dignitaries and celebrities, carrying his coffin from the hall through the village to St John the Evangelist for service.[28]

After D'Arcy's death Stanmore Hall was sold and no longer used as a family home. During the Second World War it was used by Allied Expeditionary Air Force, and after the war until 1971 it was a nurse's home for the Royal National Orthopedic Hospital.[29]

Stanmore Hall has been used as a filming location, such as the British films Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed, Nothing but the Night, 1960s series The Avengers and later ITV's The Professionals.[28][29]

Following neglect, the structure of the building deteriorated, and it received damage by a fire in 1979. Eventually in 1998 the Hall was converted into separate luxury dwellings by a developer.[28][30]

Modern Stanmore

 
A view of Stanmore Broadway
 
A view of London Road near Canons Corner

Many of Stanmore's residents commute to jobs in central London, contributing to the affluent character of the area.

Shopping and hospitality

Central Stanmore includes a range of shops, pubs and restaurants from small independent businesses to large chains.

Open spaces

 
Former Vine public house, Stanmore Hill

Stanmore Park is at the foot of Stanmore Hill and right next to the local library. Bentley Priory Nature Reserve, Stanmore Common and Stanmore Country Park are larger parks and nature reserves. Travel and excursion to these places and other attractions such as the Bernays Gardens are promoted by the Stanmore Tourist Board.[31]

Further south is Stanmore Marsh. These 4 hectares (9.9 acres) of wetlands with grassland and woodland ran dry before a restoration project was completed in 2017.[32] Here a tributary of the Stanburn Brook becomes the Edgware Brook when it leaves the marsh travelling east towards Edgware.[33]

Sports clubs

On the border with Bushey is Stanmore Cricket Club, one of the oldest in the Middlesex county championship league, which celebrated 150 years in 2003. The club has nurtured two famous cricketers who have played tests for England in the last two decades: Angus Fraser and Mark Ramprakash.

Schools

Stanmore is home to Avanti House Primary and Secondary Schools, Park High School, Bentley Wood High School, Stanmore College and the North London Collegiate School.

Health

The suburb also hosts the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital – known as RNOH – which is famed for its spinal unit and paediatric/young adult hip unit.

Housing

Demography

The population of the London Borough of Harrow ward (Stanmore Park) was 11,229 at the 2011 Census.[34] The Canons ward which covers Stanmore railway station and eastern areas had a population of 12,471 at the same census.[35]

Stanmore has Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Jain, and Jewish communities, including its local synagogue, Stanmore and Canons Park Synagogue on London Road (which has one of the largest memberships of any single synagogue in Europe and the second largest in the UK behind Borehamwood),[36] an Islamic centre, KSIMC of London (Hujjat)[37] and a new Hindu temple[38] on Wood Lane.

The 2011 census showed that in Stanmore Park ward, 56% of the population was white (47% British, 7% Other, 2% Irish) and 20% Indian. 31% was Christian, 22% Jewish, 15% Hindu and 11% Muslim.[39] Canons ward (covering eastern areas) was 52% white (40% British, 10% Other, 2% Irish) and 24% Indian. 26% was Christian, 25% Jewish, 18% Hindu and 11% Muslim.[35]

Notable natives and residents

 
The grave of W. S. Gilbert at Stanmore

Transport

Road

 
A view of Honeypot Lane (dual carriageway), an ancient Roman-era track[46]
 
Brockley Hill, road towards RNOH and Elstree

The A410 (London Road/The Broadway/Church Road/Uxbridge Road) runs east–west across Stanmore. To the west it goes towards Harrow Weald and Hatch End. To the east it meets the A5 (Brockley Hill and Stonegrove) at Canons Corner roundabout providing a connection to the M1 motorway and Central London. A short distance east of that is a junction for the A41 trunk road. Marsh Lane and Honeypot Lane travel south towards Queensbury while Stanmore Hill/The Common travels towards Bushey Heath and on to Watford.

Nearby places

 
An historic directional sign in Clamp Hill in Stanmore – dismantled in 2010

Tube/Trains

Stanmore is the northern terminus of the Jubilee line, giving the area direct London Underground access to Central London. The Stanmore branch line to Harrow & Wealdstone station closed in 1964.

Bus routes

References

  1. ^ "The Bernays Memorial Institute, Stanmore".
  2. ^ "Fawcett Mead | Available Units".
  3. ^ "Ever Been to Stanmore, at the End of the Jubilee Line? Here's Why It's Worth Your While". 26 July 2017.
  4. ^ Oxford Concise Origin of English Place Names, Eilert Ekwall, 4th edition 1960, reprinted 1990
  5. ^ "Key to English Place-names".
  6. ^ "The place names of Middlesex (Inclucing those parts of the county of London formerly contained within the boundaries of the old county)". 1922.
  7. ^ a b The London Encyclopaedia, Weinreb and Hibbert, 1983 p811
  8. ^ Website of Stanmore tourist board https://www.stanmoretouristboard.org.uk/the-stanmore-obelisk.html
  9. ^ a b Victoria County History, Middlesex, Harrow including Pinner, Manors, 1971
  10. ^ "The Broadway".
  11. ^ H Bolitho and D Peel, The Drummonds of Charing Cross (London: George, Allen & Unwin, 1967)
  12. ^ a b "Andrew Drummond, Stanmore Resident and founder of The London bank Messrs Drummond". stanmoretouristboard.org.uk. from the original on 11 February 2018. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  13. ^ Baggs, A P; Bolton, Diane K; Scarff, Eileen P; Tyack, G C. "A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5, Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham". British History Online. British History Online. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  14. ^ Stedman, Jane W. "Gilbert, Sir William Schwenck (1836–1911)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004, online edition, May 2008, accessed 10 January 2010 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  15. ^ a b c "The Harrow and Stanmore railway". stanmoretouristboard.org.uk. The Stanmore Tourist Board. from the original on 7 February 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  16. ^ "Stanmore – Hidden London". hidden-london.com. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  17. ^ a b "End of line for HQ that answered drivers' pleas", Pinner Observer, p. 12, 26 August 1993
  18. ^ "Marks says No to place in shopping mall", Pinner Observer, p. 3, 13 August 1992
  19. ^ "Supermarkets will go ahead residents told".
  20. ^ "Second Supermarket a Surprise to Stanmore".
  21. ^ "Town centre plans save hall", Pinner Observer, p. 14, 5 March 1992
  22. ^ "140 jobs go as AA moves out", Pinner Observer, p. 1, 21 January 1999
  23. ^ a b c d Ellis, Mike (26 December 1996). "Notes about the Churches of Great Stanmore". Short History of Stanmore. Mike Ellis. Retrieved 15 January 2010.
  24. ^ a b [1] 9 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ "Great Stanmore: Church". British History Online. Victoria County History. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  26. ^ T F T Baker, R B Pugh (Editors), A P Baggs, Diane K Bolton, Eileen P Scarff, G C Tyack (1976). "Great Stanmore: Church". A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5: Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 3 April 2013. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ "Stanmore Hall, Harrow, Harrow".
  28. ^ a b c "Stanmore Tourist Board | Stanmore Hall Wood Lane | Visit Stanmore".
  29. ^ a b Pykett, Derek (10 January 2014). British Horror Film Locations. ISBN 9780786451937.
  30. ^ "National House Building Council v Relicpride Ltd & Ors | [2009] EWHC 1260 (TCC) | England and Wales High Court (Technology & Construction Court) | Judgment | Law | CaseMine".
  31. ^ "Stanmore Tourist Board | Visit Stanmore".
  32. ^ "Restored Stanmore Marsh Wetlands to be officially opened by Mayor of Harrow". 19 June 2017.
  33. ^ "Inventory Site Record".
  34. ^ "Harrow Ward population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
  35. ^ a b "Canons". UK Census Data. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  36. ^ "Stanmore Synagogue Home Page". Sacps.org.uk. 12 January 1999. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  37. ^ "Hujjat.org". Hujjat.org. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  38. ^ "Portal of Swaminarayan". Swaminarayan Satsang. 19 January 2013. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  39. ^ "Stanmore Park". UK Census Data. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  40. ^ Great Stanmore: Introduction', A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5: Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham (1976), pp. 88–96. URL: Date accessed: 12 May 2009.
  41. ^ "Chaz Jankel". theblockheads.com. 14 May 2001.
  42. ^ Medina Cotten, Patricia (1998). Laid back in Hollywood: Remembering. Los Angeles: Belle Publishing. pp. 1–2. ISBN 0-9649635-2-3.
  43. ^ "Theo Walcott". TheFA.com. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  44. ^ "How Keith Vaz on a £90k-a-year MP salary built up a £4million property portfolio". Daily Mirror. 6 September 2016.
  45. ^ "Olly Mann is a presenter, columnist and technology commentator". ollymann.co.uk. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  46. ^ "Honeypot Lane".

External links

  • Stanmore College website
  • Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital website

stanmore, other, uses, disambiguation, part, london, borough, harrow, london, centred, miles, northwest, charing, cross, lies, outskirts, london, urban, area, includes, hill, highest, points, london, metres, high, district, which, developed, from, ancient, mid. For other uses see Stanmore disambiguation Stanmore is part of the London Borough of Harrow in London It is centred 11 miles 18 km northwest of Charing Cross lies on the outskirts of the London urban area and includes Stanmore Hill one of the highest points of London at 152 metres 499 ft high The district which developed from the ancient Middlesex parishes of Great and Little Stanmore lies immediately west of Roman Watling Street the A5 road and forms the eastern part of the modern London Borough of Harrow StanmorePump at one of the Roman era ponds at Little Common which gave Stanmore its nameStanmoreLocation within Greater LondonPopulation23 700 Stanmore Park and Canons wards 2011 OS grid referenceTQ1691London boroughHarrowCeremonial countyGreater LondonRegionLondonCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townSTANMOREPostcode districtHA7 HA8Dialling code020PoliceMetropolitanFireLondonAmbulanceLondonUK ParliamentHarrow EastLondon AssemblyBrent and HarrowList of places UK England London 51 37 05 N 0 18 50 W 51 618 N 0 314 W 51 618 0 314 Coordinates 51 37 05 N 0 18 50 W 51 618 N 0 314 W 51 618 0 314Stanmore is the location of the former RAF Bentley Priory station base of the Fighter Command during both world wars along with its accommodating Bentley Priory mansion notably the last residence of Queen Adelaide Some members of the Bernays family were also based here including Adolphus Bernays and his son and grandson who were both rectors of St John s church the Bernays Institute and Bernays Gardens are public amenities in the centre of the old village 1 The district increasingly developed into a London suburb during the 20th century and in the latter half housed the Automobile Association s regional headquarters Today it is a commuter town 2 with a local tube station that is the northern terminus of the Jubilee line 3 and large green spaces Contents 1 Toponymy 2 History 2 1 Rome 2 2 Origins of the Manors and Parishes of Stanmore 2 3 Pre urban 2 4 Stately homes 2 5 Urbanisation 2 6 The war and afterwards 2 7 Parish church 2 8 Stanmore Hall 3 Modern Stanmore 3 1 Shopping and hospitality 3 2 Open spaces 3 3 Sports clubs 3 4 Schools 3 5 Health 3 6 Housing 4 Demography 5 Notable natives and residents 6 Transport 6 1 Road 6 2 Nearby places 6 3 Tube Trains 6 4 Bus routes 7 References 8 External linksToponymy EditThe place earliest documented use of the name comes from a charter of 793 when land in Stanmore was granted to St Albans Abbey 4 The Domesday book of 1086 records the two manors of Stanmore as Stanmere the name deriving from the Old English stan stony and mere a pool 5 6 There are outcrops of gravel on the clay soil here and the mere which gave the manors their name may have been one of the ponds which still exist One possible candidate is a pond on Stanmore Common still sometimes known as Caesars Pond after a battle believed to have taken place in the vicinity in 54BC 7 History Edit Cottrell Cottages The Broadway 16th century Bentley Priory c 1800 Rome Edit An obelisk on Brockley Hill in the grounds of the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital marks the reputed site of a battle between Julius Caesar s Roman legions and the local Catuvellauni tribe under Cassivellaunus This battle is said to have taken place during Caesar s raid in force on Britain in 54BCE 8 Britain was conquered after Claudius invaded in 43AD sometime after this the Romans established a local settlement called Sulloniacis Origins of the Manors and Parishes of Stanmore Edit A manor called Stanmore is first recorded in 793 AD and the Domesday book of 1086 describes pre existing manors estates of Great and Little Stanmore as having changed ownership in the aftermath of the Norman Conquest 7 These estates were subsequently served by the ancient parishes of Great and Little Stanmore Pre urban Edit Until the late 19th century Stanmore was a small rural community In the Middle Ages a monastic community of cell of Augustinian Canons was established at Bentley Priory It was dissolved in 1536 during the dissolution of the monasteries 9 One of the really old surviving buildings are the Cottrell cottages built c 1565 It suggests that the medieval population centre in Stanmore was around the present day Broadway before the developments among Stanmore Hill in the late 18th 10 Stately homes Edit Between 1713 and 1724 the 1st Duke of Chandos built Cannons house in Little Stanmore Shortly after in 1729 Andrew Drummond the founder of the Drummonds Bank and Jacobite sympathiser purchased Stanmore House and the Stanmore Park estate as his country residence 11 12 A new mansion was built for Andrew Drummond at Stanmore Park in 1763 it was designed in neo Palladian style by John Vardy and Sir William Chambers Zoffany painted the Drummond family in the grounds The Drummonds leased Stanmore House to the Countess of Aylesford in 1815 and later to Lord Castlereagh The Marquess of Abercorn acquired the estate along with Bentley Priory in 1839 In 1848 Stanmore House was sold again to George Glyn 1st Baron Wolverton The house was later used as a boys preparatory school It was demolished in 1938 and the site was taken over by the Royal Auxiliary Air Force as the headquarters of Balloon Command 13 The history of the area is reflected in street names such as Lady Aylesford Avenue and Abercorn Road RAF Stanmore Park closed in 1997 and is now a housing estate Opera librettist W S Gilbert in the library at Grim s Dyke 1891 The wealthy businessman James Duberley commissioned Sir John Soane to design a large mansion house north of the original Bentley Priory in 1775 This house was added to throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries by various owners It was significantly extended in 1788 again by Sir John Soane for John Hamilton 1st Marquess of Abercorn The Priory was the final home of the Dowager Queen Adelaide queen consort of William IV before her death there in 1849 In 1882 Bentley Priory was acquired by the hotel millionaire Frederick Gordon who turned it into a country house hotel for wealthy guests 12 9 The opera librettist W S Gilbert of the Gilbert and Sullivan duo lived at Grim s Dyke a country house located between Stanmore and Harrow Weald In 1911 Gilbert drowned in the pond at Grim s Dyke He was cremated at Golders Green and his ashes buried at the churchyard of St John s Church Stanmore 14 Urbanisation Edit Stanmore Village railway station The railways first reached Stanmore in 1890 when Frederick Gordon opened the Stanmore branch line to improve access to Bentley in the hope of attracting more affluent customers Great Stanmore Parish Council stipulated that Gordon s new station building should be of the highest quality and so Stanmore station later renamed Stanmore Village was designed to resemble a small English church complete with a spire and gargoyles Trains were run by the London and North Western Railway LNWR Gordon also purchased land near the station and laid out a wide avenue named Gordon Avenue lined with new superior houses in the hope of attracting wealthy Londoners to come to live in the country and commute into the city on his new railway Despite his efforts Gordon s business ventures at Stanmore were not successful and in 1899 he sold the railway to the LNWR 15 Gordon died in 1904 at his Hotel Metropole in Cannes His body was brought back to Stanmore and buried in the family grave at the church of St John s Church 15 The manor house on Old Church Lane built in 1930 separate from an older manor house nearby In the early years of the 20th century as the population of London grew Stanmore was affected by increasing urbanisation and the small rural village was rapidly becoming a suburb of London In December 1932 the Metropolitan Railway MR opened a new electric railway with a station at Stanmore now the London Underground station on the Jubilee line This rapid direct route into London presented strong competition for Gordon s old railway by now run by the London Midland and Scottish Railway LMS especially as branch line passengers had to change trains at Harrow amp Wealdstone for London services After years of decline Stanmore Village station was closed by British Railways in 1952 15 The war and afterwards Edit Aerial shot of RAF Stanmore Park 1945 During World War II Stanmore played an important role Stanmore had an outstation from the Bletchley Park codebreaking establishment where some of the Bombes used to decode German Enigma messages were housed Bentley Priory was taken over by the RAF and in 1940 the Battle of Britain was controlled from RAF Bentley Priory RAF Bentley Priory closed in 2009 16 In the 1950s the Automobile Associationbuilt and opened a four storey office building on The Broadway which eventually became the AA regional headquarters for London and the South East As a major employer for Stanmore the centre once handled up to 3 000 calls a day In 1986 the AA moved a few hundred yards to a new building on the Broadway The abandoned building eventually became derelict and a target for vandalism graffiti and rubbish 17 There were plans to build a shopping centre at the site but due to hurdles it did not go ahead leaving the building abandoned for several years with its windows broken 18 before it was demolished in 1993 17 The site lay empty for several years before Sainsbury s secured its development of a supermarket here opening at the end of 1999 19 20 Bernays Institute a parish hall erected by Rev Leopold Bernays Bernays Memorial Institute survived demolition 21 and was restored during a period of 18 years until 2009 However the AA call operating centre closed in 1997 when it moved its base to Basingstoke and in January 1999 it was announced that the break down centre will close with the loss of 140 jobs causing local backlash and ending the firm s long association with Stanmore 22 After being sold by the AA the building was used by Carpetright and as offices Parish church Edit Main article St John the Evangelist Great Stanmore The Church of St John the Evangelist 1850 seen through the ruin of the 1632 building The first parish church was the 14th century St Mary s built on the site of a wooden Saxon church which itself may have been built on the site of a Roman compitum shrine 23 24 It has now completely disappeared one tomb survives in a back garden 23 25 This building was replaced by a new one built in the current churchyard consecrated in 1632 and dedicated to St John the Evangelist 23 24 Built of brick and consecrated by Archbishop Laud it is one of the relatively small number of churches built in Britain between the medieval period and the eighteenth century 23 By the nineteenth century this church had become considered outdated and unsafe After its replacement its roof was pulled off and it became a ruin A new church was constructed in the Gothic Revival style from 1849 to 1850 Queen Adelaide s last public appearance was to lay the foundation stone of the new church She gave the font and when the church was completed after her death the east window was dedicated to her memory 26 Stanmore Hall Edit Built in the 1840s Stanmore Hall is a Grade II listed 27 building built as a gothic castle Located on Wood Lane near the top of Stanmore Hill Stanmore Hall was developed by Matthew John Rhodes and was owned by balloonist Robert Hollond and his wife Ellen Hollond who lived for the rest of their lives at the residence The interiors were redesigned by William Morris later that century William Knox D Arcy resided at the Hall where he died in 1917 One of the pioneers of the oil exploration business D Arcy s funeral was attended by dignitaries and celebrities carrying his coffin from the hall through the village to St John the Evangelist for service 28 After D Arcy s death Stanmore Hall was sold and no longer used as a family home During the Second World War it was used by Allied Expeditionary Air Force and after the war until 1971 it was a nurse s home for the Royal National Orthopedic Hospital 29 Stanmore Hall has been used as a filming location such as the British films Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed Nothing but the Night 1960s series The Avengers and later ITV s The Professionals 28 29 Following neglect the structure of the building deteriorated and it received damage by a fire in 1979 Eventually in 1998 the Hall was converted into separate luxury dwellings by a developer 28 30 Modern Stanmore Edit A view of Stanmore Broadway A view of London Road near Canons Corner Many of Stanmore s residents commute to jobs in central London contributing to the affluent character of the area Shopping and hospitality Edit Central Stanmore includes a range of shops pubs and restaurants from small independent businesses to large chains Open spaces Edit Former Vine public house Stanmore Hill Stanmore Country Park Stanmore Park is at the foot of Stanmore Hill and right next to the local library Bentley Priory Nature Reserve Stanmore Common and Stanmore Country Park are larger parks and nature reserves Travel and excursion to these places and other attractions such as the Bernays Gardens are promoted by the Stanmore Tourist Board 31 Further south is Stanmore Marsh These 4 hectares 9 9 acres of wetlands with grassland and woodland ran dry before a restoration project was completed in 2017 32 Here a tributary of the Stanburn Brook becomes the Edgware Brook when it leaves the marsh travelling east towards Edgware 33 Sports clubs Edit On the border with Bushey is Stanmore Cricket Club one of the oldest in the Middlesex county championship league which celebrated 150 years in 2003 The club has nurtured two famous cricketers who have played tests for England in the last two decades Angus Fraser and Mark Ramprakash Schools Edit Stanmore is home to Avanti House Primary and Secondary Schools Park High School Bentley Wood High School Stanmore College and the North London Collegiate School Health Edit The suburb also hosts the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital known as RNOH which is famed for its spinal unit and paediatric young adult hip unit Housing Edit Housing in Little Common Housing in Morecambe GardensDemography Edit St John the Evangelist church The population of the London Borough of Harrow ward Stanmore Park was 11 229 at the 2011 Census 34 The Canons ward which covers Stanmore railway station and eastern areas had a population of 12 471 at the same census 35 Stanmore has Christian Muslim Hindu Jain and Jewish communities including its local synagogue Stanmore and Canons Park Synagogue on London Road which has one of the largest memberships of any single synagogue in Europe and the second largest in the UK behind Borehamwood 36 an Islamic centre KSIMC of London Hujjat 37 and a new Hindu temple 38 on Wood Lane The 2011 census showed that in Stanmore Park ward 56 of the population was white 47 British 7 Other 2 Irish and 20 Indian 31 was Christian 22 Jewish 15 Hindu and 11 Muslim 39 Canons ward covering eastern areas was 52 white 40 British 10 Other 2 Irish and 24 Indian 26 was Christian 25 Jewish 18 Hindu and 11 Muslim 35 Notable natives and residents EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Stanmore news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The grave of W S Gilbert at Stanmore Queen Adelaide 1792 1849 queen consort of William IV lived at Bentley Priory Stanmore from 1848 until her death George Hamilton Gordon 4th Earl of Aberdeen Peelite Prime Minister in office December 1852 February 1855 was raised and is buried in Stanmore Frederick Gordon hotel millionaire and builder of the first Stanmore railway W S Gilbert English dramatist librettist and illustrator lived at Grim s Dyke and died in the lake there His ashes are buried in Stanmore Robert and Ellen Hollond lived here He was a balloonist and MP and she founded London s first creche 40 Clement Attlee Labour Prime Minister in the first post war government lived in a large villa Heywood later replaced by mid rise apartments Chaz Jankel singer and multi instrumentalist was born in Stanmore 41 Billy Idol rock musician was born in Stanmore Mary Cholmondeley Lady Delamere heiress born in Stanmore Dave Bassett football coach was born in Stanmore Clive Anderson radio and television presenter was born in Stanmore Peter Van Hooke drummer grew up in Stanmore Linda Hayden actress was born in Stanmore Anthony Horowitz screenwriter and author was born in Stanmore Cyril Shaps actor lived in Stanmore Roger Moore actor famous for his role as James Bond and in The Saint lived in Stanmore Patricia Medina actress lived in Stanmore 42 Richard Greene actor most notable for his role as Robin Hood lived in Stanmore when he was married to Patricia Medina Theo Walcott footballer was born in Stanmore 43 William Knox D Arcy lived at Stanmore Hall and died there Keith Vaz MP Lab and his family lived in Stanmore 2005 2016 44 Olly Mann co host of cult podcast Answer Me This grew up in Stanmore 45 James Bord professional poker player Bacary Sagna footballer lived in Stanmore until 2014 while at Arsenal FC Jay Foreman musical comedian grew up in Stanmore Beardyman Darren Foreman performer and musician grew up in Stanmore Matt Lucas performer and comedian was born in Central London but grew up in Stanmore Alexis Sanchez footballer lived in Stanmore while playing for Arsenal F C citation needed Nikki Grahame television personality and model lived in Stanmore Transport EditRoad Edit A view of Honeypot Lane dual carriageway an ancient Roman era track 46 Brockley Hill road towards RNOH and Elstree The A410 London Road The Broadway Church Road Uxbridge Road runs east west across Stanmore To the west it goes towards Harrow Weald and Hatch End To the east it meets the A5 Brockley Hill and Stonegrove at Canons Corner roundabout providing a connection to the M1 motorway and Central London A short distance east of that is a junction for the A41 trunk road Marsh Lane and Honeypot Lane travel south towards Queensbury while Stanmore Hill The Common travels towards Bushey Heath and on to Watford Nearby places Edit An historic directional sign in Clamp Hill in Stanmore dismantled in 2010 Elstree Borehamwood Edgware Bushey Watford Harrow Weald BelmontTube Trains Edit Stanmore tube station terminus of the Jubilee line Stanmore is the northern terminus of the Jubilee line giving the area direct London Underground access to Central London The Stanmore branch line to Harrow amp Wealdstone station closed in 1964 Bus routes Edit Route Start End Operator142 Brent Cross Watford Junction London Sovereign324 Elstree Brent Cross Tesco Metroline340 Edgware Harrow Arriva LondonH12 Stanmore South Harrow London Sovereign79 Edgware Alperton Sainsbury s London Sovereign107 Edgware New Barnet Metroline186 Brent Cross Northwick Park Hospital MetrolineH18 H19 Harrow Harrow London SovereignN98 Night Stanmore Holborn MetrolineReferences Edit The Bernays Memorial Institute Stanmore Fawcett Mead Available Units Ever Been to Stanmore at the End of the Jubilee Line Here s Why It s Worth Your While 26 July 2017 Oxford Concise Origin of English Place Names Eilert Ekwall 4th edition 1960 reprinted 1990 Key to English Place names The place names of Middlesex Inclucing those parts of the county of London formerly contained within the boundaries of the old county 1922 a b The London Encyclopaedia Weinreb and Hibbert 1983 p811 Website of Stanmore tourist board https www stanmoretouristboard org uk the stanmore obelisk html a b Victoria County History Middlesex Harrow including Pinner Manors 1971 The Broadway H Bolitho and D Peel The Drummonds of Charing Cross London George Allen amp Unwin 1967 a b Andrew Drummond Stanmore Resident and founder of The London bank Messrs Drummond stanmoretouristboard org uk Archived from the original on 11 February 2018 Retrieved 11 February 2018 Baggs A P Bolton Diane K Scarff Eileen P Tyack G C A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 5 Hendon Kingsbury Great Stanmore Little Stanmore Edmonton Enfield Monken Hadley South Mimms Tottenham British History Online British History Online Retrieved 26 May 2020 Stedman Jane W Gilbert Sir William Schwenck 1836 1911 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press September 2004 online edition May 2008 accessed 10 January 2010 subscription or UK public library membership required a b c The Harrow and Stanmore railway stanmoretouristboard org uk The Stanmore Tourist Board Archived from the original on 7 February 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2018 Stanmore Hidden London hidden london com Retrieved 11 February 2018 a b End of line for HQ that answered drivers pleas Pinner Observer p 12 26 August 1993 Marks says No to place in shopping mall Pinner Observer p 3 13 August 1992 Supermarkets will go ahead residents told Second Supermarket a Surprise to Stanmore Town centre plans save hall Pinner Observer p 14 5 March 1992 140 jobs go as AA moves out Pinner Observer p 1 21 January 1999 a b c d Ellis Mike 26 December 1996 Notes about the Churches of Great Stanmore Short History of Stanmore Mike Ellis Retrieved 15 January 2010 a b 1 Archived 9 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Great Stanmore Church British History Online Victoria County History Retrieved 20 September 2016 T F T Baker R B Pugh Editors A P Baggs Diane K Bolton Eileen P Scarff G C Tyack 1976 Great Stanmore Church A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 5 Hendon Kingsbury Great Stanmore Little Stanmore Edmonton Enfield Monken Hadley South Mimms Tottenham Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 3 April 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Stanmore Hall Harrow Harrow a b c Stanmore Tourist Board Stanmore Hall Wood Lane Visit Stanmore a b Pykett Derek 10 January 2014 British Horror Film Locations ISBN 9780786451937 National House Building Council v Relicpride Ltd amp Ors 2009 EWHC 1260 TCC England and Wales High Court Technology amp Construction Court Judgment Law CaseMine Stanmore Tourist Board Visit Stanmore Restored Stanmore Marsh Wetlands to be officially opened by Mayor of Harrow 19 June 2017 Inventory Site Record Harrow Ward population 2011 Neighbourhood Statistics Office for National Statistics Retrieved 24 October 2016 a b Canons UK Census Data Retrieved 24 September 2017 Stanmore Synagogue Home Page Sacps org uk 12 January 1999 Retrieved 19 May 2014 Hujjat org Hujjat org Retrieved 19 May 2014 Portal of Swaminarayan Swaminarayan Satsang 19 January 2013 Retrieved 19 May 2014 Stanmore Park UK Census Data Retrieved 24 September 2017 Great Stanmore Introduction A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 5 Hendon Kingsbury Great Stanmore Little Stanmore Edmonton Enfield Monken Hadley South Mimms Tottenham 1976 pp 88 96 URL Date accessed 12 May 2009 Chaz Jankel theblockheads com 14 May 2001 Medina Cotten Patricia 1998 Laid back in Hollywood Remembering Los Angeles Belle Publishing pp 1 2 ISBN 0 9649635 2 3 Theo Walcott TheFA com Retrieved 19 May 2014 How Keith Vaz on a 90k a year MP salary built up a 4million property portfolio Daily Mirror 6 September 2016 Olly Mann is a presenter columnist and technology commentator ollymann co uk Retrieved 30 November 2016 Honeypot Lane External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stanmore Stanmore College website Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanmore amp oldid 1152202174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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