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Sudbury, London

Sudbury (/ˈsʌdbəri/) is a suburb in the London Borough of Brent, located in northwest London, United Kingdom. The suburb forms the western part of Wembley and is centred around 0.6 miles (1 km) west of Wembley Central railway station.

Sudbury
St Andrew's Church
Sudbury
Location within Greater London
Population14,950 (2011 Census. Ward)[1]
OS grid referenceTQ165852
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townWEMBLEY
Postcode districtHA0
Post townHARROW
Postcode districtHA1
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°33′13″N 0°19′12″W / 51.5537°N 0.3199°W / 51.5537; -0.3199
Crabbs House, Barham Park

Sudbury is a historical area, having once extended from the 'South Manor - Sudbury' (thought to have been on Harrow Hill) to the area that is now known as Wembley Central. Much of the land that once formed Sudbury Common until the 1930s has now been developed as a relatively green residential suburb of London. Much of Sudbury was once in the ownership of the Barham family, who give their name to a number of local landmarks, including Barham School and Barham Park.

Today, Sudbury covers a narrow area with Wembley to its east, North Wembley to its north, Sudbury Hill to the west, and North Greenford, in the London Borough of Ealing, directly south. Its section in the borough of Harrow is around Sudbury Court Drive, which is technically located within North Wembley. It is historically in the County of Middlesex.

History edit

Early history edit

Sudbury, in the parish of Harrow, was in the Hundred of Gore in the historic County of Middlesex, and was one of ten hamlets which formed the larger of the Archbishop of Canterbury's two Harrow manors.[2] The road to London and the proximity of Harrow School enhanced its status. Its upkeep was supported in part by Sir John Lyon, founder of Harrow School. In 1842, main train station, Sudbury station opened. On 1 May 1882, the station was renamed to "Sudbury and Wembley". Later, in 1910, "Sudbury and Wembley" was renamed to "Wembley for Sudbury". Finally, in 1948, the station was renamed to "Wembley Central" and it has remained "Wembley Central" ever since.[3]

Georgian era edit

Wealthy sisters and local philanthropists the Copland Sisters after which many local landmarks from streets to schools were named commissioned Sir George Gilbert Scott, the architect who later designed the Albert Memorial and St Pancras station, to build the Church of St John in 1846 which marks the easterly extent of Sudbury. Opposite is Copland House, now a home for the elderly. The Coplands built Sudbury Lodge in the grounds of their father's home in Crabbs House.

This would later change hands and be owned by another wealthy and philanthropic family; the Barhams. During the late Georgian period Sudbury was the home of the Express Dairy Company Limited run by the Barham Family. It was the first British Dairy to use glass milk bottles, the first to use milk churns and glass lined tanks to carry 30 0000 gallons of milk by train into London every night and one of the first to introduce pasteurisation to sterilise milk. It even supplied milk to Queen Victoria. For his services the owner and managing director George Barham Sr. was knighted in 1904. He died in 1913 leaving his business to his son Titus Barham.

Nineteenth century to modern times edit

 
Jubilee Gardens

Titus Barham died aged 77 years in 1937. On the day of his death he had been due to be made the first Mayor of the new ward. He left considerable lands for the benefit of the public in this rural area. His former mansion in Barham Park was demolished in 1956. Much of the area originally given over to arable land for use by dairy herds was lost during the interwar period.

Urbanisation began in earnest in the late 19th century with the arrival of the railways. Sudbury town became part of the London commuter belt. The demand for housing was such that within the short interwar period much of the area became urbanised. Despite this it remains a relatively green area mainly due to strict planning control. In 1928 land was given over for the Vale Farm sports fields. There has been a swimming pool on the site since 1932.

Parks and recreation edit

 
Barham Park

Barham Park is a landscaped garden dating from the 18th century. The foundations of Sudbury Lodge, formerly the home of George Barham, founder of Express Dairies,[4] still stand amidst his walled gardens. Also in the park is a surviving Georgian building, formerly Crabb's House, which is now used as a library. The park has a floral display, three ponds, a conifer plantation, a large and modern children's play area, and a war memorial.

Sport edit

Sudbury was the former home of London Wasps rugby union team who moved there in 1923. During the late nineties they relocated to Loftus Road to share with QPR before moving to Buckinghamshire in 2001, and subsequently Coventry in 2014, and the ground at Sudbury Town has been developed for housing. The club house still stands and is still considered the club's spiritual home. A large swimming pool, outdoor tennis courts, cricket pitches and nets, AstroTurf pitches and a sports complex are located at Vale Farm. The complex is also the home ground of Wembley F.C., and contains a stadium with a 2,000 seat capacity. Other sports clubs in the district include Sudbury Golf Club, Sudbury Squash and Tennis Club, and Sudbury Court Running Club.

The Lyons' Sports Club hosted the field hockey preliminaries for the 1948 Summer Olympics.[5]

Historical buildings edit

 
Walled Garden, Barham Park

In the 19th century Sudbury was a large meadow stretching from Wembley to Harrow Hill. It was dotted by many farm houses and grand residences. A few buildings from this era still remain and a notable example is Hundred Elms Farm of Elms Lane to the North of Sudbury Town. Now a residential care home, the actual building is well maintained but is not open to the public.

Religious buildings edit

 
Church of St. John, Western Aspect

Sudbury Methodist Church is situated opposite Butlers Green, and St. Andrew's Church of England, St. George's Catholic and the Church of St. John the Evangelist are located several hundred yards further up the Harrow Road. St George's is a Grade II-listed building designed by Leonard Williams.

St Andrew's Church started its life in 1904 as a mission church to Harrow Parish Church. The new church was designed by Arnold Mitchell (1863–1944) as part of the Harrow Church Extension Scheme, at a nett cost of £2,000 . The new mission church was dedicated on Wednesday 10 May 1905, by the Suffragan Bishop of Islington, and the first vicar was Reverend A M Bashford who served from 1910 to 1922. The church served as a place of worship until 1926, it is now used as the church hall. In June 1911 plans were laid to build a new church capably of holding 500 parishioners, the foundation stone was laid on 4 April 1925, and the new Church of St Andrew was Consecrated by the Lord Bishop of London on 20 March 1926. The first vicar was the Reverend A. Stone who served the parish from 1922 to 1930.[6] St. Andrews is a Grade II-listed building.

The church of St John was designed by Gilbert Scott and originally built in the 1800s. It has had at least three extensions since then. Over the past year extensive work has been completed in the Church of St John's. This church, located at the eastern edge of Sudbury where it borders Wembley, dates from the Georgian era.

Through the late 80s and mid 90s, it had fallen into a state of disrepair. Significant subsidence had threatened its foundations. Thanks to charitable works the extensive underpinning work on the historic church has been completed, saving it for future generations. Phase 2 of the restoration contracted to building firm BRICKSTONE has restored the rusted and broken ornate railings and gate to its former glory. Phase 3 involving restoration of the Lychgate was completed in time for the mayoral visit on remembrance Sunday 2009.

Demography edit

As of the 2011 census, Asian/Asian British: Indian were the largest ethnic group at 31%, followed by Asian/Asian British: Other Asian at 17% and with White: English/Welsh/Scottish/Northern Irish/British at 11%. After English with 7643 speakers, the next most spoken language is Gujarati with 2072 speakers.[7]

Residents' Association edit

Sudbury Town Residents' Association (STRA), The aims and objectives of STRA are to serve and encourage wider participation by the community (including the shops) in the restoration of a clean and safe environment within Sudbury. STRA will work closely with Brent Council and other authorities to improve the conditions and safety in the area. STRA is a non-political and non-sectarian organisation.

Notable residents edit

Transport edit

Neighbouring areas edit

Underground edit

Rail edit

Road edit

  • A404 (Harrow Road, Wembley)
  • A4005 (Bridgewater Road & Harrow Road, Harrow)
  • A4127 (Greenford Road & Sudbury Court Drive)

Buses edit

  • 18 (Euston to Sudbury Swan)
  • 182 (Brent Cross to Harrow Weald)
  • 92 (Ealing hospital to Brent Park IKEA)
  • H17 (Wembley Central to Harrow Bus Station)
  • 245 (Golders Green to Alperton Sainsbury's)

References edit

  1. ^ "Brent Ward population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
  2. ^ Sudbury Middlesex: A Short History and Guide to the Parish Church of St Andrews (1968) Wembley History Society
  3. ^ "Brent Council - History of Sudbury".
  4. ^ "History Lesson - Barham and Copland". The Alpertonian. This Church was originally built in 1846 with money given by the two sisters' Copland (Anne and Frances). {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  5. ^ 1948 Summer Olympics official report. p. 46.
  6. ^ Egan, Harold (1968). Sudbury Middlesex: A Short History and Guide to the Parish Church of St Andrew (2nd ed.). London, UK: Middlesex: Wembley History Society. ASIN B0018H8QUA.
  7. ^ "Sudbury - UK Census Data 2011".
  8. ^ Dawson, Julian (2011). And On Piano...Nicky Hopkins. Desert Hearts. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-898948-12-4.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 August 2014. Retrieved 1 April 2014. Carlo Little drummer

External links edit

sudbury, london, confused, with, sudbury, suffolk, sudbury, suburb, london, borough, brent, located, northwest, london, united, kingdom, suburb, forms, western, part, wembley, centred, around, miles, west, wembley, central, railway, station, sudburyst, andrew,. Not to be confused with Sudbury Suffolk Sudbury ˈ s ʌ d b er i is a suburb in the London Borough of Brent located in northwest London United Kingdom The suburb forms the western part of Wembley and is centred around 0 6 miles 1 km west of Wembley Central railway station SudburySt Andrew s ChurchSudburyLocation within Greater LondonPopulation14 950 2011 Census Ward 1 OS grid referenceTQ165852London boroughBrentCeremonial countyGreater LondonRegionLondonCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townWEMBLEYPostcode districtHA0Post townHARROWPostcode districtHA1Dialling code020PoliceMetropolitanFireLondonAmbulanceLondonUK ParliamentBrent NorthLondon AssemblyBrent and HarrowList of places UK England London 51 33 13 N 0 19 12 W 51 5537 N 0 3199 W 51 5537 0 3199Crabbs House Barham ParkSudbury is a historical area having once extended from the South Manor Sudbury thought to have been on Harrow Hill to the area that is now known as Wembley Central Much of the land that once formed Sudbury Common until the 1930s has now been developed as a relatively green residential suburb of London Much of Sudbury was once in the ownership of the Barham family who give their name to a number of local landmarks including Barham School and Barham Park Today Sudbury covers a narrow area with Wembley to its east North Wembley to its north Sudbury Hill to the west and North Greenford in the London Borough of Ealing directly south Its section in the borough of Harrow is around Sudbury Court Drive which is technically located within North Wembley It is historically in the County of Middlesex Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Georgian era 1 3 Nineteenth century to modern times 2 Parks and recreation 3 Sport 4 Historical buildings 5 Religious buildings 6 Demography 7 Residents Association 8 Notable residents 9 Transport 9 1 Neighbouring areas 9 2 Underground 9 3 Rail 9 4 Road 9 5 Buses 10 References 11 External linksHistory editEarly history edit Sudbury in the parish of Harrow was in the Hundred of Gore in the historic County of Middlesex and was one of ten hamlets which formed the larger of the Archbishop of Canterbury s two Harrow manors 2 The road to London and the proximity of Harrow School enhanced its status Its upkeep was supported in part by Sir John Lyon founder of Harrow School In 1842 main train station Sudbury station opened On 1 May 1882 the station was renamed to Sudbury and Wembley Later in 1910 Sudbury and Wembley was renamed to Wembley for Sudbury Finally in 1948 the station was renamed to Wembley Central and it has remained Wembley Central ever since 3 Georgian era edit Wealthy sisters and local philanthropists the Copland Sisters after which many local landmarks from streets to schools were named commissioned Sir George Gilbert Scott the architect who later designed the Albert Memorial and St Pancras station to build the Church of St John in 1846 which marks the easterly extent of Sudbury Opposite is Copland House now a home for the elderly The Coplands built Sudbury Lodge in the grounds of their father s home in Crabbs House This would later change hands and be owned by another wealthy and philanthropic family the Barhams During the late Georgian period Sudbury was the home of the Express Dairy Company Limited run by the Barham Family It was the first British Dairy to use glass milk bottles the first to use milk churns and glass lined tanks to carry 30 0000 gallons of milk by train into London every night and one of the first to introduce pasteurisation to sterilise milk It even supplied milk to Queen Victoria For his services the owner and managing director George Barham Sr was knighted in 1904 He died in 1913 leaving his business to his son Titus Barham Nineteenth century to modern times edit nbsp Jubilee GardensTitus Barham died aged 77 years in 1937 On the day of his death he had been due to be made the first Mayor of the new ward He left considerable lands for the benefit of the public in this rural area His former mansion in Barham Park was demolished in 1956 Much of the area originally given over to arable land for use by dairy herds was lost during the interwar period Urbanisation began in earnest in the late 19th century with the arrival of the railways Sudbury town became part of the London commuter belt The demand for housing was such that within the short interwar period much of the area became urbanised Despite this it remains a relatively green area mainly due to strict planning control In 1928 land was given over for the Vale Farm sports fields There has been a swimming pool on the site since 1932 Parks and recreation edit nbsp Barham ParkBarham Park is a landscaped garden dating from the 18th century The foundations of Sudbury Lodge formerly the home of George Barham founder of Express Dairies 4 still stand amidst his walled gardens Also in the park is a surviving Georgian building formerly Crabb s House which is now used as a library The park has a floral display three ponds a conifer plantation a large and modern children s play area and a war memorial Sport editSudbury was the former home of London Wasps rugby union team who moved there in 1923 During the late nineties they relocated to Loftus Road to share with QPR before moving to Buckinghamshire in 2001 and subsequently Coventry in 2014 and the ground at Sudbury Town has been developed for housing The club house still stands and is still considered the club s spiritual home A large swimming pool outdoor tennis courts cricket pitches and nets AstroTurf pitches and a sports complex are located at Vale Farm The complex is also the home ground of Wembley F C and contains a stadium with a 2 000 seat capacity Other sports clubs in the district include Sudbury Golf Club Sudbury Squash and Tennis Club and Sudbury Court Running Club The Lyons Sports Club hosted the field hockey preliminaries for the 1948 Summer Olympics 5 Historical buildings edit nbsp Walled Garden Barham ParkIn the 19th century Sudbury was a large meadow stretching from Wembley to Harrow Hill It was dotted by many farm houses and grand residences A few buildings from this era still remain and a notable example is Hundred Elms Farm of Elms Lane to the North of Sudbury Town Now a residential care home the actual building is well maintained but is not open to the public Religious buildings edit nbsp Church of St John Western AspectSudbury Methodist Church is situated opposite Butlers Green and St Andrew s Church of England St George s Catholic and the Church of St John the Evangelist are located several hundred yards further up the Harrow Road St George s is a Grade II listed building designed by Leonard Williams St Andrew s Church started its life in 1904 as a mission church to Harrow Parish Church The new church was designed by Arnold Mitchell 1863 1944 as part of the Harrow Church Extension Scheme at a nett cost of 2 000 The new mission church was dedicated on Wednesday 10 May 1905 by the Suffragan Bishop of Islington and the first vicar was Reverend A M Bashford who served from 1910 to 1922 The church served as a place of worship until 1926 it is now used as the church hall In June 1911 plans were laid to build a new church capably of holding 500 parishioners the foundation stone was laid on 4 April 1925 and the new Church of St Andrew was Consecrated by the Lord Bishop of London on 20 March 1926 The first vicar was the Reverend A Stone who served the parish from 1922 to 1930 6 St Andrews is a Grade II listed building The church of St John was designed by Gilbert Scott and originally built in the 1800s It has had at least three extensions since then Over the past year extensive work has been completed in the Church of St John s This church located at the eastern edge of Sudbury where it borders Wembley dates from the Georgian era Through the late 80s and mid 90s it had fallen into a state of disrepair Significant subsidence had threatened its foundations Thanks to charitable works the extensive underpinning work on the historic church has been completed saving it for future generations Phase 2 of the restoration contracted to building firm BRICKSTONE has restored the rusted and broken ornate railings and gate to its former glory Phase 3 involving restoration of the Lychgate was completed in time for the mayoral visit on remembrance Sunday 2009 Demography editAs of the 2011 census Asian Asian British Indian were the largest ethnic group at 31 followed by Asian Asian British Other Asian at 17 and with White English Welsh Scottish Northern Irish British at 11 After English with 7643 speakers the next most spoken language is Gujarati with 2072 speakers 7 Residents Association editSudbury Town Residents Association STRA The aims and objectives of STRA are to serve and encourage wider participation by the community including the shops in the restoration of a clean and safe environment within Sudbury STRA will work closely with Brent Council and other authorities to improve the conditions and safety in the area STRA is a non political and non sectarian organisation Notable residents editNicky Hopkins 1944 1994 musician 8 Carlo Little 1938 2005 musician 9 Transport editNeighbouring areas edit Underground edit Sudbury Town Station on the Piccadilly line Sudbury Hill Station on the Piccadilly lineRail edit Sudbury amp Harrow Road Station on Chiltern Railways Sudbury Hill Harrow Station on Chiltern RailwaysRoad edit A404 Harrow Road Wembley A4005 Bridgewater Road amp Harrow Road Harrow A4127 Greenford Road amp Sudbury Court Drive Buses edit 18 Euston to Sudbury Swan 182 Brent Cross to Harrow Weald 92 Ealing hospital to Brent Park IKEA H17 Wembley Central to Harrow Bus Station 245 Golders Green to Alperton Sainsbury s References edit Brent Ward population 2011 Neighbourhood Statistics Office for National Statistics Retrieved 20 October 2016 Sudbury Middlesex A Short History and Guide to the Parish Church of St Andrews 1968 Wembley History Society Brent Council History of Sudbury History Lesson Barham and Copland The Alpertonian This Church was originally built in 1846 with money given by the two sisters Copland Anne and Frances a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help 1948 Summer Olympics official report p 46 Egan Harold 1968 Sudbury Middlesex A Short History and Guide to the Parish Church of St Andrew 2nd ed London UK Middlesex Wembley History Society ASIN B0018H8QUA Sudbury UK Census Data 2011 Dawson Julian 2011 And On Piano Nicky Hopkins Desert Hearts p 25 ISBN 978 1 898948 12 4 Carlo Little Confessions of a Sixties Drummer the Early Years 1938 1960 Archived from the original on 13 August 2014 Retrieved 1 April 2014 Carlo Little drummerExternal links editSudbury Town Residents Association STRA http stra org uk nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sudbury London Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sudbury London amp oldid 1175681923, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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