Harrow On The Hill
Harrow On The Hill photos (34 available)
Harrow On The Hill maps (2 available)
Harrow On The Hill books (15 available)
- 1 photos on Harrow On The Hill appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Harrow On The Hill
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Harrow On The Hill and London
Harrow On The Hill memories
Childhood
St Marys Church was my special place. I would go there whenever I needed to think or just find inner peace. It helped me through a sometimes difficult transition to adulthood. Although I now live 56 miles away, it is still my place of hope, and I go back there every chance I get. It's so beautiful, my very own stairway to heaven.
Contributed by Pauline Coles
London memories
Childhood
St Marys Church was my special place. I would go there whenever I needed to think or just find inner peace. It helped me through a sometimes difficult transition to adulthood. Although I now live 56 miles away, it is still my place of hope, and I go back there every chance I get. It's so beautiful, my very own stairway to heaven.
A memory of Harrow On The Hill contributed by Pauline Coles
Happy Days
Having grown up in Harrow during the 1950s and 60s, how well I remember my trips to Universal Stationers, seen here at the top of Station Road close to its junction with College Road. As a child I was always fascinated with stationery items and this shop stocked everything you needed. Upon entering you would be greeted by an assistant who would gladly climb a ladder to bring down reams of typing paper from the shelves above which reached to ceiling level. On leaving the shop we would form an orderly queue at the nearby bus stop where the 114 and 158 called to take us home to Harrow Weald. Contrast this with the unruly scrum that occurs at Harrow Bus ...read more here
A memory of Harrow contributed by Chris Kennett
Stanley Road
I lived at number 90 Stanley Road from 1964 until 1985. My dad worked at the Gas Board at the top of the road where the gas holder always seemed to dominate the skyline. Although it was an ugly building it was part of South Harrow and I think a few people were sad to see it taken down. Not many people knew that it was a nesting site for a pair of kestrels and they nested there since I was a kid until they pulled it down.
I can remember when they built Brember Road and knocked three houses down to make the new road and built industrial units round the back. The market was always an exciting place to ...read more here
A memory of South Harrow contributed by paul cook
Extracts From Harrow On The Hill & London books
Here we see the beginnings of a familiar retail pattern: multinationals are taking over the high street. On the left is Home & Colonial, which by this date had several hundred branches. Their pricing policy was aggressive: signs in the window proclaim ‘2d in the shilling returned’. Two doors along is Boots, ‘the largest chemist in the world’, and just beyond that Sainsbury’s, with its distinctive shop interiors, spacious, practical and hygienic, worlds away from the small, cramped corner shop of old.
An extract from from"Times Gone By".
Here we see the beginnings of a familiar retail pattern: multinationals are taking over the high street. On the left is Home & Colonial, which by this date had several hundred branches. Their pricing policy was aggressive: signs in the window proclaim ‘2d in the shilling returned’. Two doors along is Boots, ‘the largest chemist in the world’, and just beyond that Sainsbury’s, with its distinctive shop interiors, spacious, practical and hygienic, worlds away from the small, cramped corner shop of old.
An extract from from"Countryside Poems".
The Earl of Cornwall built stew (fish)
ponds on the western boundary of his
estate, and fish was an important part of
the medieval diet. Fish weirs were used to
trap fish in rivers, and were an important
and often hotly disputed resource up to
the 18th century. They were supposed to
be licensed, but illegal weirs flourished and
were a hazard to river traffic. There was at
least one weir in the river by Isleworth with
stakes at its upper end, and this gave its
name to the modern Railshead Road where
the Crane joins the Thames.
In the Middle Ages the settlement at
Twickenham was a cluster of houses in
streets around St Mary’s Church and in
narrow alleys nearby leading down to the
river. Church Street was the principal way
through Twickenham for travellers until the
end of the 19th century when the present
York Street was built. The name of Burgate
was used for the area near the church in
1486. Although the nave of the present
St Mary’s dates from 1713, when it was
rebuilt after it collapsed, the ragstone church
tower is medieval and may have formed part
of an earlier fortification on the site.
An extract from from"Twickenham - A History & Celebration".
The local population in the Middle Ages
made a living from agriculture, fishing,
boat-building, and ferrying traffic up and
down the river. There was even a local
vineyard, which produced ‘two tuns and
one pipe’ in 1297. This seems to have been
planted with cherry-trees later. There is little
detailed evidence on the number of people
living at Twickenham during the Middle
Ages but the manor of Isleworth, including
Twickenham, seems to have expanded slowly
during this period. In the 14th century
there are accounts of crops of oats, wheat,
and barley being grown locally, and local
livestock included cows and sheep. The rolls
also list a ploughman, a shepherd, a cowman,
and a dairymaid in this period. By 1547 the
people of Isleworth were said to number
400, and the figure relating to Twickenham
apart from the rest of Isleworth Manor is
estimated at 210.
The River Thames has been an important
means of transport since before the Romans
arrived in England. As there was no bridge
across the Thames from Twickenham on
the Middlesex bank over to the Surrey bank
until the 18th century, residents who wanted
to cross to the opposite bank of the river did
so by ferry. The first evidence of a ferry at
Twickenham occurs in 1443.
An extract from from"Twickenham - A History & Celebration".
The Earl of Cornwall built stew (fish)
ponds on the western boundary of his
estate, and fish was an important part of
the medieval diet. Fish weirs were used to
trap fish in rivers, and were an important
and often hotly disputed resource up to
the 18th century. They were supposed to
be licensed, but illegal weirs flourished and
were a hazard to river traffic. There was at
least one weir in the river by Isleworth with
stakes at its upper end, and this gave its
name to the modern Railshead Road where
the Crane joins the Thames.
In the Middle Ages the settlement at
Twickenham was a cluster of houses in
streets around St Mary’s Church and in
narrow alleys nearby leading down to the
river. Church Street was the principal way
through Twickenham for travellers until the
end of the 19th century when the present
York Street was built. The name of Burgate
was used for the area near the church in
1486. Although the nave of the present
St Mary’s dates from 1713, when it was
rebuilt after it collapsed, the ragstone church
tower is medieval and may have formed part
of an earlier fortification on the site.
An extract from from"Twickenham - A History & Celebration".







