Elstree | |
---|---|
Watling Street, Elstree | |
Location within
Hertfordshire | |
Population | 5,110 (Ward, 2011) [1] |
OS grid reference | TQ175955 |
Civil parish | |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | BOREHAMWOOD |
Postcode district | WD6 |
Dialling code | 020 |
Police | Hertfordshire |
Fire | Hertfordshire |
Ambulance | East of England |
UK Parliament | |
Elstree /ˈɛlztri/ is a large village in the Hertsmere borough of Hertfordshire, England. It is about 15 miles (24 kilometres) northwest of central London on the former A5 road, that follows the course of Watling Street. In 2011, its population was 5,110. [1] It forms part of the civil parish of Elstree and Borehamwood, originally known simply as Elstree.
The village often lends its shorter name to businesses and amenities in the adjacent town of Borehamwood, and the names of Elstree and Borehamwood are used interchangeably. Elstree is perhaps best known for multiple Elstree Film Studio complexes, where many films were made, including BBC Elstree Centre, where the TV soap opera EastEnders is shot. This production centre is actually in Borehamwood.
The local newspaper is the Borehamwood and Elstree Times. [2] Together with Borehamwood, the village is twinned with Offenburg in Germany, Fontenay-aux-Roses in France, and Huainan in China. [3] [4]
Elstree & Borehamwood railway station is on the Midland Main Line between London St Pancras and Bedford. It was built by the Midland Railway in 1868, and is located just north of the 1,072-yard-long (980 m) Elstree Tunnels. [5]
The area of Borehamwood to the west of the railway line, formally Deacon's Hill, is colloquially called Elstree even though it is not contiguous with the village. Elstree South Underground station was due to be an extension of the Northern line, planned in the 1930s, but never completed.
The old A5 road ( Watling Street) goes through Elstree village, where it is designated as the A5183 road. Through the village, the road is called (from south to north) Elstree Hill South, High Street and Elstree Hill North. The 18th century Grade II listed building, Elstree Hill House, is still on Elstree Hill South, and used to be the home of the old Elstree School (see Schools). In the early 1900s, it was noted that:
Elstree Aerodrome is licensed by the CAA and has a 2,150-foot (717 yd; 655 m) paved runway, suitable most for light aircraft and turbine powered G A aircraft. It also is one of the main helicopter centres for north London and is extending its provision in this area. In the early 1930s it was a grass landing strip for the local Aldenham House country club. [7] A concrete runway was put down during World War II, and Wellington Bombers were modified here. [8] After World War II the airfield was initially used to fly in converted Halifaxes stacked with food supplies to supplement the depleted British stocks; however, after an overloaded plane damaged the runway it was no longer used for this purpose. [9]
On 29 November 1975, retired Formula One race car driver and Embassy Hill car owner Graham Hill and his racing driver Tony Brise were piloting a twin-engine six-seat Piper PA-23-250 Aztec (N6645Y) from France to London with four additional team members aboard. All six were killed when it crashed and burned in heavy fog on Arkley Golf Course, 3 miles (5 km) short of the runway. [10] [11] [12]
London Transport's Aldenham Works was sited on the edge of Elstree close to the A41; it was opened in 1956, closed in 1986, and demolished in 1996. [13] It is now a large business park.
Originally a 19th-century steam ship owned by the Houlder Brothers, [14] the town also lends its name to a series of ships called the Elstree Grange (rebuilt 1916, 1944, 1979), [15] at one time sunk during the Second World War. [16]
Elstree is home to a number of Grade II listed buildings, including some at Grade II* (particularly important buildings), such as:
The Manor hotel, formerly known as the Edgwarebury Hotel, is located on Barnet Lane. [21] The Tudor-style building dates back to 1540, was converted into a hotel in the 1960s, and has featured in many TV and film productions, such as the 1968 Hammer Horror classic, The Devil Rides Out. Notable guests have included Peter Sellers, Tom Cruise, John Cleese and Stanley Kubrick. [22] It was the country home of armaments manufacturer and First Baronet Sir (Arthur) Trevor Dawson, (1866–1931). [23]
A house in Elstree designed by architect Edward John May (1853–1941) was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1887. St Nicholas Parish Church was designed by English architect Philip Charles Hardwick. [24]
Elstree is home to Aldenham School, and Haberdashers' Boys' School, both independent public schools (ie. fee-paying), Haberdashers' School for Girls, and St Nicholas Church of England V.A Primary School.
Just outside of Elstree, in the neighbouring town of Borehamwood, are lots of schools. There is Hertswood Academy, Elstree Screen Arts Academy – the vocational school linked with Elstree Studios.
There is also a Jewish high school called Yavneh College, Borehamwood. Yavneh was set up in 2013 by Dr Dena Coleman, ex-headteacher of Hasmonean High School. Dr Coleman was also a board-member of the Jewish National Fund. Just before her retirement in 2013, Dr Coleman died of Meningitis. Now, Yavneh College is headed up by Mr Spencer Lewis, ex-head teacher of King Solomon High School. Recently, the Yavneh Schools governors opened a primary school on the Hillside Avenue campuses. [25]
Since the 1780s, a private school has been located in Elstree. [26]
Elstree School, a boys' preparatory school, was located in Elstree from 1848 until 1938 before moving to Woolhampton, Berkshire before the outbreak of the Second World War.
Hillside School was located in Elstree between 1874 and 1886, before eventually becoming Dorset House School in 1905, [26] [27] (not to be confused with Hillside School in nearby Borehamwood.)
Elstree Cricket Club was formed in 1878, [28] but no longer play in the Herts Saracens League. [29] [30] 18-hole Radlett Park Golf Club was founded in 1984, [31] having recently being renamed from Elstree Golf & Country Club. [32] It is closer to Elstree than Radlett.
Hatch End Cricket Club also play in Elstree. They participate in the Herts Saracens League.
Section 15 of the London Outer Orbital Path (London Loop) goes through Elstree, [33] before continuing as Section 16, a 10-mile (16 km) walk from Elstree to Cockfosters. [34] [35]
Elstree was home to Ohr Yisrael Synagogue, an Orthodox synagogue with affiliation to the Federation of Synagogues. However, the synagogue's present location is just within Borehamwood. The village currently sports two synagogues: The Shtiebel, an ultra-orthodox synagogue, and The Liberal Synagogue Elstree, just south of St. Nicholas' Church. According to census data, Elstree's population, including the Deacon's Hill area, was 36.0% Jewish, making it the only settlement with a Jewish plurality in the UK (the Christian population comprised 32.4% of the population). There is also 2 United Synagogue shuls in the area. One is on Croxdale road and the other is at Yavneh College, Borehamwood. [36]
Aldenham Country Park is both a recreational facility and a breeding centre for rare livestock. Section 15 of the London Loop walk passes by. [33] In 1873 nearby Tykes Water stream was dammed to create Tykes Water lake. [37] Tykes Water Bridge features in the open credits to the Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee film, Dracula A.D. 1972, [38] and used in several episodes of the Diana Rigg and Linda Thorson seasons of The Avengers, including the final Thorson opening titles. [39] It also features in the film Mosquito Squadron.
The dam was built in 1795 by French prisoners of war. [40] English watercolour landscape painter John Hassell writes:
In 1886, the Photographic Society of Great Britain featured an exhibition of photos of Elstree Reservoir by Edgar Clifton. [42] During World War I, then Major Keith Caldwell with No. 74 Squadron RAF, used Elstree Reservoir for target practice. [43] In 1918, one of the pilots accidentally killed a local resident when his machine gun misfired. [44]
The name "Elstree" derives from the Anglo-Saxon phrase for "Tidwulf's Tree", which is mentioned as "Tidulfres treow" in an 11–12th-century manuscript of an A.D. 786 charter. [45] [46] It is thought that "the "T" [was] lost in the wrong division of 'aet Tidwulfes treo' [47] ("at Tidwulf's Tree")."
A reference to a place in Hertford as "Ilestre" in 1460 may also be a variation. [48]
In 1723, topographer John Norden noted in his book Speculum Britanniae, that in the county of Hartfordshire [ sic] was one "Elstre or Eglestre". [49] In an earlier edition, he writes: [50]
Nemus aquilinum is the Latin for "grove of eagles".
Robinson Crusoe author, Daniel Defoe wrote in his 1748 travel guide that:
In 1811, topographer Daniel Lysons writes:
In the 5th century, British warlord Vortigern and his two sons, Vortimer and Catigern, took part in the Battle of Elstree, then called the Battle of Ailestreu, [53] where the Saxon Horsa was killed. It's possible there is confusion with the Battle of Aylesbury. George Moberly writes:
The Manor of Elstree was formerly included in the Manor of Parkbury, and belonged to the Abbey of St. Albans. On the Dissolution of the Monasteries, it was granted by Henry VIII, to Anthony Denny (1501–1549). [55] [56]
In 1607, Anthony Denny's grandson Edward Denny sold part of the estate, with all manorial rights, to Robert Briscoe, who sold it the same year to Sir Baptist Hicks. Part of the estate became the Manor of Boreham, and was sold to Edward Beauchamp. It remained with the Beauchamp-Proctor family until 1748, [57] when it was sold to James West, M.P. for St. Albans, who, in or about 1751, alienated it to a Mr Gulston of Widdial[ clarification needed]. Gulston then sold it to a Mr Pigfatt, a gunsmith, who, within a few years, conveyed it to Thomas Jemmet. In 1774 it was purchased from Mr Jemmet by the late George Byng, M.P. for Middlesex, who passed it on to his son, by which time the estate was called the Manor of Boreham. [55]
In 1776, the House of Lords granted:
In 1796 topographer Daniel Lysons writes:
In 1779, Martha Ray (c. 1742–1779), singer and mistress of John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, was buried in the parish church (illustrated, right) after she had been shot dead by the Rev. James Hackman, Rector of Wiveton in Norfolk. [60]
In 1823 Elstree became notorious for the Elstree murder of William Weare, killed in Radlett and the body disposed of in a pond in Elstree by John Thurtell. [61] The incident was recalled by Charles Dickens in his Weekly Journal. [62] An inquest of the deceased was held on 31 October by county coroner Benjamin Rooke at the local Artichoke public house. [63] He was likewise buried (funeral depicted) at the Parish Church.
On 17 August 1882, Eliza Ebborn of Watford was murdered by 24-year-old shoemaker George Stratton, who was subsequently sentenced to death. [64] [65] She was buried at Elstree Parish Church. [66]
Elstree used to be divided between the counties of Hertfordshire and Middlesex. The north part (which included the parish of Elstree) lay in the Hundred of Cashio, also known as the Liberty of St Albans, while the south part lay in the Hundred of Gore. The county boundary ran along the road from Watford to Barnet, now called Barnet Lane. [67]
From 1941 to 1974, Elstree Rural District was the local government area, before being abolished and merged with Hertsmere. On 20 March 1957, Armorial Bearings were granted. The arms and crest are described as follows:
Climate data for Elstree | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 6 (43) |
7 (45) |
9 (48) |
12 (54) |
16 (61) |
18 (64) |
22 (72) |
22 (72) |
18 (64) |
14 (57) |
9 (48) |
7 (45) |
13 (56) |
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | 1 (34) |
1 (34) |
2 (36) |
4 (39) |
6 (43) |
9 (48) |
11 (52) |
11 (52) |
10 (50) |
7 (45) |
3 (37) |
2 (36) |
6 (42) |
Average precipitation mm (inches) | 69.6 (2.74) |
47.2 (1.86) |
54.1 (2.13) |
53.1 (2.09) |
49.8 (1.96) |
60.5 (2.38) |
41.1 (1.62) |
53.6 (2.11) |
61.0 (2.40) |
74.4 (2.93) |
66.0 (2.60) |
67.6 (2.66) |
698 (27.48) |
Source: Monthly averages for Borehamwood, United Kingdom The Weather Channel. Retrieved 15 October 2011 |
Elstree | |
---|---|
Watling Street, Elstree | |
Location within
Hertfordshire | |
Population | 5,110 (Ward, 2011) [1] |
OS grid reference | TQ175955 |
Civil parish | |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | BOREHAMWOOD |
Postcode district | WD6 |
Dialling code | 020 |
Police | Hertfordshire |
Fire | Hertfordshire |
Ambulance | East of England |
UK Parliament | |
Elstree /ˈɛlztri/ is a large village in the Hertsmere borough of Hertfordshire, England. It is about 15 miles (24 kilometres) northwest of central London on the former A5 road, that follows the course of Watling Street. In 2011, its population was 5,110. [1] It forms part of the civil parish of Elstree and Borehamwood, originally known simply as Elstree.
The village often lends its shorter name to businesses and amenities in the adjacent town of Borehamwood, and the names of Elstree and Borehamwood are used interchangeably. Elstree is perhaps best known for multiple Elstree Film Studio complexes, where many films were made, including BBC Elstree Centre, where the TV soap opera EastEnders is shot. This production centre is actually in Borehamwood.
The local newspaper is the Borehamwood and Elstree Times. [2] Together with Borehamwood, the village is twinned with Offenburg in Germany, Fontenay-aux-Roses in France, and Huainan in China. [3] [4]
Elstree & Borehamwood railway station is on the Midland Main Line between London St Pancras and Bedford. It was built by the Midland Railway in 1868, and is located just north of the 1,072-yard-long (980 m) Elstree Tunnels. [5]
The area of Borehamwood to the west of the railway line, formally Deacon's Hill, is colloquially called Elstree even though it is not contiguous with the village. Elstree South Underground station was due to be an extension of the Northern line, planned in the 1930s, but never completed.
The old A5 road ( Watling Street) goes through Elstree village, where it is designated as the A5183 road. Through the village, the road is called (from south to north) Elstree Hill South, High Street and Elstree Hill North. The 18th century Grade II listed building, Elstree Hill House, is still on Elstree Hill South, and used to be the home of the old Elstree School (see Schools). In the early 1900s, it was noted that:
Elstree Aerodrome is licensed by the CAA and has a 2,150-foot (717 yd; 655 m) paved runway, suitable most for light aircraft and turbine powered G A aircraft. It also is one of the main helicopter centres for north London and is extending its provision in this area. In the early 1930s it was a grass landing strip for the local Aldenham House country club. [7] A concrete runway was put down during World War II, and Wellington Bombers were modified here. [8] After World War II the airfield was initially used to fly in converted Halifaxes stacked with food supplies to supplement the depleted British stocks; however, after an overloaded plane damaged the runway it was no longer used for this purpose. [9]
On 29 November 1975, retired Formula One race car driver and Embassy Hill car owner Graham Hill and his racing driver Tony Brise were piloting a twin-engine six-seat Piper PA-23-250 Aztec (N6645Y) from France to London with four additional team members aboard. All six were killed when it crashed and burned in heavy fog on Arkley Golf Course, 3 miles (5 km) short of the runway. [10] [11] [12]
London Transport's Aldenham Works was sited on the edge of Elstree close to the A41; it was opened in 1956, closed in 1986, and demolished in 1996. [13] It is now a large business park.
Originally a 19th-century steam ship owned by the Houlder Brothers, [14] the town also lends its name to a series of ships called the Elstree Grange (rebuilt 1916, 1944, 1979), [15] at one time sunk during the Second World War. [16]
Elstree is home to a number of Grade II listed buildings, including some at Grade II* (particularly important buildings), such as:
The Manor hotel, formerly known as the Edgwarebury Hotel, is located on Barnet Lane. [21] The Tudor-style building dates back to 1540, was converted into a hotel in the 1960s, and has featured in many TV and film productions, such as the 1968 Hammer Horror classic, The Devil Rides Out. Notable guests have included Peter Sellers, Tom Cruise, John Cleese and Stanley Kubrick. [22] It was the country home of armaments manufacturer and First Baronet Sir (Arthur) Trevor Dawson, (1866–1931). [23]
A house in Elstree designed by architect Edward John May (1853–1941) was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1887. St Nicholas Parish Church was designed by English architect Philip Charles Hardwick. [24]
Elstree is home to Aldenham School, and Haberdashers' Boys' School, both independent public schools (ie. fee-paying), Haberdashers' School for Girls, and St Nicholas Church of England V.A Primary School.
Just outside of Elstree, in the neighbouring town of Borehamwood, are lots of schools. There is Hertswood Academy, Elstree Screen Arts Academy – the vocational school linked with Elstree Studios.
There is also a Jewish high school called Yavneh College, Borehamwood. Yavneh was set up in 2013 by Dr Dena Coleman, ex-headteacher of Hasmonean High School. Dr Coleman was also a board-member of the Jewish National Fund. Just before her retirement in 2013, Dr Coleman died of Meningitis. Now, Yavneh College is headed up by Mr Spencer Lewis, ex-head teacher of King Solomon High School. Recently, the Yavneh Schools governors opened a primary school on the Hillside Avenue campuses. [25]
Since the 1780s, a private school has been located in Elstree. [26]
Elstree School, a boys' preparatory school, was located in Elstree from 1848 until 1938 before moving to Woolhampton, Berkshire before the outbreak of the Second World War.
Hillside School was located in Elstree between 1874 and 1886, before eventually becoming Dorset House School in 1905, [26] [27] (not to be confused with Hillside School in nearby Borehamwood.)
Elstree Cricket Club was formed in 1878, [28] but no longer play in the Herts Saracens League. [29] [30] 18-hole Radlett Park Golf Club was founded in 1984, [31] having recently being renamed from Elstree Golf & Country Club. [32] It is closer to Elstree than Radlett.
Hatch End Cricket Club also play in Elstree. They participate in the Herts Saracens League.
Section 15 of the London Outer Orbital Path (London Loop) goes through Elstree, [33] before continuing as Section 16, a 10-mile (16 km) walk from Elstree to Cockfosters. [34] [35]
Elstree was home to Ohr Yisrael Synagogue, an Orthodox synagogue with affiliation to the Federation of Synagogues. However, the synagogue's present location is just within Borehamwood. The village currently sports two synagogues: The Shtiebel, an ultra-orthodox synagogue, and The Liberal Synagogue Elstree, just south of St. Nicholas' Church. According to census data, Elstree's population, including the Deacon's Hill area, was 36.0% Jewish, making it the only settlement with a Jewish plurality in the UK (the Christian population comprised 32.4% of the population). There is also 2 United Synagogue shuls in the area. One is on Croxdale road and the other is at Yavneh College, Borehamwood. [36]
Aldenham Country Park is both a recreational facility and a breeding centre for rare livestock. Section 15 of the London Loop walk passes by. [33] In 1873 nearby Tykes Water stream was dammed to create Tykes Water lake. [37] Tykes Water Bridge features in the open credits to the Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee film, Dracula A.D. 1972, [38] and used in several episodes of the Diana Rigg and Linda Thorson seasons of The Avengers, including the final Thorson opening titles. [39] It also features in the film Mosquito Squadron.
The dam was built in 1795 by French prisoners of war. [40] English watercolour landscape painter John Hassell writes:
In 1886, the Photographic Society of Great Britain featured an exhibition of photos of Elstree Reservoir by Edgar Clifton. [42] During World War I, then Major Keith Caldwell with No. 74 Squadron RAF, used Elstree Reservoir for target practice. [43] In 1918, one of the pilots accidentally killed a local resident when his machine gun misfired. [44]
The name "Elstree" derives from the Anglo-Saxon phrase for "Tidwulf's Tree", which is mentioned as "Tidulfres treow" in an 11–12th-century manuscript of an A.D. 786 charter. [45] [46] It is thought that "the "T" [was] lost in the wrong division of 'aet Tidwulfes treo' [47] ("at Tidwulf's Tree")."
A reference to a place in Hertford as "Ilestre" in 1460 may also be a variation. [48]
In 1723, topographer John Norden noted in his book Speculum Britanniae, that in the county of Hartfordshire [ sic] was one "Elstre or Eglestre". [49] In an earlier edition, he writes: [50]
Nemus aquilinum is the Latin for "grove of eagles".
Robinson Crusoe author, Daniel Defoe wrote in his 1748 travel guide that:
In 1811, topographer Daniel Lysons writes:
In the 5th century, British warlord Vortigern and his two sons, Vortimer and Catigern, took part in the Battle of Elstree, then called the Battle of Ailestreu, [53] where the Saxon Horsa was killed. It's possible there is confusion with the Battle of Aylesbury. George Moberly writes:
The Manor of Elstree was formerly included in the Manor of Parkbury, and belonged to the Abbey of St. Albans. On the Dissolution of the Monasteries, it was granted by Henry VIII, to Anthony Denny (1501–1549). [55] [56]
In 1607, Anthony Denny's grandson Edward Denny sold part of the estate, with all manorial rights, to Robert Briscoe, who sold it the same year to Sir Baptist Hicks. Part of the estate became the Manor of Boreham, and was sold to Edward Beauchamp. It remained with the Beauchamp-Proctor family until 1748, [57] when it was sold to James West, M.P. for St. Albans, who, in or about 1751, alienated it to a Mr Gulston of Widdial[ clarification needed]. Gulston then sold it to a Mr Pigfatt, a gunsmith, who, within a few years, conveyed it to Thomas Jemmet. In 1774 it was purchased from Mr Jemmet by the late George Byng, M.P. for Middlesex, who passed it on to his son, by which time the estate was called the Manor of Boreham. [55]
In 1776, the House of Lords granted:
In 1796 topographer Daniel Lysons writes:
In 1779, Martha Ray (c. 1742–1779), singer and mistress of John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, was buried in the parish church (illustrated, right) after she had been shot dead by the Rev. James Hackman, Rector of Wiveton in Norfolk. [60]
In 1823 Elstree became notorious for the Elstree murder of William Weare, killed in Radlett and the body disposed of in a pond in Elstree by John Thurtell. [61] The incident was recalled by Charles Dickens in his Weekly Journal. [62] An inquest of the deceased was held on 31 October by county coroner Benjamin Rooke at the local Artichoke public house. [63] He was likewise buried (funeral depicted) at the Parish Church.
On 17 August 1882, Eliza Ebborn of Watford was murdered by 24-year-old shoemaker George Stratton, who was subsequently sentenced to death. [64] [65] She was buried at Elstree Parish Church. [66]
Elstree used to be divided between the counties of Hertfordshire and Middlesex. The north part (which included the parish of Elstree) lay in the Hundred of Cashio, also known as the Liberty of St Albans, while the south part lay in the Hundred of Gore. The county boundary ran along the road from Watford to Barnet, now called Barnet Lane. [67]
From 1941 to 1974, Elstree Rural District was the local government area, before being abolished and merged with Hertsmere. On 20 March 1957, Armorial Bearings were granted. The arms and crest are described as follows:
Climate data for Elstree | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 6 (43) |
7 (45) |
9 (48) |
12 (54) |
16 (61) |
18 (64) |
22 (72) |
22 (72) |
18 (64) |
14 (57) |
9 (48) |
7 (45) |
13 (56) |
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | 1 (34) |
1 (34) |
2 (36) |
4 (39) |
6 (43) |
9 (48) |
11 (52) |
11 (52) |
10 (50) |
7 (45) |
3 (37) |
2 (36) |
6 (42) |
Average precipitation mm (inches) | 69.6 (2.74) |
47.2 (1.86) |
54.1 (2.13) |
53.1 (2.09) |
49.8 (1.96) |
60.5 (2.38) |
41.1 (1.62) |
53.6 (2.11) |
61.0 (2.40) |
74.4 (2.93) |
66.0 (2.60) |
67.6 (2.66) |
698 (27.48) |
Source: Monthly averages for Borehamwood, United Kingdom The Weather Channel. Retrieved 15 October 2011 |