History

& Heritage In Enfield Essay, Research Paper


Ponders


End? History


Ponders


End started out as a large hamlet in the parish of Enfield. The Enfield


enclosure map (1803) shows a straggling L-shaped settlement. The High Street


was built up from Red Lane (Lincoln Road) to just south of Farm Lane (Southbury


Road). Houses were dotted along South Street as far as Ponders End Mill and the


Lee Navigation. There was also a small settlement clustered around Scotland


Green. There was no road access across the river to Chingford. (It was not


until the early eighteen-seventies that Lea Valley Road was built, financed by


public subscription). The


River Lee in its natural state was more or less navigable as far as Ware and


Hertford. The present Lee Navigation was constructed from 1766 under the


supervision of John Smeaton, including a lock at Ponders End.The


ancient moated manor house called Durants Arbour stood to the east of the High


Street, between The Ride and Durants Road. In the sixteenth century it was held


by the powerful Wroth family. Both Sir Thomas Wroth and his son Sir Robert


Wroth were prominent MP’s during the reign of Elizabeth I. The property later


passed to the Stringer family, one of whom, William Stringer, was married to


the daughter of the notorious Judge Jeffreys. The manor house was destroyed by


fire in the late 18th century, but a Tudor gatehouse survived until 1910. The


moat was subsequently filled in and the site built over.In 1826


there were coaches every half hour to London. In 1840 the first section of what


was to become the main railway line to Cambridge was opened between Stratford


and Broxbourne with a station at Ponders End. In 1845 the station was served by


6 trains daily in each direction. In 1891 the opening of the Southbury Loop


gave Ponders End a second station, sited in Southbury Road. However, this line


lost its passenger service in 1909 due to tramway competition.In 1881


a horse tramway from Stamford Hill was opened as far as the junction of


Southbury Road and the High Street. Sadly, it did not prosper and within a


short time the service was cut back to Tramway Avenue Depot at Edmonton. In


1907 a completely new electric tramway was built through Ponders End, reaching


Waltham Cross in 1908. In 1911 the tramway was extended along Southbury Road,


forming a branch to Enfield Town. Apart from the Southbury Road route the trams


gave way to trolleybuses in 1938. A


report by the General Board of Health (1850) on sanitary conditions in Enfield


reveals an alarming state of affairs in Ponders End. Many of the older cottages


were grossly overcrowded and extremly insanitary. The worst affected areas were


South Street and Scotland Green. The whole area suffered from poor drainage.Housing


development began at a fairly early date. Alma Road was developed from 1855 and


Napier Road had been laid out by 1867. The Lincoln House Estate (Derby Road and


Lincoln Road) was built up from 1871. Durants Road was dvelo

ped from 1888 and


Nags Head Road from 1890. By 1914 much of the area had been built up, but there


was still open country separating Ponders End from Enfield Highway to the north


and Edmonton to the south.For


many years the nearest church was at Enfield Town. Then in 1831 St James Church


was built at Enfield Highway. Ponders End did not get a church of its own until


1878 when St Matthew’s Church was erected in South Street. The nonconformists,


however, took Ponders End rather more seriously. An Independent Chapel was


built in the High Street in 1768. (This is the direct ancestor of the present


United Reformed Church).The


oldest industrial site is the Ponders End Mill. The present mill buildings date


from the late 18th century. In 1809 Grout and Baylis’ crape factory was built


in South Street. This closed in 1894 and the factory was later taken over by


United Flexible Metal Tubing. A jute mill was opened beside the Lee Navigation


in 1865, lasting until 1882. The building was taken over by Ediswan in 1886 and


used for the manufacture of electric light bulbs and later radio valves. During


World War I, a huge munitions factory, the Ponders End Shell Works was built in


Wharf Road. The factory buildings were sold off after the war. Further


factories were built in the thirties alongside the newly-built Great Cambridge


Road.Housing


development resumed after World War I. The gaps separating Ponders End from


Edmonton and Enfield Highway were finally closed. Much former market garden


land was built upon. By 1939 the area was virtually fully developed.There


have been several transport innovations since World War II. The Southbury Loop,


closed to passengers since 1909, was re-opened and electrified in 1960. The Lea


Valley Line was electrified in 1969. Trolleybuses gave way to conventional


diesel buses in 1961. In the early nineteen-sixties Nags Head Road was extended


to link up with Lea Valley Road, bypassing the heavily congested level crossing


at Ponders End station.After


World War II much of the older part of Ponders End was in a rundown state. From


the fifties onwards there was much council redevelopment particularly in the


South Street and Alma Road areas. Today Ponders End is an uneasy mixture of old


and new: the Mill buildings survive in the shadow of the Alma Road tower


blocks.Further


Reading Hodson,


George and Ford, Edward – A history of Enfield. Enfield. 1873.Pam,


David – Protestant gentlemen: the Wroths of Durants Arbour, Enfield and


Loughton, Essex. Edmonton Hundred Historical Society. 1973Robinson,


William – The history and antiquities of Enfield. London. 1873Whitaker,


Cuthbert Whitaker – An illustrated history, statistical and topographical


account of Enfield. London. 1911.St


Matthew’s Ladies Fellowship – Ponders End remembered. Enfield. 1981.Dalling,


Graham – Parish church of St Matthew, Ponders End. Enfield. 1978. Pam,


David – A history of Enfield: Vol.1: before 1837. Enfield. 1990.


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