This article is largely historical in nature.
For readers whose
interest is more concerned with present-day Stroud Green, London,
that topic is attempted in the related Wikipedia article
Stroud Green
Road
.
Overview
Stroud Green is the name of
a suburb (and administrative ward) located adjacent to Finsbury
Park
in the northern part of Greater London
. While most of Stroud Green is administered by
the London
Borough of Haringey
, the buildings along the whole of the south-west
side of the Stroud Green
Road
- the area's principal thoroughfare - are
administered by the London Borough of Islington
. This reflects the historical fact that the
Stroud Green Road represents a border between the ancient
ecclesiastical parishes of Islington
and Hornsey
.
Records for Stroud Green date back to the start of the fifteenth
century, but today it seems that nothing remains as physical
evidence of Stroud Green's distant past, and the area is now
dominated by housing that dates from
the late-nineteenth century.
Destruction of some parts of Stroud Green was
caused by aerial bombing during the Second
World War, and this led to the creation, by the then Hornsey
Borough
Council, of several zones of public housing.
Since c.2003 much of Stroud Green has been designated as a
Conservation Area (Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation
Areas) Act 1990), defining the areas as: "the triangular area
enclosed by Stroud Green Road and the Haringey/Islington border to
the south and west, Mount View Road to the north, and the railway
line to the east" (see the full rationale below:
Twenty-first-century
appreciation). This geographical zone seems to mirror the
area referred to as Stroud Green throughout the
Victoria County History of
Middlesex (1980), which, unless otherwise indicated, is
used as the basis for much of the historical data provided
here.
At one time, this part of Hornsey parish, and thus Stroud Green,
stretched into what is now
Hackney
, following the present-day
Blackstock Road
as far as the junction with Mountgrove Road, all
south of the
Seven
Sisters Road
(created c.1832) that today forms Stroud Green's
southern boundary.
Here in that former southern part of Stroud
Green was the site of the Eel Pie House, a tavern on the New
River
(approximately the site of the present-day Arsenal
Tavern at 175 Blackstock
Road
): then the New River ran above ground at this
point. This was originally in a wooden, lead-lined aqueduct
- known locally as the
Boarded River - but eventually that
wooden construction was replaced by a raised earth embankment, atop
which the river ran. Nowadays the New River runs underground in
this area.
The area's
principal thoroughfare, Stroud Green Road
is well known for its range of shops and
restaurants.
History
Origin of the name

The context of Stroud Green,
London, in its immediate region in 1786
1407 this once empty south-eastern corner of
Hornsey
parish was
called Stroud to denote its marshy ground covered with brushwood,
only later becoming known as Stroud Green.
Stroud Green brook
flowed from Islington
across the southern tip of the area.
Land ownership
The records are sparse. In 1811 it was said that
Stroud Green,
which lies to the North-west of the situation formerly occupied by
the Boarded River, is a long piece of common land belonging to the
copyholders of Highbury Manor. As this article
will show, details do exist of some named 'owners', but it is not
entirely clear to the legal layman the exact status of their
possession.
In the sixteenth century, part of Stroud Green was owned by John
Draper (d. 1576), brewer of London.
At his death in 1576 John Draper's estate
consisted of between Stroud Green Road and Brownswood (the area
around present-day Brownswood Road, south of Finsbury Park
) and between the latter and Green Lanes. It
was held variously by his heirs, presumably his sons in 1577,
descending by his eldest son Thomas (d.1612), to the latter's sons
Thomas (d. 1631), Robert (d.1642), and Roger. In 1636 it was held
jointly by Thomas's widow Lady (Sarah) Kemp, Robert, and Roger and
by 1656 by Roger alone. It was apparently among the lands that he
devised to his brother Robert's son Thomas (d.1703), later a
baronet, who apparently
alienated it.
Sir William Paul of Bray (Berks.), Bt. (d.1686), owned . This
portion of Stroud Green was then held by his widow, who married Sir
Formedon Penystone, Bt., c.1709, and it passed under Sir William's
will to the Paul family. It was presumably among the property
inherited from William Paul before 1727 by his daughter Catherine,
wife of Sir William Stapleton, Bt. (d. 1740), which apparently then
descended to her son Sir Thomas Stapleton, Bt. (d. 1781). By 1796,
however, the western portion of was held by a Mr. Lucas, who was
succeeded in 1808 by John Lucas, who was the owner in 1822. It
belonged to a William Lucas in 1823 and was enfranchised for James
Lucas in 1856. It was owned by Joseph Lucas between 1861 and 1876
and was finally built over by 1880.
The Corporation of Stroud Green
Eighteenth-century London newspapers record details of a group
known as the Corporation of Stroud Green.
On Monday the Ancient Corporation of Stroud Green held
the annual feast at Mr. Dobney's near the New-river-head, at which
were present upwards of two hundred members; after which Mr Kelly
of Chancery-lane was elected Mayor for the year ensuing, and an
elegant entertainment was provided on the occasion.
(Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser (London)
Thursday 2 August 1764; Issue 11 042)
Apparently such so-called Corporations were not unusual at this
time, and indeed formed something of an informal regional network,
for in 1754 the following item was reported in the London
press:
Last Monday evening the Mayor, Sherriffs and Aldermen
of Stroud Green paid their annual Visit to the Mayor, Sheriffs and
Aldermen of Kentish Town, at their Council-Chamber at the Bell in
Little Shire-lane, near Temple Bar; when the Healths of his
Majesty, and all the Royal family, were drank, under a triple
Discharge of their Canon, and the night was concluded with the
greatest Demonstrations of joy and Friendship by the Gentlemen of
both of the loyal Corporations.
(Public Advertiser (London) Wednesday 20 November
1754; Issue 6259)
Their purpose seems to have been (at least in part) an annual
beating of bounds relating to the
establishment of property ownership. Thus, the Corporation may be a
manifestation of the copyholders of Highbury Manor (already
mentioned). The establishment of property rights, even today, is an
important and serious matter for those concerned, but in Stroud
Green it seems that its undertaking was (occasionally) not without
a funny side, as is apparent from an account of the following
year's meeting:
On Monday last, according to annual Custom, the Mayor,
and Aldermen of the respectable Corporation of Stroud Green held
their Court of Conservancy at Stapleton Hall (the capital Mansion
on what is humourously called their Estate) near Mount Pleasant,
where a sumptuous Repast was prepared for their reception of their
present Sheriffs. After Dinner several loyal Healths were drank,
and the Hall resounded with the names of Granby and Pitt. The whole was
conducted with all [reasonable] Decorum; but what contributed in a
great Measure to damp their Satisfaction was the lnebriety of his
Worship's Sword-Bearer, who having imbibed large Drenches of Claret
and Hock, was rendered unfit to scale the Gates and Stiles
belonging to their Grounds, which, in a formal Procession, they
yearly Survey, and by tumbling over Neck and Heels, unhappily lost
the Insigne of his Office, viz. a Gold Sword about four inches
long, of no inconsiderable Value.
(Public Advertiser (London) Friday 5 July 1765;
Issue 9624)
Whatever the Corporation's official tasks might have been, they
always seem to have had a good time:
On Monday last the mayor, aldermen and recorder of
Stroud Green, assisted by the sheriffs, held a court of
conservancy, according to ancient custom, at the Green Man on
Stroud Green, known by the name of Stapleton Hall, where an elegant
entertainment was provided by the mayor, and many loyal toasts were
drank in honour of his Majesty's birthday. After dinner they
returned to their mansion house, the Crown, in the lower-street,
Islington, and the evening concluded with a ball, and every
demonstration of joy suitable to the happy occasion.
(Middlesex Journal or Chronicle of Liberty (London)
Tuesday 6 June 1769; Issue 29)
The last
evidence of the Corporation (at least in newspaper sources) shows
that c.1775-76 the organisation was meeting at the London Spaw
tavern in Clerkenwell
, followed by an evening at the nearby Sadlers
Wells theatre
.Such newspapers references can be found in the
British LIbrary's onine database of 17th- and 18th-century
newspapers /gale.cengage.com/DigitalCollections/> The
move was probably the result of the sale of the Green Man
tavern at Stapleton Hall in August 1769, when it seems to have
reverted to use as a farm house. (See Stapleton Hall in
the section Interesting Buildings, below)
Urban development
Nineteenth-century growth
Until the mid-19th century, in this part of Hornsey parish, there
were no houses between Crouch
End
and Archway Road to the
west and only the huge Harringay
House between Crouch End and Green Lanes. To the south,
Stapleton Hall stood alone at Stroud Green, near to recently
enclosed common land, and
Hornsey Wood House (in what is now the park of Finsbury Park
). Several cottages were in Wood Lane, near the
present day Seven
Sisters Road
. A path led south-west to a bridge over the
New
River
. Here, facing Blackstock Road
, had stood since before 1804 the old Eel-Pie house,
later (by 1847) the Highbury Sluice House tavern, with riverside
gardens and the sluice-house itself immediately to the
south. Other than those, and houses in 'South
Hornsey detached' (now the area of Brownswood Road, south of
Finsbury Park), there was nothing else south of the so-called
'Northern Hog's Back', a ridge of land that runs west-east from
Highgate
to the present-day Harringay
(West) station, across the northern edge of Stroud
Green.
In effect, modern-day Stroud Green dates from the 19th century. New
building at first was slow, perhaps partly because of poor
sewerage, until the 1860s. Stapleton Hall remained the only house
in Hornsey between Crouch End and Seven Sisters Road as late as
1861, but the streets of Islington were fast approaching towards
Stroud Green Road, along the east side of which now stood several
large houses. Rapid growth followed the opening of local
stations at Seven Sisters Road (Finsbury Park
), Crouch Hill
, and Crouch End
, as well as the new Stroud Green
station
.
In 1863 Joseph Lucas of Stapleton Hall leased land for building and
in 1868 Mount Pleasant Road (now Mount Pleasant Crescent and Mount
Pleasant Villas) had been built from the Stroud Green Road along
the western edge of the Stapleton Hall farmyard, and over the
Tottenham
& Hampstead Junction Railway. In due course the Edgware, Highgate &
London Railway would traverse that part of the road that is now
Mount Pleasant Villas (see 'Railways', below).

Houses on Stapleton Hall Road, in
March 2008
Building
development in Stroud Green was so rapid that the 1871 census was
already considered unreliable by 1875, yet country houses were
still being built in other parts of Hornsey
parish until
the 1880s; Muswell
Hill
and Fortis
Green
were still little altered by 1891.
It was
during the building boom of the 1870s that Stroud Green had started
to become part of an (even today) ill-defined urban area called
Finsbury
Park
, which included Brownswood Park and parts of
Islington
.
There were 25 houses in Mount Pleasant Road in 1871. To the south,
a grid of streets was already planned in 1868 and Osborne Road and
Albert Road and Upper Tollington Park contained 49 houses in 1871,
by which time the roads in the angle of land bordered by Stroud
Green Road and the Great North Railway
were largely built up. Stapleton Hall Road had been laid out by
1876 and Ferme Park Road was driven over the 'Northern Hog's Back'
ridge towards Tottenham Lane in 1880.
By 1877 Stroud Green was a new and fast-growing neighbourhood with
a strong community feeling and its own newspaper. It was now
inhabited mainly by commuters with third- and second-class season
tickets.

Stroud Green Road c.1910
The
adjacent area of Harringay
was built-up in the 1880s, while nearby Ferme Park
and the Crouch Hall estate were partly built up by 1894. By
1894 there was a street fire station in Stapleton Hall Road, Stroud
Green, and there were 26 alarm posts throughout the district.
Building continued as late as 1893 in Stapleton Hall Road and in
1896 the area was virtually built up. No more building was
possible.
Twentieth-century decline
In Stroud Green between 1901 and 1911, the population steadily
fell. The declining size of families, however, permitted multiple
occupation of houses and the provision of flats, which were
associated with lower standards as early as 1900. Subdivision of
houses caused concern by 1911, not only in Stroud Green but also in
North and South Harringay. In 1921 1.35 families on average lived
in each house, the trend being especially marked in the south and
east and in 1923 linked to working-class immigration from Islington
and correlated with a recent increase in poor-law cases. At Stroud
Green houses were heavily divided and the district was in decay by
c.1925.
Hornsey
as a whole
was heavily bombed during the Second World
War, when over 80 per cent of the houses suffered damage.
Hornsey
Council's
first major post-war rebuilding was at Stroud Green, where most of
the land between Victoria Road, Stroud Green Road, and Lorne Road
and Upper Tollington Park was cleared. Facing the main road
Wall Court, a balconied block much admired when new, was completed
in 1947, Lawson, Wiltshire, and Marquis courts and Brackenbury were
built in Osborne Road in 1948, and flats in Nichols Close between
1948 and 1952. Wisbech and Fenstanton date from 953, the flats and
shops of Charter Court from 1954, and Hutton Court from 1960. In
1948 Ronaldshay and Wallace Lodge, on opposite corners of Florence
and Wallace roads, and Ednam House facing them were built and in
1952 an extension to Ronaldshay was finished. Carlton Court, 64
flats in Carlton Road, dates from 1947. On opposite corners of
Oakfield and Connaught roads Connaught Lodge and Churchill Court
were completed in 1949 and on the corner of Oakfield and Stapleton
Hall roads Norman Court was completed in 1947. The cul-de-sac
Osborne Grove was replaced by an old people's home by 1973. In 1974
Ennis and Woodstock roads were reprieved from demolition and in
1976 several yellow-brick terraced houses were being
renovated.
Twenty-first-century appreciation
In 2003 Haringey Council designated Stroud Green as a Conservation
Area. Stroud Green is now regarded as an area of "special character
or historic interest, the character and appearance of which it is
desirable to preserve or enhance", Section 69 (1)(a) of the
Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990.
The rationale for this decision was as follows:
The late 19th-century residential development in Stroud
Green represents Haringey's most diverse examples of Victorian
domestic architecture concentrated in any one area.
The triangular area enclosed by Stroud Green Road and
the Haringey/Islington border to the south and west, Mount View
Road to the north, and the railway line to the east, includes a
significant variety of 19th-century house types.
These range from elegantly crafted artisans cottages to
Gothic-revival and Italianate-renewal terraces, to Queen Anne style
semi-detached houses.

Mount Pleasant Crescent, in March
2008.
architecture of the initial phases of development varies to reflect
the Victorian styles in vogue at the time. The early three-storey
1870s houses along Upper Tollington Park, Florence Road, Victoria
Road, and Mount Pleasant Villas, for example, are predominantly
Gothic. They display pointed or round arch windows with Venetian
carved foliage, polychromatic brickwork and prominent gables with
ornamental bargeboards. Other houses from the same period, and in
the same streets, are plainer and combine more subtle Gothic
detailing with classically inspired features such as Italianate
eaves. A particularly attractive street from the first phase of
development is Mount Pleasant Crescent, which is lined by
two-storey terraces. These compact dwellings are exceptional for
their attractive tri-partite Venetian-style windows with
contrasting red brick arcades, and slender cast-iron columns.
The second phase of building, along the south-eastern slopes of the
Hog's Back ridge, was delayed for several years by the landowner,
Charles Turner of Stapleton Hall who strongly resisted development
near his estate. When building finally began after Turner's death
in 1882, the prominent house style in England hasd moved away from
the Gothic-inspired houses of the 1870s towards the Norman Shaw
influenced 'Queen Anne' style that would dominate the 1890s and
early 1900s. The change in style is evident along the north part of
Stapleton Hall Road, and in the streets beyond, where the houses
are characterised by the use of red brick throughout, simple
canopied porches, and multi-panelled decorative sash windows. The
open setting of the Hog's Back ridge is used to its full advantage
and development here is generally less dense than in the first
phase. Trees, hedges, and planting add considerably to the setting
of the houses and are in the spirit of the 'Sweetness and Light'
philosophy behind the Queen Anne style.
In general the architecture of Stroud Green remains intact and has
survived the damaging changes that have eroded the character of
other neighbourhoods in the borough, e.g. replacement windows, loss
of boundary walls, unsympathetic cladding &c. It is a unique
example of a small area exhibiting the full range of domestic
building styles from around 1870 to the end of the 19th
century.
Transport
Roads
The principle thoroughfare through the area is called Stroud Green
Road. It
has ancient origins, and formed part of an ancient northern route
out of London, which forks south of Stroud Green at Clissold Park
. The fork to the east (known as Green Lanes
) extended along the whole eastern edge of Hornsey
parish towards Bush Hill, Enfield
and was turnpiked in 1789 in spite of Hornsey's
opposition. The western branch followed the 'old' north
road which stretched northward to Crouch End
via Mountgrove Road (Gipsy Lane in 1872),
Blackstock Road (still called Boarded River Lane in 1849), Stroud
Green Road, and Crouch Hill. These last two were known as
Tallingdon Lane between 1593 and 1795. In 1795, Tallingdon
Lane was noted as a rough track, which Blackstock Road
apparently still was in 1832.
Given the low-lying nature of the area, and the heavy London-clay
soil, it is not surprising that roads were susceptible to bad
weather. In the 14th century roads in Hornsey
parish were
said to be impassable in winter. There were legacies towards
maintaining main routes through the area, such as Brokhersthill
(perhaps Crouch Hill), and the way from Highgate to St. Mary's
church, and other local byways. However, in general it seems that
maintenance suffered because Hornsey shared the responsibility for
many of its far-flung roads with other authorities; not least, in
the case of Stroud Green Road, with the neighbouring parish of
Islington, which shared a border here.
Repairs to Stroud Green Road, were remembered as bad in 1593, while
statute duty was often neglected in the 17th and 18th centuries,
particularly in the period 1679 to 1686, and in 1792 another
attempt was made to exact labour rather than money to try and
improve the situation. Thus, for example, in March 1764, it was
reported:
The inhabitants of Crouch End, Mount Pleasant and
Stroud Green, have come to a resolution, by a voluntary
subscription, to repair the roads from the first-mentioned place to
the last, which at present are in a very ruinous condition, a great
number of men being employed for that purpose.
(Lloyd's Evening Post (London) Monday 12 March
1764; Issue 1041)
In 1811 is was noted that the road was well made with 'quickset
hedges on both sides', but such positive reports seem to be
few.
Throughout the 19th century disputes continued between the parishes
of Hornsey and Islington over the maintenance of the Stroud Green
Road. It is still the case today that confusion, delays, and
occasional wrangles arise over jurisdiction and maintenance of the
Stroud Green Road, with the eastern side the responsibility of
Haringey Council, and the western side that of Islington Council.
`
In 1832
the Seven
Sisters Road
was built as a turnpike
from Islington
in a north-easterly direction across the junction
of Stroud Green Road with Blackstock Road
, towards Tottenham
.
Some of the other new streets built in the 19th century were also
important lines of communication. Endymion Road, built c.1875 under the
Finsbury
Park
Act of 1857, connected Stroud Green and Green Lanes
north of Finsbury
Park
, while the new Ferme Park Road, c.1885, joined
Tottenham Lane and Stroud Green.
An interesting survival from an earlier age is the
nineteenth-century, brick-cobbled road
surface comprising the first of Mount Pleasant Crescent, at the
junction with the Stroud Green Road, and seemingly as good now as
the day it was first laid.
Railways

The station house at Stroud Green, at
the junction of Stapleton Hall Road and Ferme Park Road, in March
2008
an Act of 1862 the Edgware, Highgate &
London Railway Co. (part of the G.N.R. from 1866)
opened a line from Finsbury Park through Stroud Green to Edgware
, via Highgate
, with later branches to Alexandra Palace
and High Barnet
.
In 1881
the Stroud
Green station
was opened in Stapleton Hall Road.
A local branch line linking Highgate and Alexandra Palace was
opened in 1873, but was then closed the same year after the
destruction of the palace by fire. It re-opened in 1875 with a new station
at Muswell
Hill
, but continued to be closed for varying periods on
several occasions up to 1952.
In 1954 the whole of the line from Finsbury Park to Highgate and
beyond was closed to passenger traffic; freight services continued
to Muswell Hill until 1956 and to Highgate and Finchley until 1964,
the track to the Alexandra Palace being taken up in 1958 and to
Highgate in 1970. The track between the station at Finsbury
Park
and Highgate
is now a pedestrian, public right of way called the
Parkland
Walk
.
Education
Education of yesteryear
In 1659 Roger Draper of Stroud Green left £120 to apprentice six
poor boys of Hornsey to freemen of London in trades other than
those of silk-weaver, tailor, and vintner;
premiums of £15 for the master and £5 for clothing and equipping
the boy were to be paid, not more than two each year.
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_(175_Stroud_Green_Road).JPG)
175 Stroud Green Road (centre),
in May 2008
No 175 Stroud Green Road, built in the 1860s, began life as a girls
school, although by the 1880s it had become the home of George
Osborne Barratt, founder of the famous brand of sweets and
liquorice made nearby in Wood Green
. By 1899 it had been bought by a local draper, a
Welshman called David Hall, who soon acquired the two adjacent
properties (173 and 177), to create a large shop on the ground
floor.
In 1890, Stroud Green had at least 21 private schools, including
the forerunners of St. Aidan's Primary School and Hornsey High
School for Girls, and there were two denominational grammar schools
for boys.
The Anglo-French high school, established c.1884, had 100 pupils of
all ages in Ferme Park Road in 1889 and opened a girls' branch in
Ridge Road in 1890.
_.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_(34_Stapleton_Hall_Road_Girls_School)_.JPG)
34 Stapleton Hall Road, once home to
part of the Stapleton Hall Road School for Girls, as seen in May
2008
Hall School for Girls, at no. 54 and later also at no. 34 Stapleton
Hall Road, was run by the Misses Elfick from 1898 or earlier, until
1935. It seems reasonable, therefore, to conjecture that this
school had moved to Stapleton Hall Road from 175 Stroud Green Road
(see above).
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_(54_Stapleton_Hall_Road_Girls_School).JPG)
54 Stapleton Hall Road, once home to
part of the Stapleton Hall Road School for Girls, as seen in May
2008.
the northern end of Crouch Hill by 1898 there were schools at nos.
102 and 104, called Durham House and Cecile House, no. 110,
preparatory and kindergarten departments of Cecile House, and no.
112, Darra House. Other schools in Stroud Green included Hornsey
Rise College, Victoria Road, in 872, Rothbury House college, for
day-boys, in 1879, and Victoria College, Florence Road, in the
1880s. Frederick Newcombe, who conducted a collegiate school in
Muswell Hill Road, apparently had moved from Stroud Green.
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_and_Hornsey_High_School_for_Girls_(site_of).JPG)
The site of the original Stroud Green
and Hornsey High School for Girls is now the playground of St
Aidan's primary school, as seen in March 2008
Green and Hornsey High School for Girls, was opened by the Church
Schools' Co. in 1887. It occupied a cramped site, on the corner of
Stapleton Hall and Albany roads, and had no playground in 1906,
when there were 150 places and 111 pupils. The school,
subsidized by the company to supplement the fees, was taken over by
local governors in 1919 and grant aided by Middlesex County Council
from 1928. It became an elementary, Voluntary Controlled school in
1948 on the removal of older girls to Hornsey High School for
Girls, and was renamed St. Aidan's. A new building was opened in
1972 but the old yellow-brick hall was retained.
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_High_School_(site_of).JPG)
The site of the original Stroud Green
(Girls) High School is now an apartment block, as seen in March
2008
nearby Stroud Green (Girls) High School (c.1887) was a private
venture established by a Mrs. Mills-Carver and comprised a new
building at the corner of Addington and Oakfield roads, with its
grounds backing those of the teachers' and boarders' houses. In
1906 there were 150 places and 130 pupils of all ages, including
six boarders whose payments were needed for solvency. Competition
with the nearby Stroud Green and Hornsey High School for Girls was
mutually damaging but plans for amalgamation had to wait until
1948. Meanwhile, in 1908 Stroud Green (Girls) High
School was taken over by Middlesex County Council
to become Hornsey High School for Girls, a
counterpart to the Stationers' (boys) School and in 1915 it moved
to new buildings nearby its new partner. In 1948 it
eventually succeeded in absorbing the Stroud Green and Hornsey High
School for Girls, whose former site became St Aidan's primary
school. In 1972 Hornsey High School for Girls became a girls
comprehensive school located in entirely new premises in Crouch
End, its former premises were acquired by the Stationers'
school.
St. Peter-in-Chains Roman Catholic school for infants was open by
1959 in Elm Grove, close to St. Gilda's junior school. Originally
independent, it was Voluntary Aided in 1969 and had 206 infants on
the roll in 1975.
The position for those reliant on free education was more
precarious. A report of 1890 showed that secondary education for
the sons of the poor of Stroud Green was being provided by local
churches. A grammar school for 'sons of parents of limited means'
occupied an iron room adjoining Holy Trinity church, Stroud Green,
in 1890. It had a junior department in 1909, when prospectuses were
available at the Vicarage. A Baptist grammar school used the
Victoria Hall, Stapleton Hall Road, also in 1890.
Until the end of the 19th century there was no free, State
provision in Stroud Green for younger children. Indeed, in 1890
middle class families around Oakfield Road opposed any public
elementary school. Similar hostility was later shown on the
Harringay Park estate, where house purchasers were not told by the
British Land Co. that the local school board as early as 1883 had
bought a site between Falkland and Frobisher roads. Attacked by
builders and householders in both areas and by the vicars of St.
Paul's and Holy Trinity, the board wavered throughout the 1880s.
Meanwhile, elementary-age Stroud Green children were forced to
attend schools in neighbouring education authorities, becoming
known as 'border children'. Tottenham had over 100 Hornsey pupils in
1889 the problem of 'border children' grew worse, and the London
board eventually refused admission to 200 Stroud Green pupils in
1892, prompting the Education Department to remonstrate with
Hornsey
.
Stroud Green Board
School eventually opened in temporary buildings in Stroud Green
Road in 1894. From 1896 it used a new building in Woodstock Road,
with accommodation for 1,351 boys, girls, and infants on separate
floors. It was designed by Arnold Mitchell and A. M. Butler. There
were 1,052 places by 1932, when the school was reorganized into a
senior mixed or secondary modern school with 346 places, a junior
mixed with 408, and an infants' with 344. The seniors were later
absorbed into Bishopswood, leaving the board's building to Stroud
Green junior and infants' schools, with 320 and 180 children on
their rolls in 1975.
Under the Education Act of 1902
Hornsey became a Part III authority, responsible for elementary
education. The new education committee, met from 1903 until 1920 at
no. 206 Stapleton Hall Road. The committee took pride in relatively
small classes, taught only by qualified teachers with good
salaries. It vainly sought responsibility for secondary education
in 1904 and conducted its own census into the needs of children
beyond the age of 15 in 1905-6. Finding that provision was dependent on
private schools, Hornsey
co-operated
closely with Middlesex
County Council
in taking
over and enlarging the poorer ones. Funds from the
Pauncefort charity were available from 1903 to support three, later
five, girls at secondary schools and a further income was derived
from the Hornsey educational foundation. Advanced courses were
introduced at elementary schools, Stroud Green and South Harringay,
in 1920 and extended in 1923.
Education today
For details of education in Stroud Green, London see the London Borough of
Haringey article.
Religion
Anglicans
The first Anglican church of Holy Trinity,
Stroud Green, was built in stages between 1880 and 1885 on the
corner of Granville and Stapleton Hall roads, and replaced a
crowded temporary hall. Holy Trinity, Stroud Green had become a
separate district in 1881, assigned from the chapelries of Holy
Innocents and St. John and from Hornsey
parish.
.jpg/180px-Holy_Trintity,_Stroud_Green_(exterior).jpg)
The original Holy Trinity, Stroud
Green
Designed in a 13th-century style by B. E. Ferrey (son of the more
well known architect Benjamin
Ferrey), it was of brick with stone dressings and had a nave,
south aisles, transepts, vestry, south porch, and west
spirelet.
.jpg/180px-Holy_Trinity,_Stroud_Green_(interior).jpg)
Interior view of the west end of the
original Holy Trinity, Stroud Green
Although built at only moderate cost, the interior was dignified
and spacious. There were 1,200 seats in 1903, when a morning
service was attended by 1,051 and an evening service by 1,210.
Following war damage the church was declared unsafe c.1951 and
pulled down in 1960. The site was re-used for a hall, Vicarage, and
public garden. The adjoining red-brick hall in Granville Road was
adapted as the church, with a western portico and spirelet.

Holy Trinity church, Granville Road,
as seen in March 2008
congregation was evangelical in 1885, when 2,266 signatories
opposed the presentation of the ritualist, Dr. Robert Linklater,
vicar 1885-1911. By 1888, however, Holy Trinity was the only
Hornsey
church with Anglo-Catholic services. The church
continues to be firmly within the catholic tradition of the Church
of England, as to which see the church's website (below).
The current parish boundaries were fixed in the 1980s when the
benefice of Holy Trinity, Stroud Green was merged with that of the
now defunct St Luke's, Hornsey.
The patron is the Bishop of
London.
Baptists

Stroud Green Baptist chapel, Stapleton
Hall Road, as seen in March 2008
Stroud Green Baptist chapel, in Stapleton
Hall Road, was established in 1878 and registered as Crouch Hill
Chapel by Particular Baptists in 1884. A red-brick building
designed by J. Wallis Chapman in the Early Geometric style style,
with adjoining halls, was opened in 1889. There were 280
worshippers in the morning and 396 in the evening on one Sunday in
1903. There were 475 seats in 1928, by which date the church had
joined the London Baptist Association, and 460 in 1975. The chapel
has since been converted into leasehold apartments known as Old
Church Court, with the chapel having moved its worship into what
was once the chapel's hall.
Roman Catholics

St Peter-in-Chains Catholic church,
Womersley Road, as seen in March 2008
1893 some Roman Catholic
residents of Stroud Green formed the Stroud Green Catholic
Association, and began to raise funds for a church. Coombe House,
at the corner of Womersley and Dashwood roads, was bought in 1894,
when mass was celebrated there. It was designated St. Augustine's,
since canons regular of St. Augustine
were intended to serve the mission, but was soon committed to
canons regular of the Lateran, who changed the name to St.
Peter-in-Chains. A red-brick church, in a Gothic style, was founded
in 1898 and completed in 1902. There were attendances of 473 in the
morning and 125 in the evening on one Sunday in 1903. The church
was still served by canons regular of
the Lateran in 1976. The parish is now served by Westminster
diocesan clergy.
Ceylon and India General Mission
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_(Ceylon_and_India_Mission,_former_offices).JPG)
The former offices of the
Ceylon
and India General Mission, as seen in May 2008
1912, no. 121 Stapleton Hall Road, at the junction with Elyne Road,
was a registered office of the Ceylon and India Mission (Secretary,
David Gardiner).
Christian Scientists
Christian Scientists
were meeting at no. 137 Stroud Green Road from c.1912 until
1923.
After this date, and until the Second World War, they seem to have
met at nos. 60 or 58 Crouch Hill .
In 1936 there was also a Christian Scientist reading room at no. 13
Topsfield Parade, Crouch End.
Congregationalists
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_Congregational_Church_(site_of).JPG)
The site of the Stroud Green
Congregational church at the crossing of Granville Road and Mount
View Road, as seen in March 2008
Congregational church was
founded to serve Stroud Green, on land at the corner of Mount View
Road and Granville Roads, which was acquired with help from the
local Park, Highgate, and Tollington Park Congregational
chapels.
A hall was opened in 1887 and used for worship until the completion
of a building in the Decorated style, of red brick
faced with terracotta, which in 1893 was to seat 1,000.
The pastorate was said to be prosperous and on one Sunday in 1903
there were attendances of 330 in the morning and 231 in the
evening. The church was closed and demolished in 1935.
Plymouth Brethren
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_(Finsbury_Park_Mission,_former).JPG)
The location of the former Plymouth
Brethren
Finsbury Park Mission, as it appeared in May
2008
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green_(former_Plymouth_Brethren_meeting_place,_Woodstock_Rd).JPG)
The location of the former Plymouth
Brethren meeting place, in Woodstock Road, as seen in May
2008
In 1903 Plymouth Brethren met at
no. 45 Woodstock Road, with morning attendances of 85 and 43 and
evening attendances of 68 and 32 respectively.
Smaller groups worshipped at no. 33 Stroud Green Road, in premises
occupied by a Mrs Harding, and recorded in the Census of 1911 as the
Finsbury Park Mission.
Interesting buildings
The Covered Reservoir
.gif/180px-Stroud_Green_(covered_reservoir).gif)
Looking south-east across London from
above the Stroud Green covered reservoir, as seen in March
2009.
Datable roughly from its first known reference in a local directory
in 1885, the covered reservoir that abuts the Hog's Back ridge,
just below its crest at Mount View Road, provides Stroud Green with
a fantastic vantage point to look out high over London, eastwards
towards the Thames estuary and south towards Crystal Palace. In
recent times (March 2007) the space has been the subject of
(ultimately unsuccessful) attempts to place a mobile-phone mast on
it.World-News Independent Media Source
/freepage.twoday.net/stories/3490866/>, accessed 3 January
2009.
The dairy
This building on the corner of Hanley Road and Crouch Hill, now a
pub, was once owned by the Friern Manor Dairy Company as a
development of the site that they already owned.
The minutes of the London County Council's Building Act Committee
record:
That the application of Mr J Young & Co, on behalf
of the Friern Manor Dairy Farm Co Ltd, for the consent of the
Council for the erection of an addition to the rear of number 127
Hanley Road, Stroud Green, to abut on Crouch Hill, be granted
subject to the condition that the addition therein referred to be
commenced within six months and completed within 18 months from the
30 day of September, 1890.

The Old Dairy, Stroud Green, as seen
in the summer of 2006
The exterior wall that faces onto Crouch Hill, comprises a
remarkable set of seven, unique, anonymous sgraffitto panels (c.1890), with picturesque
illustrations of: Milk Delivery (ancient); Milk Delivery (modern);
In the Country; Milk Cooling; Making Butter; Milling;
Grazing.
Stapleton Hall
Stapleton Hall is situated on Stapleton Hall Road near the junction
with Hanley Road, Stroud Green Road, Mount Pleasant Crescent and
Crouch Hill. It was first mentioned in 1577, and was extended or
rebuilt in 1609, apparently by Sir Thomas Stapleton whose initials
appeared on date stones and panelling, and presumably was occupied
by Stapleton. A Sir William Stapleton, Bt., was the landowner until
his death in 1745, and the property then apparently passed to Sir
Thomas Stapleton, Bt. (d. 1781).
As has been shown in the section above, about the Corporation of
Stroud Green, by the 1760s the building was in use as a tavern,
sometimes known as The Green Man.
In 1759 the death of the landlord was reported:
Mr Rogers, master of the Green Man at Stroud
Green.
As he was riding thro' Islington he dropt from his
horse, and expired immediately.
Universal Chronicle or Weekly Gazette (London)
Saturday 9 June 1759; Issue 63)
In August 1769 it was announced that the tenant, a Mrs. Rogers (who
was presumably the widow of Mr Rogers), was to auction the
contents, which gives us a nice impression of the place:
All the genuine Household Furniture, Fixtures &c,
belonging to Mrs. Rogers, at the Green Man at Stroud Green, near
Mount Pleasant, in the parish of Hornsey; consisting of 14
bedsteads with furnitures, featherbeds and bedding to ditto, two
eight-day clocks, a large quantity of kitchen furniture, a brewing
copper, and the utensils of the brew-house, sundry ranges, and
other fixtures, two carts, three fine cows, two pigs and sundry
other effects.
(Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser (London)
Saturday 26 August 1769; Issue 12 632)

Stapleton Hall as it appeared in April
2008, the original building now painted white.
At some point before 1776 it appears to have been functioning as a
farm for then a sale notice states:
Messr ELDERTON give notice, that the Lease of the Farm,
late Mr Seddon's, jun. known by the name of Stapleton Hall at
Stroud Green near Holloway, between Islington and Highgate, will be
put up for sale [...] after which will follow the dispersal of the
horses, cows, hogs, farming utensils, and three very large ricks of
extraordinary fine hay. The sale of furniture will begin precisely
at 11 o'clock.
(Morning Chronicle and London Advertiser (London)
Thursday, 7 November 1776; Issue 2330)
This history seems to be borne out by the fact that in 1811 a
history of Islington stated that at Stroud Green:
there is an old farm house called Stapleton Hall, and
which was formerly the property and residence of Sir Thomas
Stapleton, of Grey's Court, in the county of Oxon, Bart. an antient
family, remarkable for the number of eminent men it has
produced.
In the building are his initials, with those of his
wife, and the date 1609.
It was afterwards converted into a publick house, and
within memory had in front the following inscription: Ye are
welcome all To Stapleton Hall.
Mr. William Lucas is the present occupier of the house,
together with a farm of more than of land contiguous
thereto.
Certainly, press announcements in the later eighteenth century
indicate that Stapleton Hall farm was the venue for a number of
agricultural auction sales, mostly of hay and field crops such as
oats and barley, and occasionally of farm equipment and furntiure.
However, from these references it is not possible to know if these
last items were the property of the tenants of Stapleton Hall or of
nearby properties.Such newspapers references can be found in the
British Library's on-ine database of 17th- and 18th-century
newspapers /gale.cengage.com/DigitalCollections/>
Between 1856 and 1884 Stapleton Hall was occupied by Charles Turner
(d.1892), member of a prominent farming family and later of nearby
Womersley House. The hall had become the Stroud Green Conservative
club by 1888, and in 1962 was bought by the club, which still
occupied it in 1978. In the 1980s it was noted that early-17th
century panelling had been reset in a short back wing, and parts of
the building may be of that date. The main range is probably
18th-century but was re-fronted in the early- or mid-19th century.
More recent alterations have included the demolition of an annexe
towards the street and the addition of a modern clubroom at the
rear.
The house has since been much altered and converted into leasehold
apartments, with more newly built in the grounds.
The telephone exchange
.JPG/180px-Stroud_Green,_London_(old_telephone_exchange).JPG)
The old Stroud Green telephone
exchange (1911) as it appeared in May 2008
No 39A Stroud Green Road, despite the fact that it bears
the date 1896, was actually built in 1911, filling a gap between
the adjacent, previously detached buildings. It is the site of the
former National Telephone
Company's local exchange, and public call office; an essential
public amenity in the days before widespread domestic telephone
ownership.
Interesting (but absent) Buildings
Scala Cinema
North of the present-day Wells Terrace bus terminus at Finsbury
Park station, is a small industrial estate that replaced the former
Great Northern
Railway Coal and Goods depot.
.JPG/180px-Scala_Cinema_(Stroud_Green).JPG)
The Scala Cinema (1914), Stroud Green,
as it appeared in April 2008.
The old brick building that was immediately on Stroud Green Road
(officially 15 The Parade) and until 2008 in use as a factory
trading under the name Peter Phillips, was the Scala
Cinema (architect H. W. Horsley). It opened in 1914 (replacing the
former Stroud Green Hall), and sat 700 people. The auditorium ran
parallel with the road, with the rake provided by the gentle,
natural drop of the land. In 1920 it was renamed the New Scala
Cinema, but closed in 1924.Scala in 'The London Project'.
London : The AHRB Centre for Film and Television Studies, Birkbeck
College, University of London.
http://londonfilm.bbk.ac.uk/view/venue/?id=602>, last accessed 1
May 2008.
Since closing as a cinema the building had a chequered history:
billiard hall, wartime factory, Irish dancing school, and whist
hall, before being turned to light industrial use. It was
demolished without any fuss in June 2008.
Stroud Green Assembly Rooms
On 19 November 1895, the London
County Council Committee for Theatres and Music Halls refused
an application from a Mr A. Bedborough, on behalf of Mr W. Andrews,
to build:
a concert hall in Stroud Green, on the north-west side
of Stapleton-hall-road, Stroud Green, with three shops at the rear
to abut upon Mount Pleasant road [...] as no open spaces are shown
to be provided at the rear of the intended shops [...] but that the
applicant be informed that a further application for consent to the
frontage only of the building might be favourably
considered.
The Era (London) Saturday 30 November 1895; Issue
2984)

The proposed site (c.1895) of the
assembly rooms for Stroud Green, seen in September 2008.
would seem that nothing more was heard until 17 March 1896 when, at
a meeting of the same committee, several sets of drawings were
submitted as plans for the 'assembly rooms or concert hall' to be
built:
at Stroud Green between Stapleton Hall road and Mount
Pleasant road.
The premises would consist, on the ground floor of four
shops, and on the first floor of a hall for which it was intended
to apply for a music and dancing licence.
The shops would have fireproof ceilings constructed of
rolled iron joist and concrete separating them from the hall, which
would have seating capacity for 280 persons.
There would be two staircases delivering from the hall,
one into Stapleton Hall road, and the other into Mount Pleasant
road.
The Era (London, England), Saturday, 21 March 1896; Issue
3000
A similar notice appeared in the same newspaper, shortly
afterwards, on 4 April 1896. On both occasions it was clear that
the building works were to be carried out within six months.
It is evident from the plans, now in the the
London Metropolitan Archives,
Clerkenwell, EC1. that the buildings on the site today bear no
relation to the planned Assembly Rooms.
Womersley House

Womersley House, as it was at the
start of the twentieth century
Perhaps, strictly speaking, not properly part of Stroud Green,
Womersely House, close by the St Peter-in-Chains catholic church,
has already been noted as home to the Turner family, prominent
local landowners in the late 19th century, who had previously
occupied Stapleton Hall. By the early twentieth century however it
was a hostel for single working women. It occupied a plot of land
bordered by Elm Grove and Womersley Road, and was finally
demolished in the 1960s. The site is currently (March 2008) being
re-developed.
External links
For Stroud Green
For the wider local area
References