A Sequence of Maps of Stoke Newingtonlast revised: January 6, 2008 9:38 AM Part1: Until 1868This series of maps of Stoke Newington tells the story of the development of the area as no words can do. They outline the changes from a tiny village to the crowded streets of today. You can compare different maps and notice the changes, or by searching links to other sites, find out more about the houses built in the time of a particular map and other details of the period. You can move forwards and backwards, or stand still for a moment. There is more information on each map and
a larger version is available by clicking on the maps below. |
John Speed 1611 John Speed's map shows what a tiny part of our modern London was built up. The Cities of London and Westminster clustered on the north bank of the Thames. London was inside its city walls and London Bridge,the single bridge over the Thames, while Westminster sprawled round Thorney Island and its ford. The main highway was the river, which was unenbanked of course. The river controlled everything and all Londoners were aware of the tide in a way recent generations have never learnt. Mistress Quickley telling of Falstaff's death said, 'Nay sure he's not in hell;n he's in Arthur's bosom, if ever a man went to Arthur's bosom. A'parted even just between twelve and one, even at the turning of the tide --' London was tiny and anyone who lived outside it, lived in a village. Speed shows the villages of Clerkenwell, Islington, Kings-land, Canonbury, and Newington Green, with Shakerwell and Newington (presumably Stoke Newington) both on the edges of the Hackney Brook.
|
|
|
|
Years before any of the present Stoke Newington schools were built there were a number of important maps, including two or three very local ones. In 1734 Stoke Newington was far out in the country, a land of farms and woodland, with one gravel road joining Stoke Newington High Street and Green Lanes. This was Stoke Newington Church Street, with its tiny old Tudor St Mary’s Church, even smaller than it is today. The Hackney Brook rose in some streams near our present Grazebrook Road, ran round the northern edge of Abney Park Cemetery and away into Hackney. The ground south of the river was Gravel, while the land north of the river was Clay. Clay is sticky and difficult to build on. Gravel drains well, gives dry walking and allows one to dig wells to the water below. Therefore Church Street was built south of the Hackney Brook and the gravel land between Church Street and Newington Green was filled with houses long before the builders started on the clay lands to the north (see the 1810 Sale Map later). (++Click) Lady Abney owned a large estate of valuable farmland and woods, north of Church Street. It ran up to Woodberry Down Meadow, near our modern Manor House Underground Station. She had a map made of her estate in 1734. |
||||||||||
![]() The 1734 Lady Abney Estate Map of Stoke NewingtonA very local mapThe map was drawn with north to the left. We are more used to seeing maps with north to the top
The 1734 Field NamesLook at the field names on the 1734 map. Some describe the shape of the field or its position – Lower Long Wood, Crooked Lane Field, Straight Lane Field, Old Cut Meadow (where a long bend in the New River had been shortened). Some describe how the field was used – West Tile Pits, Milk Field. This was in the centre of the estate, so twice a day the cattle must have been driven there from the surrounding fields for milking. Some names describe the flowers and birds - Primrose Meadow, Cowslip Meadow, and Lark Field. How long is it since a lark nested in the grassy Woodberry Down? It is interesting that someone once said, "The nightingales are in full song in Stoke Newington."
The map has been turned so that the small piece of Church Street is at the bottom and the present Manor House area is at the top. This map takes us right back to a peasant Stoke Newington unchanged for years. Look at the field names. How often have the people living in the Woodberry Down flats which were built on Lark Field, heard a lark in the garden. The country field names come from a completely different world. There is a mistake on this map showing that it was copied from an earlier one. The buildings shown on this map in Stoke Newington Church Street, are the outhouses of the old Manor House but, by 1734, these had been demolished. The houses called Church Row, which replaced the Manor House, were built before this map and are on the 1814 one. The Lost Church Row Houses |
||||||||||
1810 Turnpike MapThis map shows that Green Lanes had become a turnpike road, with a toll gate at the corner just beyond Stoke Newington Church Street. For centuries roads had been the responsibility of the local townspeople and villages. Local villagers hardly moved outside their own neighbourhoods. Building roads at the villagers’ expense for other people to drive along, was regarded as an imposition. This meant that many roads were badly built and maintained, so Parliament passed Turnpike Acts. These allowed Turnpike Companies to take over long stretches of major roads, resurface them and charge travellers to use them. Toll gates and toll houses cutoff the road in sections. People, vehicles and animals were charged for travelling along each stretch, so one needed plenty of small change. One toll gate was erected in Green Lanes at the corner of Clissold Park and another in Manor Road. In Pride and Prejudice D'Arcy says "What are fifty miles with good friends?" He was probably the first person in fiction who could have said this. |
1810 Darlington Sale Map
The 1810 sale was a failure because the Estate could not offer leases of more than thirty years and builders could not sell houses with such short leases. An Act of Parliament was required before longer leases could be offered. This needed a new map. This map was published in 1812 and the Act was passed in 1814.
|
![]() |
||
(Photograph by courtesy of Hackney Archive) |
|||
By 1814 people were starting to move out of Cities of London and Westminster into the country fields of Stoke Newington. It was only a trickle at that time, but later it would become a flood. Landlords were only too anxious to have people build houses on their land and to be able to charge the new householders Ground Rent for ever after. This would be much more profitable than using the fields for farming. To do this they needed an Estate Map and this was made in 1814. The 1734 map of the Lady Abney Estate and the 1810 map of the area south of Church Street down to Newington Green were surveyed to form the Map of the Prebendal Manor of Stoke Newington of 1814. The Manor was the property of St Paul 's Cathedral and the churchmen, who were put in charge, and given this valuable living, were called Prebends. Hence ‘Prebendary Map' |
The 1814 Prebendary map with the
|
![]() |
| In 1814 the northern boundary of Stoke Newington adjoined Tottenham, but later the borough of Harringay was created and today Tottenham starts further out. The New River snakes along the border and then snakes back on the other side of the ridge which now carries Seven Sisters Road. A New Road has been created to connect Church Street with Green Lanes but not yet given a name. It became Lordship Road and Woodberry Grove. Creating a major road through open fields was always a sign that the owners were hoping to develop the estate and attract builders. Seven Sisters Road had not yet been cut so Woodberry Grove was a major road at that time. The names of the fields can be found on the black and white Abney Estate map shown earlier. Field shapes do not seem to have changed at all. |
![]() |
The Central part of the Prebendary map showing Church Street running from the High Street to Green Lanes, just south of the Hackney Brook. Houses line Church Street but only a small block around St Mary's Primary School and up to Yoakley Road has been developed beyond it. |
|
The 1810 sale had been a failure but there was a more successful sale in 1821. The second Sale of the Darlington Estate took place in 1821. Thomas Cubitt and his brother William bought a number of plots and built Albion Road. Stoke Newington in 1921, showing plots purchased by
|
The 1828 Cruchley Map |
|||
There have been so many changes in the area that this map merits close examination Woodberry Down Cottages had been built on what was later to become the site of Woodberry Down Comprehensive School. The house where The Manor House public house now stands was called The Lodge and opposite was Field's House. There was a turnpike gate in Green Lanes, which was a turnpike road, while Seven Sister's Road had yet to be built. The New River was still above ground, running from top to bottom of the map. There were hardly any houses in Lordship Road (not Lane). Clissold Park was thickly wooded. Clissold House was probably lost under the letter E. The only new roads were Lordship Road north of Church Street and part of our modern Albion Road south of it. Albion Road, had only a few houses and those were at the Church Street end where they would have been easier to sell. The southern end of Albion Road had been laid out to join Newington Green and building was starting. The main route from Newington Green was still Church Path, called here ‘footpath',which had led through the fields to St Mary's Church for centuries. The Cruchley Map shows a few houses at the top of Albion Road. By 1846, they had extended down the curve and the Post Office Directory Map of 1858 shows houses from Church Street to Newington Green. |
|||
|
The 1846 Tithe MapThe 1846 Tithe map, which is in colour, numbers every plot in the estate. it was also printed in Black and white, but without the numbers, as The Parish Map Of Stoke Newington as shown below. |
The Parish Maps of 1846 and 1855 |
|||||||||
![]() |
The Parish Maps of 1846 and 1855 give a detailed plan of the street layout. Many of these boundaries persist to today and could be identified. In 1858 the Post Office published a map and numbered the houses, because addresses were often difficult to find. 'Mr Jones's house, near the Butchers in Church Street', is too vague for comfort.This map shows several planned street layouts, many of which were later altered, but Stoke Newington was poised for immense changes in the next couple of decades. Click on the map to see it in more detail. |
||||||||
| (Printed by courtesy of Hackney Archive) | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||
Revised: December 21, 2008 10:35 AM