History of the Site of Stoke Newington Secondary School
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Engraving by Bewick |
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The Vicar of St Mary's lived in the old wooden Rectory on the corner of Church Street and Church Walk. This was a weather-boarded house with a high, over-sailing window which gave a fine view of everything going on in the road. Proust's Aunt Leonie would have been at homein that room, keeping an eye on all her neighbours.
The Vicar had a farm on the Glebe Field which he ran as a Home Farm, or rented out to a tenant farmer
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(Photograph by permission of Hackney Archive)
The Old Rectory Part on the 1846 Allerton Tithe Map
The Old Rectory was the red building on plot 662. The red is the footprint of the house and therefore does not show the over-sailing look-out window.
Albion Road had been built by 1846, but the Glebe Field was still a farm. Church Path, the old bridle path linking the villages of Newington Green and Stoke Newington, is marked in blue on the Tithe Map. This path was hundreds, perhaps thousands of years old, and ran along the edge of the Vicar's Glebe Field.
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In 1855, the Vicar of St Mary's gave a lecture which he later published. In this he saw the houses of London moving ever closer to Stoke Newington each year. In America, he said, such was the speed of advance that pioneers moved to the Frontier and, only a year later, found themselves fifteen miles from the New Frontier.
In the sixty years after this lecture the old Cities of London and Westminster were rebuilt. Everywhere there were new railway stations, new sewers, and new roads. Hundreds of navies dug tunnels: millions of bricks were burnt and laid. London turned into a new Wild West.
There were new roads cutting diagonally through old slums. These had festered for centuries, more and more overcrowded, more and more unhealthy. Now their inhabitants were being scattered to the wind, with no place to go. The air, the noise, the stench, all made London such an obnoxious places to live in that nine tenths of the population fled to along the new railway lines to the suburbs. Old Stoke Newington estates were soon covered with bricks and mortar. By 1914 the whole of Stoke Newington had been completely transformed. Stoke Newington became a suburb on the fringe of London. Beyond there were still pasture fields, but Stoke Newington's cattle-pastures had gone. The following maps reflect this.

1868 Ordnance Survey map of the Betty Layward School site
By this date Clissold Road had been built across the old Glebe Field.

Part of the 1889 Booth Poverty Map.
Charles Booth, who was a wealthy businessman, was told by the radicals that a million people were living in poverty ETC
FIND KEY TO THE COLOURS AND ADD
The maps were coloured in seven colours from Yellow to Black. Yellow (3 servants and property worth more than £100 ponds a year).
This was a very prosperous corner of land. The houses facing the Park were a millionaires' Row, with at least three servants and worth £100 a year. Clissold Road and Albion Road were 'Well Off' with at least one servant. The houses which had just been built were Pink, were 'Solid Comfort'- regular weekly wage - the non-commissioned officers of the industrial world (foremen and sub-managers.,
The poorer grades of people were nowhere near this area. There were a few tiny pockets of Light and Dark Blue near Newington Green, while Essex Road was full of Blue and even Black.

The1894 Ordnance Survey map of the area
By 1894 the huge estate along Park Lane (now called Clissold Crescent) had been sold. The area had been cleared, the trees felled and the first houses were appearing.
KEITH PLEASE SUBSTITUTE YOUR VERSION OF THE 1894 MAP WHICH IS NOT DAMAGED BY THE HORIZONTAL SMUDGE
The map shows the area fully built up, including the Albion Parade Shopping Parade on both sides of the road. It would stay like this until the Second World War.
The plan of Clissold School Site which was extended when Stoke Newington School was created
At this time the New River School was on part of the present Betty Layward School site.

The sites of Stoke Newington School and Betty Layward School
set out on the 1869 map
The Aerial Site Map of Stoke Newington School and Betty Layward School sites.
The Swimming Bath and Football Pitch show up clearly.
Google Map 2007