HOUNSLOW HEATH.
It seems likely that the
great tract of heath in south-west Middlesex extended originally over most of the area covered with
Taplow gravel. The gravel reaches roughly from
Smallbury Green and Fulwell in the east to Longford and Stanwellmoor near the Colne. On the north
its edge approximately follows the line of the
London-Colnbrook road, with a northward spur
past Cranford and another, skirting most of Heston,
up beyond Osterley. In the south, it takes in the
villages of Stanwell and the Bedfonts, just includes
Feltham and Hanworth, and reaches to the edge of
Hampton village. (fn. 99) The correspondence between
soil and heathland was probably never exact, for the
commons at Staines, for instance, lay partly outside
this area though near to it. (fn. 1) By 1086, too, several
villages and hamlets-Stanwell, East and West
Bedfont, Cranford, Hatton, Feltham, Hanworth,
and probably Hounslow-were established on
the Taplow. (fn. 2) Piecemeal inclosure made further
inroads during the next two centuries: the hamlets
of Stanwellmoor and Heath Row probably appeared
during this time, assarts of 100 acres near Fulwell
are referred to about 1200, and inclosures were
made in Heston by the Crane and nearby in
the Beavers. (fn. 3) Hanworth Park (200 a.) was said in
1517 to have been inclosed since 1495 from former
arable land, but its situation suggests that at least
some of it may have been heathland. In the same way
the inclosures made at Hampton in the early 16th
century, though these were just outside the Taplow
area described above, probably lay on the edge of
the heath. (fn. 4) In 1545 Hounslow Heath was estimated
to cover 4,293 acres 1 rood and to extend into the
'fields, parishes, and hamlets' of Isleworth, Brentford End, Heston, Hounslow, Twickenham, Teddington, Hampton, Hanworth, Feltham, Bedfont,
Cranford, Harlington, Harmondsworth, and Stanwell. (fn. 5) In each of these places the principal estate was
in the possession of the Crown: advantage had
already been taken of this to make a new river,
through the royal manors and over the heath, from
the Colne to Isleworth mill, (fn. 6) and in 1545 an Act was
passed to inclose the whole heath, dividing it between
the various parishes. Each parish allotment was to be
separated into three, two parts being for arable, laid
out in 20-acre furlongs with strips for each tenant,
and the third being kept as common pasture. The
proportions of arable and pasture could be varied
according to circumstances. (fn. 7) The heath had already
been surveyed when the Act was passed and some
preliminary steps seem to have been taken towards
making the allotments, (fn. 8) for at about the time of the
Act there was trouble at Isleworth when people set up
gates, presumably in furtherance of the inclosure
though against the commissioners' orders. (fn. 9) Whether
allotments were ever formally made or not, no records
of inclosures have been found except at East Bedfont
and Hampton, and possibly at Whitton. Elsewhere
the only lasting result of the Act may have been to
set out parish boundaries across the heath. It is not
impossible that some boundaries were already de
fined: the common of Isleworth was described in
1299 as reaching from Cranford to Twickenham and
from Babworth Pond (near Baber Bridge) to Hounslow. (fn. 10) There is no clear evidence, however, before
1607 that this area was apportioned between Heston
and Isleworth. (fn. 11) Elsewhere, it is possible that the
heath was originally common to all adjoining villages:
the boundary between Stanwell and Harmondsworth, for instance, ran along the Duke of Northumberland's River, which was not made until the reign
of Henry VIII, though parts of it may have followed
older water-courses. (fn. 12) By 1754 all the boundaries
across the heath were fixed. (fn. 13)
Neither at Bedfont nor Hampton was the inclosure
under Henry VIII's Act complete, for both retained
common heath until the 19th century. In 1568 an
Exchequer commission was issued to ratify the titles
of the inhabitants of Hampton to 96 acres which had
been manured out of 317 allotted to the parish. (fn. 14)
This land seems to have lain north of Smythes Lane,
in Hampton, with the old open fields on the south of
the lane and the heath on the north. (fn. 15) In 1601 Sir
Michael Stanhope sought a similar commission to
ratify inclosures at Bedfont. He alleged that East
Bedfont contained 800 acres of the heath, of which
221 acres had been allotted to the tenants for tillage.
He supported this by documents from the Court of
Augmentations, including a terrier of the allotments,
which lay in three fields: Hatton Field, Broomhill
Field, and Pond Furlong Field. On the other side it
was said that Henry VIII had desisted from the
original inclosure because of the protests which
had been made, and that no inclosure had been
made before Stanhope himself tried to inclose the
heath. (fn. 16) Whether the Bedfont inclosure was made
under the Act or by Stanhope, the 18th-century
open field north and east of Hatton (c. 300 a. in
1817) (fn. 17) seems very likely to be related to it. (fn. 18) The
inclosures which seem to have been made at Whitton
under the Act are referred to in particulars of a proposed Crown lease which were drawn up in 1562.
The land to be leased lay on the common to the
south of the hamlet, and the Crown surveyors professed to be ignorant of the Crown's title to it, so that,
even if they were carrying out Henry VIII's Act,
they seem to have been unconscious of the fact. (fn. 19) The
land covered some 98 acres: whether its inclosure
was afterwards maintained seems from later maps
to be doubtful. (fn. 20)
The 17th century saw more inclosures, mostly
small ones, around the heath, including the enlargment of Bushy Park. (fn. 21) The park of Whitton Place
was extended over the heath in 1726. (fn. 22) In 1754
Rocque shows Hounslow Heath on the eve of its
final inclosure. In spite of encroachments, of which
the more important are mentioned above or in the
histories of the various parishes, Hounslow Heath
still stretched in a wide belt from Hampton in the
south-east to Heath Row in the north-west. (fn. 23) Stanwell was the first parish to respond to the pleas of the
18th-century agriculturalists who lamented the evil
example of this waste so near to the capital. (fn. 24) The
Stanwell inclosure award was dated 1792 and the
heath land there was under cultivation within a few
years. (fn. 25) Teddington followed in 1800, Feltham and
Hanworth in 1803, Bedfont in 1817, Heston, Isleworth, and Twickenham in 1818, Harmondsworth
in 1819, Cranford in 1820, Harlington in 1821, and
Hampton in 1827. (fn. 26)
The principal use of Hounslow Heath was
naturally for pasture. It was also used for hunting
and may have contained or have been co-extensive
with the warren of Staines which existed until
1227. (fn. 27) At least after that date the heath was regarded
as free of all restrictions, and complaints were
made after his death that Richard of Cornwall had
made a warren on the heath near Hounslow. (fn. 28) Queen
Elizabeth may have hawked on Hounslow Heath, (fn. 29)
and James I seems to have done so often. He and his
successors preserved game there as well as in the
parks of Hampton Court, and in 1629 hunting,
hawking, coursing, and fishing near Hounslow Heath
without royal licence was expressly forbidden. (fn. 30)
William III used Hounslow manor-house as a hunting lodge. (fn. 31) The increasing use of the heath for
military camps no doubt diminished its amenities
for hunting after the 17th century. Both Charles I
and Charles II held reviews on the heath, parliamentary forces mustered on it during the Civil War,
and James II established there the camp with which
he intended to overawe London (see plate facing p.
91). (fn. 32) The commissary-general of provisions was
then granted the right to hold a fair and market at
Hounslow, (fn. 33) and in addition to stables, kitchens, and
so forth (fn. 34) the buildings of the camp included a hospital, (fn. 35) and a Roman Catholic chapel, which was later
removed to Conduit Street in London where it became a chapel of ease to St. Martin in the Fields. (fn. 36)
The site of the camp was leased from Lord Belasyse
(d. 1689), (fn. 37) who is said to have owned a house at
Whitton. (fn. 38) Hospital Bridge, across the Crane south
of Whitton, was so called by 1754 and probably owes
its name to the camp hospital. (fn. 39) Prints of 1686 show
the camp lying east of the Crane and most of it south
of the Staines Road, (fn. 40) but another of 1740 suggests
that at least part of the camp lay west of the Crane. (fn. 41)
This is possibly borne out by the fact that payments
for damage caused by the encampment were made to
Sir Thomas Chambers, a landowner at Feltham and
Hanworth. They were also claimed by Lord Berkeley,
who owned Cranford. (fn. 42) Most of the camp was dismantled after William III's accession, but reviews
and musters continued to be held on the heath at
intervals throughout the 18th century, and in 1784
General William Roy set out the base-line of the
Ordnance Survey on the heath in Feltham. (fn. 43) In 1793
cavalry barracks were built on the heath in Heston
north of the Staines Road. (fn. 44) Accommodation for
infantry was first provided in the seventies, (fn. 45) and,
much enlarged, these barracks were in 1957 the
headquarters of Eastern Command. The original
buildings were for 400 men, and 1,298 persons were
enumerated in the barracks in 1931. (fn. 46) When the
Isleworth and Heston part of the heath was inclosed
in 1818 268 acres south of the Staines Road were
purchased by the government to be an exercise
ground for the barracks. (fn. 47) The army has since erected
buildings over part of it. The remaining 150 acres,
still generally called Hounslow Heath, belongs to the
War Office, but has not been used by the army for
many years. (fn. 48) Its later use is discussed elsewhere. (fn. 49)
Duels and prize-fights were held on the heath in
the 17th and 18th centuries, and there was a racecourse to the south of the Staines Road in Isleworth
in the 18th, (fn. 50) but perhaps the most common popular
association with the heath is as a resort of highwaymen. There are fairly frequent references to robberies on the heath from the 16th century, (fn. 51) but
many of the stories commonly told of the Hounslow
highwaymen have little foundation. There is, for
instance, no evidence that Dick Turpin operated
there. (fn. 52) The bodies of criminals hung on gibbets by
the road as late as 1801. (fn. 53) The gibbets are said to
have been taken down about 1809. (fn. 54)