ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY.
Until
the exploitation of brickearth deposits in south Hillingdon began in the early 19th century the economic
history of Hillingdon outside Uxbridge is essentially
agrarian. After Uxbridge emerged as a commercial
centre in the early 12th century, economic expansion
and most of the recorded social activity of the parish
were concentrated there. Surviving population figures
suggest that as early as the 14th century settlement
also was concentrated in Uxbridge, and not until
1821 did the population of rural Hillingdon exceed
that of the town. (fn. 78)
In 1086 the manors of Hillingdon and Colham
together contained land for 9 ploughs. Earl Roger
had 3 ploughs and room for one more on his 8
demesne hides, and the villagers and Frenchmen
shared 4 ploughs. In addition there was sufficient
meadow for 3 ploughs and 4 oxen, pasture for the
cattle of the vill, woodland sufficient to support
1,400 pigs, and one arpent of vineyard. (fn. 79) In 1086, as
at all later periods, mills were an important source of
income. Two mills, presumably on the Colne, rendered 41s. and a further ½ mill, the other half of
which probably lay in Buckinghamshire, was worth
5s. (fn. 80)
Commutation of services owed by tenants of
Colham manor occurred during the 12th century. (fn. 81)
By 1311 the customary obligations owed by many
tenants had apparently been commuted for money
payments. (fn. 82) In 1328, however, some tenants still
rendered heavy services, including malting, brewing, threshing, shearing, mowing, harvesting, and
the carriage of straw from the grange within the
manor. (fn. 83) The continuation of such heavy labour services possibly resulted from difficulties in cultivating
the extensive demesne.
In 1328 the demesne of Colham was said to comprise 325 a. of arable, 268 a. of pasture, 40 a. of
meadow, and 18 a. of woodland. (fn. 84) Seven years later
the demesne contained 670 a., (fn. 85) but during the remainder of the 14th century its area appears to have
declined. In Cowley Hall manor 234 a. of the 375acre demesne were in cultivation by 1327. (fn. 86) By the
1370s the gross yearly value of Colham manor
averaged £238 (£145 net), including rents from two
mills at Colham and two at Uxbridge, (fn. 87) tolls of the
twice-weekly market and the two statute fairs held at
Uxbridge, (fn. 88) and perquisites of court worth approximately £12. (fn. 89) The manorial demesne was said to contain 449 a. in 1386, (fn. 90) but only 380 a. in 1449. (fn. 91) By the
1380s money payments had entirely replaced labour
services. (fn. 92) At this period the demesne was divided
into two parts, the northern estate administered
from a grange called Northall. Each estate had a cowherd, swineherd, and ploughman, and a warrener
was appointed for the whole manor. (fn. 93) In addition to
the usual domestic and draught animals the stock
included 60 cows, 100 pigs, and 400 sheep tended by
a shepherd. Much of the demesne was in wheat, but
small quantities of rye and oats were also grown. Of
the total corn yield of 242 qr. in 1376, 105 qr. were
sold, chiefly in London, 29 qr. sent to Uxbridge for
malting and brewing, and 13 qr. milled for flour at
Uxbridge and Colham. By c. 1690 the augmented
demesne of Colham, all of which was apparently
leased, totalled 536 a. (fn. 94) The manor was then said to
be worth £931, including leasehold rents in Hillingdon worth £794, profits of court worth £20, and
£68 from rents, tolls, and profits in Uxbridge. (fn. 95) By
the 19th century the demesne had again been reduced to a little more than 300 a. (fn. 96)
Whether changes in land utilization following the
inclosure of parcels of common and open-field land
from the 16th century onwards (fn. 97) significantly retarded the growth of rural Hillingdon is uncertain.
In 1670 large areas of the parish were in grass
supplying hay for the London market, (fn. 98) and in the
late 18th century the Colham leet still appointed
a hayward for the manor. (fn. 99) But in 1801, when more
than one-half of the total population was said to be
employed in agriculture, (fn. 1) there were still 1,129 a. of
arable in the parish. (fn. 2) Of this, 465 a. were in wheat,
292 a. in barley, 264 a. in peas and beans, and the
remainder in oats, rye, turnips, and potatoes. Between 1801 and 1811 the population of rural Hillingdon increased by 469 to 2,252, and for the first
time the number of families gaining a living by trade
exceeded those employed in agriculture. In 1821,
when the population of the remainder of the parish
exceeded that of Uxbridge, 243 families were said to
be employed in agriculture. Ten years later, following the opening of brick-fields in south Hillingdon (fn. 3)
and the execution of the inclosure award in 1825, (fn. 4)
the population of Hillingdon had risen to 3,842, but
only 14 families were said to be employed in agriculture. (fn. 5) The sudden slump in agricultural employment reflected changes in land utilization and the
beginning of industrial expansion in and near Uxbridge. (fn. 6) From the 1820s onwards an increasing
amount of arable was leased for the extraction of
gravel and brickearth, (fn. 7) and much of the remainder
seems to have been turned over to grass. (fn. 8) In 1830
only 24 a. of the 103-acre Rye Fields Farm were
arable, (fn. 9) and two years later the 129 a. of Colham
Manor Farm were almost all meadow. (fn. 10) Further
north horticultural specialization for the metropolitan market followed the establishment in 1838 of
a railway link with London. (fn. 11) By 1853 the Victoria
and Hillingdon Nurseries had been established at
Uxbridge by Thomas Appleby, and Robert Pain,
who advertised as successor to James Griffin, owned
the Uxbridge Nursery at Hillingdon End. (fn. 12) In 1876
there were said to be 'numerous' orchards in the
parish, (fn. 13) and four years later there were nurseries in
the Greenway, Kingston Lane, Harefield Road,
Denham Road, and south of St. Andrew's church. (fn. 14)
By 1894 the glass and orchards of the Uxbridge
Nursery covered almost 40 a. between Hillingdon
Road and the G.W.R. line. (fn. 15) There were then small
areas of glass in Cowley Mill Road and Kingston
Lane and a 5-acre nursery on Hillingdon Heath. The
Kingston Lane premises of Joseph Lowe (later
Lowe & Shawyer Ltd.), founded in 1864, were expanded during the 1890s and in the early 20th
century the firm was said to be the largest cut flower
nursery in the country, specializing in the growing
of chrysanthemums for the London market. (fn. 16) A nursery at Pield Heath was established in 1895 by Milton Hutchings, a friend of Joseph Lowe. (fn. 17) By 1913
there were six nurseries, covering approximately 65
a., in the area bounded by Cowley Road, Hillingdon
Road, and Royal Lane, and four smaller nurseries
covering almost 20 a. on Hillingdon Heath. (fn. 18) All
contained large areas of glass and chiefly produced
flowers for the metropolitan market. Despite the
rapid in-filling of the parish after 1900 and the
encroachment of building estates on agricultural
land, market-gardening and farming on a small scale
continued. (fn. 19) Hercies Farm, north of Sweetcroft
Lane, and Hillingdon House Farm to the west were
not sold to the local authority until 1922 (fn. 20) and 1941 (fn. 21)
respectively. In 1934 there were still large areas of
glass along both sides of the railway between Uxbridge and Cowley and at Pield Heath. (fn. 22) Building
after 1945 further reduced the land available for
cultivation, but in 1963 there were still seven nurseries, five of them small, within the old parish. (fn. 23) In
1964 Milton Hutchings Ltd. employed between
80 and 100 people in their 25-acre nursery at Pield
Heath. (fn. 24) At this date there were still patches of
agricultural land north of Hercies Road and east of
Hillingdon Circus.
Although there are references to mills in Hillingdon during all documented periods, the information
is so fragmentary that many of the mills are unidentifiable, while others have more than one name.
Hence it is seldom possible to say with certainty that
a medieval mill remained in continuous use until the
19th century or later. In 1086 there were 2½ mills in
Colham manor. (fn. 25) Presumably the third mill was
driven by the main stream of the Colne, in which
case the other half probably belonged to a manor on
the Buckinghamshire bank. (fn. 26) The two other Domesday mills, however, were probably on the southern
extension of the Frays river, known variously as the
Cowley stream or Colham mill stream. During the
medieval period the two mills belonging to Colham
were called Port mill and Bury mill: (fn. 27) later they
were known as Colham or Lower Colham mill and
Yiewsley mill respectively. In the 19th century, and
presumably earlier, Colham mill stood less than ½
mile west of Colham manor-house and about 1½ mile
downstream from Yiewsley mill. (fn. 28) In 1265 Godfrey
de Heddesore (probably Hedsor, Bucks.) was said to
hold three mills in Uxbridge, (fn. 29) and in 1327 three
water-mills called Crouch mill, Wode mill, and
Town mill were included in an extent of Cowley Hall
manor. (fn. 30) There was a windmill belonging to Colham
manor in 1328 (fn. 31) and at least from the late 14th century the lord of Colham owned, in addition to his
two mills south of Uxbridge, two watermills under
one roof in the town. (fn. 32) A mill called Mede mill, also
belonging to the lord of Colham, is first mentioned
by name in 1409 when it was apparently horsepowered. (fn. 33) A wharf for Mede mill was being constructed in 1419 and thereafter it is described as
a water-mill. (fn. 34)
In the 1530s there were two mills, one driven by
the Frays and the other by the Colne, near the
Oxford road at the west end of Uxbridge. (fn. 35) In the
17th century a water-mill at Uxbridge belonged to
Stanwell manor, (fn. 36) and two unidentified mills at
Hillingdon were included in grants of Swakeleys
manor in Ickenham. (fn. 37) In the 18th century, and possibly earlier, one or more of the Uxbridge mills were
possibly used for paper-making. (fn. 38) Town (later Frays
or Mercer's) mill on the Frays at the west end of
Uxbridge and Crouch mill, presumably identifiable
with the two 14th-century mills of the same name, (fn. 39)
were again mentioned in 1636 (fn. 40) and 1649 (fn. 41) respectively. In 1649 Crouch mill and the adjoining millhouse were leased to Samuel Bonsey, a London
mealman. Rabbs or Robbs mill (later Cowley mill),
sited on the Frays stream at the junction of Cowley
Road and the modern Cowley Mill Road, is first
mentioned by name in 1636 (fn. 42) although it had almost
certainly been in existence since the Middle Ages.
Cowley Hall mill on the Frays west of Cowley Hall,
although not mentioned by name until 1733, (fn. 43) is
shown on a map of 1641. (fn. 44) By this date the Frays
river powered at least five mills-Town or Frays
mill, Rabbs mill, Cowley Hall mill, Yiewsley mill,
and Colham mill-and before 1746 another mill on
an arm of the Colne west of Uxbridge had apparently
been built. (fn. 45) The demesne mill at Colham was
separated from the manor in 1771 and sold to John
Hubbard, a mealman, members of whose family had
leased the mill and an adjoining close called Wharf
Mead as early as 1690. (fn. 46) Hubbard's son John, Rector
of Shepperton, owned Colham mill in 1800, (fn. 47) but by
1842 it had been acquired by the firm of Thomas
Smith and Son. (fn. 48)
There were said to be 13 corn mills in the neighbourhood of Uxbridge during the 1840s, (fn. 49) but the
location of some of these is uncertain. A map of 1842
shows eight corn mills on the Hillingdon stretch of
the rivers. (fn. 50) Of these three were in Uxbridge, including Frays mill then in the possession of John
Mercer, members of whose family had probably
owned this mill and Drayton mill in West Drayton
parish since about 1796. (fn. 51) In addition to the four
ancient mills on the Frays stream a mill called Upper
Colham mill, probably identifiable with the mill
marked on a map of 1746, (fn. 52) is shown on the Colne
west of Uxbridge. (fn. 53) Cowley Hall mill and an unidentified mill called Kelsey's were burned down in
1864 and 1873 respectively, (fn. 54) but Cowley Hall mill
had been rebuilt before 1895 when it was one of four
flour mills still standing on the Frays south of Uxbridge. (fn. 55) The mill on the Colne west of the town was
purchased by the Bell Punch Co. in 1919 and incorporated in their industrial premises. (fn. 56) By 1934 only
Rabbs or Cowley mill and Frays mill in Uxbridge
were still certainly standing. (fn. 57) Rabbs mill was acquired by the local authority from Grimsdale and
Sons, the Uxbridge brewers, in 1949. (fn. 58) Frays mill
was modernized at the beginning of the 20th century
and remained in use as a flour mill until the Second
World War. In 1954 the buildings were bought from
the millers E. and J. Fountain by Glaxo Ltd. and
later converted into a training centre. (fn. 59)
Apart from milling there is no evidence of any
industry in rural Hillingdon before the opening of
the Middlesex section of the Grand Junction Canal
at the end of the 18th century. The establishment of
facilities for bulk transport stimulated the exploitation of brickearth deposits in the south of the parish.
Brick-making on a commercial scale probably began
shortly after 1815 with the opening of small fields
between Cowley Hall and Yiewsley. (fn. 60) In 1818 'several
hundred' men were employed in the brick-fields
south of Uxbridge. (fn. 61) In 1832 45 a. of Philpots Bridge
Farm, 44 a. of Colham Manor Farm, and 22 a. in
Pole Sturges meadow were leased for brick-working,
and by 1836 a number of cottages for labourers in
the brick-fields had been built south of the canal. (fn. 62)
The extensive Hillingdon brick-field was said in 1853
to be a source of great wealth to Uxbridge. (fn. 63) By 1856
more than 240 a. in Hillingdon, including 100 a. of
the rectorial glebe south of Colham Green leased to
Samuel Pocock, were being worked for brickearth.
All brick-field lessees paid a royalty on every thousand
bricks and two tenants, as a condition of their lease
of a total of 58 a., undertook to produce between
them at least 5 million bricks a year. (fn. 64) By 1866
smaller brick-fields had been opened north-west of
Colham Green and south of Uxbridge. (fn. 65) Eight years
later, however, deposits near Uxbridge were said to
have been exhausted. (fn. 66) In 1872 Samuel Pocock
extended his Hillingdon brick-field southward into
West Drayton parish, and between 1876 and 1879
he constructed a dock on a branch of the canal to
serve the extended field. (fn. 67) Pocock had six stools in
Hillingdon in 1877, when the bricks from the whole
field were being fired in Hillingdon. (fn. 68) In 1884
Pocock conveyed his interests to C. B. Broad and G.
Harris, of South Wharf, Paddington, and the field
continued to be leased by Broad & Co. until 1935,
when the company bought the freehold. The company's land included, as well as the West Drayton
field, about 100 a. in Hillingdon parish. (fn. 69) At its
peak, about 1890, Broad's brick-field was working
18 to 20 stools and gave seasonal employment to
between 400 and 500 men. (fn. 70) At this period gravel
associated with the brickearth deposits was also
being extracted west of Starveall Lane and in the
extreme south-east of the parish. (fn. 71) The Hillingdon
brickearth was becoming worked out at the beginning of the 20th century and the Stockley brickworks began to decline. Brickearth was still being
extracted from Hide Field in 1913, but processing
was apparently carried out only at the Stockley works
in the north-east corner of West Drayton parish. (fn. 72)
By 1930 the Stockley works were producing only 2
million bricks a year, and the brick-field was closed
in 1935. (fn. 73)
A number of other industries, about which little
is known, were established during the 19th century
along the canal in south and west Hillingdon. The
Victoria oil mills on the canal at Yiewsley were in
existence before 1855. By 1886 the works were
occupied by Graham Walter & Co., a firm of
oil cake manufacturers, who continued production
there until about 1900. (fn. 74) The Hillingdon Varnish
Works on the canal east of Yiewsley had been established by 1868, (fn. 75) and was still operating in 1895 (fn. 76)
when the chief industries of the Yiewsley area were
described as brick-making, milling, tanning, rubber,
varnish, and chemical works. (fn. 77) The Para rubber mill
(established before 1898) (fn. 78) was sited on the canal
north of Yiewsley, and a coconut fibre mill, which
was converted to a leather works before 1913, stood
north of Cowley Bridge. (fn. 79) The varnish and rubber
factories were still operating in 1913. (fn. 80) An unidentified chemical works on the east side of Horton Lane
which is shown on a map of 1864 (fn. 81) was occupied in
1874 by Thomas Reynolds and Alfred White, manufacturing chemists. From 1890 the premises were
described as the chemical works of Alfred White and
Sons. The factory ceased production between 1910 (fn. 82)
and 1915 when the premises were opened by the
Queen of Roumania as the Sonic engineering works.
Here George Constantinescu (1881-1965), also a
Roumanian, conducted experiments on his wave
transmission system of interrupter gear for machine
guns firing through the propellers of aircraft. (fn. 83) The
premises were taken over in 1920 by the Admiralty
for use as an engineering laboratory specializing in
experimental work for the Navy. Stores, offices, and
canteen buildings were added after 1920 and the
number of persons employed on the site increased
from 150 in 1920 to 350 in 1958. (fn. 84) Land formerly
owned by St. Thomas's Hospital (fn. 85) was acquired in
1921 by two industrial concerns called Lactine Ltd.
and Hobdellway & Co. Ltd., whose premises were
purchased in 1928 by the Kenilworth Chemical
Manufacturing Co. and the English Metal Powder
Co. The English Metal Powder Co., producing
flake and atomized aluminium powders and aluminium pastes, began operations on the site in 1932.
In 1965 the firm employed approximately 80
persons. The premises in Trout Road originally
occupied by the Metal Powder and Kenilworth
companies were taken over after 1935 by the
Middlesex Oil and Chemical Works Ltd., an
associate company manufacturing oils, petroleum
jellies, and resins. The Kenilworth and Metal Powder companies then moved to an adjoining site in
Trout Road. In 1965 the Middlesex Oil and Chemical Works employed approximately 100 persons. (fn. 86)
A large number of smaller industries, chiefly engaged
in manufacturing chemicals, plastics, and engineering components, were established at Yiewsley, and
particularly in Trout Road, after 1930. By 1960 there
were more than forty such concerns in the area. (fn. 87)
Among these was the factory of Bux Ltd. (formerly
the Buckinghamshire Paper and Box Co. Ltd.)
which was established in Bentinck Road in 1942 and
later moved to a 6-acre site in Horton Road. In 1965
the company, which manufactured fibreboard corrugated containers, employed approximately 150
people. (fn. 88) The coachbuilding firm of James Whitson
& Co. moved into premises in High Street, Yiewsley, in 1952. The firm then manufactured chiefly
coaches and fire engines and employed approximately 350 people. By 1965, however, the demand
for luxury coaches had declined and the firm employed only about 50 people in manufacturing glass
fibre components for commercial vehicles. (fn. 89) Further
north, at Cowley, the Cowley Bridge works of Cape
Building Products Ltd. was erected in 1935. Initially
the factory produced flint bricks only, but in 1949
the company also began to manufacture asbestos
insulation boards. In 1963 the factory had a labour
force of approximately 550 persons, said to be drawn
from an area within an 8-mile radius of Cowley. (fn. 90)
Uxbridge emerged as the economic focus of the
ancient parish in the late 12th century when Gilbert
Basset granted the right to hold a Thursday market
in the town to the 'burgesses' of Uxbridge. (fn. 91) Basset's grant also provided that holders of one acre in
the town should be free from all tolls and customs
on payment of 2s. a year, that ½-acre holders should
have the same privileges in consideration of 1s.
a year, and that both classes of tenant should have
the right to alienate their holdings at will. By 1281
the town also had an annual fair held on St. Margaret's day (20 July). (fn. 92) The right to hold a second
annual fair at Michaelmas and a Monday market was
granted to the lord of Colham in 1294. (fn. 93) Until the
19th century the importance of Uxbridge rested
almost wholly on its markets, fairs, and mills.
A market-house seems to have been built by 1513, (fn. 94)
and the importance of the Uxbridge mills and markets was stressed by Leland, writing in the 1530s. (fn. 95)
By the late 16th century the town was a market and
milling centre for a wide area extending into
Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire. (fn. 96) Despite disputes over the right to dispose of the market tolls, (fn. 97)
the Uxbridge corn market and flour mills seem to
have retained their importance during the 17th and
18th centuries. The market-house was rebuilt in
1789, (fn. 98) and the corn trade was further stimulated by
the opening of the Middlesex section of the Grand
Junction Canal in 1796. (fn. 99) In 1799 almost 10,000 tons
of grain and flour were carried on the canal between
Uxbridge and the Thames. (fn. 1) The Thursday market
was then said to be one of the largest pitched corn
markets in the country, the market tolls realized
more than £400 a year, and the town 'abounded'
with mealmen and corn merchants. (fn. 2) About 1830
corn was brought to the Uxbridge market from
places as far distant as Edgware and Hendon to the
east, Staines, Hampton, and Kingston (Surr.) to the
south, and Amersham, Missenden (Bucks.), and
Chinnor (Oxon.) to the west. (fn. 3) On a good day more
than 2,700 sacks of corn were sold, almost all of
which was milled at Uxbridge. Street markets associated with the Thursday corn market and a market
held on Saturdays sold fruit, vegetables, meat, and
a variety of consumer goods. The corn market and
mills began to decline about 1840 with the transfer
to market-gardening, meadow, and brick-working of
large areas of corn-growing land. The Uxbridge
Corn Exchange Co. was instituted in 1859, and sale
by sample superseded the old method of sale in
bulk. (fn. 4) The Thursday street market also declined but
in 1883 the corn and flour trade was still described as
the staple business of Uxbridge. (fn. 5) In 1890, when
there was still some street trading, the Thursday and
Saturday markets were said to deal in corn, provisions, meat, vegetables, old clothes, and 'other
petty commodities'. (fn. 6) By this date annual fairs, said
in 1839 (fn. 7) to be held on 25 March, 31 July, 29 September, and 11 October, had been discontinued. (fn. 8)
Although the commercial life of Uxbridge centred
on the corn and flour trade, a number of minor
industries existed in the town before 1800. Brewing
seems to have been an important industry by the
14th century. (fn. 9) Uxbridge beer-brewers and breweries,
presumably supplying the many inns and beerhouses in the town, are mentioned at all later
periods. (fn. 10) In the 1580s Camden commented on the
large number of inns in the town, (fn. 11) and with the
increase in traffic on the London-Oxford road
stabling and victualling became an important local
industry. By 1648 there were approximately twenty
inns in Uxbridge, (fn. 12) and a hundred years later nearly
forty licensed alehouses in and around the town. (fn. 13) In
1853 there were 54 public houses, beerhouses, and
inns in Uxbridge. (fn. 14) The first commercial brewery
was apparently established in the early 18th century
by George Harman (d. 1744). (fn. 15) Norton's brewery,
which is said to have been established about 1750, (fn. 16)
is shown on a late-18th-century plan at the north
end of High Street, (fn. 17) and the brewing firm of G. B.
Hetherington had premises in the town before 1847. (fn. 18)
There were 4 breweries in Uxbridge in 1851, (fn. 19) 5 in
1869, but only 3 by 1909. (fn. 20) Of these the last, Harman's Uxbridge Brewery Ltd., was closed in 1964.
A tannery in Uxbridge is mentioned in 1672, (fn. 21)
and one of the town mills may have been converted
for paper-making by Joseph Grainger about 1793. (fn. 22)
An establishment at Hillingdon End manufacturing
Windsor chairs was in existence before 1800, (fn. 23) and
a small firm manufacturing cutlery was established
in High Street in 1798. (fn. 24) The opening of the Grand
Junction Canal in 1796 (fn. 25) not only revitalized the
Uxbridge milling industry but also opened up the
town and parish to industrial development. By 1814
a plate-glass mill had been established on the site of
the old waterworks just north of Dolphin Bridge, (fn. 26)
and between 1830 and 1850 a number of industrial
premises, including a gas-works, (fn. 27) parchment works,
oil mills, and mustard mills, were erected near the
canal on Uxbridge Moor. (fn. 28) Extensive wharves were
built along the canal on Uxbridge Moor and at the
west end of Uxbridge. In 1851 the town was said to
derive much of its importance from the redistribution
of foreign timber, slate, and coal to west Middlesex
and Buckinghamshire. Facilities for bulk transport
also resulted in the establishment of several iron
foundries in the town. (fn. 29) The firm of Grainge, Rogers,
and Grainge occupied premises off High Street from
1800, (fn. 30) and the Uxbridge Iron Works of Stacey and
Son were erected in George Street in the 1820s.
Stacey's foundry employed about 50 men, whose
families were housed in Foundry Terrace, York
Road (demolished in 1935). (fn. 31) In 1853 both firms
were described as agricultural implement makers. (fn. 32)
A third foundry, the Albert Iron Works, had been
built in Falcon Yard, east of Harefield Road, by
1894. (fn. 33) At this date the Uxbridge Iron Works,
which has been sold in 1889, was still standing, but
the factory is said to have been burned down before
1900. (fn. 34) Other 19th-century industries included the
coach-making firm of Edward Hood, which was
established in High Street about 1829 and moved to
premises in Windsor Street shortly after 1840. (fn. 35) By
1853 a second coach-building firm had been established in High Street. (fn. 36) The firm of Brownie, rickcloth and rope manufacturers, was established by
1830 and served both King William IV and Queen
Victoria. (fn. 37) In 1868 the smell from Hetherington's
tallow factory was causing discomfort in the town. (fn. 38)
By 1880 two firms manufacturing clocks and watches
and a branch of J. A. Harling & Co., a London firm
of piano makers, had been set up in Uxbridge. (fn. 39)
Boat-building yards in Waterloo Road are first
mentioned in 1881, (fn. 40) and saw- and planing-mills two
years later. (fn. 41) A factory in Waterloo Road manufacturing steel barrels opened about 1898. In c. 1905
the concern, then known as the Steel Barrel Co.,
employed between 40 and 50 men. (fn. 42)
After the First World War a number of industries
moved to Uxbridge from the metropolitan area.
The largest of these was the Bell Punch Co. (established 1878) which in 1919 moved from premises in
the City of London to the site of an old mill on an
arm of the Colne west of Uxbridge. In 1963 the
firm, which manufactured ticket machines, taximeters, and other technical instruments, employed
approximately 1,500 persons in workshops covering
8 a. (fn. 43) Other industrial building was concentrated on
a 26-acre industrial estate between the canal and the
Colne which was opened by the local authority in
1946. (fn. 44) An industrial trading estate association was
formed in 1958, and by 1964 the estate comprised
more than 50 companies, most of which were general
or light engineering concerns specializing in the
manufacture of component parts. (fn. 45) The average
labour force in most of the factories was between 50
and 80 in 1963, but several larger concerns employed
more than 200 persons. F. T. Products Ltd. was
established in Rockingham Road in 1949 to manufacture components for the motor industry. Additional premises in Wallingford Road were opened in
1956, and in 1963 the company employed 315
persons. (fn. 46) A chemical engineering firm, Nordac
Ltd., moved from a factory at Park Royal, Acton, to
premises in Wallingford Road in 1950. By 1963 the
factory area was approximately 41,000 sq. ft. and the
firm had a labour force of 240. (fn. 47)
Social activity during the 16th and 17th centuries
seems to have centred on the efforts of the inhabitants of Uxbridge to enforce and extend their customary privileges. A fatal quarrel between town and
manorial officials occurred in the early 16th century, (fn. 48)
and in 1561 the Vicar of Hillingdon and 17 others
were indicted for breaking down fences on Cow
Moor in Harefield on which Uxbridge burgage
tenants claimed rights of common pasture. (fn. 49) About
1630 the townspeople engaged in a further dispute,
this time with Alice, Dowager Countess of Derby,
lady of Harefield and Colham manors, over her right
to collect and dispose of the Uxbridge market tolls. (fn. 50)
Although these profits belonged to the lords of
Colham it had apparently been customary for the lord
to allow the bailiffs of Uxbridge to collect the tolls for
distribution for 'public and charitable purposes'. In
1631 the Countess accused the bailiffs of appropriating the tolls for their own benefit and declared
her intention of distributing them herself. Her right
to do so was disputed by the town authorities who,
in answer to a writ of quo warranto, claimed that
Uxbridge was an ancient borough and corporation
of 73 burgesses holding the tolls by ancient privilege.
Their claim was rejected, and the townspeople then
created a series of disturbances and prevented the
collection of the tolls. The Countess referred the
matter to Star Chamber which in 1633 rejected
the townspeople's interpretation of the 12th-century
market grant (fn. 51) and fined them £200. They then
petitioned the Countess for the remission of the fine
and relinquished their claim to the market tolls. In
1652, however, George, Lord Chandos, a Royalist
sympathizer, who had succeeded his grandmother as
lord of Colham, left the country, (fn. 52) and the townspeople again appropriated the tolls. An action for
restitution was brought against the town authorities
in 1665 and seven years later the case again came
before the courts. Nothing further is recorded until
a settlement was reached in 1695 with the sale of the
manor and profits to representatives of the town. (fn. 53)
Burgage tenants continued to exercise their customary pasture rights on the Colham waste and on
Cow Moor in Harefield until the 19th century. (fn. 54)
Their pasture rights in Colham were extinguished
on the inclosure of the commons in 1812, and under
the Harefield Inclosure Act of 1813 they were
allotted 32 a. in Harefield in lieu of their customary
rights. (fn. 55) Despite protests from the burgage tenants
this land was sold by the lords in trust in 1856 under
powers conferred by an Act passed in 1855. (fn. 56)
Further details of the social life of Hillingdon
during this period are confined to the activities of
Parliamentary soldiers, (fn. 57) who garrisoned Uxbridge
almost continuously between 1644 and 1651. (fn. 58) In
1688 disbanded soldiers from James II's army were
said to be concentrated around Uxbridge and to be
responsible for assaults, murders, and arson in the
district. (fn. 59) Four years later additional watches were
mounted in Cowley Street and at the 'Red Lion',
Hillingdon, to combat the increasing number of
larcenies. (fn. 60) The activities of highwaymen and
smugglers in the Uxbridge area were frequently
reported in the early 18th century, (fn. 61) and it was later
said that in the 1750s notorious highwaymen lived
openly in the town while travellers made a detour to
avoid its thieves and pickpockets. (fn. 62)
The economic developments which followed the
opening of the Grand Junction Canal in 1796 were
accompanied by a significant expansion in the commercial and social facilities of Uxbridge. The Uxbridge universal tontine was established in 1791, (fn. 63)
and the first meeting of freemasons was held at
the 'Crown' in 1796. (fn. 64) By 1836 two freemasons'
lodges had been established in Uxbridge. (fn. 65) A bank,
occupying premises on the west side of High Street,
was founded in 1791 by members of the milling
families of Norton and Mercer. A sub-branch at
Southall was established as early as 1879, and by
1900, when it was taken over by Barclays & Co.,
the bank had branches at Pinner, Northwood,
Brentford, Slough, Eton, and Windsor. (fn. 66) A printing
press was set up in Uxbridge by Thomas Lake about
1770, (fn. 67) and by 1824 a second press was operating at
Hillingdon End. (fn. 68) During the 1820s Lake's press
published literature attacking the local administration, (fn. 69) but the town does not seem to have had
a regular newspaper until the publication at Amersham (Bucks.) about 1840 of Broadwater's Buckinghamshire Advertiser and Uxbridge Journal (after 1853
called the Buckinghamshire Advertiser). By 1870 the
town had two further newspapers, the Uxbridge
Chronicle and Hetherington's Uxbridge Marvel. (fn. 70) In
1880 the Uxbridge firm of John King began to print
the Uxbridge Gazette. From 1860 the Buckinghamshire Advertiser was printed in offices in the King's
Arms yard, Uxbridge. The paper was taken over in
1903 by W. J. Hutchings (d. 1917) who had also
established a printing works in High Street in 1880,
and the two newspapers continued in competition
until 1916 when the King family bought the
Advertiser. The two firms of King and Hutchings
amalgamated in 1919, and the combined business
subsequently acquired and published a number of
local and county newspapers. The firm was acquired
by the Westminster Press group in 1955. In 1965
the Uxbridge premises in Cricket Field Road comprised a newspaper and general printing works
employing more than 500 persons. (fn. 71)
Cultural activities in Uxbridge flourished in the
early 19th century. The Uxbridge Book Society,
which provided a lending library and reading room,
was founded in 1811 with a limited membership of
60. On the creation in 1836 of the Literary and
Scientific Institution, the Book Society was dissolved
and its books transferred to the library of the new
institution. (fn. 72) A savings bank was instituted in 1816
by a group of philanthropic townspeople, (fn. 73) and
a friendly society in the following year. (fn. 74) Public
rooms in Vine Street were opened in 1837, and the
Theatre Royal in Windsor Street, said to have been
opened by Edmund Keane, the actor, was in use
by 1839. (fn. 75) The town was then said to have the
'appearance of activity and great respectability'. (fn. 76) A
second theatre, the Prince of Wales, had opened
by 1849 (fn. 77) and other dramatic entertainments were
staged in the public rooms and in the magistrates'
room at the 'King's Arms'. (fn. 78) A building society had
been formed by 1845 and a young men's improvement society by 1847. From about 1847 the improvement society published a literary journal, the
Attempt, which lasted until 1853. It overlapped with
the Uxbridge Pioneer, which first appeared in 1849.
The improvement society was still in existence in
1899 as the Uxbridge Young Men's Literary Institute. (fn. 79) The Uxbridge branch of the Conservative
Association was formed in 1870. (fn. 80)
Stags were hunted on Uxbridge Common as
late as 1826 and Her Majesty's Staghounds met at
Hillingdon until 1879. Cock fights were held at
Hillingdon until at least as late as 1839. (fn. 81) During the
19th century Uxbridge C.C., founded in 1789,
played matches against important national teams
on the club's ground in the modern Cricket Field
Road. (fn. 82) Hillingdon C.C., playing on Coney Green,
was in existence before 1865. (fn. 83) The Uxbridge
amateur football club was formed in 1870, and has
since played in many leagues and on various grounds
in the town. (fn. 84) Hillingdon Golf Club was instituted
in 1892 and a nine-hole course was laid out over 23 a.
of Hillingdon House park. (fn. 85)
A military association for the Uxbridge division of
Elthorne hundred was formed at Uxbridge in 1797. (fn. 86)
The force, styled the Uxbridge Yeomanry Cavalry,
consisted of two troops of horse which exercised
and had their field days on Uxbridge Common. The
troop founded in 1797 was disbanded four years
later, but in 1830 a corps of 98 yeomanry cavalry
was again raised at Uxbridge to meet the threat of
agrarian discontent in the district. From about 1840
an annual race-meeting in connexion with the
Uxbridge Yeomanry was held at Harefield Place, on
Harefield Moor, and, later, at West Drayton. More
than 10,000 people were said to have attended the
1846 meeting. In 1871 the strength of the volunteer
corps was increased to four troops and the style
changed to the Middlesex Yeomanry Cavalry. The
'Chequers' at Uxbridge, however, remained the
headquarters of the corps until 1878 when the headquarters were moved to London. There were then
said to be no more than five Uxbridge men in the
regiment, and its subsequent history is that of
a county rather than a local force.
The proliferation of cultural facilities in Uxbridge
in the early 19th century contrasted strongly with
social conditions in the town and parish during the
same period. Complaints in 1828 drew attention to
the declining reputation of Uxbridge. Increasing
poverty in the town was attributed mainly to the
erection by private speculators of large numbers of
insanitary cottages. Prostitutes were said to be on
the increase, and the opening of shops on Sunday
mornings was also criticized. (fn. 87) Although criticism
was probably exaggerated, the extinction of common
grazing rights and changes in land utilization following inclosure in 1825, the introduction of industry
into the parish, and the presence of labourers working in the brick-fields probably aggravated prevailing
hardship. Unrest west of the Colne, where bands
of 'swing rioters' were destroying machinery, farm
implements, and ricks, resulted in the re-formation in
December 1830 of the Uxbridge Yeomanry Cavalry
to protect private property. (fn. 88) In Uxbridge town
a vestry committee headed by the Vicar of Hillingdon was formed to suppress Sunday business and
disturbances caused by drunken brick-field and railway workers. (fn. 89) In 1841 there were said to be 146
seasonal labourers living in barns in Hillingdon and
population increases since 1831 were largely attributed to the influx of brick-workers. (fn. 90) In the later
19th century urbanization, stimulated by the introduction of trams and railways, proceeded steadily.
In 1904 the surveyors of the Hillingdon House estate
considered that the development of 'smaller class
property on the main road frontage' would inevitably follow the laying of the tramway. (fn. 91) Extensive
speculative and council building during the 1920s
accompanied the sharp rise in the population of
Hillingdon, although the number of people living in
Uxbridge had already started to decline. (fn. 92)
Despite the large-scale urbanization of rural Hillingdon after 1900 Uxbridge maintained its position
as the economic and social focus of the parish. In
1964 the town, despite uncertainty over redevelopment plans, was a business and transport centre
for north-west Middlesex and part of east Buckinghamshire. (fn. 93) Shops and industries in and around
Uxbridge provided employment for a considerable
part of the population of Hillingdon and adjoining
parishes, and the location in the town of the branch
offices of several government taxation and welfare
departments further emphasized its wider importance. Local trade and industry also contributed
significantly to the social life of the district by providing clubs and associations for sport and cultural
activities. The Uxbridge chamber of trade and commerce (formed in 1908) had 265 members in 1963, (fn. 94)
and a second chamber of commerce for the north
Hillingdon district was formed in 1936. (fn. 95) In 1964
there were also several traders' organizations, a
trades' council, two residents' associations, and exservice, political, trade union, and youth organizations. A room in the county library was furnished as
a museum, which was named after H. T. Hamson,
for many years editor of the Middlesex Advertiser
and a prominent benefactor of the museum. (fn. 96) A
local history society was formed in 1949, and by 1964
the parish also supported opera, music, and drama
societies. An Uxbridge festival of arts mounted in
1963 staged exhibitions of painting, books, and
handicrafts, plays, and operatic and music recitals by
international artists in the Regal cinema. (fn. 97) In 1962
the thirty-seventh annual Uxbridge Show, held on
the show ground in Park Road, attracted approximately 10,000 people. (fn. 98)