FRIERN BARNET
Friern Barnet, (fn. 1) home of Colney Hatch asylum, is
a small parish 7 miles north of London and, with
Finchley, protrudes into Hertfordshire. (fn. 2) Its maximum length along the main north-north-west axis
is 3 miles and nowhere is it more than 1½ mile wide.
The extent of the civil parish was 1,304 a. in 1871.
In 1891 a small detached portion of Hornsey at
Colney Hatch was included in Friern Barnet. The
area increased to 1,340 a. between 1931 and 1937,
through adjustments to boundaries on the incorporations of Finchley and Southgate, and to
1,342 a. in 1951. (fn. 3) The parish acquired a local board
in 1884, became a U.D. in 1895, and from 1965
was included in the London Borough of Barnet. (fn. 4)
There are no natural boundaries, the location of
estates having probably determined the border
with Hertfordshire to the north and north-east.
Edmonton and Tottenham lie to the south-east,
Clerkenwell detached (later part of Hornsey), and
Hornsey to the south, Hornsey and Finchley to the
south-west, and Finchley to the west. Boundaries
with Clerkenwell detached were marked by 1339
and with Finchley and Hertfordshire by 1515. (fn. 5)
Where woods extended into Tottenham, Edmonton,
and Finchley, (fn. 6) the boundary may have been fixed
later. The bounds were beaten annually by 1781 (fn. 7)
and marked by posts from 1855. (fn. 8)
Most of the ground lies on London Clay. A
narrow deposit of brickearth lines Bounds Green
brook. Boulder clay from Finchley stretches into
the north part of the parish as far as All Saints'
Avenue and along the whole western boundary the
clay is flanked by glacial gravel, which extends
eastward to Russell Lane in the north and through
Colney Hatch to New Southgate in the south.
The Friary, Manor House Farm, and St. James's
church stand on an outcrop of gravel beside Friern
Barnet Lane. (fn. 9) The highest point is Whetstone High
Road in the north, on a ridge of over 300 ft. which
recedes gradually southward along the Great North
Road in Finchley. The whole of Friern Barnet south
and east of that line falls away sharply as far as
Bounds Green brook. The 250-ft. contour curves
from Oakleigh Park station to the parish church.
The only areas below 125 ft. are farther east,
including part of Bethune recreation ground, and to
the south on either side of Bounds Green brook,
south of which the land rises steeply to 250 ft.
towards Muswell Hill. (fn. 10)
The streams are all tributaries of Pymme's
brook. Blackett's brook, mentioned c. 1513, (fn. 11)
runs southward from a re-entrant in the North
Middlesex golf course, eastward across Friern
Barnet Lane, and under the railway towards
Hertfordshire. Streams also flowed eastward under
Friern Barnet Lane from Friary park by the socalled Queen Elizabeth's well in 1826 and through a
culvert near the alms-houses. Farther south Bounds
Green brook flows along the line of the North
Circular Road to Southgate. (fn. 12) Bridges called Ruffins
bridge and Stone bridge were decayed in 1519 (fn. 13)
and Queen's bridge at 'Mr. Graham's Bottom' was
to be repaired in 1765, (fn. 14) but in 1783 and 1846
Blackett's and Bounds Green brooks crossed the
road in watersplashes. (fn. 15) Both brooks had been
bridged by 1865 and the two northernmost streams
were later mainly culverted. (fn. 16)
About 1197 the church, lands, and woods lay in
'Barnet', (fn. 17) which was not distinguished from the
neighbouring Barnets in Hertfordshire. The name
denoted a 'place cleared by burning', which may
have been only recently assarted and presumably
was relatively unimportant in 1237, when Barnet in
Middlesex was termed Little Barnet. Not until
1274 was it called Frerenbarnet, (fn. 18) recording the
lordship of the brotherhood or knights of the Hospital of St. John and later crystallized into Friern
Barnet. The name was applied not only to the parish
but to the manor, which from the 15th century,
however, was usually called Whetstone. (fn. 19)
There were early settlements at Whetstone in the
north-west part of the parish, at Friern Barnet in
the centre, and at Colney Hatch to the south-east.
The name Whetstone occurred from 1398 (fn. 20) and so
cannot have derived from a stone used to sharpen
swords before the battle of Barnet. (fn. 21) Colney
Hatch was first mentioned in 1409, (fn. 22) the 'hatch'
perhaps being a gate of Hollick wood. (fn. 23)
Friern Barnet parish remained largely rural until
after the First World War. The building of Colney
Hatch asylum in 1851 helped to cut off the area to
the south, and the location of railways caused the
edges of the parish to be built up first. In 1883
the most populous and prosperous district was that
of All Saints', Whetstone. Sixty-one per cent of the
total population, however, lived in the Freehold,
Avenue, and Holly Park districts, (fn. 24) which had
grown up around Colney Hatch. The working-class
Freehold, so called in the late 19th century when
the original ownership of the land had been
forgotten, lay south of Bounds Green brook and
east of Colney Hatch Lane. The Avenue was a
similar area north-east of Colney Hatch, in the
angle between Oakleigh Road South and Friern
Barnet Road and separated by the railway from
Holly Park, to the west. (fn. 25) Relative densities of
population were altered by building in the central
and northern parts of the parish after 1920. (fn. 26)
More than ten per cent of the land was still open
in 1975, most of it in the southern part. From the
mid 19th century newcomers have worked mainly
outside the parish, which by 1933 was largely
residential. (fn. 27)
John Walker (d. 1807), actor and lexicographer,
was born at Friern Barnet in 1732. (fn. 28) The philanthropist Dr. Samuel Wilson Warneford (d. 1855)
was married at Colney Hatch in 1796. Charles
Macfarlane (d. 1858), miscellaneous author, lived in
a cottage at Friern Barnet in 1846. (fn. 29) Among those
buried in the parish were Sir William Oldes,
gentleman usher of the Black Rod, in 1718; (fn. 30)
Admiral Sir Thomas Pasley, Bt. (d. 1808), whose
hatchment hangs in St. James's church; (fn. 31) the
song-writer Helen Selina Sheridan (d. 1867), later
Lady Dufferin and countess of Gifford; and Herbert
Kynaston (d. 1878), hymnologist and high master of
St. Paul's school. Other notable inhabitants are
mentioned below.
COMMUNICATIONS.
Friern Barnet's road system
was established by the late 15th century. The main
north-south route of that date became known as
Whetstone High Road in the north, as Friern
Barnet Lane between Whetstone and Colney
Hatch, and as Colney Hatch Lane from there to
Muswell Hill. According to Norden, it had been
the principal highway from London to Barnet and
the north of England but by the early 14th century
the main road ran through Hornsey park to Finchley
and thence to rejoin Friern Barnet Lane at Whetstone, along the route of the modern Great North
Road. (fn. 32) Thus only Whetstone High Road, in the
extreme north-west part of the parish, was left as
a major line of communication.
Friern Barnet Lane, also known as Friern Lane,
which was realigned c. 1790, (fn. 33) was Wolkstreet
c. 1518. (fn. 34) Colney Hatch Lane, so called from 1846, (fn. 35)
was Halliwick Street (Halwykstrete) in 1398 (fn. 36) and
Muswell Hill Lane or Aspen Lane in 1801. (fn. 37) No
route led westward, except via Whetstone. To the
east a road led from Colney Hatch to Betstile, where
it met roads to Enfield, Tottenham and Wood
Green, East Barnet, and the modern Oakleigh
Road. It was known in turn as Betstile Lane
between 1549 and 1785, (fn. 38) Southgate Lane in 1801, (fn. 39)
High Road in 1879, (fn. 40) and Friern Barnet Road
from 1889. (fn. 41)
Oakleigh Road runs north-west from New
Southgate parallel with Friern Barnet Lane to
Whetstone High Road. The northern part or
perhaps the whole was Avernstreet in 1499, (fn. 42)
Hungerdown Lane from at least 1823 until 1881, (fn. 43)
Blackhorse Lane in 1851, (fn. 44) Station Road from
1863 to 1871, and Oakleigh Road by 1873. (fn. 45) The
stretch north of the Brunswick railway bridge
became Oakleigh Road North, the rest Oakleigh
Road South. Leading north-east from the centre of
Oakleigh Road to East Barnet was Mare Lane, so
called in 1522 and 1825 (fn. 46) but also known as Beldams
Lane before 1820, when it was described as Blackhorse Lane, (fn. 47) and as East Barnet Lane by 1863. (fn. 48)
In 1975 it was Russell Lane. By 1754 the modern
Coppetts Road ran from Crouch End along the
south-west parish boundary north towards Colney
Hatch, (fn. 49) which by 1846 was linked by a track
south of Bounds Green brook to Colney Hatch
Lane. (fn. 50) At the northern end Coppetts Road met a
route running westward from Colney Hatch shortly
before it forked into two tracks crossing Finchley
common, later Woodhouse Road and Summers
Lane. (fn. 51) In the late 15th and early 16th centuries
many copyhold lanes apparently led to individual
holdings. (fn. 52)
South of Whetstone, in addition to Woodhouse
Road and Summers Lane, roads on the lines of the
later Torrington Park and Friary roads were planned
in the 1820s (fn. 53) and had been laid out by 1863 (fn. 54)
as Friern Park North and South. (fn. 55) Friern Barnet
Lane and Oakleigh Road were linked only after
1903 by Myddelton Park. (fn. 56) Oakleigh Park North
and South, following earlier footpaths, were laid
out by 1888. (fn. 57) The principal roads of the Freehold
in the south part of the parish existed by 1863,
but access to Colney Hatch station was made difficult
by the asylum to the north and the railway to the
east, which apparently impeded growth in 1895. (fn. 58)
A route across the railway line was not provided
until the construction of the North Circular Road
(Pinkham Way) after 1929. (fn. 59) In 1975 a fly-over
was built over it to carry Colney Hatch Lane.

FRIERN BARNET IN 1783
In 1754 Whetstone High Road was turnpiked in
spite of local opposition and after 1810, when it was
managed by the Whetstone and Highgate turnpike
trust, it was said to be one of the best roads in the
country. (fn. 60) In 1856 the Compagnie Générale des
Omnibus de Londres employed two omnibuses on
the London-Barnet route via Whetstone (fn. 61) and
c. 1870 the journey from Whetstone to the City
took 1¾ hour. (fn. 62) In 1901 Middlesex C.C. and the
Metropolitan Tramways and Omnibus Co. obtained
light railway powers for routes from Highgate to
Whetstone and from Tottenham via Southgate to
Friern Barnet. (fn. 63) The first route was completed in
1905 and in 1906 workmen's trams left regularly
from 5 a.m. (fn. 64) The second reached Oakleigh Road in
1906, (fn. 65) permitting travel to Wood Green and thence
to Enfield or Finsbury, (fn. 66) but was not extended
along Woodhouse and Friern Barnet roads until
1909. (fn. 67) In 1914 there were combined Underground
and motor-bus tickets from London via Highgate to
Colney Hatch Lane. (fn. 68) In 1933 a motor-bus ran from
Friern Barnet across London (fn. 69) and in 1936 Oakleigh Road was served by so many buses from
Palmers Green to Whetstone that Friern Barnet
U.D.C. considered pruning the services. (fn. 70) There
were good communications with all neighbouring
parishes c. 1948: trolley-buses ran from Finchley via
Colney Hatch to Holborn and regular motor-buses
from Potters Bar via Friern Barnet Lane to Victoria
station. Motor-buses in the east part of the parish
and trolley-buses in the centre served stations on
the Piccadilly line, (fn. 71) probably Bounds Green and
Arnos Grove as in 1958, when there were also
motor-buses to the City and west end of London. (fn. 72)
An omnibus garage at no. 165 Sydney Road was
opened c. 1931 by the London Passenger Transport
Board, later London Transport. (fn. 73)
In 1845 the Great Northern Railway's line to
York was planned to skirt the eastern edge of
Friern Barnet. (fn. 74) It was built slightly farther west,
through the eastern end of Hollick wood, (fn. 75) and
helped to determine the choice of an adjoining
site for the county lunatic asylum. In 1850 the
G.N.R. agreed in principle to a station, after requests from the Middlesex justices, who insisted
on a train's stopping daily. (fn. 76) The station was built
next to the asylum, with a siding which connected
by a tramway to the stores depot in the grounds. (fn. 77)
There was one train hourly to Hatfield in the north
and to Hornsey and King's Cross in the south in
1860, when the journey to King's Cross took 18
minutes. (fn. 78) Trains still ran hourly in 1975. Access
to the City was eased by the opening of the Metropolitan Railway in 1863. (fn. 79) Colney Hatch station
initially stood in Edmonton parish (fn. 80) but was moved
in 1889-90 farther north to a position over the
tracks. (fn. 81) It was renamed Southgate and Colney
Hatch in 1855, New Southgate and Colney Hatch
in 1876, and New Southgate and Friern Barnet in
1923. (fn. 82) The line was bridged for Friern Barnet
and Oakleigh roads and tunnelled between Oakleigh Park and Brunswick Park. Oakleigh Park
station, opened in 1873 (fn. 83) between Colney Hatch
and New Barnet stations, was in Hertfordshire.
Residents in the western and north-western parts
of the parish could use stations beyond the boundary
at Woodside Park and at Totteridge and Whetstone,
on the branch line to High Barnet opened by the
G.N.R. in 1872. The branch ran from Finchley
Central on the line to Edgware from Finsbury Park,
whence trains ran to King's Cross (fn. 84) and, from
1904, along the Great Northern and City Railway to
Moorgate. (fn. 85) In 1940 the line to High Barnet became
part of the Northern line, with Underground
trains to the City and west end of London. (fn. 86)
The Freehold was served by Muswell Hill
station on the G.N.R.'s branch line from Highgate
to the Alexandra Palace. The line, opened in 1873,
finally closed in 1954. (fn. 87)
Growth.
The original settlement may have
bordered Friern Barnet Lane near the church,
but the manor-house built soon after 1551 and two
farm-houses existing by the mid 17th century were
the only residences near by in 1754. (fn. 88) The surrounding area, in the centre of the parish, consisted
entirely of demesne late in the 15th century and was
still mainly wood in 1544. (fn. 89) By 1488 there were two
areas of copyhold land, one at Colney Hatch and the
other north-east and south-east of Whetstone. (fn. 90)
There were two chief pledges for Whetstone and
one for Colney Hatch, (fn. 91) and copyhold tenements
such as Sayers, Newmans, Cuckolds, and Tromers (fn. 92)
were named after former holders, implying that the
pattern of settlement was several generations old.
Whetstone village may have grown in the 14th
century, when the diversion of the Great North
Road made it an important road junction. (fn. 93) The
bell at the Bell House summoned people from
Whetstone to Friern Barnet church, (fn. 94) thought to
be conveniently located in 1650. (fn. 95) By 1677 settlement was concentrated on both the Finchley and
Friern Barnet sides of the Great North Road, (fn. 96)
and in 1754 it adjoined the entrances to Oakleigh
Road and Friern Barnet Lane. (fn. 97) Probably most of
the five offenders against the assize of ale in 1492
lived in Whetstone, (fn. 98) where inns were always
numerous. The Lion, one of two mentioned in
1636, (fn. 99) existed by 1521 (fn. 1) and may have been the
same as the Red Lion, (fn. 2) later becoming the Green
Man. (fn. 3) The Green Dragon existed by 1662, (fn. 4) the
Bell House soon after, (fn. 5) and the Griffin by 1697. (fn. 6)
There may have been seven public houses on the
Friern Barnet side of the road in 1716 (fn. 7) and by
1800 five of the parish's six inns were at Whetstone:
the Griffin, Green Man, King's Head, Blue Anchor,
and Black Bull. (fn. 8) In 1876 and 1882 the inns catered
for waggoners and stage coaches, as did forges and
coach-houses. (fn. 9) Travellers have often stopped where
the road widens in front of the Griffin, a red-brick
Georgian building of two storeys, rebuilt c. 1929
and abutting on a plain two-storeyed late-18thcentury house. (fn. 10) The imposing Green Man, rebuilt
in 1830, is of red brick in three narrow storeys and
has been turned into a garage. In 1851 68 houses,
with 367 inhabitants, were on the Friern Barnet
side of the road, (fn. 11) where in 1876 buildings straggled
for a considerable distance. (fn. 12) Apart from public
houses, the village in 1882 consisted of shops and
nondescript terraces, (fn. 13) many of them old-fashioned
and poor. (fn. 14)
Colney Hatch was a hamlet in 1409. (fn. 15) Although
on the edge of the manors of Whetstone and Halliwick and at the junction of Friern Barnet and Colney
Hatch lanes with Friern Barnet Road, it lacked
commercial importance. In 1795 it was estimated
to have only twelve of the 78 houses in the parish (fn. 16)
and those mostly belonged to gentlemen. Halliwick
manor-house stood north of some cottages and on
the south-west corner of the broad junction. The
White House and the Orange Tree inn stood on the
north-west, a little below Brook House, the Priory
on the north-east, with the Woodlands, Greenbank,
and Springfield farther north, (fn. 17) and the Hermitage
and several cottages on the south-west by 1783. (fn. 18)
Until rebuilt c. 1923 (fn. 19) the Orange Tree consisted
of two red-brick buildings: that to the south was
cramped and later disfigured by hoardings but the
northern one remained an elegant 18th-century
building, of three storeys and two bays. Each had a
large garden. There was very little change in the
19th century before the construction of the county
lunatic asylum, and in 1882 Colney Hatch was
described as a village which had sprung up to
serve the staff. (fn. 20)
South of Bounds Green brook there was only
Coppetts Farm between 1783 and 1846. (fn. 21) At the
eastern end of Friern Barnet Road was the hamlet
of Betstile. Before 1815 most of the houses lay in
Hertfordshire or Edmonton, apart from Betstile
House on the corner of Friern Barnet and Oakleigh
roads, (fn. 22) but by 1846 others stood north of the road,
on the site of the former Friern great park, and the
former Friern little park in Oakleigh Road had
been divided into plots with cottages. (fn. 23) Since the
mid 19th century Betstile has been better known as
New Southgate.
Growth was uneven from the mid 19th century.
In 1801 there were 56 inhabited houses in Whetstone, 55 in Friern Barnet, and 33 in Colney Hatch,
and by 1841 the population had doubled over forty
years. (fn. 24) After 1852 several schemes for the central
area were abandoned or only partially carried out:
35 new houses were inhabited there by 1883, (fn. 25)
when it contrasted with the built-up periphery of
the parish, (fn. 26) and no estate was completed before
1914. Until that date most houses were built for
labourers and clerks in the Avenue, Freehold, and
Holly Park districts, although all parts experienced
some growth. In 1909 there were 971 dwellings in
the south, 722 in the central, and 403 in the north
wards, when it was proposed that the south ward
should elect 5, the central ward 4, and the north
ward only 3 members to the U.D.C. (fn. 27) After 1920
there was little building in the south ward but the
centre and north were steadily covered. The U.D.C.
was a leading builder from 1919, until in 1953
there were 674 council houses in a total of 8,162. (fn. 28)
In 1828 new roads were proposed for central
Friern Barnet, (fn. 29) where early plans were made for
access to the Great North Road rather than Friern
Barnet Lane. In 1852 Finsbury Road (later Finchley
Park), a cul-de-sac from the Great North Road
into Friern Barnet with two southern spurs, had
been laid out as the Finsbury estate in at least 36
plots. (fn. 30) There were a few houses in 1865 (fn. 31) but the
estate was not completed until after 1900. (fn. 32) It
was bordered on the north by Goslings and
Dovescroft of 13½ a., which in 1853 were acquired
by Morgan Godbold and Co., (fn. 33) who laid out the
Finchley freehold estate of 114 allotments. Opposite
the Swan with Two Necks in the Great North
Road, Britannia Road stretched to the edge of John
Miles's estates and was to form a square with
other streets. Presumably there was little demand
for housing, as by 1857 Miles had purchased almost
the whole, redeeming certain lots from other
buyers. (fn. 34) Only the west end of Britannia Road
was constructed. A little farther south Torrington
Park and Friary Road were laid out on Thomas
Bensley's former estate between Friern Barnet
Lane and the Great North Road by 1865, (fn. 35) where
between 1866 and 1868 the land was sold by H. D.
Holden. Some lots were incorporated in the estate
of John Miles, later the North Middlesex golf
course, (fn. 36) but most were sold to the Planet Building
Society, which planned a road south-westward from
Friern Barnet Lane across Torrington Park to the
Great North Road. (fn. 37) The western stretch, intended
to join Friern Park, was laid out as Torrington Road in the Finchley estate of the Middlesex
Freehold Land Association on land that had not
belonged to Bensley. (fn. 38) It was hardly built on by 1865
and was not finished until after 1897, (fn. 39) while the
eastern end was never developed. Edmund William
Richardson, secretary of the building society,
bought most of the plots between Friary Road
and Torrington Park as his garden, (fn. 40) in 1975
Friary park, and others were retained for agriculture
by George Knights Smith. (fn. 41) There were a few
houses between the roads by 1897 but the whole area
was built over only between the World Wars. (fn. 42)
It contained the Friern Watch estate of Newcombe
Estates, which consisted of the avenues between
High Road, Finchley Park, and Friary and Torrington roads. (fn. 43) Central Friern Barnet grew slowly as
transport improved and was mainly farm-land until
after the First World War. In 1883 it contained
only 90 houses. (fn. 44)
The opening of Colney Hatch asylum and station
brought new residents to the area east of the railway. In 1854 G. K. Smith was letting cottages in
Carlisle Place and in 1864 Cornwall Terrace, Ely
Place, and Railway Cottages had been built in
Oakleigh Road South and Southgate Cottages in
Friern Barnet Road. (fn. 45) Betstile House had been
replaced by terraced cottages before 1888, (fn. 46) when
Smith sold 8 a. between the two roads for further
building. (fn. 47) Better known as the Avenue, the land
was sold in 1890 to the United Estates & Investment
Co. (fn. 48) St. Paul's, Holmesdale, and Stanhope roads,
the Avenue, and Carlisle Place, with small houses
close together, were laid out. (fn. 49) There were 185
houses with 925 occupants in 1883, when only the
Freehold had a lower rateable value, (fn. 50) and in 1891
the district was considered one of the roughest in the
northern suburbs. (fn. 51) Houses of similar type, such as
Rathbone Cottages, were erected c. 1865 north of the
Brunswick railway bridge. (fn. 52)
The Freehold's roads were defined in 1863, (fn. 53)
probably by the Westminster Freehold Land
Society, (fn. 54) and by 1867 they had c. 130 houses, with
c. 1,000 inhabitants. (fn. 55) The influx was of labourers
employed on the Alexandra Palace in Wood Green,
whom the parish could not immediately absorb.
In 1866 the roads, drains, and water supply were
considered as bad as the moral condition of the
newcomers, (fn. 56) many of whom left the district (fn. 57)
when the first palace was burnt down. (fn. 58) Seven
occupants per house was considered a modest
estimate in 1867, (fn. 59) only two families kept servants
in 1877, (fn. 60) and there were 870 inhabitants in 174
houses in 1883. (fn. 61) The rented houses, neglected and
difficult to keep sanitary in 1893, (fn. 62) accommodated
many young, poor, and abnormally large families
in 1904. (fn. 63) As late as 1920 the inhabitants were
mainly artisans and casual labourers. (fn. 64) In spite of
such expansion, land east of Colney Hatch Lane
was still being farmed in 1902 and was not built on
until the 1930s. (fn. 65) The Albion Estates Co. had laid
out half of its Halliwick Manor estate west of Colney
Hatch Lane for 800 houses c. 1899 (fn. 66) and there was
land for 500-700 houses, with four miles of road
frontage, in 1901. (fn. 67) The houses were intended for
sale. (fn. 68) In 1909 4,537 people lived in 971 houses in
the south ward. (fn. 69)
Holly Park, the district north of Friern Barnet
Road and so called after 1871, attracted the first
commuters after the opening of Colney Hatch
station. (fn. 70) In 1904 they were mainly London clerks,
keeping up appearances on small incomes. (fn. 71)
They lived in small semi-detached houses, described
as smart villas in 1876, (fn. 72) or in superior terraced
houses with bay windows, such as Edith, Glen, and
Thorne villas and Cyprus and Clydesdale terraces in
Glenthorne Road. (fn. 73) The Holly Park estate of 33 a.
adjoined the railway, with a frontage on Friern
Barnet Road. It was laid out in 424 plots in 1879,
when Beaconsfield, Glenthorne, and intervening
roads were said to have been sewered, although
only 47 plots on the main road had then been sold (fn. 74)
and the roads were mere tracks in 1910. (fn. 75) By 1883
there were 198 houses with 900 occupants (fn. 76) and
in 1889 Glenthorne Road contained 66 and Holly
Park Road 74 houses. (fn. 77) The estate was virtually
complete by 1897. (fn. 78)

FRIERN BARNET
Development from the mid 19th century
Southgate Park, an estate of 24 a. which bounded
Holly Park on the west, (fn. 79) included the Priory and
fronted Friern Barnet Lane and Road. Still fields
in 1889, (fn. 80) it had been divided into 314 plots around
Stanford, Ramsden, Hartland, and two unnamed
roads before the bankruptcy of the London Land
Co. in 1887, (fn. 81) when 200 plots were put up for sale. (fn. 82)
There were only 12 houses in Macdonald Road and
15 in Stanford Road in 1896, (fn. 83) and some of the
estate was incomplete in 1920, (fn. 84) although the whole
of the north side of Friern Barnet Road had been
finished by 1900. (fn. 85) Building was mainly by local
firms, notably Brown & Sweetland. (fn. 86)
North of Southgate and Holly parks Frenchman's
farm, extending from Friern Barnet Lane to the
railway, was offered for sale before 1879. (fn. 87) As the
Bethune Park Garden estate of 110 a., it was
intended to be the 'prettiest garden suburb to
London', with a network of roads from Friern
Barnet Lane to Oakleigh Road and with access to
Friern Barnet Road via Holly Park. The plots had
wide frontages and the quality of building was to be
controlled on the whole estate, which would include
Friern Barnet Garden Village on the Ridgeway.
The Crescent was lined with expensive houses in
1910, when the area between it and Holly Park
Road had been built over and the Ridgeway and
Bethune Avenue had been constructed, (fn. 88) but little
more was done before 1920. (fn. 89)
The Hollyfield estate, in the south corner of
Friern Barnet Road and Colney Hatch Lane and
previously part of Hillside farm, was laid out for
building in 1903 by E. C. Day. St. John's and
Hollyfield roads were to have houses and the frontages to the main roads were to have shops, (fn. 90) most
of which had been built by 1912. (fn. 91)
West of Friern Barnet Lane and north of Woodhouse Road the White House estate of c. 55 a. of
Frederick Crisp was acquired in 1908 by the British
Land Co. (fn. 92) By 1911 Ashurst, Petworth, Bramber,
Warnham, and Buxted roads had been laid out
between Woodhouse Road and Friern Park and the
first two had been built up. (fn. 93) Lewes Road was
later inserted and Horsham Road was constructed
across the grounds of Brook House, but contained
little housing in 1920. (fn. 94)
The northern part of the parish had no houses in
1866 except in Whetstone High Street. (fn. 95) East of it
and north of Oakleigh Road lay the district that
became known as Oakleigh Park. The Whetstone
Freehold Estate Co. had acquired land formerly of
the Haughton Clarke family known as Matthews
farm by 1869, when it diverted footpaths to lead to
Oakleigh Park station. (fn. 96) In 1871, apart from the
cottages in Beldhams Place, the whole area contained only six large houses. (fn. 97) The estate included
long frontages in Oakleigh Road, which attracted
buyers in 1875, when 25 large houses were occupied
and other plots were for sale. (fn. 98) Demand persisted in
1888, when 40 such houses were occupied, some
with tennis courts and stabling and many described
as genteel villas. (fn. 99) In spite of building the area in
1882 was thought to be prettily timbered and
undulating, with extensive rural views. (fn. 1) In 1883
the whole district of All Saints, which included
Whetstone High Road, contained 271 houses with
1,255 inhabitants and had the highest rateable
value in the parish. (fn. 2) In 1889 only 33 houses stood
in Oakleigh Park North, 13 in Oakleigh Park
South, and 10 in Athenaeum Road, which was lined
with sports grounds. (fn. 3) By 1920 Oakleigh Gardens
was partly built up but Oakleigh Avenue, (fn. 4) laid out as
All Saints' Road in 1905, (fn. 5) was still an empty track. (fn. 6)
The former estate of the duke of Buckingham and
Chandos was sold in 1892 (fn. 7) but Chandos Avenue
alone had been constructed by 1920, when its
eastern end was lined with houses. (fn. 8)
Myddelton Park, a short cul-de-sac from Oakleigh Road opposite the entrance to Oakleigh Park
South, was built by John Miles before 1882,
when he erected All Saints' church and Vicarage
near by. (fn. 9) In 1903 the whole of his estate between
Friern Barnet Lane and Oakleigh Road was
acquired by the National Land Corporation which
planned freehold houses for prosperous commuters
and extended Myddelton Park to Friern Barnet
Lane along an existing path, Loring and Pollard
roads, and Queen's Avenue. (fn. 10) Initially 86 plots,
fronting Oakleigh Road and in the part of Myddelton Park where there was roadway, were offered for
sale. (fn. 11) Successive sales followed, including those of
58 plots in 1905, when Loring and Pollard roads
were still projected, (fn. 12) but there were only c. 50
houses by 1920: the frontage to Friern Barnet Lane
was built up but not that to Oakleigh Road, and
houses formed isolated groups elsewhere in the
estate. (fn. 13)
In 1921 the population outside the lunatic asylum
was 14,821, of whom 2,419 lived in All Saints'
district including Whetstone, 4,598 in the Freehold,
and 5,512 in the parish of St. James, which included
Holly Park and Colney Hatch. (fn. 14) By 1920 most of
the Freehold east of Colney Hatch Lane and south
of Albion Avenue farther west was covered with
building, as were the Avenue, Holly Park, and the
Hollyfield estate. Housing was less concentrated
in the north-west part of the parish, in Myddelton
Park and Oakleigh Park, and large areas were almost
rural. (fn. 15) In 1920 the population density in the north
ward was 5.26 per acre, compared with 19.1 in the
central and 26 in the south wards, (fn. 16) but only 448 a.
or a third of the total land was built up. (fn. 17) Most
of the remainder was built on between the World
Wars. (fn. 18)
After the First World War the council was a
major builder, following a scheme of 1919 by two
projects for 100 houses each in 1925 and 1926.
There were two main sites, the western part of
the Freehold and 36 a. north of Oakleigh Road, (fn. 19)
on the second of which houses were built along
Russell Lane, Road, and Gardens, Simmons Close
and Way, Miles Way, and Barfield Avenue. Under
the initial scheme Russell Road was finished in
1921, (fn. 20) and by the end of 1926 73 houses had been
built on the northern site and 38 on the southern.
Nonetheless in that year, when the council was
particularly active, it was responsible for only 78
of 266 houses under construction. (fn. 21) The schemes
were complete in 1928. (fn. 22)
The southern and western parts of the Bethune
estate were built as planned, although considerable
space was left along the Crescent. Most of the
northern part was acquired by the council for allotments and a recreation ground, cutting off Holly
Park from the Church farm estate, which, on the
completion of Myddelton Park, was laid out to
the south by Church Farm Estates Ltd. between
Friern Barnet Lane and Oakleigh Road North. (fn. 23)
The first roads were Oakleigh Crescent, Church
Way and Crescent, St. James's Avenue, and Friary
Avenue, and building was still in progress in York
Way in 1935. (fn. 24) The estate contained uniform semidetached housing and blocks of flats, built to
prescribed densities. (fn. 25) Building likewise occurred
west of Friern Barnet Lane, where a network of
roads linked the existing cul-de-sacs. The sites of
large older houses were also used: on the death
of Sydney Simmons's widow in 1935 her house
Okehampton was demolished and a private road
(Okehampton Close) between Torrington and
Friern parks and two- and three-storeyed flats were
approved for the site. (fn. 26) Similar building was carried
out in Oakleigh Park, where only sports grounds
were left. Even the Freehold provided space for
high density blocks (fn. 27) and new roads, such as Bedford Close off Colney Hatch Lane in 1936. (fn. 28)
The Orange Tree and White House at Colney Hatch
were rebuilt c. 1923, (fn. 29) and the site of Halliwick
manor-house was acquired in 1932 by Oldham
Estates, who originally planned five new roads,
218 houses, and 57 shops. (fn. 30) In 1931 27.7 per cent
of the population was considered to belong to the
two highest social classes and only 14.5 per cent to
the two lowest. (fn. 31)
After the Second World War the council was the
only large-scale builder. It used few new sites,
since little land not reserved as open space was
left, although 215 a. were available for new schools. (fn. 32)
The Freehold estate was extended westward before
1969 by the construction of Halliwick Road, George
Crescent, and the west frontage of Colney Hatch
Lane, (fn. 33) as planned in 1949. (fn. 34) Gardens in Oakleigh
Park were appropriated between 1951 and 1957. (fn. 35)
Wellington House, the Hollies, a large brick and
concrete range of flats with flat roof and balconies
on the corner of Oakleigh Road North and Oakleigh Park South, won a design award in 1953. (fn. 36)
Since 1969 Sweet's Way has replaced the former
nursery at Whetstone: it consists of small houses
grouped in cul-de-sacs around lawns. By 1969 (fn. 37)
Friern Lodge north of the golf course had been
replaced by Friern Court, a block of flats. The site
of Derwent Lodge west of the links was built on in
the 1950s (fn. 38) and Haldane Close was constructed on
the former Cromwell recreation ground by 1975.
Houses built before 1900 were considered worn out
in 1930 (fn. 39) but it was not until 1958 that the first
slums were demolished at nos. 16-22 East Road,
nos. 1-10 Lilly Villas, and nos. 1-21 Ada Villas. (fn. 40)
The adjoining Link Road crossed the north-east
corner of Bethune recreation ground by 1969. The
near-by Avenue district was cleared after 1969; (fn. 41)
by 1975, when there were still vacant patches,
the Avenue itself, Stewards Holte Walk, Coppies
Grove, and flats called Holmesdale and Stanhope
had been built. Slum clearance had been proposed
for the Freehold as early as 1933, (fn. 42) and in 1975
flats were being put up on the north frontage to
Hampden Road. Four new schools included two in
Bethune Park between the Crescent and Hemington
Avenue.
Private building since 1945 has also been mainly
on old sites, for flats. At Oxford Gardens, off
Athenaeum Road, a cul-de-sac of town houses was
partly finished by 1968. (fn. 43) In Stanford Road on the
site of St. John's school (closed in 1968) a block
of flats has been called Gilmore Court after the
rector. Others stand in Whetstone High Road on
either side of Friern Mount Drive, and Torrington
Court, in the town-house style, occupies a single
plot in Torrington Park. Wide frontages in Oakleigh Park have permitted the piecemeal construction of new houses. No part of the parish is without
in-filling.
In 1975 Friern Barnet was still divided by the
asylum and a large empty tract on either side of the
North Circular Road. To the south the Freehold
was orientated towards Muswell Hill, with buildings
along Colney Hatch Lane straggling into north
Hornsey. To the east terraces were interspersed
with small corner shops, little changed since 1909
and concealing factories, some of them large employers. Many slums had been replaced and the
west Freehold built up, except its extreme south
part and the playing fields and recreation ground in
the north.
In the north half of the parish only the eastern
section from the Avenue to Russell Lane, dominated
by council estates, is like the Freehold. Although
parts remain waste, the Avenue has been rebuilt
and the terraces in East and Oakleigh roads are being
cleared. As in 1882 the largest shopping area is
Whetstone High Road, with several blocks of shops,
including multiple stores, public houses, and offices,
most of them modern. It is not rivalled by Colney
Hatch, New Southgate, or Oakleigh Road North,
where small shops serve a local clientele. The rest
of the parish is covered mainly by commuters'
semi-detached houses. Some of the Victorian and
Edwardian terraces in Holly Park are decaying and
others are divided into flats, but most are structurally sound. Friern Barnet Lane, bordered by
Friary park and the golf course, is the least populous
part; with grass verges, it still seems rural, despite
the felling of trees in the churchyard and in front
of the alms-houses. After insertions and some rebuilding Oakleigh Park, with its winding roads
lined with mature trees, preserves a distinct character. Apart from the alms-houses and an 18thcentury building beside the Griffin, there are no
buildings earlier than 1850.
There were 80 communicants in Friern Barnet in
1544 (fn. 44) and 84 adult males took the protestation
oath in 1642. (fn. 45) The population rose steadily from
432 in 1801 to 974 in 1851 and 3,344, including
2,009 in the lunatic asylum, in 1861. The rate of
growth then accelerated to reach a total of 6,424 in
1881, 14,994 in 1911, 17,375 in 1921, and 23,101 in
1931; the figures include 2,351 in the asylum
in 1881, 2,452 in 1911, 2,854 in 1921, and 2,880 in
1931. From a peak of 29,163 in 1951, numbers fell
slightly to 28,813 in 1961. Friern Barnet ward,
covering 313 hectares and about three-fifths of the
size of the former U.D., had 15,112 persons in
1971. (fn. 46)