ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Agrarian History. In
1241-2, 1273-4, and 1298 the demesne of Hornsey
manor was leased (fn. 76) but it was exploited directly in
1304 and 1318, when it was managed directly with
that of Finchley. In 1318 there was a separate grange
of Hornsey, probably the later Rowledge farm. The
famuli consisted of a herdsman, a ploughman, and a
ploughleader, and there were six oxen; there were
eight oxen in 1304 and thirteen in 1339, when there
was only one complete plough. In 1318 five other
ploughs were provided by villeins rendering labour
services. (fn. 77) Apparently the demesne was still in
hand in 1375 (fn. 78) but c. 1390 Rowledge farm was
leased as a whole and the herbage of the parks and
High Reading were leased separately. (fn. 79) Farnfields
was already leased in 1369 (fn. 80) but the demesne of
Muswell was in hand between 1488 and 1535. (fn. 81)
The first known lease of Brownswood demesne
dates from 1547. (fn. 82)
There were 63 freehold and copyhold tenants of
Hornsey manor in 1406. (fn. 83) The majority were probably copyholders: freehold land was almost confined to the eastern fringe of the parish. The
tenements recorded between 1318 and 1406 varied
from 1 to 28 a. in size. (fn. 84) Bondmen and bondlands
were recorded in 1375 (fn. 85) and in 1318 a sower, 2
scatterers, 5 ploughmen, and 5 ploughleaders
rendered boon-works. (fn. 86) The tenants owed rents of
assize, Romescot, smokepennies, palfrey money, (fn. 87)
heriots, (fn. 88) and, by 1384, 4s. as their share of the
64s. common fine due to the bishop from the manor
of Stepney. (fn. 89) There were nine copyhold tenants
of Brownswood in 1577, when they owed rents of
assize and hen-silver of 3s. 4d. on each house. (fn. 90)
On Hornsey manor in 1406 and on Brownswood
manor c. 1580 holdings were subject to partible
inheritance, (fn. 91) as on the manor of Stepney itself.
On Hornsey manor subdivision of holdings was
frequently averted by surrenders in tail and to the
use of tenants' wills or reversed by the purchase of
all purparties by a single individual. (fn. 92)
In the 15th century some copyhold and freehold
land in a small area east of Crouch End consisted
of strips in larger fields; one such strip contained
five ridges in 1478. (fn. 93) There is no evidence of open
fields elsewhere in the parish: estates already in
closes at the earliest dates for which concrete
evidence survives were Muswell demesne in 1488, (fn. 94)
Brownswood demesne in 1547, (fn. 95) the copyhold of
Brownswood manor in 1577, (fn. 96) and the copyhold
of Hornsey manor in the early 17th century. (fn. 97)
By 1318 the field called Little Redings (in Finchley)
existed in the woods, and assarting continued after
the leasing of the demesne: (fn. 98) those fields were
probably fenced off from the woodland by 1303. (fn. 99)
A field on Hornsey demesne was fenced during
1318. (fn. 1)
In 1318 wheat was delivered to the bishop's reeve
from the grange at Hornsey. On Hornsey demesne
58 a. were sown with wheat in 1304 and 54½ a.
were under rye, when little of either was in store.
In 1304 the granary contained 109 bu. of maslin,
104 bu. of oats, 24 bu. of dredge, and 8 bu. of rye,
in 1318 there were 115 bu. of wheat and 11 bu. of
oats, and in 1339 there remained 47 bu. of rye, 64 bu.
of peas, 72 bu. of beans, and 570 bu. of oats,
probably as winter feed for livestock. In 1304
there had been hay worth 24s. Of the 1318 harvest,
61 bu. of wheat and oats were threshed and winnowed on the manor, 34 qr. of wheat were delivered
to Stepney for milling, and the remainder was
consumed locally. Wheat and oats were supplied to
the famuli. Villeins of Hornsey had five ploughs in
1318 (fn. 2) and were growing wheat and oats in 1375. (fn. 3)
A rector bequeathed 4 qr. of wheat in 1428, (fn. 4)
arable was under cultivation at Muswell in 1488, (fn. 5)
and in 1557 a resident possessed a fully equipped
plough and harrows. (fn. 6)
Part of Hornsey demesne in 1318, (fn. 7) all of Farnfields demesne in 1419, (fn. 8) and most of Muswell
demesne between 1488 and 1535 were pasture. (fn. 9)
Open-field arable in Topsfield manor was converted
to pasture by 1478 (fn. 10) and conversion was complete
on High Reding by 1536 (fn. 11) and Rowledge farm
by 1543. (fn. 12) In 1547 the demesne of Brownswood
manor was under grass. (fn. 13)
A herdsman was employed on Hornsey manor in
1318. (fn. 14) There were 6 carthorses and 4 stots in
1304 and 2 carthorses and 4 stots in 1339. There
were 2 bulls, 47 cows, and 5 bullocks in 1304 and
2 bulls and 25 cows in 1339. By then goats and
pigs had been replaced by 138 ewes and 189 lambs. (fn. 15)
no stock was leased with the demesne in 1396 or
1404. (fn. 16) Two tenants possessed oxen in 1375 (fn. 17) and
teams of oxen were in use in 1524 and 1557; (fn. 18)
a team of carthorses occurred in 1461 (fn. 19) and other
horses in 1396 and 1557. (fn. 20) Four tenants owned
cows in 1318 (fn. 21) and individual residents bequeathed
from 1 to 6 cows between 1402 and 1533. (fn. 22) A
tenant had a sheep-pen in 1375 (fn. 23) and in 1428 a
resident bequeathed 5 stone of wool. (fn. 24) Between
1488 and 1535 St. Mary's priory, Clerkenwell,
pastured cattle on its Muswell demesne. (fn. 25) Pigs
grazed in the park in 1318 and 1375 and were said
to number 1,000 in 1359. (fn. 26)
From c. 1550 to 1850 there was continual expansion of the cultivated area at the expense of
woodland and waste. Probably little more than a
quarter of Hornsey demesne was farmed in 1540,
little less than a half in 1647, and over two-thirds
in 1820. (fn. 27) Similarly the area of the manor of
Brownswood excluding waste amounted to 536 a.
in 1577, (fn. 28) when waste was not surveyed, but in
1796 there were 597 a., including only 1 rod of waste.
The demesne grew from 313 a. in 1577 to 320 a.
in 1649 and 329 a. in 1796, and the copyhold from
223 a. in 1577 to 268 a. in 1796. Moreover, much of
Brownswood and various copyhold groves were
cleared during the same period. Finally, in 1816,
the commons were added to the cultivable area.
About 1600 the copyholders of Brownswood
manor tried unsuccessfully to fix entry fines. (fn. 29)
Arbitrary fines persisted on Topsfield manor (fn. 30)
but were fixed on Hornsey manor in 1667. (fn. 31)
There are few references to arable after 1550
but there was a mill-house at Muswell Hill in
1574 (fn. 32) and a short-lived windmill was erected
shortly before 1601 on the north side of chapel
field, Highgate. (fn. 33) Little of the parish was said to
be under the plough in 1795 (fn. 34) and in 1796 only
36 a. or 6 per cent of Brownswood manor was
arable. The area had doubled by 1822 (fn. 35) but in
1869 only 95 a. or 4 per cent of farmed land in the
parish was arable, mainly under wheat but including fodder and root-crops. (fn. 36)
From the late 16th century rents for grassland
rose rapidly, apparently stimulated by demand from
London. After 1569 rents on the manor of Brownswood rose 13 times by 1649, 20 times by 1681,
and 75 times by 1821. (fn. 37) High prices encouraged
investment, especially manuring: in 1664 a lessee
sought allowance for improvements (fn. 38) and in 1822
a tenant's rent was reduced because he had manured
his land highly. (fn. 39) Manuring was expected on the
Hornsey demesne in 1837, when the low yield of
130 a. of good grassland was attributed to inadequate
investment. (fn. 40)
There were sheep on Rowledge farm in 1543 (fn. 41)
and in 1599 a small copyholder left 100 sheep. (fn. 42)
Three thefts in 1613-15 were of sheep (fn. 43) and large
flocks overcharged the waste in 1629 and 1632. (fn. 44)
In the 1840s J. G. Booth concentrated on sheep
farming on his Crouch Hall estate, which included
Shepherd's Hill, on which stood the Shepherd's
Cot. (fn. 45) Milch cattle occurred in 1531 and 1599,
when a tenant possessed six, (fn. 46) and unspecified
cattle in 1610, 1694, and 1774. (fn. 47) In 1610 a London
innkeeper pastured 120 horses on 21 a. at Brownswood of which he had bought the herbage. (fn. 48)
Hay was grown for sale c. 1500 (fn. 49) and by the early
17th century haymaking was sufficiently widespread
to occupy a migrant worker throughout the summer. (fn. 50) Sixty loads of hay were sold for consumption in
the City of London c. 1500 (fn. 51) and 80 loads were sold
at Smithfield in 1651. (fn. 52) About 1728 a farmer lost
hay worth £770 (fn. 53) and at Muswell Hill in 1774 a
farm of 130 a. had 200 loads for sale. (fn. 54)
The common land of Hornsey manor, mainly at
Muswell Hill, Fortis Green (so called in 1558), (fn. 55)
and Highgate (Southwood), totalled 600 a. in
1647. (fn. 56) Tenants also had rights of pasture in the
demesne woods (fn. 57) but they failed to establish rights
on the neighbouring Finchley common in 1812. (fn. 58)
There was waste on the manor of Topsfield (fn. 59) and
at Brownswood there may have been 60 a. of waste
in 1577, probably at Stroud Green. (fn. 60) Pounds
existed at Highgate and Stroud Green in 1576-7 (fn. 61)
and Hornsey manor had poundkeepers by 1617. (fn. 62)
From 1637 the homage elected overseers of the
commons, who took fees from the owners of
beasts and controlled demands on the waste. In
1585 no drover was to pasture his beasts there (fn. 63)
and in 1638, 1640, 1659, 1699, 1717, and 1719 (fn. 64)
inhabitants of other manors and parishes were
presented for pasturing their livestock, the people
of Friern Barnet being particularly troublesome.
In 1650, 1658, and 1717 (fn. 65) tenants were presented
for pasturing other people's beasts. In 1584, (fn. 66)
1623, 1629, and 1632 individual tenants were found
to have overcharged the commons, but the main
users, as in 1791, were probably the poor. (fn. 67) The
homage was concerned to protect its own animals
and made frequent orders against infected stock,
including geese (1650), asses (1699, 1719), and
goats (1719): (fn. 68) unringed pigs were a perennial
problem. The value of the commons for grazing
was endangered by the poor, who took the dung for
sale in 1637-8, and by those who used it as a
dumping ground or took gravel, loam, fern, furze,
or turf. Tenants were permitted to take fern and
furze only in the winter but presentments reveal
frequent infringements. There were many disused
pits by 1815, when the commons were declared to
be incapable of improvement without inclosure. (fn. 69)
The most serious threat arose from encroachments, frequent from at least 1579. (fn. 70) In the 17th
century the poor built many cottages on the waste,
until in 1676 the homage forbade further grants
for that purpose. In 1686 the court found that
Thomas Rowe had deceived it into granting 30 a.
From 1791 it allowed grants of the waste at 22years' purchase and sold turf and loam, the proceeds
going to the wastelands fund; (fn. 71) a similar policy
had been tried in 1671. By 1816 only 232 a. remained and Brownswood had no waste. Although
there were many trespassers from other parishes,
only the poor of Tottenham were allotted land
under the inclosure award published in that year,
when allotments were made to four tenants of
Topsfield and eighteen of Brownswood. (fn. 72) The
bishop received 30 a., the prebendary of Brownswood 24 a., the rector 46½ a., and the copyholders
the rest. (fn. 73) Some common at Hornsey, still used for
grazing, was not inclosed, in order to preserve the
beauty of the village. (fn. 74) Waste at Topsfield in 1820
may have survived for the same reason. (fn. 75) To make
such allotments productive was expensive: one of
23 a. on Hornsey common, consisting mainly of
disused gravel pits, had been levelled and fenced
by 1821. (fn. 76) Many others were very small. Several
allotments on Muswell Hill common, copyhold of
Brownswood, had not been thought worth improving in 1831. (fn. 77) The commons were used for
dumping rubbish in 1863 (fn. 78) and most of them later
were built upon.
Grain production had ceased by 1877. (fn. 79) Farmland, which totalled 2,179 a. in 1869, was reduced
to 1,432 a. in 1877, 542 a. in 1897, 169 a. in 1917,
15½ a. in 1937, and 9 a. between 1957 and 1962.
Grazing land totalled only 187 a., 17 per cent of the
grassland, in 1869, but increased to 738 a. (55 per
cent) in 1877 and to 79 per cent in 1887; by 1907
it represented little more than a third of the grassland. Meanwhile the number of cattle rose from 241
in 1869 to 388 in 1877 and 360 in 1887 before declining to 160 in 1897, 63 in 1907, and 5 in 1917.
They were mainly dairy cows, for whose products
a shop was opened in Stanhope Road, Crouch End,
in 1885. (fn. 80) The number of sheep fell from 324 in 1869
to 56 in 1877, and 24 in 1907. There were 179 pigs
in 1867, 167 in 1887, and 105 in 1907; none remained
in 1917. Some 70 pigs were kept in a small field behind Archway Road in 1893, when the farmer was
ordered to remove them, and a similar number
behind Townsend's Yard, Highgate, in the 1890s. (fn. 81)
Horses, mainly draught animals, still numbered 116
in 1869 but with the end of grain production their
number fell to 38 in 1877 and 9 in 1977; 59 recorded in 1917 included 47 vanners.
In 1869 1,997 a. or 83 per cent of the grassland
was for mowing, but the total and proportion fell
sharply by 1877 owing to the advance of buildings
and grazing. Nevertheless the 1,105 a. under hay in
1877 vastly exceeded local demand. There were
haystacks at Clissold Park and Brownswood Park
in 1873 (fn. 82) and at North Hill, Highgate, in 1869 (fn. 83)
but in 1887 the fields adjoining Hampstead Lane
were said to be the hayfields nearest London. (fn. 84)
There was an orchard at Crouch End in 1465 (fn. 85)
and a hop yard at Muswell Hill in 1574. (fn. 86) Seven
acres of hops existed in 1869 but had disappeared
by 1877, when there were 9 a. of orchard and ¾ a.
of nursery garden. The nursery had probably
included part of one that was being established on
the corner of Mountgrove Road and Green Lanes
in 1821 by James Smith, (fn. 87) who had failed by 1838. (fn. 88)
The nursery disappeared between 1872, when the
frontages were taken for building, and 1894. (fn. 89)
At Highgate a nursery which had existed in 1804
became that of William Cutbush; in 1881 the firm
had 4 a. at Highgate, where it remained until 1918,
20 a. at Barnet, and 7 a. at Finchley. (fn. 90) A nursery
in Wightman Road, Harringay, included a vinery,
cucumber- and peach-houses, and glass forcingpits in 1885; it too had gone by 1894. (fn. 91) In 1880
there were at least two other nurseries at Hornsey
and four at Highgate (fn. 92) and in 1887 there were 17½ a.
of nurseries and orchards. The area shrank from
5 a. of small fruit in 1897 to 1 a. in 1907, (fn. 93) but there
were still 4 holdings in 1947, 2 with small areas of
glass-houses and 3 with small frames. (fn. 94) In 1887
the local board opened its own nurseries at Irish
Corner with 4 glass-houses to supply the isolation
hospital and public gardens. (fn. 95) The nurseries had
been considerably enlarged by 1963 (fn. 96) and survived
in 1976.
The bishop of London's woods once
covered most of the west and central areas of
Hornsey and the eastern part of Finchley, probably
merging into Finchley common, itself a demesne
wood, and even the commons of Hornsey manor.
If the bishop's lodge of 1464 was at Lodgehill on
the boundary with Finchley (fn. 98) it was in the middle
of his woods. Besides Rowledge grove of 40 a. he
had 650 a. of demesne woods in 1647. There were
also closes of 380 a. in the great and little parks
and High Reading, (fn. 99) apparently assarted from the
surrounding woodland. Repairs were made to closes
in the parks c. 1390 (fn. 1) and the names Oxleas and
High Reading, mentioned c. 1540, (fn. 2) indicate clearings.
Before the formation of such closes the demesne
woods of Hornsey manor covered not less than
1,070 a., of which c. 380 a. were in Finchley. They
had dwindled to 700 a. in 1647, (fn. 3) 450 a. by 1746, (fn. 4)
394 a. by 1820, (fn. 5) and 278 a. in 1885. In 1841 131
a. of the remaining woodland was in Finchley. (fn. 6)
In 1976 only Queen's wood of 51 a., Highgate
wood of 69 a., and Coldfall wood of 32 a. survived.
First mentioned in 1241, (fn. 7) Hornsey park was
already fenced by 1303. (fn. 8) In 1241-3 and 1263
grants of deer and timber were made by the Crown
sede vacante. (fn. 9) In 1406 the chapter took 32 spars
for the belfry of St. Paul's cathedral and 1,000
faggots as firewood. (fn. 10) Of 15 trespassers in the park
in 1318, 13 had felled oaks and one had taken
600 faggots. (fn. 11) Commissions were issued in 1318-19
and 1354 against those who had taken deer, fish, or
timber during vacancies. (fn. 12) Trespasses were also
recorded in 1375, (fn. 13) 1577, (fn. 14) 1618-19, and 1631, (fn. 15) and
destruction was beyond the control of the officers by
1646. (fn. 16) The lord employed a parker or woodward
by 1318 (fn. 17) and protected the deer. (fn. 18) In 1318, when
the reeve was allowed a tenth of receipts from the
pannage and herbage towards his wages, ten colts
were pastured in the park. (fn. 19) It was customary
by 1375 for copyholders to attend 'at the cross' on
11 November to pay the lord for pannage. (fn. 20) In
1374 the parker was to keep the wood and collect
the issues of agistment and pannage, for which in
addition to his fee he might take underwood,
branches, and windfalls, and stint 4 cattle, 4 colts,
and 5 pigs in the park. (fn. 21) By c. 1390 the pannage,
agistment, and herbage were farmed (fn. 22) but the
woods were kept in hand. The bishop's palace was
supplied with 4,000 faggots in 1464-5 (fn. 23) but by
1579, to preserve the woods, the bishop used coal
not only at Fulham but at Hornsey. (fn. 24) The lease of
the great park in 1540 reserved brushwood and
dead wood to the bishop. (fn. 25)
Henry of Sandwich, bishop 1263-73, sold timber
to the Franciscans and Dominicans of London. (fn. 26)
In 1423-4 oaks and underwood were sold (fn. 27) and
in 1464-5 timber, underwood, and logs were sold
locally. (fn. 28) For systematic exploitation the woods
were organized in falls by 1577, (fn. 29) which numbered
c. 28 in 1647. (fn. 30) In 1570 the woods seem to have
been well maintained, (fn. 31) but Richard Putto of
Highgate, the under-tenant, had been licensed to
clear part of Finchley fall. (fn. 32) In 1576 John Gilpin
was licensed to clear a large triangle at the Highgate
end of the great park, (fn. 33) and in 1577 c. 60 a. had
been felled, mainly by Gilpin and his lessees. (fn. 34) In
1579 Bishop Aylmer admitted selling 800 trees and
24 a. woodland in Hornsey alone but asserted that
the trees had been pollarded or were in decay. He
was accused of selling £1,000-worth of timber and
he admitted receipts of £600, which was nearly
equal to the value set on all the remaining timber
in 1647. (fn. 35) Aylmer, ordered by the council to desist
from waste, appointed his son Samuel as woodward. (fn. 36) Richard Fletcher, bishop 1594-6, left £60worth of wood felled at Highgate. (fn. 37)
In 1645 the bishop leased all the woods, consisting
of 650 a., to John Smith of Hornsey, whom he
appointed woodward. (fn. 38) The office descended with
the lease until c. 1743. (fn. 39) In 1662 the woods were
leased to Rees Gwyn of Highgate, (fn. 40) from whom
they passed in 1692 to John Russell and after
1702 to Thomas Russell, whose heirs conveyed them
in 1708 to Edward Jennings. By 1715 the lease was
held by Silvanus Horton and Richard Hodgson,
apparently in trust for John Sherwood until 1737,
when Sherwood became lessee. Following his
death it was renewed to William Abbot, coalmerchant of Highgate, in right of his wife Jane,
Sherwood's executrix. After Jane's death it passed
to her husband and then to their four daughters.
The lease was renewed in 1754 to their guardians.
In 1769 (fn. 41) it was held by James Way as agent for
William Murray (d. 1793), Lord Mansfield (later
earl of Mansfield). (fn. 42) The lease was renewed for his
heirs until in 1885 the earl's trustees acquired the
freehold of 16 a. and sold their rights in 683 a. to the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners. (fn. 43)
As early as 1647 the lessee felled 18 a. in breach of
the lease. (fn. 44) The lessees alleged that in 1727, while
making charcoal, they had accidentally burnt 20-30
a. of underwood, which they asked permission to
plough up. (fn. 45) It was found that in 1726 they had
grubbed up much woodland and that a clause
requiring the planting of 300 trees had been
omitted from the lease; (fn. 46) 205 a. had been grubbed
up by 1746, (fn. 47) 273 a. by 1759, (fn. 48) and 328 a. by 1819.
In 1817 the fences, ditches, gates and hedges of
Coldfall (formerly Great Coldfall) wood were in
disrepair. Copyholders had long depastured their
animals there and in 1815 they failed in their
claim that it was part of the commons only because
it featured in leases. There was no replanting of
trees and in 1819 the bishop was urged to resume
possession and either to manage the woodland
efficiently or convert it to agriculture. (fn. 49) There
were only 168 trees in all the woods in 1823,
among them 154 oaks: 83 were too small to fell. (fn. 50)
Nevertheless 278 a. remained in 1885, when the
largest woods were Coldfall (111 a.), Gravel Pit, and
Churchyard Bottom. (fn. 51) The trees had apparently
recovered by the period 1886-97, when, apart from
oaks, there was a dense foliage of larches, willows,
and hornbeams. The woods were frequented by
sportsmen, birdcatchers, and walkers (fn. 52) until the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners closed them. (fn. 53) From
1884 H. R. Williams campaigned locally and in the
national press to preserve the woods as open
spaces, which would be more rural than Finsbury
Park. In 1885 the Ecclesiastical Commissioners
gave Gravel Pit wood to the Corporation of
London, which renamed it Highgate wood and
maintained it in 1976. Churchyard Bottom wood
was bought by Hornsey U.D. with help from other
local authorities and opened in 1898 as Queen's
wood, (fn. 54) a condition of purchase being that Wood
Lane should be extended through the south part
as Queen's Wood Road. In 1920 Coldfall wood,
bounded on the south by Fortis Green and on the
west by Finchley, stretched northward and eastward almost to Coppetts Wood hospital and Coppets Road and Tetherdown respectively. (fn. 55) Most
of it was cleared in the 1920s for council housing. (fn. 56)
In 1976 there remained 32 a. north of Creighton
Avenue. (fn. 57)
Rowledge grove, mentioned in 1528, (fn. 58) in 1647
comprised 40 a. that had long been leased with
Rowledge farm (fn. 59) but were not recorded later.
The bishop retained hunting rights until 1662,
when they were leased with fishponds in Hornsey
and Finchley for 21 years to Sir Thomas Rowe.
The rent included three brace of partridges and
two brace of pheasants annually. (fn. 60) The lease was
renewed for Thomas Rowe the younger in 1676 and
1682 and in 1700 for Charles Bonython, serjeantat-law, and Richard his son. It was renewed in
1732 for Francis Dickins, whose widow Rachel
devised it to Anthony Dickins (d. 1795), and
in 1814 for Henry Berry, who appointed a gamekeeper in 1822.
Brownswood, the manor's largest demesne wood,
was known as Hornsey wood by 1745 (fn. 61) and covered
122 a. both in 1548 (fn. 62) and 1577. (fn. 63) The wood was
leased out from 1569 (fn. 64) and had diminished to
119 a. by 1594, to 92 a. by 1649, (fn. 65) and to 52 a. by
1709. (fn. 66) To make room for pleasure grounds it
was reduced to 27 a. by 1796. (fn. 67) The flora attracted
botanists from the 16th century (fn. 68) and the wood,
although divided, still seemed wild in 1866. (fn. 69) As
part of the grounds of Hornsey Wood House it
was incorporated in Finsbury Park, where the forest
trees had been felled by 1869. (fn. 70)
In 1294 the prior of St. Sepulchre, Warwick,
accused Roger of Arderne of taking wood from his
manor of Farnfields, where Roger was found to
have taken only what he had been sold. (fn. 71) The
woods of Farnfields contained 16 a. in 1419 (fn. 72)
and 30 a. c. 1557 (fn. 73) and survived in 1577, when there
were also demesne woods of Topsfield. (fn. 74)
Excluding the demesnes the largest wooded
areas were the various commons, which in 1647 on
Hornsey manor carried trees worth £295 belonging
to the bishop. (fn. 75) The largest of the many freehold
and copyhold groves was apparently Ushers, which
contained 30 a. in 1576. (fn. 76) Such groves were gradually cleared, such as the 7 a. of wood that George
Crowther converted to pasture between 1586 and
1604. (fn. 77) In 1667 the homage of Hornsey declared
that a tenant should have all trees that were so
close to his lands that a cart with a woolpack could
not pass between them and the perimeter. (fn. 78)
Trade and industry.
Tilers were digging at
Highgate by 1485. (fn. 79) Bricks, used in the tower of
Hornsey church c. 1500 (fn. 80) and in a forerunner of
Lauderdale House, probably accounted for the
name of Brick or Tower Place in 1578. (fn. 81) Cholmley's
school and its chapel were to be repaired by John
Weatherley, lessee of the chapel field, in 1601 (fn. 82)
and thereafter many houses in Highgate, including
Cromwell House, were of brick. A cottage of brick
existed at Brownswood by 1647 (fn. 83) and another at
Hornsey by 1648. (fn. 84) Weatherley, who was already
making bricks at Highgate in 1595, (fn. 85) had a works
on the waste ground near Southwood Lane in
1604, where he dug holes which were a danger to
travellers, and in 1608 he took soil from the great
park, of which he was under-tenant. (fn. 86) Weatherley's
son also took materials from the commons, as was
permitted until 1619 when the homage forbade soil
to be removed from Crouch End Hill. Repeated
efforts were made to punish offenders, many of them
from St. Pancras. By 1667 tenants were allowed to
dig earth or sand to repair their tenements, and
both in 1686 and 1793 licences to dig were granted. (fn. 87)
Tilekilnfield and its kilns were mentioned in 1654
and other kilns in 1614 at Southwood Lane and in
1793. (fn. 88) Sawpits occurred in 1609, 1648, and 1797,
and there were 3 sawyers in Hornsey Side in
1831. (fn. 89) Brick-makers occurred in 1648, 1684, and
1691, and in 1829 there were two brick-works at
Highgate, one of 25 a. and one in Southwood Lane. (fn. 90)
In 1831 there were 6 brick-makers, 22 bricklayers,
11 glaziers and plumbers, and a plasterer in
Highgate Side and 7 bricklayers, 4 brick-makers,
12 house-painters, and 31 carpenters in Hornsey
Side. (fn. 91) In 1901, near the peak of building in
Hornsey, 1,915 people were employed in building,
including 467 carpenters and joiners, 320 bricklayers and their labourers, 145 plasterers, and 323
painters, glaziers, and decorators. As many as 1,877
were still employed in the trade in 1931 and 2,455
in 1951. (fn. 92) No works produced bricks or tiles in
1976 but there were several large firms of builders'
merchants, notably off Summersby Road, Highgate.
Gravel for the roads was available in most parts
of the parish from Hornsey Wood House (fn. 93) to
Irish Corner. The name Gravelpit wood occurred
in 1863, when there was a Gravel Walk at Crouch
End, and the glebe included a Gravelpit field in
1804. (fn. 94) The supply had diminished by 1650, when
the Hornsey surveyors took 600 loads from Clerkenwell detached, (fn. 95) in 1684 the homage needed to
extract it gratis from the bishop's woods, and by
1817 the surrounding commons were virtually
exhausted of gravel. (fn. 96) In 1815, to make up new
roads, 1,078 loads were extracted from the demesne
wood of Coldfall, (fn. 97) which had long provided good
gravel for the turnpike road. (fn. 98) From 1819 the price
was raised and in 1824 the pit there was the only
one open in the parish. (fn. 99)
Stock-raising gave rise to related trades. There
were several butchers in the early 17th century (fn. 1)
and tanners in 1607 (2), 1616 (3), (fn. 2) and 1697. In
1611 a watercourse was polluted by a tanner who
used lime-pits and ponds on the common. (fn. 3) A
blacksmith's forge occurred in 1577 (fn. 4) and wheelwrights in 1633 and 1701. In 1831 5 blacksmiths, 4
wheelwrights, a harness-maker, 2 saddlers, a horsedealer, and a carrier resided at Hornsey Side and 3
blacksmiths, 12 coachmen, 3 wheelwrights, and a
horse-dealer at Highgate Side. (fn. 5) The forges at Crouch
End and Highgate survived until c. 1844 (fn. 6) and 1896
respectively. (fn. 7)
At Highgate a new brewhouse was leased from
Joseph Townsend in 1749. (fn. 8) 'Highgate brewhouse',
so called in 1783, (fn. 9) may have been John Addison's
brewery, recorded between 1800 and 1808. (fn. 10) Fortis
Green brewery was a large building between the
entrances of the modern Fortis Green Avenue and
Lynmouth Road in 1869. (fn. 11) It was occupied by
Charles Green, brewer and grocer, from at least
1845 to 1855, (fn. 12) by Mrs Susan Green & Son from
1859 to 1884, (fn. 13) and by Norman & Co. from 1888
until 1901, when it may already have belonged to
Ind Coope & Co., whose district office was next
door. (fn. 14) Brewing had probably ceased by 1902, when
Ind Coope occupied the whole site, (fn. 15) which c.
1910 became H. W. Wilson's Fortis Green brewery
stores. (fn. 16)
Hornsey brewery at no. 27 Clarendon Road was
run in 1884 by S. F. Rhodes. (fn. 17) In 1886 it was
occupied by Alexander & Co. (fn. 18) and between 1888
and 1920 by R. Caffyn & Son (later F. P. B. Caffyn
& Co.), perhaps as lessees. The brewery may have
belonged to the Rhodes family throughout: an
adjoining house was occupied by Samuel Rhodes in
1880 and S. F. Rhodes from 1917 to 1939, (fn. 19) and
from 1923 the brewery itself was managed by V. F.
Rhodes. (fn. 20) Caffyn's were brewing ale and 'Invalid
Stout' in 1895. (fn. 21) Brewing may have continued until
1957 and bottling until 1959 (fn. 22) but from 1960
Rhodes & Co. dealt only in wines and spirits made
elsewhere. (fn. 23)
Soda water was made at Highgate in the 1820s by
Thomas Dunn of the pharmacy and in 1845 by
his successor. (fn. 24) Early-19th-century bottles and the
remains of a brick-lined container and pipes were
found beneath a shed behind no. 64 High Street
in 1977. (fn. 25)
Hornsey was said to have no trade in 1904 (fn. 26) and
no industry in 1933, (fn. 27) with some exaggeration, and
had no large factories either in 1921 or 1954. (fn. 28)
More people were employed in handicraft than in
agriculture by 1821, (fn. 29) and crafts accounted for
most of the 297 workshops registered under the
Factory Act of 1901 in 1905, when there were 68
dress-makers, 23 milliners, 29 launderers, 42 bakehouses, and 6 bicycle-makers. (fn. 30) In 1901 Hornsey
residents included 925 textile workers, 293 of
them women, and 2,046 others engaged in making
clothes, of whom 1,190 were women; they included
277 tailors and 829 milliners, and presumably were
all employed locally. (fn. 31) By 1906 61 workshops had
been added and 51 closed (fn. 32) and by 1911 the total
number had risen to 377, before falling steadily to
275 in 1918, (fn. 33) while the trades scarcely altered.
By 1954, however, 75 of the 246 workshops were
engaged in light engineering, including 39 in the
motor trade. Among the four factories employing
over 100 people were the gas-works and the Myddelton and Alexandra Park Laundry (M.A.P.). The
others processed films (probably Kay Films) and
made hollow metalware. As only eight other firms
employed more than 50 and another sixteen more
than 25, (fn. 34) industry remained relatively unimportant.
By 1963 there were only 233 factories, of which
41 lacked mechanical power. (fn. 35)
Hill & Son and Norman & Beard, church organbuilders, is an amalgamation of two firms: William
Hill & Son, formed in the 1840s and tracing its
origins to John Schneytler c. 1748, and the East
Anglian firm of Norman & Beard, incorporated in
the 1890s. After the merger in 1916 the company
used a factory in Islington until 1943 and Manor
works at Eagle Cottage, Hornsey High Street, from
1947. It later employed c. 120 indoor craftsmen,
themselves training apprentices, and a similar
number throughout the country. Among the organs
built between 1950 and 1974 were those for seven
English and eight Canadian cathedrals. The firm
moved to a former branch at Thaxted (Essex) in
1974, leaving the Hornsey premises empty. (fn. 36)
Brian Taylor's, garment-makers, occupied Woodside works in Summersby Road until 1951, when
half the factory was taken over by Gauges and
Instruments, a family business founded in 1941 at
Palmers Green. Gauges and Instruments needed
more accommodation by 1963, when there were
75 staff, and later expanded into the rest of the
factory, formerly occupied by Austin & Hayes.
In 1976 c. 40 employees were engaged in precision
engineering, making components for the aircraft,
motor, and electronic industries, and the firm's
own power press equipment. (fn. 37)
Johnson Roberts, founded c. 1900 and re-formed
in 1940 in Stoke Newington, moved to Pembroke
Road, Hornsey, in 1951 and to a new factory in the
near-by Myddelton Road in 1965 following its
purchase by Dental Manufacturing (later Hawtin
Industries and in 1976 Hawtin Ltd.). Since 1951 it
has specialized in the repair of internal combustion
engines, mainly road vehicles but also including
stationary engines. In 1976 there were 27 employees. (fn. 38)
Robert Deard's, haulage and refuse contractors,
was founded c. 1875 at Finchley and moved to
north Hornsey detached c. 1954. The offices and
parking area for lorries occupied a large site on the
corner of Colney Hatch Lane and the North Circular Road in 1976. (fn. 39)
Henley's Medical Supplies was founded by D. F.
Henley in 1948. In 1949 it moved from Alexandra
Road, Hornsey, to the Alexandra works in Clarendon Road, where it was initially housed over the
stable of the former Hornsey brewery. Adjoining
premises had been acquired by 1976, when a twostoreyed block, to contain storage space, a print
room, and offices, was being erected. The company
manufactures a range of surgical disposable sundries, in which it claimed to be Great Britain's
leading specialist, and waterproof bedding and
protective clothing. It also distributed in Britain
many surgical and X-ray supplies manufactured
abroad. In 1976 there were 150 employees at the
Alexandra works and 130 others in the Hornsey
area, Harlow (Essex), and Westbury (Wilts.), most
of them employed in warehouses. (fn. 40)
Mr. A. C. B. (Colin) Chapman adapted vehicles
as Lotus sports cars at Muswell Hill and at Vallance
Road, Wood Green, before moving into a former
stable at no. 7 Tottenham Lane in 1951, when he
established the Lotus Engineering Co. which was
incorporated in 1953. The staff had grown to 30
by 1959 and the premises were extended with
new offices and workshops in 1953 and again in
1957. Lotus cars, which won several motor-racing
trophies, were designed and entirely built in Hornsey until 1957, when the body-building was done
at Edmonton, but in 1959 the company moved to
Cheshunt (Herts.). (fn. 41)
There were 121 tradesmen in Hornsey Side in
1831, of whom 55 were in the building trades, 25
dealt in food and drink, 18 made footwear, 8 sold
clothing, and 11 were associated with horses and
transport. (fn. 42) None plied luxury trades of the kinds
found at Highgate, where there had been a tailor's
shop in 1605, (fn. 43) a wig-maker's in 1749, (fn. 44) and an
apothecary's (the Highgate pharmacy) before
1800. (fn. 45) Highgate Side provided employment for 6
barbers, a bookseller, a cabinet-maker, 3 chemists, 2
clock-makers, 2 opticians, a confectioner, 2 printers,
a chimney-sweep, 2 tinmen, an upholsterer, 3
white-smiths, and 3 pipe-makers among its 205
tradesmen in 1831. Most nevertheless fell into the
same categories as in Hornsey Side, for there were
32 dealing in food and drink, including 16 publicans, 21 coachmen, 66 in the building trades, 21
cobblers, and 20 dealing in clothing, among whom 8
were drapers or haberdashers. (fn. 46) A ban on Sunday
trading in Highgate, apparently effective c. 1840,
was made the object of a further campaign under
the Revd. T. H. Causton, Harry Chester, and other
leading residents, in 1842-3. (fn. 47)
In 1867 it was claimed that Hornsey's shopkeepers
did not satisfy local demand (fn. 48) and c. 1880 it was
worthwhile for London costermongers to hawk
fish and other commodities in the new suburbs of
Finsbury Park and Crouch Hill. (fn. 49) As building
spread, several new shopping areas appeared and in
1891 it was claimed that no useful trade was lacking
at Muswell Hill. (fn. 50) That was before the construction of Crouch End Broadway and Muswell Hill
Broadway with their high-quality shops. Muswell
Hill was particularly well equipped with drapers
c. 1926. (fn. 51) By 1914 there were 1,174 shops of 41
distinct types, grocers numbering 103 and being
followed by confectioners, boot-makers, drapers,
and butchers. (fn. 52) The number of shops grew to 1,325
by 1934 (fn. 53) and 1,356 by 1949. (fn. 54) Apart from Woolworth's at Crouch End and Sainsbury's at Muswell
Hill relatively few chain stores or large supermarkets had been opened by 1976 and except at
Crouch End and Muswell Hill most of the shops
were small and specialized.