ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Agriculture.
In 1086
Kingsbury was divided between two holdings.
The largest, held by Albold, consisted of 7½ hides,
made up of land for 7 ploughs, enough meadow for
½ plough, and woodland for 1,000 pigs yielding £1.
Of the arable land, 2 ploughs were on the demesne
and 5 on the land held by peasants. The whole
estate, worth £4 in 1086 and £6 T.R.E., was
worth only £1 when Albold received it, suggesting
considerable devastation after the Conquest. The
second estate, at Chalkhill, consisted of 2½ hides,
composed of land for 2 ploughs and woodland for
200 pigs. Of the arable, 1 plough was in demesne and
one divided among the 5 villeins, who each held a
virgate, and one cottar. The estate, worth £1 10s.
in 1086, had been valued at £3 T.R.E. (fn. 36)
Of the cultivated land in Kingsbury in 1086 6
ploughs were required on the peasant land, approximately 4 hides, and 3 ploughs on the freehold
demesne land, probably about 3 hides. If there was
more customary than freehold land in cultivation,
there was also a large area of uncultivated, probably
wooded, land. Most had been granted out by the
end of the 13th century, part forming freehold
estates like those of the de la Hayes in northern and
of the Brancasters in southern Kingsbury, (fn. 37) and
part forming new villein holdings. In 1276-7 there
were 16 virgates and 20 a. of copyhold land of
Edgware manor in Kingsbury. (fn. 38) By c. 1350 most of
the freehold land in northern Kingsbury had been
absorbed into the demesne of Kingsbury manor,
which then consisted of approximately 320 a. (fn. 39)
Southern Kingsbury was predominantly freehold.
By c. 1350 the Westminster estate at Chalkhill had
been replaced by a freehold estate of 40 a., a few
small freehold estates, and 3¾ virgates and 22 a. of
copyhold land held from Kingsbury manor; southeastern Kingsbury was occupied by the freehold
Brancaster estate. Copyhold land, which was at its
greatest extent during the early Middle Ages,
contracted during the 15th and 16th centuries as it
was absorbed into the larger freehold estates of
Chalkhill and Kingsbury manor. (fn. 40) By 1597 750 a.
out of a total of 1,580 a. (48 per cent) was freehold
land. (fn. 41) This proportion remained until the copyhold
contracted still further with new acquisitions by
All Souls College and enfranchisements in the 19th
century.
Accounts made by the bailiff of Geoffrey le
Scrope for the period Feb. 1325-Michaelmas 1326
are the only evidence for the organization of the
economy on the freehold demesnes. (fn. 42) The work was
directed by the bailiff and carried out by famuli,
permanent and hired workers, and villeins performing customary services. Permanent labourers, who
included a dairyman, a swineherd, a herdsman, a
drover, a carter, two ploughmen, a boy to watch the
horses and a woman to make ale, were paid in
money and grain. Hired workers performed all the
mowing of hay, collecting, binding and stacking,
winnowing, most of the threshing and part of the
weeding and reaping of grain. Famuli
(fn. 43) carried out
half the weeding, a small part of the threshing, and
part of the collecting of hay and building of hayricks.
The rest of the reaping of grain and collecting of hay
and building of hayricks was performed by boonworkers.
In 1304 Thomas of Brancaster alluded to service
owed him by William Gospriest and Richard
Simond. (fn. 44) Although Ralph Gospriest and Ralph
Simond were among the six tenants who paid
assized rents to Geoffrey le Scrope in 1325, (fn. 45) there
is no evidence that customary services other than
boon-works were ever exacted on the Coffers
estate. Most people in Kingsbury owed customary
services to Edgware manor. The services appear to
have been evenly divided between Kingsbury and
Edgware, being respectively worth £1 6s. 10¾d. and
£1 6s. 11¼d. in 1276-7 (fn. 46) and £1 7s. ¼d. and £1 9s. 3d.
in 1426. In 1426 23 tenements in Kingsbury,
representing 13¾ virgates, owed a total of 289
works: 50 carrying works (averagia), 23 each of
hedging, harrowing, hoeing, and binding corn,
92 reaping and 55 carrying corn works. Apart from
one tenant who had to mow Rush Mead, there was
no mention in 1426 (fn. 47) of any works connected with
hay, in contrast to 1276-7 when mowing, carrying,
and building haystacks were demanded from all
customary tenants. (fn. 48) In 1438-9 11 customary
tenants of Kingsbury manor owed services of
harrowing and hoeing, boon-works of mowing,
lifting and carrying, and certain autumn works,
valued in all at 7s. a year. (fn. 49) Although services were
included in the appurtenances of Freren manor
leased in the early 16th century, (fn. 50) there is no
evidence that any were performed. The tenants
of Freren were said in 1358 to be free (fn. 51) and of
the 13 tenants mentioned in 1510-12, many held
land in Hendon and Harrow. (fn. 52)
Most services had probably been commuted by
1276-7, (fn. 53) although there was some presentment of
tenants of Edgware manor for failure to perform
ploughing-services in 1280 (fn. 54) and 1331 (fn. 55) and mowing
was expected from tenants in Kingsbury in 1433. (fn. 56)
On Kingsbury manor tenants had to mow Honeyslough meadow in 1350 (fn. 57) and 16 people were
presented for default at 'the time of mowing'
in 1379; at the same court Robert Wrench
was presented for having 30 autumn works in
arrears. (fn. 58)
None of the customary holdings in Kingsbury
during the Middle Ages was very large. On the
main manor in 1086 8 villeins held a virgate each,
3 villeins held a half-virgate each, and 5 bordars
held 5 a. each; there was one cottar. (fn. 59) In 1276-7
holdings consisted of a virgate and a quartron or
quarter-virgate, 6 virgates, 6 triple-quartrons, 7
half-virgates, 3 quartrons, and two 5-acre holdings.
Except for Tollesland and Allechonland, two triplequartrons which were probably held in common,
each was held by one tenant, giving a total of 23
tenants. (fn. 60) By 1426 customary land in Kingsbury
held from Edgware manor comprised 4 virgates,
3 triple-quartrons, 10 half-virgates, 10 quartrons,
and 24 other holdings, mostly crofts. There were 32
tenants, ranging from John Hamond, who held part
of a virgate, a triple-quartron, a quartron and 4 a.,
to John Lyon of Boys, who had 2 a. (fn. 61)
A comparison of the figures for 1086, 1276-7, and
1426 suggests that, as the population of Kingsbury
grew, the larger holdings were divided and by 1426
many under-holdings had become separated from
the main tenement. Since the total amount also
expanded, however, there must have been continuous assarting. Colmans Dean, the valley of the
charcoal man, (fn. 62) was presumably once densely
wooded, but by 1276-7 it was a field of 70 a.
belonging to the manor of Stanmore Chenduit. (fn. 63)
The same process took place elsewhere in Kingsbury, although most areas, when cleared from the
forest, formed small assarts surrounded by wood
rather than large open fields. In eastern Kingsbury in
the late 13th and early 14th century land was held
in 1 r. strips or selions by about five or six people in
Apsfurlong, Streetfurlong (identifiable with Stratford Long or Shoelands), (fn. 64) Oldham, Arneyshaw,
Sneteleshale, and Hay Dean. (fn. 65) In 1350 customary
land held from Kingsbury manor included 7 halfvirgates, one quartron, one 7-acre and one 11-acre
holding. (fn. 66) Unlike Edgware manor, where there
were no free holdings apart from the large estates,
there were four freehold estates held from Kingsbury manor: Chalkhill, consisting of 40 a. in 1350,
and three one-acre holdings. The land held from
Kingsbury manor consisted of scattered holdings
like Brasiers at Kingsbury Green, Dawes on
Edgware Road, strips in Tunworth and strips and
closes in south-west Kingsbury. (fn. 67)
The process of consolidating and inclosing
selions by exchange (fn. 68) and by accumulating undersets (fn. 69) was furthered when the Black Death considerably reduced the numbers of landholders, especially
on Kingsbury manor. Colmans Dean had probably
been inclosed by 1426, when it was parcelled among
six tenants, (fn. 70) and consolidation had been carried a
stage further by 1482 when it was held by two
tenants. (fn. 71) By 1597 strip-cultivation was confined to a
small area of Broad field between Bacon Lane, Stag
Lane, and Roe Green. (fn. 72) The inclosure of strips into
closes took place in Tunworth in the 15th century, (fn. 73)
on Freren manor at the beginning of the 16th
century, (fn. 74) and to the west of Stag Lane in 1584. (fn. 75) It
had begun in Broad field by 1479 (fn. 76) and was completed by 1752. (fn. 77) Much of the land in the southwest became absorbed into Kingsbury demesne
and Chalkhill, while much of the rest was incorporated into the estates built up by the Shepherd,
Scudamore, and Nicholl families.
During the 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries most
customary land was held by local peasant families,
the Mosshatches, Randolfs, Lewgars, Roes, Lemans,
Hamonds, Edwins, Richards, Simonds, Dibels,
Wrenches, Warrens, Dawes, Pages, Lyons, and
Groves. (fn. 78) The Hamonds had the longest association
with Kingsbury. Hamon Constantine, hanged in
1280, (fn. 79) was succeeded by his son John Hamond,
whose descendants remained landholders in Kingsbury until 1641. (fn. 80) The Wrench family, which held a
half-virgate in 1276-7, (fn. 81) was active in Kingsbury
until 1530. (fn. 82) Most of the Wrench lands passed to
the Shepherd family. A William Shepherd had an
interest in land in Kingsbury in 1306 (fn. 83) but the main
connexion of the family with the parish dates
from the mid 15th century. The Shepherds were
lessees of Kingsbury manor demesne (1450-1618),
of Hyde farm (1534-66 and 1584-94), and of
Coffers (c. 1541). (fn. 84) Of the copyhold estates, they
held Edwins (1463-1572), Richards (1466-1541),
Townsend (1462-1542), land around Roe Green
(1498-1599), and part of Colmans Dean (1543-93). (fn. 85)
The family was at its height c. 1540 when it held
285 a. and leased 783 a., 46 per cent of Kingsbury
parish. In 1597 Thomas Shepherd leased 233 a. of
Kingsbury manor demesne and 5 other members
of the family held a total of 118 a. (fn. 86) In 1631 9
members, mostly sons of Michael Shepherd, held
66 a.; (fn. 87) four houses, all small, were charged to the
family in 1664. (fn. 88) In 1698 three Shepherds held
28 a.; (fn. 89) the remaining land was lost and the family
died out in the early 18th century. (fn. 90)
The rise and decline of the Shepherds illustrates
the part played by local families. During the
Middle Ages only one large freehold estate,
Chalkhill, was held by such a family but most
customary lands were in the hands of local peasants.
Towards the end of the medieval period control
began to pass to three groups of outsiders: those
whose main interests were in neighbouring parishes,
those who received estates in Kingsbury as a
reward for services elsewhere, and the Londoners.
Among the first group were the Pages, who originally
acquired Kingsbury manor as an extension of their
estate in Stanmore. The Barnvilles, Bellamys,
Pages, Lyons, and Walters extended their Harrow
estates into Kingsbury. Colmans Dean and Redhill
were closely linked with Little Stanmore and
Coffers with Willesden, and the Franklin and
Roberts families, who held land in southern
Kingsbury, were primarily concerned with Willesden. The most important of this group was the
Brydges family, centred on Canons in Little
Stanmore.
The second group was especially important in the
Middle Ages. The de la Hayes and Poleyns were
vassals of the earls of Lincoln. Geoffrey le Scrope
was a royal favourite who may have obtained his
estate near Hendon through his brother, Henry.
John Warner, Christopher Hovenden, and Robert
Strensham, warden and fellows of All Souls
College, and their relatives, had interests in Kingsbury in the 16th century, (fn. 91) which were maintained,
in the latter's case, even against royal pressure. (fn. 92)
The third class of outsiders, the Londoners, was
always influential. Kingsbury manor was leased to
Londoners in the 14th century and owned by
London merchants during the early 15th century.
In the south a large area was held by Gilbert of
Brancaster, the son of a London citizen, and by his
daughter, who married another. Although most of
these two estates passed into the hands of
institutions, All Souls College and the Knights
Hospitallers and later St. Paul's Cathedral, Chalkhill and Coffers and most of the copyhold land were
acquired by Londoners. By 1597 only 35 per cent
of Kingsbury was owned by people who lived in the
parish. (fn. 93) The proportion continued to decline, to
26 per cent in 1672, (fn. 94) 17 per cent in 1839, (fn. 95) 12 per
cent in 1887, and 0.2 per cent in 1917. (fn. 96)
Although more and more land passed to outsiders, the size of estates remained much the same.
From the Domesday survey until the 19th century
most estates were of between 5 and 50 a. (fn. 97) During
the 19th century there were more large estates and
new cottages were erected.
The most important tenure for most of Kingsbury's history, however, was not freehold or copyhold but leasehold. Few outsiders were prepared
to farm the land themselves. Land was leased.
sometimes to the local peasant families but
increasingly to other outsiders, who in turn sub-let it
to local farmers. The most important figures in
18th- and early-19th-century Kingsbury were not
owners but the duke of Chandos and his heirs who
from 1714 until 1800 held, mainly by lease, 38 per
cent (640 a.) of the parish. (fn. 98) Thus, especially on the
larger freehold estates, there was a chain of leasing
and under-leasing which was a major cause of the
backward character of rural Kingsbury. Middlesex
was the most highly rented county in England in
1833 (fn. 99) and the high rents for cottages were given in
1834 as the main cause of poverty. (fn. 1) The farmers
were themselves lessees and, although their rents
were lowered in the 1830s, (fn. 2) often insolvent.
High rents for short leases did not encourage long
term investment and land became exhausted and
farm-houses dilapidated. Another effect of leasing
was the lack of authority in the parish. All Souls
College and St. Paul's regarded the estates purely
in terms of profit. Everything that could be leased
out, including seigneurial and church rights and
appurtenances, (fn. 3) was leased, usually to men who
rarely visited Kingsbury. In the absence of the lord
and his bailiff and with courts held at Edgware, it is
not surprising that court orders were ignored and
that neglect, quarrels and corruption became
something of a tradition, from the cases of fraud and
forgery in the 15th and 16th centuries (fn. 4) to the local
government feuds of the 20th century. (fn. 5)
Leasing began on the freehold estates in the
Middle Ages. Geoffrey le Scrope's estate was
administered for him by a bailiff in 1325 (fn. 6) but it was
probably leased out from 1333. (fn. 7) Walter Saling may
have farmed Kingsbury manor in the 1330s but
most of the owners were absentees who leased it out.
From 1458 the manorial demesne was let on 10year leases at £8 a year. (fn. 8) It was held on 20-year
leases at £8 13s. 4d. from 1508 until the end of the
century (fn. 9) when a mixed money and corn rent was
introduced which lasted, with little variation, (fn. 10) until
1867 when a more realistic rent of £420 a year was
demanded. (fn. 11) Hyde farm was let on 20-year leases at
£6 a year in 1534 (fn. 12) and for a mixed money and
grain rent from 1584 (fn. 13) until 1870, when the 139acre farm was let at £340 a year. (fn. 14) Freren manor was
leased in the early 16th century for £8 and its woods
were leased in 1524 for £1. (fn. 15) From the mid 16th
century until 1886 the Freren estate was held by
21-year leases at £9 or £9 10s. a year rent with the
addition, from the mid 17th century, of an annual
payment to the curate (£40), and from the early
19th century, of an annual redeemed land-tax
payment of £66. (fn. l6) In 1886, when the connexion with
the dukes of Buckingham came to an end, the
estate was divided into two farms, leased for £210
and £204 respectively. (fn. 17)
During the 16th century leasing became widespread on the copyhold estates. Sometimes a
father or elder brother leased portions of the estate
to other members of the family (fn. 18) but most leasing
was by outsiders to local farmers. The farms were
rarely conterminous with the estates but, from the
17th century, were usually small, of between 30 a.
and 150 a. Large estates, notably those of All Souls
College, were divided into several farms, while
smaller estates were combined. In 1870, for example,
William Field's farm of 236 a. was formed from land
owned by 9 people, he himself owning only 7 a. (fn. 19)
The acreage of farms remained much the same
throughout the 19th century, although there was a
tendency towards large farms, the largest in 1870
being of 282 a., compared with 212 a. in 1839. (fn. 20)
The size and shape of farms was intimately
connected with agriculture. The quartron and
virgate strip-holdings of the early Middle Ages
were part of a predominantly arable farming
system. Wheat, oats, and beans were grown. (fn. 21)
In 1350 there were at least 18 oxen on the demesne of
Kingsbury manor (fn. 22) and in 1426 wheat was grown in
Paradise, possibly identified with Cow Leas, west
of Salmon Street. (fn. 23) During the 15th century oats
were frequently sold by the lessee to the stables of
All Souls College in Oxford. (fn. 24)
Oats were apparently the most important crop
grown in 1325-6 at Geoffrey le Scrope's Kingsbury
grange which produced nearly 43 qr. of oats and
18½ qr. of oats and wheat growing together compared
with 10¼ qr. of wheat, 11¼ qr. of maslin, and 1 qr.
6 bu. of beans. About 28 per cent of the wheat and
50 per cent of the beans were sold and some wheat
was sent to the lord's house in London, but all the
other produce was consumed at Kingsbury, as seed,
payment for manorial workers and officials, and food
for servants, dogs, and stock. Compared with 106 a.
producing grain crops, there were only 17½ a. of
meadow and the only pasture was at Wakemans Hill,
which was leased out. The cattle, of which at Michaelmas 1325 there were 20 cows, 16 calves, a bull and 4
bullocks, were also leased out. Other stock included
9 oxen, 4 plough-stots, 2 carthorses, 15 pigs, and
poultry. There were no sheep although a sheephouse
(domus bercar') was mentioned. There were also
apples in a garden. (fn. 25)
The relative unimportance of meadow and
pasture compared with arable land on the le Scrope
estate seems to have been general throughout
Kingsbury in the Middle Ages. In 1086 there was
only enough meadow for ½ plough, presumably
water-meadow along the Brent. There was extensive
woodland, enough for 1,200 pigs, (fn. 26) and some of it
may have been cleared by c. 1200 to give pasture for
cattle. (fn. 27) Nevertheless, pannage was still demanded
in 1333 (fn. 28) and pigs and draught animals figured more
frequently than cattle in suits of trespass during the
14th and early 15th centuries. (fn. 29) Meadow formed a
very small proportion of estates curing the 14th
century and pasture is rarely recorded before 1430. (fn. 30)
Meadow was apparently held in common in 1284. (fn. 31)
The lord's meadow was mentioned in 1379 (fn. 32) and
hay was grown on the demesne of Kingsbury manor
during the 15th century. (fn. 33)
The conversion of arable to grassland may
intitially have been connected with the inclosure of
arable strips and building up of estates. It was welladvanced in some areas by the late 15th century and
by 1597 arable formed only 30 per cent of the 1,240 a.
marked on the All Souls map. (fn. 34) Of the area in south
Kingsbury not marked on the map, Coffers (366 a. in
Kingsbury, Hendon, and Willesden) had 33 per cent
arable in 1478-9, (fn. 35) Chalkhill (166 a.) had 24 per
cent arable in 1533, (fn. 36) and Freren (184 a.) had 41 per
cent arable in 1650. (fn. 37) Although Kingsbury was on
the edge of the wheat-growing belt and grain was
still grown, animal farming became increasingly
important during the 16th century. Sheep and
cattle, especially bullocks for the London meat
market, were raised. (fn. 38) Kingsbury's position on
Edgware Road was excellent for middlemen
operating between London and the animal-raising
regions of Hertfordshire. John Molesley, a drover
from London, acquired a small estate at Redhill
in 1445. (fn. 39) Between 1615 and 1617, 8 inhabitants of
Kingsbury were licensed as drovers, badgers, and
kidders. (fn. 40)
Pasture continued to increase throughout the
17th and 18th centuries, until by 1838 it covered
97 per cent of Kingsbury. Boundaries were rearranged and arable was converted to pasture at
Gore fields during the early 17th century. (fn. 41) The
process was completed in eastern Kingsbury,
bordering Edgware Road, by the mid 18th century, (fn. 42)
at Hungry Down by 1812, (fn. 43) at Pipers farm by 1832, (fn. 44)
Freren farm by 1866, (fn. 45) and at Hill farm by 1867. (fn. 46)
A three-field system involving fallowing and the use
of leas was long practised on farms before the total
conversion to grassland. Another feature was the
conversion of woodland to arable before it was
turned over to pasture. (fn. 47) By the mid 18th century
most of the grassland in Kingsbury was given over
to hay, which was taken to London by waggon
along Edgware Road (fn. 48) and remained the chief crop
until well into the 19th century. (fn. 49) The dependence
on hay, while possibly helping the farmers during
the agricultural depression of the 1830s, increased
the poverty of the labourers. While Irishmen were
hired during the harvest, local farm-workers became
chargeable on the parish during the winter. (fn. 50) In
1851 30 labourers were employed on 7 of the 11
farms in Kingsbury; since 95 labourers, a shepherd,
three farm servants, and a farmer's boy lived in the
parish, many must have been unemployed for most
of the year. (fn. 51) Hay-farming began to decline at the
end of the 19th century when cheap foreign hay
could be imported and when motor traffic replaced
horse traffic. (fn. 52)
Some diversification was introduced into farming
during the 19th century. Crops were never important. In 1867 there were 9 a. of mangolds, 3 a. of
turnips, and 180 a. of clover and artificial grass, all
presumably grown as fodder crops. (fn. 53) Mushrooms
were grown at Blackpot Hill farm in 1909 (fn. 54) and
fruit and vegetables together covered 11½ a. in
1917. (fn. 55)
There was a shepherd in Kingsbury in 1851 (fn. 56) and
Grove House was in the hands of a sheep salesman
between 1868 and 1880. (fn. 57) There were 851 sheep
in 1867 but only 332 in 1917. During the same
period the number of pigs rose from 100 to 486. (fn. 58)
Gore farm, owned by Dr. Arthur Calcutta White,
was a pig farm from 1901 (fn. 59) and there were piggeries
at Grange farm, Shoelands, and Fryent farms by
1915. (fn. 60) Horses were probably reared in consequence
of the hay trade. There were two jobmasters in
1851 (fn. 61) and from that date until 1900 Redhill farm
was in the hands of horse-dealers. (fn. 62) In 1921 it was
leased by Capt. Bertram Mills as a stud farm for
hackney horses. (fn. 63) The lessees of Hyde farm in
1882 (fn. 64) and of Freren farm from 1882 until 1915 were
horse-dealers. (fn. 65) There were stud farms at Roe Green
in 1904 (fn. 66) and at Kingsbury House in 1913, (fn. 67) and in
1917 Shoelands farm was licensed as a slaughterhouse of horses for human consumption. (fn. 68) The
number of horses increased from 80 in 1887 to
146 in 1917. (fn. 69)
Like hay-farming horse-breeding declined with
the growth of motor traffic and was mostly replaced
by dairy farming. A cowkeeper was mentioned in
1823 (fn. 70) but most farms did not transfer to dairy
farming until the end of the century. It was practised
at Blackbird farm by 1894, (fn. 71) at Grange farm by
1900, (fn. 72) and at Valley farm, Chalkhill farm, and the
Hyde by 1901. (fn. 73) It was introduced at Hyde farm in
1911, (fn. 74) and Freren farm passed from a jobmaster
to a dairy farmer from Willesden in 1915. (fn. 75) The
number of cattle increased from 68 in 1867 to 225
in 1887 and 472 in 1917. (fn. 76) Nine dairy farmers were
registered in 1922 (fn. 77) but suburban building development began to encroach on farming land soon
afterwards and by 1933 there were only three. (fn. 78) The
last of the farms disappeared after the Second
World War but cattle were still grazed in Kingsbury,
on Fryent open space, in 1970. (fn. 79)
A pound-keeper had been granted Radletts
cottage in 1489 (fn. 80) but no pound was marked on the
map of 1597. Hyde pound existed by 1698 (fn. 81) and was
dilapidated in 1857. (fn. 82) In 1844, when there was no
hayward or pound-keeper for Kingsbury, one man
was appointed to hold both offices. (fn. 83)
Woods.
In 1086 there was enough woodland,
yielding £1, for 1,000 pigs on the main estate at
Kingsbury and woodland for another 200 pigs on the
Westminster abbey estate, (fn. 84) which had been
described in Edward the Confessor's grant of
1044-50 as the 'wood, which belongs to Kingsbury,
which is held in common as it was constituted in
olden times'. (fn. 85) By c. 1200 the common wood had
become common pasture, (fn. 86) considerable clearance
presumably having taken place in the meantime.
There were four woods, Oldfield wood, Roberts
grove, Faytes grove, and Honeyslough, on the
demesne land of Kingsbury manor c. 1438. (fn. 87)
Roberts grove was leased out as early as 1370 (fn. 88)
but usually All Souls reserved the wood grounds,
calculated in 1597 as 113 a., (fn. 89) when it leased out the
rest of its lands. Mid-15th-century leases of Kingsbury manor allowed lessees ploughbote, firebote, and
cartbote but reserved all other wood. (fn. 90) For about a
century from 1470 the college found a lucrative
source of income in selling the right to fell wood in
certain fields for two-year periods, providing that
sufficient storers were left and hedges maintained
to protect the young trees. (fn. 91)
In 1580 Robert Hovenden, warden of All Souls,
leased all the college's woods in Middlesex to
Christopher Hovenden, presumably a relative, for
20 years. The college maintained the grant, even
against royal pressure. (fn. 92) In spite of a decision
in 1661 that leasing woods and hedgerows was
contrary to the statutes of the college, (fn. 93) such leases
continued to be made from 1667, usually to the
lessee or under-lessee of the farm-lands. (fn. 94) On other
estates the practice was probably the same. In
1524 the Knights Hospitallers reserved oaks and
elms over 60 years of age but allowed the lessee to
uproot 12 a. of woodland on payment of £10. (fn. 95)
Great trees over 60 years old continued to be
reserved. (fn. 96) The lessee of Freren paid £40 on his
entry for underwood c. 1668. (fn. 97)
During the Middle Ages there were frequent
presentments for illegally taking wood, sometimes
large amounts, like the 26 oaks which Jon Chalkhill
had cut down in 1479. (fn. 98) It was probably during the
16th century, however, that the reduction of woodland reached alarming proportions. Oaks were
felled on Hyde farm in 1551 (fn. 99) and wood on the
borders of Harrow and Kingsbury was cut down by
Joan Lyon in 1593. (fn. 1) Wood mentioned at Tunworth
in 1558 (fn. 2) had been cut down by 1597. (fn. 3) By that date
woodland, mostly in bands around fields, comprised
rather more than 11 per cent of the known area of
Kingsbury. The largest areas were Roberts grove
(7 a.), Dawes (7 a.), Oldfield grove (4½ a.), Crabsland (4½ a.), Hogsheads (3½ a.), and Frowicks
(3½ a.). (fn. 4)
Woodland seems to have been preserved longer
on the demesne lands of Kingsbury and Freren
estates than on the copyhold estates. In 1662 All
Souls owned 730 oaks, 213 elms, and 16 ashes worth
a total of £652. (fn. 5) Trees were cut down on the
Groves estate at the beginning of the 17th century (fn. 6)
and copses were uprooted at Gore field and Framesland between 1706 and 1722. (fn. 7) By 1729-38 woodland
occupied about 4 per cent of the parish and was
mostly concentrated on the demesne lands of Hill
and Pipers farms. (fn. 8) There were still 43 a. of woodland
on All Souls estates (fn. 9) in 1788, 23 a. having recently
been converted to farm-land. The land was thought
to grow very fine timber but to be less productive
than if it had been laid down to grass. (fn. 10)
The woodland on the old demesne lands was
cleared during the next 50 years. Two acres of wood
ground were grubbed up at Hyde farm in 1800, (fn. 11)
some more on Pipers farm in 1803, (fn. 12) and Roberts
wood disappeared between 1800 (fn. 13) and 1819. The
24 a. of woodland which survived in 1819, (fn. 14) were
reduced by 1839 to 4 a., mostly on the Chalkhill
estate. (fn. 15) Many trees remained - in 1843, for
example, there were 65 oaks, 174 elms, 3 ashes and
3 willows on Little Bush farm - but there was no
separate acreage for woodland. (fn. 16)
Mills.
There was a mill rendering 3s. on the land
of Ernulf of Hesdin in 1086. (fn. 17) 'Brentmill', which was
farmed, was recorded from 1461 until 1499, (fn. 18) but it
may have been in Kingsbury, Hendon, or Willesden.
The site of a water-mill was included among
appurtenances of Coffers manor in 1556 (fn. 19) but it, too,
might have lain in Kingsbury or Hendon. There was
a Mill field approximately on the site of the present
Willesden cemetery. (fn. 20) Shortly before 1596 Jon
Chalkhill erected a mill over the Brent to the southwest of Blackbird Hill. (fn. 21) A windmill, which stood
at Redhill from 1675 at least until 1729-38, (fn. 22) had
been blown down by 1754. (fn. 23)
Trade and industry.
Agriculture, the main
occupation throughout most of Kingsbury's history,
was followed, in terms of numbers, by domestic
service. In 1831 there were 30 servants, compared
with 56 agricultural labourers. Twenty years later
the figures were 63 and 100 respectively. Merchants
and professional men numbered 10 in 1831 and
included an architect, a solicitor, a civil engineer, a
civil servant, three landed proprietors and two
'gentlemen' in 1851. (fn. 24)
Apart from charcoal-burners who may have
flourished in Colmans Dean in the early Middle
Ages (fn. 25) and a 'collier' who lived in Kingsbury in
1528-9, (fn. 26) the only crafts were those which sprang
directly from an agricultural community. There
was a tailor in 1615, (fn. 27) a tallow-melter in 1826, and
a plumber in 1835, (fn. 28) and tradesmen included a
milliner, a carriage-painter, a dressmaker, and a
fruit-seller in 1851. (fn. 29) Most of the tradesmen lived
at the Hyde, although there was probably a general
store or grocer's shop at Kingsbury Green. In 1906
it was said that all the local shopping had to be done
at Hendon. (fn. 30) Shops came to Kingsbury with the
development between the World Wars. Kingsbury
and Queensbury Chamber of Commerce was
founded in 1938. (fn. 31) In 1967 there were shopping
centres at Burnt Oak, the Hyde, and the western
part of Kingsbury Road. (fn. 32)
Industry was attracted by government intervention during the First World War, when Kingsbury's
proximity to Hendon Aerodrome made it a centre
of aircraft and munitions production. Edgware
Road provided good communications with the
main market, London, and with the source of much
of the raw material, the Midlands. Labour, mostly
unskilled, was initially brought from more denselypopulated areas in the south by cheap trams and
electric railways and later housed in estates built
on farm-land. After the First World War, new
concerns, mainly motor and engineering factories,
were officially encouraged to employ the many made
idle by the collapse of the war industries. (fn. 33) By 1923
there were 23 factories employing thousands. (fn. 34)
More recently, the high price of land and cramped
conditions have forced many companies farther out
into the country, leaving their sites to small, new
firms making goods such as plastics or electronic
components. There are three industrial areas in
Kingsbury: Edgware Road and its extensions,
Kingsbury Road, and Honeypot Lane.
Messrs. Thrupp & Maberly were making motor
bodies at Shoelands Farm in 1914 (fn. 35) and Messrs.
Handley Page were permitted to erect buildings at
the back of Thrupp & Maberly's factory in 1915. (fn. 36)
The Aircraft Manufacturing Co. (Airco), which had
been founded in 1912 in Hendon, extended its
premises to the Kingsbury side of Edgware Road in
1915 and by the end of the war had acquired all the
area between Hay Lane and Carlisle Road, stretching
westward across Grove Park, which was used as a
take-off field. Airco failed to adapt itself to peacetime production and in 1920 it was sold to the
Birmingham Small Arms Co. (fn. 37) The site was occupied by factories mostly concerned with motor
engineering, including the Daimler Co., Beardmore
Motors, Windover, and Desoutter Bros. (fn. 38) The
American firm of General Motors opened a branch
with 6 employees in Edgware Road in 1923,
beginning the production of American and later of
Vauxhall vehicles in 1928. Frigidaire, a division of
General Motors, occupied part of the premises in
1931 and took over the whole site when Vauxhall
moved to Luton (Beds.) in 1946. By 1969 Frigidaire
occupied 25 a. and employed over 2,000 people in
Kingsbury. (fn. 39)
One of the largest Edgware Road factories was
that of the Phoenix Telephone & Electric Works,
which started in 1912 in Cricklewood, became the
War Department Signal Factory, and moved to
Kingsbury in the early 1920s. (fn. 40) At its height it
employed 1,600 workers but there were only 1,000
at the factory's closure in 1968-9. (fn. 41) In 1920 Thrupp
& Maberly's premises were acquired by Lamson
Paragon, which had been established in the City
of London in 1886 as the Paragon Check Book Co.
The factory was opened in 1922 as Papercraft
Works, manufacturing bags and wrappings but
became inadequate after the Second World War,
when most production was moved to West
Hartlepool (co. Dur.). A new factory and offices
were being built in Carlisle Road in 1969, (fn. 42) when
the old premises were occupied by Hupfield Bros.
and Hedges Reinforced Plastics. (fn. 43) Carlisle Road was
built as a westward extension from Edgware Road
in the 1930s and was occupied mostly by small
factories like Acorn Products Ltd., which was
founded in 1928 and moved from Camden Town in
1936. It changed its name in 1965 to Acorn
Aluminium Products and was closed down in 1968. (fn. 44)
The farthest extension westward of the Edgware
Road industrial complex was the de Havilland works
in Stag Lane. The de Havilland Aircraft Co. Ltd.
was founded in 1920 by a group from Airco which
leased and in 1921 bought the 76-acre site from two
flying instructors. Factory buildings for aircraft
bodies and engines were erected west of Stag Lane,
around the later De Havilland Road, while the rest
of the site, to the north and west, was occupied by
the airfield. The company opened the de Havilland
Aeronautical Technical school in 1928, and by 1929
it employed 1,500 people. In 1932, however,
owing to the depression and to increasing air
congestion, all but 14 a. of the Stag Lane site were
sold to builders and a new factory was opened
at Hatfield (Herts.). Manufacture, notably of
propellers, continued at Stag Lane, and during the
Second World War other factories, including
some in Carlisle Road and Honeypot Lane, were
requisitioned. (fn. 45) The Stag Lane works were acquired
in 1946 by the de Havilland Engine Division, itself
taken over in 1960 by the Hawker Siddeley Group,
which used it as a Rolls Royce works (fn. 46) until the
sale of the site in 1969 to Brixton Estate. (fn. 47)
The second area of industry is at the Kingsbury
Works, south of Kingsbury Road. (fn. 48) The works were
built for the Kingsbury Aviation Co., which was
formed in 1917 as a subsidiary to Barningham Ltd.,
machine tool engineers, to make aeroplanes and
motor-cars. The company occupied 109 a., including
an airfield stretching from Church Lane across
Jubilee park, and in 1918 it employed 800 people
building aero engines. As Kingsbury Engineering
Co., (fn. 49) it tried to transfer to motor-car manufacture
after the war but went into liquidation in 1921. The
works remained empty until 1924, when several
firms were attracted by the improvements to
Kingsbury Road which linked the site with Edgware
Road. The main hangar was taken over by Vanden
Plas (England) 1923 Ltd., which had been formed
after the failure of Vanden Plas (England) 1917
Ltd., the firm at Colindale formed out of Airco.
The new firm built up a reputation for highquality motor-car bodies and gradually extended its
site, purchasing Kingsbury House in 1926. It made
aircraft during the Second World War and reverted
to motor cars in 1946, when it became a subsidiary
of the Austin (later British) Motor Co. In 1969 it
was building Daimlers as part of British Leyland.
With the exception of the Albion Food Mills,
most industry at Kingsbury Works has been
concerned with engineering and most firms have
been small and relatively short-lived. (fn. 50) Firms in the
1920s included the Power Co., Ajax Motor &
Engineering Co., and Fry's Metal Foundry. (fn. 51) The
Power Co., founded in Cricklewood in 1919,
moved to premises in Kingsbury Works in 1924 and
to adjacent premises in 1937, the old factory being
occupied by Linotype-Paul in 1969. (fn. 52) LinotypePaul, formerly known as K. S. Paul & Associates,
has made electronic equipment since it started at
Kingsbury Works in 1961 and by 1969 had three
factories employing over 250 people. (fn. 53) In 1962
Harry Neal, engineers, took over the premises
occupied since 1947 by another engineering
firm, Charles R. Price, and was in 1969 employing
135 people. (fn. 54) India Tyres occupied Semtex's
premises from 1954 until it moved to Park Royal in
1968. (fn. 55) Purdy & McIntosh (Electronic Developments) moved into Scott's Wire Works in 1962,
took over the adjoining factory of K. S. Paul &
Associates in 1967, and moved to Wembley in 1969. (fn. 56)
The third industrial region at Honeypot Lane and
its extensions, Cumberland and Westmoreland roads,
grew up during the 1930s after the building of
Honeypot Lane and of the Stanmore line and after
the opening of Kingsbury and Queensbury stations
in 1932 and 1934. (fn. 57) The largest firm in 1965 was
Rotaprint, which built its first factory in 1936 and
steadily expanded until in 1969 it had 8 factories in
the area and one in east Kingsbury, employing a
total of 1,200 people. (fn. 58) Injection Moulders opened
its first factory in Westmoreland Road in 1935 with
three employees. By 1939 there were 60 employees
and a second factory was opened in Dalston
Gardens, Great Stanmore. Three other factories
followed, the last, opened in 1960, being in
Honeypot Lane. By 1969 the firm, which was taken
over in 1966 by G. K. N. Sankey, employed some
400 people in Kingsbury, although the main plant
had been moved to the Midlands. (fn. 59) The Gee Tee
Co., manufacturers of paper products, which was
founded at King's Cross, London, in 1926, moved
to Colindale Avenue, Hendon, in 1931 and thence
to a new factory in Cumberland Road in 1936.
During the Second World War the factory was
requisitioned for work on torpedoes; although the
company afterwards returned, there was no room
for expansion and in 1966 it moved to Thetford
(Norf.). (fn. 60)
In 1965, 21 firms in Edgware Road employed
5,511 people, 20 firms in Kingsbury Road employed
1,164 people, and 26 firms in Honeypot Lane
employed 3,822 people. (fn. 61)