East Finchley 'Walks'
This walk from East Finchley station follows the ancient track which
led along the edge of the common. Turn left out of the station and
make
your way round the back of MacDonalds HQ.
150 years ago we would have left the High Road at the Mutton Brook
and cut diagonally across the Dirthouse field and East End Road to
Market Place, formerly Hog Market. On the left were shops, Prospect
Place (1825) and the George public house. To the right was open field
as far as the High Road, and Chapel Street, since lost in the redevelopment.
Facing us, where the road swings right was a triangular green in front
of a row of houses on the Pound. All this is now incorporated into
the shrubbery and children's playground.
Continuing through the playground
we pass first to our right the site of the Post Office, then a field
and an imposing row of cottages to the left. Past the Constitutional
Club the path becomes the Walks and swings leftish across the former
grounds of Park Gate towards what was the triangle at the bottom
of Church Lane, formerly Bull Lane. The southern leg of this triangle,
just before the Windsor Castle pub, has disappeared. To the right
was
the common. The route continues along King Street and a short passage
to the Red Lion pub on Red Lion Hill, an original settlement called
Cuckolds' Haven. Between road and passage was the Methodist chapel
and school.
Take the left path up to Oak Road along the edge of the housing estate.
When the road bears right, follow the old path straight on in front
of the new housing development. Before it was even a Lucas factory
site, there were two large houses, Oak Lodge and the even grander "Grange",
built for Edward Sayer a well known East Finchley resident. Follow
Tarling Road and the narrow path to the foot bridge across the North
Circular Road. Here the route is blocked and we follow the NCR eastwards
to cross the High Road by the Territorial Army hall. South of the intersection
can be seen the location of what was the only settlement on the common
itself, Brownswell, where the Strawberry Vale Brook flowed east to
form the northern boundary of our parish.
Start of 'The Walks' looking north, with Constitutional
club on left. Our route passes the glebe lands, possibly the last remaining
fragment
of the common. Take the path along the edge of the fields to Summers
Lane, then right to pick up Nursery Approach at the end of which
is Coppetts Wood, marking the Eastern edge of Finchley and the Common.
Turn south along the former northern part of Coppetts road before
the NCR development, then cross the footbridge to join present day
Coppetts road. Before Trott Road, turn right into the track leading
to the sports ground. The fence along the right of the field marks
the boundary of Anglo Saxon Finchley and the old Common, only formally
agreed with Hornsey in 1816. If you spot a small cast iron boundary
marker, marked FP for Finchley parish, let the Archer know. Continue
up through the coppiced hornbeam of Coldfall Wood and exit at the
south west corner into Creighton Avenue, cut through the wood in
1899, which at that time stretched to Fortis Green. The old boundary,
marked by poplars, continues between the gardens of Church Vale and
Durham Road. Take the passageway into Durham Road, then to Summerlee
Avenue, crossing the old boundary of the Bishops Park into Cherry
Tree Wood and back to the station. 