East
Finchley's
Elegant Past
The first wave of London expansion to hit EF, in the 1800’s,
was to prove short lived. Where elegant houses were to stand in capacious
grounds, the memories now live on only in street names.
The houses of the affluent normally seek the higher slopes for reasons
of health and aesthetics and EF was no exception. The merits of the
south-facing slopes of the Finchley triangle along East End Road and
Fortis Green were noted as early as 1798 by John Middleton’s
Agriculture of Middlesex .. “from the southeast corner of the
common, there is a most enchanting prospect... ..there are many points
in this situation, such as deserve to be adorned with elegant villas”
The most notable property, dating from the 1600’s but considerably
extended in this period, was Elm House, almost opposite the Five Bells.
Its most celebrated occupant was Anthony Salvin, an architect of national
renown, whose restorations included Alnwick and Norwich Castles, parts
of the Tower, and Thoresby Hall. Salvin and his family were largely
responsible for the construction of EF’s parish church of All
Saints and the village school on East End Road in the 1840’s.
Elm House, later renamed Elmhurst, survived until the war. Part of
the property is now a green space. Another occupant was Samuel Pulham,
a Mayor of Finchley, and it his name, rather than Salvin’s which
has been remembered. Salvin is remembered indirectly in Springcroft
Avenue, as we shall see in a later chapter.
Further along East end Road was Park Farm, later used by George
Sanger to winter his circus animals until his murder there in
1911. Between
there and Elmhurst was Knightons, opposite Church Lane, and the only
surviving building of the period, Fairacres. Between Elmhurst and
the Vicarage (Cedar Drive) were some smaller properties and one
Cromwell Hall, set back a little down the slope in large grounds.
Fortis Green
To my untrained eye, parts of Church Lane and Fortis Green remain the
most varied and attractive parts of the area.
Development of Fortis Green from a countryside track began with the
enclosure of the commons it crossed. The area of Hornsey Common fronting
the track was divided into narrow plots and used to commute the Common’s
copyholder’s rights in 1815. Building started soon after, effectively
augmenting the hamlet of Fortis Green around the Clissold Arms. Meanwhile
development from the EF end began in 1820 when the Bishop sold off
a large south facing field on the Barclay’s Bank corner for development.
Known collectively as Park Place there were four grand houses and numbering
from the High Road these were Fairlawn, Cranleigh, Park Hall and Summerlee
respectively. Then, in 1835, just across the border in Hornsey, architect
and EF resident Anthony Salvin and his brother in law purchased a field
and built two elegant Italianate villas Springcroft and Colethall (later
Uplands), the latter being featured in Gardener’s Magazine at
the time. Development of the adjacent plot, behind older houses on
Fortis Green, to be known as the Harwell Estate, began in 1853 and
marks the transition toward the methods which were to be used subsequently
for the development of all EF’s remaining open spaces. The estate
was laid out with roads and divided into small plots for sale in blocks
to local builders for speculative ventures. Starting before the advent
of the railway, development proved slow and piecemeal, which is why
this estate has such a wide variety of architectural styles. At that
time, Southern Road went nowhere and even today you can see the irregular
joins at each end. Sometimes several plots were purchased for one dwelling
(see Beechwood); some of the plots in Southern Road have since been
turned round to front Eastern and Western Roads.
The coming of the railway in 1867 increased the pressure for smaller
properties, but that’s another story.
Acknowledgements: The Growth of Muswell Hill by Jack Whitehead.