Heathrow Road, TW6

Road in/near Heathrow, existing until 1944.

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Road · * · TW6 ·
December
5
2021
Heathrow Road is now buried beneath the runways and terminal buildings of Heathrow Airport.

Heathrow - or as two words - Heath Row - was a small hamlet along a minor country lane called Heathrow Road in the ancient parish of Harmondsworth, Middlesex.

This tiny hamlet gave its name to one of the world's most well-known travel hubs.

Heath Row was obliterated by the construction of Heathrow Airport in the mid 1940s. Its farms and houses were demolished, the orchards grubbed up and the market gardens bulldozed. Everything disappeared under concrete and tarmac.

We'll come to the somewhat murky story about how the airport came to be later. But first of all, we'll take a wee tour of rural Heath Row as it was in 1939 at the beginning of the Second World War. We'll meet its people, see its houses and watch a way of life which hadn't changed in decades.

* * *

Note: A lot of the following is based on work by a local historian Philip Sherwood.

The name Heathrow described its layout: a row of houses on a lane by a heath. It was a  hamlet arranged in a straggling fashion largely along a single road - Heathrow Road.

Heathrow Road ran south from the Bath Road at the Three Magpies pub, after a mile turned west. After another mile, you could follow another road - Tithe Barn Road - back north to the Bath Road.

We'll follow this route here - a rather extended crescent. So let’s go back in time...

THE MAGPIES was a cluster of houses at the junction of the Bath Road and Heathrow Road. It's still here at the northern entrance road into the airport but nobody now really knows it by its former name. It was called The Magpies as it had two pubs called after the particular bird: The Three Magpies and the Old Magpies.

The settlement also had a church and a school.

The road layout is somewhat different now but, back in 1939, Heathrow Road - the road we'll virtually walk along - led south from the Bath Road corner where the Three Magpies stood.

Heathrow Road marked a boundary - most of the area to the south and east - the right side of the road originally formed the western edge of Hounslow Heath.

The area to the north and west, the left side of Heathrow Road was originally one of the open fields of the parish and was known as Heathrow Field.

In 1819, this was split into individual fields and many of the buildings and farms arrived to exploit the new fields. The vast majority of the Heath Row settlement was to  the north and west of Heathrow Road.

Saying how interesting the area is to the left of Heathrow Road and how uneventful the area to the right is, is immediately disproved by the first buildings along the road just as we leave The Magpies.

If we turn down Heathrow Road from the Three Magpies we would have passed a row of houses - DOGHURST COTTAGES - on the left, the eastern side.

The cottages were built around 1900 and demolished in the early 1950s. Photographs show them as brick-built 2-storey houses with slate rooves.

Behind Doghurst Cottages was KING'S ARBOUR - small orchard set up before the 19th century. Orchards were a major agricultural activity in the Heathrow area before the building of the airport.

In 1784, within the orchard, General William Roy mapped one end of the first baseline for measuring the distance between the Paris and Greenwich observatories, the first precise distance survey in Britain.

General Roy chose the orchard for his line as it was near-flat, near Hounslow Heath barracks and about 15 miles from the Royal Observatory. The south/east end on the line was the Hampton Poor House. Both ends were marked by vertical wooden pipes which could support flagstaffs.

Let's walk further down Heathrow Road.

Gordon Maxwell in Highwaymen’s Heath published in the 1930s described the general character of the area:

"If you turn down from the Bath Road by the "Three Magpies" you will come upon a road that is as rural as anywhere in England. It is not, perhaps, scenically wonderful but for detachment from London or any urban interests it would be hard to find its equal; there is a calmness and serenity about it that is soothing in a mad rushing world".

Passing in 1939,  a disused nineteenth century non-conformist CHAPEL, the first farmhouse going south along the road was a rather undistinguished one on the left known as BATHURST. In the 1930s, William Howell was recorded living at Bathurst.

Some way behind Bathurst was a neolithic settlement. Alas, all evidence of this too was destroyed in 1944, despite a hurried archaeological wartime survey.

Continuing south, Heathrow Road was renowned for being a riot of wild flowers in the springtime - these included red and white campion, ragged robin, harebells, ox-eye daisies with willow herb and yellow iris beside the numerous ponds.

A little further along on the right-hand side of the road was one of the largest farmhouses; known as HEATHROW HALL. Heathrow Hall was an attractive 18th century building occupied by one of the several branches of the Philp family who farmed extensively in the area. The farmhouse adjoined a typical English farmyard with sheep, pigs and cattle and many old barns.

By the late 19th century, the hamlet of Heath Row had developed three main agricultural settlement clusters with orchards and fields worked by teams of labourers - Heathrow Hall, Perrotts Farm and Perry Oaks. In 1933, Frederick Philp was living at Heathrow Hall.

Almost opposite Heathrow Hall on the east side of the road was a large pond which had probably started life as a gravel pit to obtain roadmaking material. This pond was surrounded by trees and reeds and had a rich variety of wildlife, including kingfishers looking for fish in the pond.

In 1939, the HEATHROW BRICK COMPANY applied to the HM Land Registry to register this land on Heathrow Road. A short-lived brickworks was thus established here

PALMER'S FARM was about a quarter of a mile past the pond on the left. It was an early 17th century farmhouse.

Just after passing Palmer’s Farm, the road forked at Wheatcut Corner.

We'll briefly foray down this other road - CAIN'S LANE.

Isaac Cane owned land on one side of the lane in 1819 - hence its name. The lane led to East Bedfont and was dead straight, having been laid out across the Common by the Enclosure Commissioners in 1819.

Shortly afterwards, a new row of farms was set up on this new farmland along both sides of Cain’s Lane.

On the east side of Cain’s Lane were two twentieth century farmhouses - Shrub End and Croft House - belonging to the Wild family whose family had farmed in the parish for more than three hundred years.

On a corner of their farm and adjoining the road was a corrugated iron mission hall which had been erected in 1901. This belonged to the Baptist Church at Sipson and was the only "church" in Heathrow by 1939.

The Fairey airfield, opened in 1929, was a little further along on the west side of the lane. We'll return to this later and so we'll continue along the lane

By the early 1900s Charles Glenie lived at CAIN'S FARM, keeping a dairy herd of some 20 cows. By the early 1930s, a Mrs Waddell lived at the farm.

Opposite Cain’s Farm,  HEATHROW HOUSE had been built in the 18th century, preceding the lane.

In 1839 Heathrow House was owned by a Richard Langslow, who lived here until the 1850s. By 1872 a market gardener was living there, and thus likely that the house was being used as a farmhouse by then.

Cain’s Lane then continued until it was crossed in about half a mile by the GREAT SOUTH WEST ROAD, which had been constructed as a by-pass to the old Staines Road in 1925. The part of Cain’s Lane beyond the Great South West Road was outside the boundaries of the airport and a small length of its south-east end still exists.

Back to Wheatcut Corner and back onto Heathrow Road which starts to change direction and swing west,

On the left is PERROTT'S FARM.

By 1819, the farm was in the ownership of Martha Parrott. A half-timbered frontage was a feature of the farm buildings, set about 150 feet back from road.

In its final years, Heathrow Farm used the Perrott's Farms buildings.

About 200 yards along Heathrow Road from its junction with Cain’s Lane and on its north side was Heathrow’s only public house, the PLOUGH AND HARROW. a small building of no great distinction dating from the mid-19th century.

Edgar Charles Basham was the final publican at the Plough and Harrow.

In 1933, a local trade directory listed George Dance as living in a small house on Heathrow Road opposite the Plough and Harrow pub. Behind his house was WHEATCUT FIELD, a square area of land.

As an orchard, it formerly belonged to Perrott’s Farm. Then it eventually passed to the Philp family.

In 1938, during the Munich Crisis, the Wild family took possession of this field, grubbed out the orchard and planted vegetables on the land.

Heathrow Road now begins to run into the heart of HEATH ROW hamlet itself. There was some buildings after the pub.

Although most of the agricultural land in West Middlesex was in use for market gardening, mixed farming was also practised at Heath Row.

This made it more attractive than the rest of the locality as mixed farming, unlike market gardening, could in the 1930s exist quite happily with trees and hedgerows.

HEATHROW FARM, the next main building, lay on the north side of Heathrow Road. It grew vegetables and cereals. The Curtis family were the final farmers at Heathrow Farm. It dated from before the 1819 enclosures.

An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Middlesex dated 1937 said of it: Heathrow Farm, house and barns. The House was built late in the 16th century and has 18th-century and later additions on the north side. The house has been refaced in brick. Inside the building one room has an original moulded ceiling-beam. There are also two original doors and a little original panelling with enriched upper panels. The Barn, west. of the house, is of the 17th century, timber-framed and of six bays with a porch. A rather earlier barn adjoins this one on the south west. To the west of the second barn is a third, of four bays, and of late 16th or early 17th-century date.

Although most of the agricultural land in West Middlesex was in use for market gardening, mixed farming was also practised at HEATH ROW. This made it more attractive than the rest of the locality as mixed farming, unlike market gardening, could in the 1930s exist quite happily with trees and hedgerows.

Soon after passing Heathrow Farm was a T-junction where HIGH TREE LANE branched off to the left. This was another of the Enclosure Commissioners 1819 roads leading in a straight line to West Bedfont.

We'll just briefly nip half a mile along High Tree Lane to a ford marked on maps as GOATHOUSE TREE FORD where the road crossed the Duke of Northumberland’s river. This had been constructed in the mid 16th century to increase the water driving Isleworth Mill and to provide water to Syon House. When construction of the airport began in 1944 it was diverted to a more southerly route for about two miles of its length.

Goathouse Tree Ford was its official name but locals called it High Tree River. It was a local beauty spot, popular for picnics, where children could safety paddle in the water and fish for tiddlers. Although the very occasional traffic had to use the ford there was a footbridge high above the river. The banks were well-wooded and on the south side was a riverside walk to Longford, about two miles away.

Coming back along High Tree Lane to rejoin Heathrow Road and almost opposite the junction were two cottages, laying back from the road, besides which was the entrance to PEASE PATH, a public footpath running across the fields in a northerly direction to join the Bath Road.

There were a few more residential buildings housing mainly agricultural workers and, in the 1930s, Heath Row's only shop.

Heath Row had an unusual and continuing agricultural focus being so close to London.

Agriculture was the main source of income. The underlying brickearth and gravel made for reliable farming for fruit trees, vegetables and flowers. The soil held manure well and London markets were in easy reach of these perishable cash crops. Most residents were involved in the large market gardening concerns.

Often several sorts of fruit were mixed in the orchards where a lot of soft fruit was grown, often under the fruit trees. Sometimes vegetables or flowers were grown under the fruit trees. An author in 1907 reported "thousands and thousands" of cherry, plum, pear, apple and damson trees.

After the First World War, the amount of fruit-growing in the area decreased due to demand for more market gardening land. By 1939, less than 10% of the orchard area was left.

Produce was taken to Covent Garden market - 14 miles away - or by smaller growers to Brentford market. Until motor trucks came, Covent Garden was about six hours away at laden horse-and-wagon speed. Goods had to set off before 10pm the previous day to reach the market when it opened at 4am.

Many residents grew produce that they would travel into London with to sell. On the return journey, they collected manure for farming.

Heathrow was away from main roads and this kept it secluded and quiet. Parts of Heath Row held on to old-style mixed farming. It was chosen for the Middlesex area horse-drawn ploughing competitions which needed land which was under stubble after harvest.

Next was PERRY OAKS - a ’most handsome redbrick Elizabethan farmhouse’ runs the description.

Perry Oaks had a gate onto Heathrow Road and also a gate onto Tithe Barn Lane and could almost be regarded as separate from Heath Row.

At the end of its days, Perry Oaks was occupied by Sidney Whittington, from an old local farming family. Perry Oaks had some old barns, a dovecote and also a duck pond. It was considered the best of the many farmsteads of Heath Row

With land sold by the Whittingtons, the Perry Oaks Sludge Works was opened in 1936 by Middlesex County Council. This was 200 acres of land occupied by lagoons in which sludge was allowed to settle under gravity. It sounds horrible but was more attractive than its description.

The lagoons were destroyed in the late 1990s to make way for Heathrow Terminal 5 but the works had become a site of some scientific importance by then. A large number of wading birds were being attracted to the lagoons.

Back at Perry Oaks farm, due to its westerly position, it slightly post-dated the rest of the Heathrow demolition, holding out until the late 1940s.

Heathrow Road ends here. Oaks Road leads south and Tithe Barn Lane leads north. We’ll follow the latter now.

TITHE BARN LANE got its name from a barn half-way along its western side that was reputedly a reconstruction of a northern wing of the Great Barn of Harmondsworth.

The area at the junction of Tithe Barn Lane and the Bath Road was known as SHEPHERD'S POOL, the pool being a large pond completely surrounded by trees. It had probably started life as a gravel pit but had become completely naturalised over 150 years when its name was recorded on the Enclosure Map.

And so we've rejoined the Bath Road midway between two pubs: the “Three Magpies” and the “Peggy Bedford” pubs.

So what happened to the hamlet of Heath Row? We need to retrace our steps to Fairey Aviation's Great West Aerodrome on Cain's Lane.

Since 1915, a company called Fairey Aviation had been flight testing aircraft - then a new thing - at Northolt Aerodrome. The aircraft were designed and manufactured at the Fairey factory in North Hyde Road, Hayes.

In 1928 the Air Ministry gave it notice to cease using Northolt.

Fairey’s chief test pilot, Norman Macmillan, recalled an earlier forced landing and take-off at Heath Row in 1925. He remembered the flatness of the land, and recommended the area as suitable for an aerodrome.

Norman Macmillan flew some aerial surveys of the site - then used for market gardening - and convinced his bosses at Fairey to move here.

Fairey Aviation moved on 4 March 1929. The company bought 71 acres and later purchases gradually enlarged the aerodrome to about 240 acres.

The aerodrome was some three miles by road from Hayes and it was declared operational in June 1930. That year, a hangar was built.

In time, the airfield got called the Great West Aerodrome.

In 1943, the Air Ministry secretly developed plans to requisition the airfield under the Defence of the Realm Act (1939).

The plans were stated as suiting the needs of long-range bombers but they were actually based on confidential recommendations for a new international airport for London, replacing Croydon. The project was headed by Harold Balfour who kept the true nature of it hidden from parliament.

Fairey Aviation had in 1943  bought 10 more acres of land to add to the airfield since it intended to relocate its production facilities from Hayes. The wartime legislation provided no obligation to pay compensation and indeed didn’t at the time.

The whole area - from The Magpies to Heathrow Farm to Perry Oaks; down Cain's Lane to the Great South West Road - the whole area was served with eviction notices in May 1944.

It was wartime. Dissent was frowned upon. It was wartime. There was no need for any public enquiries.

Within a year, everything had been demolished and tarmacked over. The location of generations disappeared in a year. Ceasar's Camp - the iron age site - ended up under a runway. Waste pits filled with struck flint, arrowheads and fragments of pottery were found in a rushed survey

Some of the most fertile land in the London area went under concrete.

By the end of the war, the official plans had already changed from wartime military use (which had not been honest) to overt development into an international airport.

On 1 January 1946, ownership of the site was transferred to the Ministry of Civil Aviation.

On 31 May 1946, the newly named London Airport was officially opened for commercial operations.

Fairey’s 1930 hangar was used as Heathrow Airport’s fire station before being finally demolished.

The development of the airport destroyed the north-south road links between Harmondsworth and Stanwell, between Longford and East Bedfont. The large expanse of the airport created a barrier, so that now there is little sense of a shared community interest between the villages to the north and south of Heathrow.

The very reason for abandoning Croydon Airport - being surrounded by housing - is now similarly true of Heathrow.

 

 




Citation information: Heathrow – the lost hamlet » The Underground Map
Further citations and sources


CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE LOCALITY

Lived here
   
Added: 19 Feb 2022 16:21 GMT   

Harmondsworth (1939 - 1965)
I lived in a house (Lostwithiel) on the Bath Road opposite the junction with Tythe Barn Lane, now a hotel site. Initially, aircraft used one of the diagonal runways directly in line with our house. I attended Sipson Primary School opposite the Three Magpies and celebrated my 21st birthday at The Peggy Bedford in 1959.

Reply
Comment
   
Added: 30 May 2022 19:03 GMT   

The Three Magpies
Row of houses (centre) was on Heathrow Rd....Ben’s Cafe shack ( foreground ) and the Three Magpies pub (far right) were on the Bath Rd

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LATEST LONDON-WIDE CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE PROJECT

Comment
Wendy    
Added: 22 Mar 2024 15:33 GMT   

Polygon Buildings
Following the demolition of the Polygon, and prior to the construction of Oakshott Court in 1974, 4 tenement type blocks of flats were built on the site at Clarendon Sq/Phoenix Rd called Polygon Buildings. These were primarily for people working for the Midland Railway and subsequently British Rail. My family lived for 5 years in Block C in the 1950s. It seems that very few photos exist of these buildings.

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Steve   
Added: 19 Mar 2024 08:42 GMT   

Road construction and houses completed
New Charleville Circus road layout shown on Stanford’s Library Map Of London And Its Suburbs 1879 with access via West Hill only.

Plans showing street numbering were recorded in 1888 so we can concluded the houses in Charleville Circus were built by this date.

Source: Charleville Circus, Sydenham, London

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Comment
Steve   
Added: 19 Mar 2024 08:04 GMT   

Charleville Circus, Sydenham: One Place Study (OPS)
One Place Study’s (OPS) are a recent innovation to research and record historical facts/events/people focused on a single place �’ building, street, town etc.

I have created an open access OPS of Charleville Circus on WikiTree that has over a million members across the globe working on a single family tree for everyone to enjoy, for free, forever.

Source: Charleville Circus, Sydenham, London

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Comment
Charles   
Added: 8 Mar 2024 20:45 GMT   

My House
I want to know who lived in my house in the 1860’s.

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NH   
Added: 7 Mar 2024 11:41 GMT   

Telephone House
Donald Hunter House, formerly Telephone House, was the BT Offices closed in 2000

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Comment
Paul Cox   
Added: 5 Mar 2024 22:18 GMT   

War damage reinstatement plans of No’s 11 & 13 Aldine Street
Whilst clearing my elderly Mothers house of general detritus, I’ve come across original plans (one on acetate) of No’s 11 & 13 Aldine Street. Might they be of interest or should I just dispose of them? There are 4 copies seemingly from the one single acetate example. Seems a shame to just junk them as the level of detail is exquisite. No worries if of no interest, but thought I’d put it out there.

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Comment
Diana   
Added: 28 Feb 2024 13:52 GMT   

New Inn Yard, E1
My great grandparents x 6 lived in New Inn Yard. On this date, their son was baptised in nearby St Leonard’s Church, Shoreditch

Source: BDM London, Cripplegate and Shoreditch registers written by church clerk.

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Comment
Vic Stanley   
Added: 24 Feb 2024 17:38 GMT   

Postcose
The postcode is SE15, NOT SE1

Reply

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Envoy Roundabout, TW6
Esher Crescent, TW6 Esher Crescent is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Esher Crescent, TW6
Evelyn Way, TW16 Evelyn Way is a road in the TW16 postcode area
Evelyn Way, TW16
Exeter Road, TW6 Exeter Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Exeter Road, TW6
Exeter Way, TW6 Exeter Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Exeter Way, TW6
Fairlawns, TW16 Fairlawns is a location in London
Fairlawns, TW16
Felix Lane, TW17 Felix Lane is a road in the TW16 postcode area
Felix Lane, TW17
Field View, TW13 Field View is a road in the TW13 postcode area
Field View, TW13
Finch Drive, TW14 Finch Drive is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Finch Drive, TW14
Foxwood Close, TW13 Foxwood Close is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Foxwood Close, TW13
French Street, TW16 French Street is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
French Street, TW16
Glebeland Gardens, TW17 Glebeland Gardens is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Glebeland Gardens, TW17
Gloucester Road, TW13 Gloucester Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Gloucester Road, TW13
Gordon Road, TW17 Gordon Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Gordon Road, TW17
Green Way, TW16 Green Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district. It is a housing estate that was built in the 1970s and was previously Gravel Pit Lane
Green Way, TW16
Hampton Business Park, TW13 A street within the TW13 postcode
Hampton Business Park, TW13
Hampton Road West, TW13 Hampton Road West is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Hampton Road West, TW13
Hampton Road, TW16 Hampton Road is a location in London
Hampton Road, TW16
Harfield Road, TW16 Harfield Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Harfield Road, TW16
Hatton Road North, TW6 Hatton Road North is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Hatton Road North, TW6
Hatton Road, TW14 Hatton Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Hatton Road, TW14
Heath Row Cottages, TW6 These were a block of eight small buildings on the south side of Heathrow Road
Heath Row Cottages, TW6
Heathrow Airport Spur Road, TW6 Heathrow Airport Spur Road is a road in the UB7 postcode area
Heathrow Airport Spur Road, TW6
Heathrow Boulevard, UB7 Heathrow Boulevard is one of the streets of London in the UB7 postal area
Heathrow Boulevard, UB7
Heathrow Cargo Tunnel, TW6 The Heathrow Cargo Tunnel is a road tunnel that serves London Heathrow Airport
Heathrow Cargo Tunnel, TW6
Heathrow Close, UB7 Heathrow Close is a road in the UB7 postcode area
Heathrow Close, UB7
Heathrow Road, TW6 Heathrow Road is now buried beneath the runways and terminal buildings of Heathrow Airport
Heathrow Road, TW6
Hedges Close, TW14 A street within the TW14 postcode
Hedges Close, TW14
Heron Way, TW14 Heron Way is a road in the TW14 postcode area
Heron Way, TW14
High Tree Lane, TW6 High Tree Lane led from Heathrow Road to Goathouse Ford
High Tree Lane, TW6
Hitchcock Close, TW17 Hitchcock Close is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Hitchcock Close, TW17
Horsham Road, TW14 Horsham Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Horsham Road, TW14
Hounslow Road, TW14 Hounslow Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Hounslow Road, TW14
Inner Ring East, TW6 Inner Ring East is a major Heathrow route (Heathrow)
Inner Ring East, TW6
Inner Ring West, TW6 Inner Ring West is a road serving the central area of Heathrow Airport
Inner Ring West, TW6
Jessiman Terrace, TW17 Jessiman Terrace is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Jessiman Terrace, TW17
Kempton Avenue, TW16 Kempton Avenue is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Kempton Avenue, TW16
Kilross Road, TW14 Kilross Road is a road in the TW14 postcode area
Kilross Road, TW14
Kingsmead Avenue, TW16 Kingsmead Avenue is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Kingsmead Avenue, TW16
Kingston Avenue, TW14 Kingston Avenue is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Kingston Avenue, TW14
Korda Close, TW17 Korda Close is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Korda Close, TW17
Laytons Lane, TW16 Laytons Lane is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Laytons Lane, TW16
Lewin Terrace, TW14 Lewin Terrace is a road in the TW14 postcode area
Lewin Terrace, TW14
Lindsay Drive, TW17 Lindsay Drive is a road in the TW17 postcode area
Lindsay Drive, TW17
Littleton Lane, TW17 Littleton Lane is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Littleton Lane, TW17
Longleat Way, TW14 Longleat Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Longleat Way, TW14
Lower Hampton Road, TW16 Lower Hampton Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Lower Hampton Road, TW16
Lower Hampton Road, TW16 Lower Hampton Road is a road in the KT12 postcode area
Lower Hampton Road, TW16
Lower Hampton Road, TW16 Lower Hampton Road is a road in the TW12 postcode area
Lower Hampton Road, TW16
Lower Hampton Road, TW16 Lower Hampton Road is a road in the KT8 postcode area
Lower Hampton Road, TW16
Lower Sunbury Road, TW12 Lower Sunbury Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Lower Sunbury Road, TW12
Main Street, TW13 Main Street is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Main Street, TW13
Manygate Lane, TW17 Manygate Lane is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Manygate Lane, TW17
Maple Industrial Estate, TW13 Commercial area
Maple Industrial Estate, TW13
Maple Way, TW13 Maple Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Maple Way, TW13
Market garden house (north side), TW6 A market garden house, north side, George Dance and Sons lived there, according to Philip Sherwood
Market garden house (north side), TW6
Market garden house, TW6 According to Philip Sherwood, a small market garden house nearly opposite the Plough and Harrow. John Dance lived there
Market garden house, TW6
Markway House, TW16 Markway House is a location in London
Markway House, TW16
Maryland Way, TW16 Maryland Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Maryland Way, TW16
Marys Close, TW16 Marys Close is a location in London
Marys Close, TW16
Mccarthy Road, TW13 Mccarthy Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Mccarthy Road, TW13
Mead Lane, TW17 Mead Lane is a road in the TW17 postcode area
Mead Lane, TW17
Moat Side, TW13 Moat Side is a road in the TW13 postcode area
Moat Side, TW13
Mono Lane, TW13 Mono Lane is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Mono Lane, TW13
Nelson Road, TW6 Nelson Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Nelson Road, TW6
Nene Road, TW6 Nene Road connects Bath Road and the Northern Perimeter Road
Nene Road, TW6
New Chapel Square, TW13 A street within the TW13 postcode
New Chapel Square, TW13
Newall Road, TW6 Newall Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Newall Road, TW6
Newton Road, TW6 Newton Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Newton Road, TW6
Nobel Drive, TW6 Nobel Drive is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Nobel Drive, TW6
Northern Perimeter Road West, TW6 Northern Perimeter Road West is part of a series of roads running along the perimeters of Heathrow Airport
Northern Perimeter Road West, TW6
Northern Perimeter Road, TW6 Northern Perimeter Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Northern Perimeter Road, TW6
Northern Perimeter Road, TW6 Northern Perimeter Road is a road in the UB7 postcode area
Northern Perimeter Road, TW6
Northolt Road, TW6 Northolt Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Northolt Road, TW6
Northrop Road, TW6 Northrop Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Northrop Road, TW6
Northwood Road, TW6 Northwood Road is a road in the UB7 postcode area
Northwood Road, TW6
Nursery Close, TW14 Nursery Close is a road in the TW14 postcode area
Nursery Close, TW14
Nursery Road, TW17 Nursery Road is a road in the TW17 postcode area
Nursery Road, TW17
Oaks Road, TW6 Oaks Road ran from Perry Oaks to Stanwell
Oaks Road, TW6
Oberon Way, TW17 Oberon Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Oberon Way, TW17
Old Halliford Place, TW17 Old Halliford Place is a location in London
Old Halliford Place, TW17
Old Orchard, TW16 Old Orchard is a road in the TW16 postcode area
Old Orchard, TW16
Orchard House, TW16 Orchard House is located on Thames Street
Orchard House, TW16
Page Road, TW14 Page Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Page Road, TW14
Pantiles Court, TW16 Pantiles Court is a block on Thames Street
Pantiles Court, TW16
Parkwood Grove, TW16 Parkwood Grove is a location in London
Parkwood Grove, TW16
Pates Manor Drive, TW14 Pates Manor Drive is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Pates Manor Drive, TW14
Pearmain Close, TW17 Pearmain Close is a location in London
Pearmain Close, TW17
Pease Path, TW6 Pease Path was a semi-formal road in the Heathrow area prior to 1944
Pease Path, TW6
Pennards, TW16 Pennards is a location in London
Pennards, TW16
Pier Road, TW14 Pier Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Pier Road, TW14
Pinglestone Close, UB7 Pinglestone Close is a road in the UB7 postcode area
Pinglestone Close, UB7
Planet Centre, TW14 A street within the TW14 postcode
Planet Centre, TW14
Polar Park, UB7 A street within the UB7 postcode
Polar Park, UB7
Poplar Way, TW13 Poplar Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Poplar Way, TW13
Priory Close, TW16 Priory Close is a road in the TW16 postcode area
Priory Close, TW16
Queens Road, TW13 Queens Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Queens Road, TW13
Raeford House Pier Road, TW14 Raeford House Pier Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Raeford House Pier Road, TW14
Railway Terrace, TW13 A street within the TW13 postcode
Railway Terrace, TW13
Raleigh Way, TW13 Raleigh Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Raleigh Way, TW13
Ravenscourt, TW16 Ravenscourt is a road in the TW16 postcode area
Ravenscourt, TW16
Rex House, TW13 A street within the TW13 postcode
Rex House, TW13
Richmond Avenue, TW14 Richmond Avenue is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Richmond Avenue, TW14
River Ash Estate, TW17 Commercial area
River Ash Estate, TW17
River Gardens Business Centre, TW14 River Gardens Business Centre is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
River Gardens Business Centre, TW14
River Gardens, TW14 River Gardens is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
River Gardens, TW14
River Walk, TW16 River Walk is a road in the TW16 postcode area
River Walk, TW16
Rivermead House, TW16 Rivermead House can be found on Thames Street
Rivermead House, TW16
Riverside, Riverside lies within the postcode
Riverside,
Rookeries Close, TW13 Rookeries Close is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Rookeries Close, TW13
Row, TW16 Row is a location in London
Row, TW16
Sanctuary Road, TW6 Sanctuary Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Sanctuary Road, TW6
Schenker House, TW6 Schenker House is a block on Scylla Road
Schenker House, TW6
School Walk, TW16 School Walk is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
School Walk, TW16
Seaford Road, TW6 Seaford Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Seaford Road, TW6
Sealand Road, TW6 A street within the TW6 postcode
Sealand Road, TW6
Shakespeare Avenue, TW13 Shakespeare Avenue is a road in the TW13 postcode area
Shakespeare Avenue, TW13
Shakespeare Avenue, TW14 Shakespeare Avenue is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Shakespeare Avenue, TW14
Shakespeare Way, TW13 Shakespeare Way is a road in the TW13 postcode area
Shakespeare Way, TW13
Sheffield Road, TW6 Sheffield Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Sheffield Road, TW6
Shepherd Close, TW13 Shepherd Close is a road in the TW13 postcode area
Shepherd Close, TW13
Shepherds Close, TW17 Shepherds Close is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Shepherds Close, TW17
Shepperton Court Drive, TW17 Shepperton Court Drive is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Shepperton Court Drive, TW17
Shepperton Health Centre, TW17 Shepperton Health Centre is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Shepperton Health Centre, TW17
Shepperton Road, TW17 Shepperton Road is a road in the TW17 postcode area
Shepperton Road, TW17
Shoreham Road East, TW6 Shoreham Road East is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Shoreham Road East, TW6
Shoreham Road West, TW6 Shoreham Road West is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Shoreham Road West, TW6
Snowdon Road, TW6 Snowdon Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Snowdon Road, TW6
South Gate Avenue, TW13 South Gate Avenue is a road in the TW13 postcode area
South Gate Avenue, TW13
South Road, TW13 South Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
South Road, TW13
South Road, TW13 South Road is a road in the TW12 postcode area
South Road, TW13
Southampton Road East, TW6 Southampton Road East is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Southampton Road East, TW6
Southampton Road West, TW6 Southampton Road West is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Southampton Road West, TW6
Southampton Road, TW6 A street within the TW6 postcode
Southampton Road, TW6
Southern Perimeter Road, TW19 Southern Perimeter Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district (Heathrow)
Southern Perimeter Road, TW19
Southern Perimeter Road, TW19 Southern Perimeter Road is a road in the TW19 postcode area (Heathrow)
Southern Perimeter Road, TW19
Southern Perimeter Road, TW6 Southern Perimeter Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Southern Perimeter Road, TW6
Southern Perimeter Road, TW6 Southern Perimeter Road is a road in the TW14 postcode area
Southern Perimeter Road, TW6
Southgate Avenue, TW13 Southgate Avenue is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Southgate Avenue, TW13
Space Waye Pier Road, TW14 Space Waye Pier Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Space Waye Pier Road, TW14
Spelthorne Lane, TW17 Spelthorne Lane is a road in the TW17 postcode area
Spelthorne Lane, TW17
Spelthorne, TW17 Spelthorne is a location in London
Spelthorne, TW17
Springfield Grove, TW16 Springfield Grove is a road in the TW16 postcode area
Springfield Grove, TW16
St. Dunstans Road, TW4 A street within the TW4 postcode
St. Dunstans Road, TW4
St. Lawrence Business Centre, TW13 A street within the TW13 postcode
St. Lawrence Business Centre, TW13
St. Marys Close, TW16 St. Marys Close is a location in London
St. Marys Close, TW16
Stansted Road, TW6 Stansted Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Stansted Road, TW6
Stanwell Road, TW6 Stanwell Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Stanwell Road, TW6
Stanwell Road, TW6 Stanwell Road is a road in the TW19 postcode area
Stanwell Road, TW6
Station Approach, TW13 A street within the TW13 postcode
Station Approach, TW13
Station Parade, TW14 Station Parade is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Station Parade, TW14
Status Park, TW6 A street within the UB3 postcode
Status Park, TW6
Stirling Road, TW6 Stirling Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area (Heathrow)
Stirling Road, TW6
Stranraer Way, TW6 Stranraer Way is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Stranraer Way, TW6
Studios Road, TW17 Studios Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Studios Road, TW17
Sunbury Court Mews, TW16 Sunbury Court Mews is a road in the TW16 postcode area
Sunbury Court Mews, TW16
Sunbury Way, TW13 Sunbury Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Sunbury Way, TW13
Sunna Gardens, TW16 Sunna Gardens is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Sunna Gardens, TW16
Sunrise Close, TW13 Sunrise Close is a road in the TW13 postcode area
Sunrise Close, TW13
Swan Close, TW13 Swan Close is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Swan Close, TW13
Swan Walk, TW17 Swan Walk is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Swan Walk, TW17
Swansea Road, TW6 Swansea Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Swansea Road, TW6
Swindon Road, TW6 Swindon Road is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Swindon Road, TW6
Sydney Road, TW13 Sydney Road is a road in the TW14 postcode area
Sydney Road, TW13
Tanglyn Avenue, TW17 Tanglyn Avenue is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Tanglyn Avenue, TW17
Tawny Close, TW13 A street within the TW13 postcode
Tawny Close, TW13
Terminal 5 Roundabout, TW6 Terminal 5 Roundabout is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Terminal 5 Roundabout, TW6
Thames Street, TW16 Thames Street is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Thames Street, TW16
The Avenue, TW16 The Avenue is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
The Avenue, TW16
The Crescent, TW17 The Crescent is a road in the TW17 postcode area
The Crescent, TW17
The Drive, TW14 The Drive is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
The Drive, TW14
The Grove Bath Road, UB7 The Grove Bath Road is one of the streets of London in the UB7 postal area
The Grove Bath Road, UB7
The Island, UB7 A street within the UB7 postcode
The Island, UB7
The Spinney, TW16 The Spinney is a road in the TW16 postcode area
The Spinney, TW16
Tilley Road, TW13 Tilley Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Tilley Road, TW13
Tithe Barn Lane, TW6 Tithe Barn Lane ran under what became Heathrow Airport
Tithe Barn Lane, TW6
Trees, TW16 Trees is a location in London
Trees, TW16
Two modern houses, TW6 Two modern houses, west side. In the 1930s, Mr Ward (headmaster at Harmondsworth school) lived there
Two modern houses, TW6
Vanguard House, TW6 Vanguard House is a block on Vanguard Way
Vanguard House, TW6
Vanguard Way, TW6 Vanguard Way is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Vanguard Way, TW6
Victoria Road, TW13 Victoria Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Victoria Road, TW13
Vineyard Road, TW13 Vineyard Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Vineyard Road, TW13
Viscount Way, TW6 Viscount Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Viscount Way, TW6
Wallace Close, TW17 Wallace Close is a road in the TW17 postcode area
Wallace Close, TW17
West Way, TW17 West Way is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
West Way, TW17
Westbourne Road, TW13 Westbourne Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Westbourne Road, TW13
Willow House, TW14 A street within the TW14 postcode
Willow House, TW14
Wirra Way, TW6 Wirra Way is a road in the TW6 postcode area
Wirra Way, TW6
Wood Road, TW17 Wood Road is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Wood Road, TW17
Wyatt Close, TW13 Wyatt Close is one of the streets in the Twickenham postal district
Wyatt Close, TW13
York Place, TW13 A street within the TW13 postcode
York Place, TW13
York Way, TW13 York Way is a road in the TW13 postcode area
York Way, TW13

NEARBY PUBS
General Roy
General Roy
Kings Arms
Kings Arms
Leon Restaurant
Leon Restaurant
London’s Pride (airside)
London’s Pride (airside)
Old Magpies The Old Magpies was a pub which was situated on the Bath Road.
Old Magpies
Plough and Harrow The Plough and Harrow was situated on Heathrow Road between the junctions of Cain’s Lane and High Tree Lane.
Plough and Harrow
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
The Flower Pot
The Flower Pot
The Goat - Stonehouse Pizza & Carvery
The Goat - Stonehouse Pizza & Carvery
The Grey Horse
The Grey Horse
The Three Magpies The Three Magpies is the last pub left on the Bath Road.
The Three Magpies
The White Horse Pub
The White Horse Pub
White Horse Inn
White Horse Inn


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