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Hayes
The first mention of Hayes as a local place name was in 1177.
It is thought to mean “The rough ground covered with brushwood
and undergrowth”.
Until the twentieth century Hayes was a small rural village
clustered around the church and Hayes Place. As at West
Wickham, the arrival of the railway in 1882 had very little
effect resulting only on a few houses along what is now Bourne
Way.
By 1923, new houses had begun to appear at the far north end
of the parish as Edwardian Bromley
spilled over the boundary and spread along Hayes Road, but it
was not until 1927 that changes began to affect the village
itself. Parts of the Norman estates along Hayes Lane were sold
off for building, but most significantly the death of Sir Everard
Hambro of Hayes Place in 1925 caused the break up of that estate
and those at Pickhurst soon followed.
This, coinciding with the electrification of the railway to
London in 1926, made Hayes a very desirable building location.
Development was carried out by a mixture of large builders such
as Henry Boot of Sheffield and local ones such as George Spencer
of West Wickham. It continued throughout the 1930s.
Following the war the area north of the village was developed
in two stages; first the Hayes Place council estate in the forties
and fifties and later from 1960, the modernist Hayesford Park
estate, designed by the Building Design Partnership.
Subsequent development has been mainly infilling and building
replacement.
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C.
A. Smallbone Ltd.,
Hayes Street,
Hayes, c. 1933 |
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Odeon
Cinema,
Station Approach,
Hayes, 1948 |
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Station
Approach,
Hayes, 1974 |
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