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Charlton
Charlton,
although a London suburb retains some of its principal village
characteristics. The manor house, parish church, and Bugle Horn
pub grouped around the remnants of the village green. The place
name in Anglo Saxon means "farmstead of the freemen or
peasants".
The earliest traces of a community at Charlton were found in
what is now Maryon Park where an Iron Age hillfort was excavated
in the 1920s. Within the hill fort was found evidence of earlier
stone age people.
The present village is beautifully situated on high ground
overlooking the Thames. At the heart of the community is Charlton
House, its former manor house. Built in 1607 - 1612 by Adam
Newton (died 1630) this Jacobean mansion is a unique survival
in London.
Adjacent to the house are the near contemporary parish church,
the original stables, the very fine summer house, and Charlton
Park the surviving part of the original grounds.
In Charlton Road a weather boarded seventeenth century cottage
(Poplar Cottage) remains as a reminder of Charlton’s rural past.
Although there was Victorian suburban development on the slopes
from Charlton Road to the Woolwich Road, Charlton retained the
appearance of a quiet Kentish village until the 1930s.
Development had also taken place at the bottom of the hill on
the marshes where New Charlton grew up around the burgeoning
new industries along the riverside in the nineteenth century.
As a refection of its changing identity the newly developing
suburb acquired its own professional football club, Charlton
Athletic F.C. Its proud and committed supporters were first
rewarded in 1947 when they won the FA Cup and, very much later,
the club gained the distinction of being promoted to the Premier
League.
Large housing developments, both private and municipal like
the Guild Estate, Springfield, and Cherry Orchard, joined the
small, attractive Kentish village to its larger neighbours,
Blackheath and Woolwich.
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