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Plumstead,
1800 – 1900:
The Building of a London Suburb
Page 1
by Barbara Ludlow
Before Development:
A Place of Little Consequence
In 1794 John Boydell produced two volumes of aquatints showing
interesting views of places alongside the River Thames. He included
a map of towns and villages close to the river. Plumstead has
no place on his map.
Deptford, Greenwich, Charlton, Woolwich and Erith all appear
and, further inland, Lewisham, Eltham, Shooters Hill, Crayford
and Dartford fill up the "metropolitan" part of North
West Kent. But what happened to the village of Plumstead?
There is surely no way that Boydell’s mapmaker could have been
unaware of the small village standing on the edge of many acres
of marsh land. Behind it, to the south, the ground rose steeply
to Plumstead Common, which stretched to the heights of Shooters
Hill and the Dover Road.
The one thing that Plumstead did not possess was any building
of great architectural or historical value. The “Great House”
on the corner of Riverdale Road and the High Street was the
most impressive building in the village but hardly ranked against
the grand country houses of Greenwich or Blackheath. Lesnes
Abbey, close to the village, was not excavated until the twentieth
century and was actually in the Parish of Erith.
However,
not all 18th century mapmakers ignored Plumstead. It is quite
clearly marked on Andrews, Dury and Herbert’s map of 1794 showing
the small village built around St. Nicholas Church and some
thin development westwards along Plumstead High Street towards
Woolwich.
The ordnance factory housed in the “Warren” at Woolwich (later
the Royal Arsenal) had not yet spread over the vast acres of
Plumstead Marshes. Plumstead Common and the slopes of Shooters
Hill contained very few houses. The “Pott Houses” of the brick
makers were the most dominant feature on the western side of
the common.
Fishing, farming and fruit growing had kept the people of Plumstead
busy for centuries. After all, the name “Plumstead” means “place
where the plum trees grow” and the site may well have been chosen
by Roman Londoners for out-of-town orchards where the fruits
that they had introduced to this country could be grown.
Long after the Romans departed Plumstead had a moment of glory
when the body of Archbishop Alfege, murdered at Greenwich in
1012, was taken from St. Paul’s Cathedral in London for reburial
in Canterbury Cathedral. The funeral procession used the lower
road from Southwark and so passed through Plumstead Village.
It is not difficult to imagine the excitement that day in June
1023 and the many tales told about it.
Many centuries later W. T. Vincent, editor of the Kentish Independent
newspaper, printed his memories of a Plumstead, which had rapidly
changed in his lifetime. “An occasion of sad memories of pleasant
walks along the old lane from the top of Sandy Hill to the Royal
Military Academy, of the gates and stiles at either end, of
the blackberry bushes across the fields … the wild rose hedge,
the nightingales in the West Lane woods and the purling stream
now buried under the Lord Clyde Tavern.”
There were two major events that influenced the early 19th
century development of Plumstead.
The establishment of a major ordnance factory in east Woolwich
at the end of the 17th century and its inevitable growth over
the years must be seen as the prime reason for Plumstead’s 19th
century population explosion. The impact of Britain’s imperialist
dreams demanded an ever-growing fighting force armed with the
latest weapons.
At the same time North American moves towards independence produced
a major war, which resulted in the need to expand the “Warren.”
The largest threat to Britain, however, was Napoleon and his
declared intention of becoming the ruler of Europe. By the time
the Napoleonic Wars were underway expansion inside the “Warren”
was impossible and the Board of Ordnance leased about 150 acres
of Plumstead marshland alongside the “Warren.” In 1805 King
George III recognised the importance of his Woolwich works and
officially changed the name to the “Royal Arsenal".
With the introduction of new methods and machinery, brought
about by the advances in industrial manufacture, the workforce
would be sure to increase. The long march of the Arsenal eastwards
had begun. The Pattisons of Burrage House, which stood close
to the eastern boundary of Woolwich, realised that their Plumstead
lands would prove to be more valuable than they had imagined.
In Merthyr Tydfil the 19th century opened with the trial of
the first locomotive. A Trevithick steam engine dragged wagons
loaded with bar iron and seventy people for some miles. The
whole adventure was deemed a success. The “railway age” was
launched and the first railway to be built in London, the London
to Greenwich, opened in two stages between 1836 and 1838. The
line was unable to progress beyond Greenwich due to unacceptable
plans to take the train line through Greenwich Park.
In 1844 the London, Chatham and North Kent Railway Company started
building their line from London to Woolwich via Blackheath.
Very quickly this was extended to serve the North Kent riverside
towns, Canterbury and Dover. Woolwich was opened up and so was
the western part of Plumstead.
Once again the Pattison family made money from selling “Pattison’s
Sandpit” for the site of the new Woolwich Arsenal station. This
opened in 1849. The relatively newly built Burrage House on
the low slopes of Plumstead Common was demolished, and a strip
of land used to take the railway line from Woolwich Arsenal
Station onwards to North Kent. The first major housing development
in West Plumstead was served by Woolwich Arsenal station. There
was no station in Plumstead until 1859.
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