By the early Middle Ages the scattered Saxon settlements had coalesced into the four villages of Streatham. Through the imposition of the feudal system, land holdings and villages were turned into well-organised manorial estates, each controlled by a Lord of the Manor through his manor court. Within the parish three manors were established which, during the Middle Ages, were held by the church. The largest of these manors was Tooting Bec, which included the estate of Streatham and part of Balham. The manor of South Streatham was the detached part of the Lambeth manor of Vauxhall. Leigham Court manor, which covered most of the Streatham Hill area, also included the remainder of Balham and the detached portion of the parish situated at Knight's Hill. Working under the restraints of the feudal system a majority of villagers maintained a livelihood through agriculture. Others found work in local industries such as woodland management and tile-making, whilst the general prosperity of the community was assured by its nearness to the London markets and from trade and services generated by travellers passing through the parish. Although the population of the parish during the Middle Ages is not known, a reasonable estimate would be a few hundred or so people inhabiting the wooden-framed tenements of the four villages. However, there is some evidence to suggest a drop in the local population following the Black Death of 1349, an event which did much to remove the shackles of feudalism and to improve the status of many Streatham tenants by the reduction of their feudal obligations. A further indication of the well being and wealth of the parish was reflected in work done to the parish church, especially during the mid 14th century when the church appears to have been enlarged with the building of a tower, and by endowments and gifts given to the church prior to the reformation of the 16th century.
Although the parish church lay within the village of Streatham, the centre of local activity was at Tooting Bec, the largest of the parish villages. Tooting Bec appears to have been a planned linear village, probably laid out by the monks of Bec following their acquisition of the estate. Most of the tenements and cottages were concentrated along the north end of Upper Tooting Road, with Glenburnie Road marking the Back Lane to the village fields. The status of the village was enhanced by the existence of a moated manor house, attendant vineyards and archery butts, and by its favourable position alongside the busy highway of Stane Street. Northwards along the highway, and in marked contrast to Tooting Bec lay Balham, a community consisting of a few scattered farmsteads set back from the highway.
At Streatham the tenements of the villager lay dotted along the highway, with an occasional footpath or lane leading off to the fields and to neighbouring parishes. Beginning near Becrnead Avenue with a few properties, the village continued along the highway to the parish church where a concentration of buildings would have been seen. The next cluster of buildings lay further south along the highway at Greyhound Lane and by the crossing point of the River Graveney at Green Lane. Separating these areas of habitation would have been the open fields of the parish in which the villagers worked their strips of land. Also marking the landscape were the woodlands and stretches of lush green meadow and pasture land, separated in places by the irregular expanses of manorial wastes. Later these were to become the open spaces of Streatham Common and Tooting Bec Common. The configuration of these villages, with their scatterings of buildings, patchwork of hedged fields, woods and meandering lanes and track ways, were to remain almost unchanged until the arrival of suburban development centuries later. To generations of villagers such things appeared to be fixed in time and space. Before the beginnings of suburban development, the parish experienced the usual problems and changes effected by national events such as population fluctuations, pestilence, poor harvest years and civil disturbance. Of the many events that were to mark the course of Streatham's history, the Reformation of the 1530s was to be one of the most important.
Following the Reformation the manorial estates of Streatham, which had been held by the church, finally came into secular hands. This in turn was to stimulate changes in land tenure and use. Many of the old open fields and meadows of the parish had been, or were in the process of being, enclosed to make more efficient use of land and of new and improved farming techniques. Across the parish new farming concerns appeared. These were invariably established through the enterprise of individuals, many who were successful merchants or courtiers benefiting from the reforms and changes brought about by the reformation. Among these individuals were the new Lords of the Manor who saw their estates as a family business, or as a source of personal revenue and status. Working through the manor courts and with the judicious use of leases, they were able to maintain and improve their investments. In a number of cases these new estates were to mature into larger agricultural units, creating what became the "old" farms of Streatham: farms named Fursden, Covey's, Grey's, Bridge House and Mount Nod. It was through these farms that the future pattern and look of suburban development in Streatham were sown. Foremost among those families who speculatively developed their farming estates were the Howlands. Merchants by trade, this family obtained the manors of Tooting Bec and Leigham Court during the early decades of the 17th century, a move which made the family the principal landholder in the parish. Through a marriage in 1685, the estates of the Howland family passed into the hands of the Duke of Bedford whose family managed their Streatham holdings well into the following century, during which they started to sell off their local property and land interests: a policy which was to have a long term effect.
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