It was at Streatham Hill that the first residential area was established in Streatham proper. This entailed the building of a number of stylised villas and cottage type properties along the west side of the highway towards Brixton Hill. At the top of the hill some limited house building had already occurred just north of Mill Lane (now Moorish Road). An integral part of the Streatham Hill development was the laying out of Streatham Place. This planned road anticipated the construction of similar roads that were soon to criss-cross the parish in anticipation of housing developments. South of Streatham Place the "Paragon" was developed; a row of twenty fashionable stucco styled properties, planned to be a main feature in this newly designed residential area. With the unfolding of the 1830s, further house building took place in this area with the construction of numerous small terraced properties and shops along the north end of Bleak Hall Lane, an old country lane renamed New Park Road in 1884.
Beriah Drew, a shrewd and capable developer, laid out the road, which was part of an ambitious development scheme, in 1839 across the lands of Mount Nod Farm. Three years earlier, Drew had purchased the land from the devisees of Lord Thurlow's estate, who had been the Lord of the Manor of Leigham Court. The new road was named St. Julian's Road and not designated Leigham Court Road until 1902. House building in this road commenced at the high road end during the early 1840s with the building of a number of large well-proportioned mansions. The building of similar properties in nearby Leigham Avenue complemented these. Previously the road had been the track way to the farmhouse of Mount Nod Farm.
Similar residential developments were extending the bounds of Balham where new roads were taking shape, notably Balham New Road, where the Loat family, who owned a local building firm, was putting up small cheap properties. From the early 1820s larger and more expensive types of property began appearing along Balham High Road south of Bedford Hill Road. Richardson Borradaile, a speculative builder constructed Bedford Hill House, a substantial property built on land previously part of Covey's Farm. At a later date Richardson Borradaile was to lie out the carriageway to Bedford Hill House as a thoroughfare in anticipation of future house building. However, this was slow to materialise, and it was not until the 1870s before the road saw any substantial building. On completion, in 1891, it was renamed as Bedford Hill.
With subsequent building taking place along Balham High Road southwards from Balham Hill, and infill developments within Balham proper, ribbon development had almost reached the bounds of Tooting Bec village. This began at Wandsworth Lane, now known as Trinity Road. Southwards from here along Upper Tooting Road, little modern development had taken place; the old village looked much the same. South beyond the village, from approximately Hebdon Road, most of the land flanking the highway still presented a rural view until reaching the village of Tooting Graveney. This stretch of road was dominated by a number of large 18th century mansions. Notable among these were Park Holme, The Manor House and Lynwood; grand houses standing in acres of ornamental ground. It was not until Totterdown Street was reached that limited suburban development could be seen, generated by the northward growth of Tooting Graveney village, now Lower Tooting. By the mid 1890s suburban building was beginning to overtake the village of Tooting Bec and this part of Streatham parish. High profile commercial building appeared along Upper Tooting Road and a pattern of residential side streets were built, including the well known Totterdown Estate, built by the London County Council during the late 1900s. Building continued in and around Tooting Bec, now commonly called Upper Tooting, until the late 1920s with the completion of the Bell estate, which centred on Fishponds Road.
In between the stately mansions, which dotted Streatham parish, were the scattered fields of the local farms. Although farming was still an integral part of parish life, signs of decline were becoming evident during the late 18th century. Land previously farmed for root crops or grain was now being landscaped or used for pasture. Large mansions such as Furzedown House, Streatham Lodge and Bedford Hill House had gradually replaced the old farming estates. Agricultural land not taken up for building or parkland was being used for market gardening or dairy farming. Produce from these concerns found ready markets in London as well as supplying local demands. Nevertheless, such was the loss of local farmland, by 1840 only 720 acres of arable land remained within the parish. This was further emphasised by the marked decline during the period 1811 to 1831 in families engaged in agriculture and the increase of those engaged in some form of trade or manufacture. Moreover, there was the demand for people to work in the large country houses as servants, cooks, gardeners and grooms, and the increasing need to employ people in the retailing sector. These demands brought new people into Streatham. Some of these newcomers were farm workers affected by changes in the countryside, such as low agricultural wages, poor living conditions, mechanisation and enclosures. Furthermore, they were attracted by employment prospects offered in the expanding metropolis of London. The rise in local population during the coming decades was to bring irreversible change to Streatham. The class structure was to be altered through a rising middle class, and there were to be radical changes to the local environment. These events, in turn, were to bring pressure on the limited resources and organisation of the parish vestry. This authority had, since the 18th century, taken over much of the administrative work of the manor courts, and did much to regulate local affairs. In earlier centuries the local population had shown little
increase and at times had been almost static. With the general
increase in the national population during the 19th century
coupled with the influx of people into Streatham, the local
population quickly increased. By 1850 the population was approaching
7,000 inhabitants. In the adjoining parish of Clapham the figure
was much higher, reaching to more than 16,000. This was due
to the nearness of Clapham to London, although in size the parish
was smaller than Streatham. At Wandsworth, again a smaller parish,
the population was higher, numbering around 10,000. The comparative
smallness of Streatham's population reflected the continuing
rural nature of the parish: a situation, however, that was not
to last.
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