London
Borough of Lambeth
Brixton | Brixton Hill | Clapham
Crystal Palace | Herne Hill | Kennington
Lambeth North | Norwood | Stockwell
Streatham | Tulse Hill | Vauxhall
The London Borough of Lambeth stretches in a long thin line
from the Thames to the Surrey hills. The boundaries of the manor
and the parish of Lambeth are largely the same as the present
borough but with the addition of the old parishes of Streatham
and Clapham.
The manor of Lambeth belonged to the Archbishop of Canterbury
from 1190. Lambeth Palace sat opposite the Palace of Westminster
and the two were linked by a horse ferry across the Thames.
The name Lambeth is thought to have come from the Old English
"lamb" and "hythe", suggesting a landing
place for lambs or sheep.
Until
the middle of the 18th century the north was marshland, crossed
by a few roads raised against floods. The south was dominated
by woods and commons with a few villages and settlements, notably
at Clapham and Streatham on the old Roman roads to the south
coast.
Industry was concentrated in the north along the riverside.
Lambeth was famous for glassmaking, pottery and boat building.
Westminster Bridge was opened in 1750 and marked the beginning
of any major development in Lambeth. The new bridges (Blackfriars
and Vauxhall followed) gave people a chance to escape the noises
and smells of the city.
The laying out of major thoroughfares
such as Westminster Bridge Road, Kennington Road and Camberwell
New Road generated ribbon development of houses and shops. Many
of these imposing terraces can still be seen.
The next catalyst to development was the coming of the railways
in the mid 19th century. The parish church of St Mary at Lambeth,
on the northern-most tip of Lambeth, could no longer cope and
four new churches were built in the 1820s: St Mark's in Kennington;
St John's, Waterloo; St Luke's in Norwood and St Matthew's,
Brixton.
Suburban expansion was beginning in the south. Brixton, Herne
Hill, Clapham, Streatham and Norwood had railway stations and
became attractive propositions for the lower middle classes
who worked in the City and the West End. In Norwood the population
grew in 50 years from 600 to 6000.
In 1900 the Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth was formed. (Streatham
and Clapham were in the Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth).
Building and development continued steadily and by the 1930
even leafy Streatham was a thriving suburb, gaining its reputation
as an entertainment centre.
Slum clearance and the war meant massive programmes of public
housing, often fiercely resisted in the south. The policy of
demolishing large 19th century properties and replacing them
with modern estates continued into the 1970s.
In 1965 the old parishes of Lambeth, Streatham and Clapham were
combined to make the London Borough of Lambeth. As it is today,
Lambeth has always been a borough of contrasts. Each district
has its own identity and loyalties. Lambeth has developed into
a multi cultural inner city borough of great interest.
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