Blackheath
 Blackheath
was so called because it appeared a darker colour than the green
fields beside the Thames which it overlooked - the soil was
dark and so were the plants which grew there. The name has nothing
to do with the plague or Black Death. The soil was poor and
was not cultivated, but chalk, gravel and larger pebbles for
ballast were dug out of it. This left deep pits all over the
Heath. Some are now ponds, some were filled in with rubble from
bomb sites in the Second World War.
In both the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 and Jack Cade’s rebellion
of 1450, the rebels camped on the Heath (a convenient high point
overlooking London). The Cornish rebellion of 1497 was defeated
in a battle on Blackheath.
The
Heath was a lonely place where travellers along the London to
Dover road (now the A2) were in danger from highwaymen. But
it was also a place for recreation. Fairs were (and are) held
here, and many sports played. In recent years it has been the
starting point for the London Marathon.
The Heath became a public open space in 1871, and is now administered
by Lewisham and Greenwich Councils as it falls within both Boroughs.
The district around the Heath began its career as one of London’s
most wealthy suburbs late in the seventeenth century, when houses
began to appear around the north-western corner of Greenwich
Park, and Lord Dartmouth enclosed some land on the western edge
of the common and built the fine street that he called Dartmouth
Row.
To
the east of the park Sir John Vanbrugh built a village of large
houses for his family between 1717 and his death in 1726. The
trustees of Morden College, the Blackheath almshouses, were
the most active landlords in the middle of the century.
They initiated development at West Grove from the 1730s, and
at Grote’s Buildings from the 1760s. Elsewhere on the south
side substantial building did not begin until the 1790s, but
then it came with a rush as John Cator and Lord Eliot covered
most of the heath frontage before 1805, and the Village began
to grow into a major shopping centre.
The
early decades of the 19th century saw major developments
on the Cator Estate to the south-east of the Heath, and on the
Earl of St Germans' land to the east. All the houses described
above were substantial ones intended for the upper and middle
classes, but now the growing community needed substantial numbers
of servants and service workers to sustain it, and so a number
of working class enclaves began to appear, tidily hidden away
in mews and courts behind the main Village streets, or in the
large disused gravel pit known as Blackheath Vale.
Later 19th century development followed similar lines,
with large houses for the middle classes speading out in all
directions from the Heath until they merged with Greenwich to
the north, Kidbrooke to the east, and Lee and Lewisham to the
south.
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