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Brockley
Brockley was once a small
settlement on the Lewisham side of the boundary
between Lewisham and Deptford, but it now
stretches from Lewisham Way to Forest Hill.
Brockley may mean “Broca’s
clearing in the woods” or perhaps “the clearing by the brook”.
The area was built up in the
later 19th and early 20th centuries.
Until that time the principal buildings were
Brockley Farm, Manor Farm, Brockley Hall (a
large private residence), and the Brockley
Jack public house, formerly a picturesque wooden
building, said, with little or no evidence,
to have been a haunt of highwaymen. It was
owned by the Noakes family, brewers who lived
at Brockley Hall.
The London and Croydon Railway, which runs through Brockley,
was opened in 1839, but Brockley Station was not built until
1871. Brockley Lane station (now closed) followed in 1872, and
Crofton Park station in 1892.
The area of the original Brockley is now called Crofton Park,
after the railway station there, which was named after a building
estate. The central focus of Brockley has become the junction
of Drakefell, Shardeloes, Brockley and Upper Brockley Roads,
which is known as Brockley Cross
The northern part of Brockley was owned by the Tyrwhitt-Drake
family who developed the estate (previously used for market
gardening) from the late 1840s. They built substantial three-or
four-storied houses for the professional classes. Many of these
have now been divided into flats.
Brockley Cemetery was opened in 1858 to serve the growing population
of Deptford.
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Brockley Jack
Public House,
Brockley, 1885
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Brickmaking,
Blythe Hill Fields,
Brockley, c. 1890 |
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St Mary
Magdalen's Church,
Howson Road,
Brockley, c. 1900 |
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