Peckham
Peckham was a hamlet of
the parish of Camberwell, situated about
a mile to Camberwell’s east on the
road to New Cross. The name means the place
of the river Peck, a small steam that runs
through the district. Peckham has never been
an administrative district, or a single ecclesiastical
parish in its own right, but today has a
strong sense of identity. This has its roots
in its development in the 19th century from
fields to suburbs, and crucially the development
of Rye Lane as one of the most important
shopping streets in south London.
Until the early 19th century it was largely a rural area with
a number of large houses occupied by the gentry. In the 18th
century the Grand Surrey Canal was built and terminated at
Peckham High Street, but had little direct effect on development
Its development divides
into two phases. The earlier phase, up to
the 1860s, took place in two areas. To the
north development was stimulated by proximity
to the Old Kent Road, and impressive villas
and terraces were built in this area. A new
district called Peckham New Town was built,
centred on Peckham Hill Street, on land owned
by the Hill family, hence the name of its
main axis, Peckham Hill Road. The second
was to Peckham’s
south near Peckham Rye, the area's Common and
large houses were built in prime locations.
The turning point was the coming of public transport: railways
and, more important, horse trams in the 1870s. This stimulated
much building of a more modest scale in almost any open space.
Indeed the common land at the Rye was also threatened with
development.
Rye Lane evolved into a
new shopping street encouraged by a new and
young and relatively prosperous population,
and good transport. Stores such as Jones & Higgins
became the best known in south London.
This
section of the Dewhirst map of the parish of St Giles, Camberwell,
shows the first stage of transition of the area from a rural village
to a London suburb.
Click on the map for a larger view or click
here for a readable version which may be slow to download.
Ribbon development has taken place along the
Old Kent Road (top right), Hill Street, the
High Street and Rye Lane. Prime plots facing
south west looking over Peckham Rye have also
been developed.
This
1891 map shows Peckham on the way to becoming a London suburb.
Click on the map for a larger view or click
here for a readable version which may be slow to download
Railways have been built (as have tram-lines,
though they are not indicated here), and most
sites near main roads have been developed.
However, large tracts of remaining agricultural land are still
to be developed.
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