Buses from Barnes Station and Rosslyn Park

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Buses from Barnes Station and Rosslyn Park Barnes Station – Zone 3 i Onward Travel Information Local area map Bus map 1 G L E B E R O A D 17 29 32 Barnes Wetlands Centre Buses from Barnes Station and Rosslyn Park 36 Barnes 31 26 Athletics Track The R O C K S L A N E Barnes T 45 52 Barnes E N Bulls Chiropractic C 14 H E S Head G S Community R Barnes Bridge Healthcare I T The C H R Association E 56 375 E H 60 Barn Elms Ladies E S E 68 Sun Inn T Rowing Club N Coach & T CHURCH ROAD 28 6 SWAN B A R PLACE Barnes Green Playing Fields 1 Horses MEREDYTH ROAD Centre 1 23 18 HILLERSDON AVENUE 2 N74 S T. J O H N ’ S ELM GROVE ROAD 6GROVE Street continues to S RECTORY ROAD N 47 E Gallery Baker Street D STANTON ROAD Barnes 28 R 27 BARNES BRIDGE A Pond G 14 N E 10 91 C 17 A 21 R 1 39 R 23 E CARDIGAN ROAD B 430 T S Barnes everle 28 y Brook SHEPHERD’S BUSH T South Kensington 2 42 BELLEVUE ROAD EAST ACTON A Green 2 COURT 16 for the Museums MALTINGS L I M G R O V E R O A D T East Acton White City Bus Station Barnes E E S S E X G L E B E R O A D S I BEVERLEY CLOSE Brunel Road Hammersmith Hospital for Westfield Goldhawk Road 42 A 40 61 O Old Sorting Office Bridge V Old Brompton Road 2 E HAMMERSMITH N N 1 2 24 hour U 2 1 2 service East Acton White City Shepherd’s Bush Market E 59 Barnes 72 LAUREL ROAD 24 hour 10 E R for Wood Lane service Barnes 1 RANELAGH AVENUE 33 C 1 Rocks Lane 1 O Bridge 37 Methodist Church 14 Multi Sports Centres West Brompton A ELLISON ROAD 19 Hammersmith A R E E 20 54 H AV E N U R L N E L A G Bus Station M D ok R A Tennis E ro B 25 CLEVELAND ROAD ey B Courts A 28 rl T N ve K C Be L Lillie Road E G E A 1 V 55 Barnes H R E CAMBRIDGE ROAD L 1 T D A Common 1 E N 24 2 26 N D S G A 72 21 Old Barnes R River Thames Fulham Palace Road D 60 E Cemetery N S 2 Fulham Cemetery CREEK 14 22 BRIDGE E U Castelnau N CEDARS ROAD BARNES Fulham Palace Road E E V U 83 E L M B A 26 A Lonsdale Road N K G A R D N Kingwood Road E N S D E O V 28 O A Putney Lower St. Michael and Subway W K W O O L Fulham Palace Road All Angels Church O R O A D 41 L H I L L Barnes Common Cemetery R I M I L L W Castelnau 108 B Common Bishop’s Park Road FULHAM C 104 R 2 The Spinney O 113 S 100 S S Putney High Street T R CASTELNAU Fulham High Street 63 E M I L L H I L L 25 CHARLES STREET E T Castelnau 4 ARCHWAY STREET M I L L Washington Road 265 Subway 118 H I L L Putney Bridge 71 M I L L H I L L R CROSS STREET O BEVERLEY ROAD A D THORNE STREET 15 45 Castelnau WESTFIELDS AVENUE 2 Newport Road 34 82 75 Barnes S Primary N D G 16 BEVERLEY GARDENS School K SCARTH ROAD O Barnes ARCHWAY STREET 6 O R Barnes B Common Red Lion 71 7 2 V I N E R O A D COMMON ROAD S R O C K S L A N E T A Putney WESTFIELDS AVENUE Barnes Vine Road 1 T Rocks Lane I O St Mary’s Church Primary Recreation Ground N Ranelagh Avenue School R Paddling Bowling O A CLAPHAM Level Crossing Lower Richmond Road Lower Richmond Road Green D 78 Pool 2 Barnes Commondale Ruvigny Gardens 67 Barnes JUNCTION 95 Common Common Lower Richmond Road Lower Richmond Road R A I LWAY S I D E Festing Road Putney Level Crossing W STATION ROAD 337 80 Level Crossing C O HALLAM ROAD T H 53 81 Clapham Junction H 33 M E R O S S LY N AV E N U E M E R I O N E 22 N St John’s Hill T A R T R L PUTNEY Putney High Street E O 2 80 A A Barnes T E D S D Barnes K Putney Bridge Road 2 ELEANOR GROVE A C O 17 O H 1 493 R Common 7 E WOODLANDS ROAD T H E E L M S Upper Richmond Upper Richmond R PRIORY GDNS U E G A 117 N Barnes I N E P North Sheen I Wandsworth E Road West Road West D RI S V V S R D EN Y A E L A Manor Circus East Sheen Kings Road QU Town Hall WA O A RW T N ICKD E R Barnes N 1 R E I 11 E Footbridge E V T U D O R G D N S R D 2 N OA E T I Common E R L D D 2 N A Upper Richmond Road Upper Richmond Road 27 ROSSLYN AVENUE 12 V D UP MO D UP PER ICH U PE R V R A I A P RI 7 M C N H E M R U Y OND Putney Leisure Centre Putney Arts Theatre N G R A O 36 L T A FITZGERALD AVENUE N k S D E U A o ’ N R East 13 S Rosslyn Park E R E R RICHMOND E o N Upper Richmond Upper Richmond R E U r F V I Y E P N B E O C O A ST. MARY’S GROVE H&R1 Putney E D U W S RUFC P K 103 V y E Road West R Road West N 13 24 A E T O A e O D O U 21 Richmond C l N O FITZGERALD AVENUE A L R L N r H 27 EL L W A B C V E Q A OKI D e Richmond Park Road Priests Bridge AR NG K E E V A B v Y R E Putney Upper Richmond SIDE A Upper Richmond Road Wandsworth T e E LANG E IV P O DR V B for Mortlake M R N A NUE E R Armoury Way Road West E W AV U R Putney Methodist Church P H O E BEAUCHAMP E E S K G I P S Y L A N E U T T O TERRACE Richmond Temple Sheen Road N L W G G I 53 A 2 O O P U H O D A WESTWOOD GDNS S N D Y A Bus Station N N R R L L S E O O A Sheen Road A Barnes N O O E D R R O C K S L A N E E Y T L A ROEHA H E M P E Common Queen’s Road D R R LECONFIELD AVENUE A G U D 27 5 N 40 I I N 2 O CLOSE O R 24 N V I for North Sheen F T B A A Footbridge I E I R R D 18 N S Roehampton A T PRIESTS BRIDGE P R D W C G S A R W I C K 337 R E F E I 2 D R I V E E Golf Course I R N ON E IBB S G P QUEEN’S RIDE L R 2 D U WALK W B BELOE CLOSE R A Barnes Common N O I Red R G I P S Y L A N E D R O A D A NS D W O O N W LYS D 1 H M C 437 Y S 484 R I U P I 52 C E R 419 P E R E WALK U P P Rover R K R I C ’ H M D S O R N L D I R V Priory Lane O A 399 A D Upper Richmond Road E N PUTNEY PARK AVENUE St Margarets Roehampton Lane Dover House Road DAYLESFORD AVENUE E MARRICK CLOSE Rosslyn Park DUNGARVAN AVENUE Richmond Road Roehampton University Elmshaw Road ARABELLA DRIVE 1 Rugby 2 347 Football 21 Dover House Road ARABELLA DRIVE 2 Twickenham 18 E 341 LUDOVICK WALK D Queen Mary’s Hospital C 60 A King Street Crestway Club L P O R U 335 4 O Lennox V F The Tennis Courts L PUTNEY PARK LANE A Swimming E B Northumberland Putney Heath Pool 24 Strawberry Hill ROEHAMPTON Roehampton Lane Tennis Courts R Dover House Road PUTNEY PARK LANE Waldegrave Road South Thames College D H A 129 2 O Paddock 19 R O BURKE CLOSE Secondary H Danebury Avenue Roehampton A R A B E L L A D R I V E WOKING CLOSE 16 G U U 28 79 School O 2 7 R 430 Mount Angelus Road Earl Spencer LANGSIDE AVENUE 1 O S B D Teddington Putney Heath Putney Heath 37 O E O N74 2 Library Dover Park Drive Hayward Gardens Tibbet’s Corner W R O C K I N G H A M C L O S E 15 L Tennis Courts A R Roehampton Danebury Avenue N K T E L R A N O Putney Heath Putney Heath C L O S E 5 Danebury Avenue Roehampton Library W 1 R FULWELL A Exeter House Green Man I A Bessborough Road R Roehampton 51 B D Fulwell Petersfield Rise E Club L L 20 A D Princes Way E L D R O 1 Old Tram Depot The Brookside N I N G F I E T 36 PUTNEY PARK LANE D B 28 H U N 24 hour O W Community Hall O 44 service D R E 27 33 Bessborough Road S O 60 W PRIORY LANE E L U HUNTINGFIELD ROAD The yellow tinted area includes every bus L 68 19 C G L O S Dilton Gardens E H stop up to about one-and-a-half miles from 51 P R L 16 12 Southfields 58 Barnes Station and Rosslyn Park.
Recommended publications
  • The Summary Report
    Report by Rocket Science for The Barnes Fund This report draws on a wide range of data and on benefitted enormously from their input. Second, the experiences of a diverse sample of local we are grateful to 41 representatives from local residents to tell the story of need within our organisations who came together in focus groups community. The Barnes Fund concluded in late to discuss need in Barnes; to a number of others 2019 that we would like to commission such a who shared their views separately; to the 12 report in 2020, our 50th anniversary year, both to residents who took on the challenge of being inform our own grant making programme and as a trained as peer researchers; and to the 110 community resource. In the event the work was residents who agreed to be interviewed by them. carried out at a time when experience of Covid-19 The report could not have been written without and lockdown had sharpened many residents’ sense their willingness to provide frank feedback, of both ‘community’ and ‘need’ and there was much thoughts and ideas. And finally, we are grateful to that was being learned. At the same time, we have Rocket Science, who were chosen by the Steering been keen to take a longer-term perspective – both Group based on their expertise and relevant backwards in terms of understanding what pre- experience to carry out the research on our behalf, existing data tells us about ourselves and forwards who rose to the challenge of doing everything in terms of understanding hopes, concerns and remotely (online or via the phone) and who have expectations beyond the immediate health listened to, questioned, and directed us all before emergency.
    [Show full text]
  • A Call to Pray for World Peace and to Study Related Issues
    A CALL TO PRAY FOR WORLD PEACE AND TO STUDY RELATED ISSUES Believing that God is calling us to pray with new purpose and deeper understanding for peace and justice among all men we invite Qur fellow believer6 of all faiths to join in a WEEK OF PRAYER FOR WORLD PEACE from 20 - 27 October 1974. The week has been chosen to include United Nations Day. 24 October. The Week of Prayer for World Peace will be inaugurated on Saturday. 19 October "at a service to be held at Westminster Abbey at 3 p.m •• when the Archbishop of Canterbury will be the preacher. We hope this special Week will provide an annual occasion when Christians and members of other faiths may, ·in the words of the Lambeth Conference, ·subject to intense prayer and study their attitude to the issues involved in modern warfare-. There will be a need to follow up and surround such prayer with a study of those contemporary problems which lead to conflict: the issues that create injustice, notably world poverty and the deni al of human rights; and those factors such as race, colour, political ideology, economic status and language which separate people from one another.· As today Christians pray together during January for the deeper unity of the Church, so we now call upon men and women of all faiths to pray in unity for world peace and for the unity of all mankind. Penitence will need to be an essential feature of this united act of prayer so that we may all of us not only learn from past errors, but also be open to the fresh insights which the unprecedented modern situation demands.
    [Show full text]
  • James Cooper Stewart
    THE JAMES C STEWART MELBOURNE CONNECTION Adrian Fletcher – last update 15 January 2015 afletch at paradoxplace dot com www.ciaofamiglia.com James Cooper Stewart (1836 – 1919 (83)) was the son of another James Stewart (a master house painter) and his wife Mary (May) (Falconer) who lived in Brechin, north of Edinburgh. Their names appear in the 1841, 1851 and 1861 (without James jnr) Scottish censuses and we have managed to trace hand written registry records of some of their ancestor births, marriages and deaths back to 1777. The Stewart’s brownstone residence at 62 High Street, Brechin, is now a dilapidated boarded up shopfront which can be driven past via Google Earth. This is the record of James Cooper’s birth in Brechin in 1836. “Cooper” was May Falconer’s mother’s maiden name. Stewart emigrated from Liverpool to Melbourne (“for his health”) as a paying first class passenger aboard the famous sailing clipper “The Marco Polo” (“The Fastest Ship in the World”) in 1857. Melbourne was then 22 years old, the gold rush had been on since the early part of the decade and Victoria itself had been created in 1851. During this voyage he kept a diary and we have both a photocopy and typed transcript of this as well as a copy of part of the passenger list. The original diary has not been located yet. The diary is written in the form of a letter dated 27 September 1857 to James’ father back in Brechin: The opening paragraph covers leaving home in Brechin on Monday June 1 1857 and “the pangs of grief which rent my breast as I tore myself from all I loved”.
    [Show full text]
  • MC/09/84 the Methodist Council
    MC/09/84 The Methodist Council APPOINTMENTS - METHODIST COUNCIL SEPTEMBER 2009 (Underlined names indicate new committee members. Reasoned statements as received are set out at the end of the committee listings.) Italics indicate where we have not been able to update the committee lists as yet – where further updates are received, these will be tabled at the Council meeting. PART I: COMMITTEES APPOINTED BY THE COUNCIL FOR 2009-2010 (1) Connexional Allowances Committee (SO 212(4)): The Revds Diane Daymond, Graham Thompson, Deacon Ian Murray , Mr John Bell, Mrs Carole Booth, Mr Robert K Lolley (Chair), Dr Roy Swanston (Convener: Mr Philip Bedford-Smith) (The same persons also act as the committee for each of the following: Auxiliary Fund, Methodist Medical Benevolent Fund, Trinity Hall Trust, Methodist Ministers’ Children’s Relief Association) (2) Medical Committee (SO 212(5)) The Revds William H Anderson, Dr Brenda M Mosedale, Richard J Teal ; Professors Peter Howdle, Deborah Symmons; Ms Sarah Cave, Dr Ajay George, Dr Anita Holdcroft, Dr Carole Jackson, Dr Dorothy Tesh, Dr Richard Vautrey, Dr Janet Wigley, Deacon Sue Culver. Non members: Mr Nigel Wrighton (Advisor), Mr Tony Tidey (Convenor) (3) Ministerial and Diaconal Reinstatements Panel (SO 761(4)) The Revds Rita Armitage, P Shirley Baker, Kathleen M Bowe, Malcolm L Braddy, Stuart J Burgess, John A Cooke, Geoff R Cornell, David S Cruise, Hazel Forecast, Albert Gayle, Doreen Hare, F Barrie Heafford, Kenneth G Howcroft, Christina Le Moignan, Derrick R Lander, Beryl E Lucas, Jennifer B
    [Show full text]
  • 1000 Years of Barnes History V5
    Over 1000 years of Barnes History Timeline from 925 to 2015 925 Barnes, formerly part of the Manor of Mortlake owned by the Archbishop of Canterbury, is given by King Athelstan to the Dean and Chapter of St Paul’s Cathedral. 1085 Grain sufficient to make 3 weeks supply of bread and beer for the Cathedral’s live-in Canons must be sent from Barnes to St Paul’s annually. Commuted to money payment late 15th Century. 1086 Domesday Book records Barnes valued for taxation at £7 p.a. Estimated population 50-60. 1100 - 1150 Original St Mary‘s Parish Church built at this time (Archaeological Survey 1978/9). 1181 Ralph, Dean of St Paul’s, visits Barnes, Wednesday 28th Jan to assess the value of the church and manor. The priest has 10 acres of Glebe Land and a tenth of the hay crop. 1215 Richard de Northampton, Priest at the Parish Church. Archbishop Stephen Langton said to have re-consecrated the newly enlarged church on his return journey from Runnymede after the sealing of Magna Carta. 1222 An assessment of the Manor of Barnes by Robert the Dean. Villagers must work 3 days a week on the demesne (aka the Barn Elms estate) and give eggs, chickens and grain as in 1085 in return for strips of land in the open fields. Estimated population 120. 1388 Living of Barnes becomes a Rectory. Rector John Lynn entitled to Great Tithes (10% of all produce) and right of fishing in Barnes Pond. 1415 William de Millebourne dies at Milbourne House.
    [Show full text]
  • November 2019
    Official# PAYMENT PAYMENT DIRECTORATE PAYEE ACTIVITY DATE AMOUNT Environment & Community 05/11/2019 2,500.00 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA CAPEXP Capital grants Services Directorate Environment & Community 05/11/2019 2,500.00 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA CAPEXP Capital grants Services Directorate Environment & Community 18/11/2019 500.00 Annie Gray Advertising / Publicity Services Directorate Housing & Regeneration 25/11/2019 827.50 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA Lettings Directorate Housing & Regeneration 04/11/2019 3,961.84 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA Homeless Red Act Initiatives Directorate Adult Social Services Directorate 14/11/2019 4,649.79 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA Supported Living Adult Social Services Directorate 14/11/2019 1,428.34 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA Direct Payments to Clients Adult Social Services Directorate 14/11/2019 696.00 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA DP prepaid cards Adult Social Services Directorate 14/11/2019 1,069.72 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA Client Costs - Personal Budget Housing & Regeneration 19/11/2019 1,100.00 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA PSL Payments To Landlords Directorate Adult Social Services Directorate 27/11/2019 526.11 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA DP prepaid cards Adult Social Services Directorate 27/11/2019 694.84 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA DP prepaid cards Adult Social Services Directorate 27/11/2019 5,483.59 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA DP prepaid cards Adult Social Services Directorate 27/11/2019 1,063.57 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA DP prepaid cards Adult Social Services Directorate 27/11/2019 2,098.03 REDACTED PERSONAL DATA DP prepaid cards Adult Social Services
    [Show full text]
  • Parish Profile
    PARISH PROFILE www.stmarybarnes.org ST MARY’S CHURCH OFFICE, CHURCH RD, BARNES, LONDON SW13 9HL TEL: 0208 741 5422 EMAIL: [email protected] WEBSITE: WWW.STMARYBARNES.ORG PARISH PROFILE: ST MARY’S CHURCH, BARNES The Barnes Team Ministry is a team of three parishes of St Mary’s, St Michael & All Angels and Holy Trinity in the attractive and busy community of Barnes in South West London. Each parish has a separate PCC and separate finances and is led by a Team Vicar, and at St Mary’s by the Team Rector. After a very successful and happy eight years with us, Richard Sewell, our Team Rector, has recently left to take up the post of Dean of St George’s College in Jerusalem. We are seeking to appoint a new Team Rector and Vicar of St Mary’s Barnes who will • oversee the Team and look for new ways of working together to serve the community and share the Gospel • lead the congregation of St Mary’s with vibrant worship and caring pastoral support • inspire us to grow in our faith • serve the wider community in Barnes • nurture relationships with other churches and community organisations We are looking for someone who: • embraces a central, inclusive tradition with an understanding of, and empathy for, other traditions, who will develop variety in worship, maintaining a Eucharistic emphasis and the vital role of music. • has a strong personal faith and an ability to communicate that through lively and stimulating preaching and teaching. • has strong pastoral skills and awareness • has enthusiasm for families and young people and the experience and creativity to develop ways to nurture them in their faith • can collaborate well and sensitively, keen to build productive relationships with other churches and across the local community and further afield • will recognise people's talents and encourage involvement, discipleship and lay ministry.
    [Show full text]
  • Descendants of James Patterson
    Descendants of James Patterson By Catherine Reuther Table of Contents Descendants of James Patterson 1 Source Citations 508 Name Index 563 Produced by: Catherine Reuther : 20 Jan 2016 Descendants of James Patterson 1-James Patterson James married Mary Ferrell. They had two children: Abraham and Alexander. 2-Abraham Patterson, son of James Patterson1 and Mary Ferrell1, was born in 1756 in County Derry, Ireland,2 died on 27 Jul 1806 in Chester district, South Carolina3 at age 50, and was buried in Old Purity Presbyterian Church, Chester, South Carolina.4 General Notes: Abraham Patterson was considered a man of means in Ireland. He had a man and a woman servant and kept a horse and buggy. He was a merchant and a farmer. In coming to America, Abrahan settled in Baltimore, Maryland, for two years and he is said to have worked at a tan yard part of this period. While living there, the baby Margaret was born in 1804. She was called Peggy. Abraham wrote a number of poems which were published in book form in Baltimore in 1805. [2] Abraham (John in Lena's notebook) was probably a cousin to Betsy Patterson's father, William (wife Dorcas) of Baltimore. Betsy married Jerome Bonapart (Napoleon's younger brother) December 24, 1803. She secured a divorce in Maryland about 1812 or 1813, after Napoleon, who did not recognize the marriage, married Jerome to Catherine of Wurttemberg. [3] Abraham preferred to live in the North a "free" country since he did not approve of slavery [Maryland was actually a slave state - CAR], but Margaret wanted to come south, where her sister Mrs.
    [Show full text]
  • Estate Papers of the Manor of Lugwardine in Herefordshire, 1785‒1879
    The information in this document should be read in conjunction with the introductory webpage SHC: 940 Gadesden Papers Records of the descent of the estate, in chronological order Bundle 18 Title of George Newland to manor of Fitznells, including deeds, with abstract of title, 1669‒1711 18/1 Bargain and Sale 23 April 1669 William Saunders the elder, citizen and merchant tailor of London; Elizabeth his wife; Thomas Pritchard of Grays Inn and Roger Williams of Covent Garden, trustees. Thomas Turgis of Gatton Other name: William Saunders the younger 1) Capital messuage, ‘Quid keeps’ or ‘Good Keepers’ of whatever name it is called by, with all houses, barns, gardens, orchards, lands woods etc and all appurtenances; and 15½a in Southfield, comprising 4 a Coles Hedge 2 a Tayles Hill 4 a Hatch Furlong 1 a Priest Hill 1 a Goldhoard 1½ a above Westland 1 a South Furlong 1 a East Mark Furlong and 1 acre in Lyncroft common field 3 acres in Northcroft 1 acre croft Abridge Close 7 acres pasture all occupied by Henry West and later Thomas Saunders. 2) All lands in Ewell occupied by Robert Savage (no details) 3) Messuage and orchard called ‘Kippings’ in occupation of Thomas Saunders Cottage and land occupied by Nicholas Seager Cottage and land occupied by John Tegg Cottage occupied by Philip Martin, later Allen Brigland Cottage occupied by Ralph Furneys Cottage occupied by Nicholas Waterer Cottage occupied by Edw. Wilkins 4) 46 acres in Ewell occupied by Thos. Waterer 6 acres in Southfield occupied by Jeremy Stevens, later Alice Stevens, widow 4 acres in Southfield and 2 acres in Northcroft occupied by John Stanton 12 acres in Sharns or Shalford Field occupied by Thos.
    [Show full text]
  • November 2017
    £2 WHEN Prospect SOLD Charity Reg No. 1156379 Barnes Community Associaton Newsleter November 2017 The countdown has Begun! Employment opening at BCA We’re getng excited! Just a few weeks to go and Barnes is preparing for The BCA is looking for a person to replace our mult- Christmas – with some new elements. talented membership administrator, Sarah Sumpter, who is stepping down from the role, having moved out of the area. Not only is the street entertainment startng earlier – at 5pm – on Friday 8th December, but at 11am, a BCA Christmas Lights Fair opens in the Sun Inn Replacing Sarah will not be easy but we are sure there yard (entrance is free) with as many as 16 exhibitors keen to show you their is a person out there whose existng skills would aid the wares. There will be refreshments all day inside the pub, a prize draw and BCA in making Barnes a beter place to live. carols. It’s in support of the Barnes Christmas Lights. The job descripton includes: • Looking afer all aspects of membership of the BCA Between 5pm and 8pm, the main streets of Barnes will be aglow with the lights, a-tnkle with the chimes of hand-bells, echoing to the melodies of • Organisaton of distributon of our newsleter, carol singing, and resounding with seasonal band tunes. Many of our local Prospect, to our members shops will be opening late untl 8pm to welcome customers old and new. • Maintenance of the BCA website • Collatng, formatng and distributon of our There will be plenty of gif ideas at the OSO too: from 5pm browse the stalls e-newsleter, Prospect+ selling beautful and imaginatve Christmas merchandise, including books, • Assistng the organisers of the BCA Fair and the Food Fair.
    [Show full text]
  • Village Walks.Indb
    LONDON’S VILLAGE WALKS 20 Walks Around the City’s Most Interesting Historic Villages by David Hampshire City Books • Bath • England Acknowledgements First published 2018 he author would like to thank all the many people who helped with research and provided information for this book. Special thanks are due to Alex Browning for her invaluable research, TGraeme & Louise Chesters and Richard Todd; Robbi Forrester Atilgan for editing; Peter Read for additional editing and proof-reading; Susan Griffi th for fi nal proof checking; John Marshall for DTP, photo selection and cover design; and Jim Watson for the lovely maps. Last, but not least, a special thank you to the many photographers All rights reserved. No part of this publication – the unsung heroes – whose beautiful images bring London to life. may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or recorded by any means, without prior written permission from the publisher. Copyright © Survival Books 2018 Cover design: Survival Books Cover photo: ?? Maps © Jim Watson ACCESS Most buildings and public spaces (e.g. parks) in London provide City Books, c/o Survival Books Limited wheelchair access, but this doesn’t apply to private buildings Office 169, 3 Edgar Buildings and gardens. Contact the relevant company or organisation if George Street, Bath BA1 2FJ, United Kingdom you have specifi c requirements. The Disabled Go website (www. +44 (0)1305-266918 disabledgo.com) provides more in-depth access information for [email protected] many destinations. www.survivalbooks.net and www.londons-secrets.com British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN: 978-1-909282-94-0 Printed in China Author’s Notes Contents Please note the following regarding the walks in this book.
    [Show full text]
  • The Burial Grounds of Putney London SW15
    1 The Burial Grounds of Putney London SW15 Introduction The chronology of Putney’s burial grounds is broadly as follows: St Mary’s Church, Putney Bridge: 12th/13th century to 1763. Putney Old Burial Ground (POBG), Upper Richmond Road: 1763 to 1854. Putney Lower Common Cemetery (PLCC), Mill Hill Road: 1855 to 1891. Putney Vale Cemetery (PVC), Kingston Road: 1891 to present. Closure dates are nominal and burials took place later, e.g. in family graves or in special circumstances. They continued at St Mary’s, in the churchyard (in large numbers) until 1854 and inside the church until 1863; in POBG until 1900; and in PLCC until the 1950s – even as late as 1975. St Mary’s Church The parish church was Putney’s only burial 1797 ground for some 500 years. St Mary’s is not mentioned by name until c. 1290, though there may have been a church or chapel of ease (a satellite of St Mary’s Wimbledon) on the site as early as the 12th century. Nothing remains of those early churches and the oldest part of the present building is the tower, which dates from c. 1450. St Mary’s was severely damaged by a storm in 1703, was rebuilt, apart from the tower, in 1836, and extensively damaged by an arson-started fire during the night of 6th/7th June 1973, with only the walls, columns and, again, the 15th century tower surviving. Rebuilding, to a design by Ronald Sims, with the altar, unusually, on the north side and stained glass by Alan Younger (who also designed the stained glass above the entrance to Putney Exchange) was completed in 1982.
    [Show full text]