Bellenden Road

Bellenden is a small region in South East London. Sitting between Peckham, Camberwell and East Dulwich, Bellenden is centred on Bellenden Road.[1]

History

Bellenden is claimed to be distinct from any of its surrounding neighbours for a number of reasons (largely those trying to justify why they spent over 600K in Peckham), (though is often claimed as being a part of all of them). Named after the 7th Lord Bellenden of Broughton,[2] Bellenden Road was laid out along with neighbouring streets from the 1870s on what had formerly been largely fruit gardens serving the City of London.

French Influence

From its earliest days, Bellenden was populated disproportionately by French Huguenots, and still retains something of its French flavour, with various streets, pubs and businesses carrying French names such as the Montpelier Public House, Petit Chou cafe and Choumert Road attracting a significant French population to the area. For this reason Bellenden has for some years been known as 'the French Quarter'.

Bellenden has a growing spread of shops and cafes [3] and is attracting more artists, such as Anthony Gormley, who designed bollards and street furniture for the area.[4]

The Bellenden Road Nature Garden is a nature reserve managed by London Wildlife Trust.[5]

References

Coordinates: 51°28′07″N 0°04′21″W / 51.4687°N 0.0726°W / 51.4687; -0.0726

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, August 31, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.