Brimsdown

Brimsdown

Brimsdown Avenue
Brimsdown
 Brimsdown shown within Greater London
OS grid referenceTQ3697
London borough Enfield
Ceremonial county Greater London
RegionLondon
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town ENFIELD
Postcode district EN3
Dialling code 020
Police Metropolitan
Fire London
Ambulance London
EU Parliament London
UK ParliamentEnfield North
London Assembly Enfield and Haringey
List of places
UK
England
London

Coordinates: 51°39′36″N 0°01′34″W / 51.660°N 0.026°W / 51.660; -0.026

Brimsdown is a neighbourhood of eastern Enfield in the London Borough of Enfield, north London, on the west side of the mid-to-lower Lea Valley.

Geography

The east of Brimsdown, that is, east of the eastern Lea Valley line is one of the borough's main commercial centres. It divides into the Brimsdown Industrial Estate comprising Watermill, Sovereign, Leeside Business Centres, Riverwalk Business Park and storage. Its far north is the Enfield Power Station built on part of the former Brimsdown Power Station and an electricity sub-station.

Residential Brimsdown is south of Turkey Brook, extending as far south as Jeffreys Road by the two blocks of the Trafalgar and Centenary Trading Estate units.[1] It is home to the Brimsdown Industrial Estate and also includes a residential area just west of the Lea Valley railway line. The western boundary is half way to the other Lea Valley line for this station-centric neighbourhood, where used as a term.

This area was the easternmost part of the old parish of Enfield which ecclesiastically is today divided into six, the present relevant parish being Enfield Highway a secular division of Enfield which competes with the west of the area for its identity, particularly around the irregular polygon of Durants Park, a large park, which is shared between both areas.[2]

The area east of the Lea Valley Lines railway is almost exclusively industrial use, whereas west is a residential area primarily built up from the 1930s which blends into Enfield Highway to the west, Ponders End to the south and to the north Enfield Wash and Enfield Lock. This residential area around Brimsdown Avenue, Brimsdown railway station and Brimsdown School is at the heart of a Brimsdown neighbourhood, within Enfield, identity.

History

Brimsdown was recorded as Grymesdoun in 1420, Grymesdoune 1441, Grymes downe, Brymesdowne 1610, Grymsdown, Brimsdown 1686. The first element may be a surname Gryme. The second is the early and Middle English doun or down though unusually low for a down here referring to slightly raised ground in an area no more than 19 metres above sea level and 5 metres above the Lea, more than most of Edmonton to the south. Grīm as with Grim's Dyke to the west being linked to Woden.[3]

In the 19th century the parish of Enfield had the second largest area north of the Thames in the two closest home counties for smallholdings run by families growing salads for the London market, with to a lesser degree fruit:

In 1867 there were several orchards at Enfield Highway and in 1869 market gardens accounted for much of the Connop estate in the eastern part of the parish. After inclosure the farms near the Lea continued to be split between arable and pasture, although fields formed out of the former common were very large in comparison with those farther west; one of Trinity College's farms at Brimsdown had fields of 44 a. and 60 acres (0.24 km2) in 1855. Market gardens encroached increasingly on the farm-land between Hertford Road and the Lea during the later 19th century, until by 1900 Enfield was said to be the main parish for market gardening in northern Middlesex and the second in the whole county. Tomatoes and cucumbers were the main crops, although flowers were also grown, and glass-houses covered several hundred acres. By 1920, with the expansion of industry and suburban housing, some of the market gardens around Ponders End and Enfield Highway had disappeared[4]

Nearest railway stations

Watercourses

Mossops Bridge spans the Lee Navigation (completed 1999)
Mossops Creek Bridge (completed 2006)

Mossops Creek Bridge (completed 2006)[7] forms part of the Mossops Creek permissive path which links the Lee Navigation to the Brimsdown Industrial Estate and Brimsdown railway station.

Angling is allowed on the River Lee Navigation towpath between Enfield Lock and Ponder's End Lock. Information from the River Lea Anglers Club.[8]

Politics

Schools and colleges

Primary schools

College

Sport

Football

Business partnerships

In popular culture

Between 1977 and 1980 a council house in the Green Street area of Brimsdown was the scene of alleged poltergeist activity.[10] The incidents were the subject of a Sky Living television series The Enfield Haunting which was screened in May, 2015.[11]

References

  1. http://www.enfield.gov.uk/362/Enfield%20Highway.pdf Local Government Map: Enfield Highway Retrieved 3 March 2008
  2. Enfield Highway parish map The Church of England. Retrieved 2015-02-23
  3. Mills, A,D, Oxford Dictionary of London Place Names (2001) p30 ISBN 0-19-860957-4 Retrieved 20 October 2008
  4. A P Baggs, Diane K Bolton, Eileen P Scarff and G C Tyack, "'Enfield: Economic history'", A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5 ed. T F T Baker and R B Pugh (London, 1976), pp. 232-239
  5. Mossops Creek Retrieved 20 November 2007
  6. Mossops Bridge Retrieved 19 November 2007
  7. Mossops Creek bridge Retrieved 7 June 2008
  8. River Lea Anglers Club Retrieved 2 December 2014
  9. Ray Winstone Retrieved 16 May 2011
  10. The Enfield Poltergeist Retrieved 22 April 2015
  11. Sky TV The Enfield Haunting Retrieved 22 April 2015

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, March 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.