EPW062814 ENGLAND (1939). Copthall Drive and environs, Mill Hill, 1939

© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.

Delweddau cyfagos (22)

EPW062814
  0° 0m
EPW032948
  33° 47m
EPW032955
  23° 74m
EPW032950
  43° 78m
EPW062812
  168° 80m
EPW032947
  94° 117m
EPW032958
  75° 120m
EPW062808
  89° 121m
EPW032956
  63° 125m
EPW032949
  324° 128m
EPW032954
  20° 137m
EPW032953
  20° 160m
EPW032952
  36° 171m
EPW062809
  144° 182m
EPW062811
  145° 185m
EPW062817
  225° 202m
EPW062819
  162° 227m
EPW010851
  196° 238m
EPW062810
  162° 256m
EPW062815
  160° 259m
EPW032957
  316° 270m
EPW032951
  319° 305m

Manylion

Pennawd [EPW062814] Copthall Drive and environs, Mill Hill, 1939
Cyfeirnod EPW062814
Dyddiad 30-August-1939
Dolen
Enw lle MILL HILL
Plwyf
Ardal
Gwlad ENGLAND
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad 522294, 191412
Hydred / Lledred -0.23376034826849, 51.60777321167
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol TQ223914

Pinnau

Copthall Girls Grammar School

colsouth111
Thursday 22nd of May 2014 04:54:41 PM
Copthall Gardens

colsouth111
Thursday 3rd of April 2014 11:29:39 AM
These houses were originally marketed by Merrylees as "Bijou Baronial Halls". They did indeed have rather a splendid entrance hall cum living room that was oak panelled with a fine staircase too.

colsouth111
Tuesday 1st of October 2013 03:21:39 PM

Cyfraniadau Grŵp

I've added this Mill Hill picture as these upmarket suburban semis, built at the the same time (1930) as John Laing's "little palaces of Colindale", were marketed by the builder Merilees as "bijou baronial halls". That description may seem contradictory but having visited one of them I can vouch that the spacious entrance hall cum lounge had oak paneled walls and a rather splendid staircase.

colsouth111
Thursday 3rd of April 2014 11:25:20 AM
As a child in Burnt Oak, Mill Hill was rather off the radar but the eastern edge of the Watling estate reaches almost to Mill Hill, separated from it by the mainline railway and now also by the M1. Some years back an elderly lady told me how as a child she would occasionally walk with her mother across the fields to Burnt Oak. It was with some bitterness that she recalled the building of the Watling estate as a barrier to such childhood pleasures. She said that Mill Hill folk would refer, rather unfairly, to the LCC Watling estate as "little Moscow", which fact is also mentioned in Alan A Jackson's excellent book "Semi-detatched London" (2nd edition, Wild Swan, 1991).

colsouth111
Thursday 3rd of April 2014 11:25:20 AM