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The Story of the Effingham-Beresford Backlands


The Story of the Effingham-Beresford Backlands
Posted by Hugh on July 16, 2020 at 15:29 in History of Harringay
The development of the Harringay Ladder was tightly controlled, both by the covenants imposed by the land vendor, the British Land Company and through the supervision of building quality by Hornsey & Tottenham Councils. Some of the builds were considered so poor that Hornsey Council had the builders tear down some houses and start again.
With the exception of churches, schools, council work depots and retail development along Green Lanes and at either end of Wightman Road, almost all of the initial development on the Ladder was residential in nature. There was however one exception to this: a non-residential zone created between the back-gardens of the houses at the eastern end of the the Effingham-Beresford block.  ....

Wood Green , United Kingdom , United Kingdom General , Waltham Cross , Mashonaland East , City Of , Clarence Holton , Harringay Denchfields , George Brown , Fairfax Hall , Harold Frederick , Arthur William , Jamesg Medlock , James Alsford , Callison Hall , Charles Edward , John Purves , Jo Pinate , William Denchfield , Alfred Salamon , George Akerman Hooton , Denchfield Harringay , James Medloclk , Jesse Denchfield , George Hooton , Jamese Medlock ,

The Story of the Effingham-Beresford Backlands


The Story of the Effingham-Beresford Backlands
Posted by Hugh on July 16, 2020 at 15:29 in History of Harringay
The development of the Harringay Ladder was tightly controlled, both by the covenants imposed by the land vendor, the British Land Company and through the supervision of building quality by Hornsey & Tottenham Councils. Some of the builds were considered so poor that Hornsey Council had the builders tear down some houses and start again.
With the exception of churches, schools, council work depots and retail development along Green Lanes and at either end of Wightman Road, almost all of the initial development on the Ladder was residential in nature. There was however one exception to this: a non-residential zone created between the back-gardens of the houses at the eastern end of the the Effingham-Beresford block.  ....

Wood Green , United Kingdom , United Kingdom General , Waltham Cross , Mashonaland East , City Of , Clarence Holton , Harringay Denchfields , George Brown , Fairfax Hall , Harold Frederick , Arthur William , Jamesg Medlock , James Alsford , Callison Hall , Charles Edward , John Purves , Jo Pinate , William Denchfield , Alfred Salamon , George Akerman Hooton , Denchfield Harringay , James Medloclk , Jesse Denchfield , George Hooton , Jamese Medlock ,

Grand Parade panorama - Salisbury to Kimberley


Grand Parade panorama - Salisbury to Kimberley
Added by alistairj on July 26, 2008 at 10:14
Comment by Simon T on July 26, 2008 at 12:12
I know the Iceland site used to be Woolworths anyone know why it was built? Was it a bomb site from the war?
Comment by alistairj on July 26, 2008 at 23:06
I didn t know it used to be Woolworths but have speculated whether a WWII bomb could be responsible. Whatever caused it, a real shame that something more in keeping , could not have been built.
Comment by Hugh on July 26, 2008 at 23:58
Are you sure it used to be Woolworths? I was told by a long-time resident who remembers Harringay s Woolworth s as being in Salisbury Promenade (i.e. where the row of shops where the Tesco Express now is). ....

Mashonaland East , City Of , United Kingdom , Grand Parade , Mashonaland West , Richard Woods , Harringay Woolworth , Egg Store At Bruce Grove , Egg Stores , Salisbury Promenade , Tesco Express , Warwick Gardens , Egg Store , Former Shops Harringay , Green Lanes , மஷோனலண்ட் கிழக்கு , நகரம் ஆஃப் , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , மாபெரும் அணிவகுப்பு , மஷோனலண்ட் மேற்கு , ரிச்சர்ட் வூட்ஸ் , முட்டை கடை இல் காயங்கள் தோப்பு , முட்டை கடைகள் , சாலிஸ்பரி ப்ராமெநேட் , டெஸ்கோ எக்ஸ்பிரஸ் , வார்விக் தோட்டங்கள் ,

The Story of the Effingham-Beresford Backlands


The Story of the Effingham-Beresford Backlands
Posted by Hugh on July 16, 2020 at 15:29 in History of Harringay
The development of the Harringay Ladder was tightly controlled, both by the covenants imposed by the land vendor, the British Land Company and through the supervision of building quality by Hornsey & Tottenham Councils. Some of the builds were considered so poor that Hornsey Council had the builders tear down some houses and start again.
With the exception of churches, schools, council work depots and retail development along Green Lanes and at either end of Wightman Road, almost all of the initial development on the Ladder was residential in nature. There was however one exception to this: a non-residential zone created between the back-gardens of the houses at the eastern end of the the Effingham-Beresford block.  ....

Wood Green , United Kingdom , United Kingdom General , Waltham Cross , Mashonaland East , City Of , Clarence Holton , Harringay Denchfields , George Brown , Fairfax Hall , Harold Frederick , Arthur William , Jamesg Medlock , James Alsford , Callison Hall , Charles Edward , John Purves , Jo Pinate , William Denchfield , Alfred Salamon , George Akerman Hooton , Denchfield Harringay , James Medloclk , Jesse Denchfield , George Hooton , Jamese Medlock ,