About Pinner
Pinner
is centuries old. It was one of the ten hamlets of
the medieval Harrow Manor and is still the most easily
distinguishable today. The name Pinner is nowadays
considered to be of Saxon origin. Among the oldest written
records of Pinner is one telling us that the church was
here during the 1230s.
Pinner was the sort of village you learn about at
school. Near the centre it had a church on a low hill
with a street of houses leading down to the river. At
the north was woodland and a large common or green.
South of the street was a huge area subdivided into a few
large fields and split up again into small portions.
These were shared out among all the villagers, and as a
rule they co-operated so that the same crop was grown on
all the plots in any one field. This is the area
where today the very large estates of 20th century
semi-detached houses are to be found, and the two long
roads the villagers used to get to their pieces are still
here today - Cannon Lane and Rayners Lane. Rayners
Lane used to be called Bourne Lane because it crossed
several streams.
The area between the main street and the common or
wood was for the most part given over to individually
occupied estates of a few acres each on which co-operation
was not necessary - only a few villagers had this sort of
property. Roadways threaded between the properties
and led to the houses, which were clustered in tiny hamlets
whose names survive today - West End, East End, Hatch End,
Pinner Green, Barrow Point, Nower Hill, Waxwell. The
roads survive too. Some still have names going back
to Tudor times or earlier - West End Lane, Moss Lane,
Paines Lane, Love Lane, while others just as old have
changed their names - Chapel Lane, Church Lane, Bridge
Street.
All of this belonged to the lord of the manor of Harrow,
and the villagers had their pieces in return for rent or
work done. The lord kept some parts of Pinner
entirely for his own use however. He had two large
farms called Woodhall and Headstone. Part of
Woodhall’s farmhouse is still there. So is part
of Headstone’s house, as well as its barn and moat,
and they form the Harrow Heritage and Museum Centre.
Very different was Pinner Park, a 250-acre haven for his
deer, protected from the depredation of local people by a
high bank and two ditches. When needed his keeper
would send deer to the lord’s table, or release some
to be hunted in the neighbourhood. Today Pinner Park
is known as Hall’s Farm, and parts of the old bank
still exist.
In 1336 King Edward III granted a fair to be held in
Pinner at Midsummer, the feast of its patron saint St. John
the Baptist. It provided a chance for the inhabitants
to buy things not usually obtainable locally and offered
some welcome diversion. The natural site was just
outside the church, which had been rebuilt in flint,
completed a little earlier in 1321.
By Tudor and Stuart times there was a butcher, a
baker, a candlestick-maker, a cobbler, a provisions man,
even a tailor in the street, working from their
homes. Some of the inhabitants who were doing well
built houses which still stand, marking the old street and
the hamlets. A few Londoners with money took an
interest in Pinner, among them Sir Christopher Clitherow,
Lord Mayor of London in 1635 who built a mansion on Pinner
Hill, and others who bought Woodhall, Headstone and Pinner
Park when the lord put them up for sale around that
time.
Pinner continued to be primarily a place of people getting
their living from the land, but by 1800 things were ready
for a change. Many people had already sold
their rights in their small pieces of land to more
prosperous farmers and over the next couple of decades what
remained of the great fields to the south were privatised,
most small owners being bought out. This was the
first great change in Pinner since medieval times and made
it a place of a few farmers and many agricultural
labourers. In the south Downs Farm was created in
Cannon Lane, with land on either side. Much of
the land along each side of Rayners Lane was acquired by
farmer Daniel Hill who built a couple of cottages there for
his workers. One of the families, living there for
about half a century, was named Rayner, and the lane was
renamed after these humble people.
The population of Pinner rose in the early 19th century as
it did in the country as a whole. Most were ordinary
folk who were accommodated in new houses added to the
existing hamlets or along roadsides leading from them, on
small plots created by the privatisation. The
occupants worked on local farms, set up or assisted in the
extra shops or businesses required by the greater numbers,
or became servants.
The building of the London and Birmingham Railway,
which clipped the north-east of Pinner in 1837, accelerated
the trend. A station named Pinner was opened in 1842,
and after several changes was finally renamed Hatch End in
1948. There were only a couple of farms nearby at
first but with encouragement from the railway a new estate
of well-to-do villas was built there by 1855 which was
called Woodridings. It was an isolated estate and its
residents were Pinner's first commuters, using the train to
Euston. They also employed a large number of
servants, some of them drawn from Pinner.
In 1851 about 40% of the population of Pinner was
engaged in agriculture or related occupations, but only
about 15% by 1881, when the leading occupation was
domestic service, which had risen from some 25% to about
30%. The main reason for the agricultural reduction
was the movement from arable farming to the less labour
intensive dairy farming and hay growing - these fields fed
the horses which kept the streets of London grid-locked
with traffic.
A school to cater for most of the children was
founded in 1844, backed by the vicar and other
worthies. The Commercial Travellers’ School,
transferred to Hatch End in 1855, added two or three
hundred more souls, largely confined to the school
buildings.
The arrival of the Metropolitan Railway in 1885
enabled Pinner people, better educated by now, to take work
in London, while Londoners could buy a home ‘in the
country’. It gave rise to development of a
slightly different sort, as streets near the centre of
Pinner began to sprout houses on roadside fields sold by
farmers, and new streets were laid out on chunks of fields
sold by other landowners who lived close to the
centre. By 1901 the population was
3366.
There was plenty of local recreational
activity. There were entertainments - concerts,
readings, bands, talks, magic lantern shows - in the parish
hall at the foot of the High Street and in the temperance
tavern called The Cocoa Tree at the top. There were
flower shows, sports, Royal Jubilees and, of course, the
fair.
By 1914 new neighbourhoods were appearing away from
the centre of Pinner - North Harrow, St. George’s
Headstone and a vastly enlarged Hatch End. Hundreds
of men from Pinner served in some capacity during World War
One, and many of those who died are remembered on the War
Memorial at the top of the High Street in 1921.
Between the two world wars the physical expansion of
London reached Pinner and went beyond it. The fields
disappeared under large new estates and roads. A
fresh neighbourhood appeared around Rayners Lane
station. New shopping centres, schools and churches
were needed. Cinemas were provided. In general
the houses to the north were more expensive, and much of
that area became known as Metroland, the name used by
Metropolitan Railway Company to foster building along its
line. People poured in. Growth continued to
rise after World War Two, reaching more than 46,000 by
1961.
This was too large a mass to continue to be regarded
as one entity. North Harrow, Rayners Lane, Headstone
and Hatch End have their own identity today. What is
meant by Pinner is more nebulous. But Pinner Village,
a much used expression, now tends to mean the old heart of
the village, that is the High Street and church, plus the
nexus of those old lanes radiating from it. Many,
though not all, of the oldest houses away from the High
Street are to be found within it – Sweetman’s
Hall, Orchard Cottage, Bee Cottage, Grange Cottage, The Bay
House, and the three old houses at East End. The High
Street itself shares many of the characteristics of village
high streets further out in the Home Counties, being
replete with timber-framed pubs, restaurants and antique
shops. The village is still there, even if it is set
within the matrix of Greater London.
Patricia
A. Clarke
22 Malpas Drive
Pinner
Middlesex.
HA5 1DQ
22.11.2000