And so we come to the final post in this series of monthly articles about the backgrounds of a number of east end street names and why they were so called – or were probably named. For the most part I can be certain, but occasionally – as you will read in this post – there has been a certain amount of guess-work, and if readers have an alternative view do let me know.
Many decades passed in the twentieth century with estates and other development areas only partly complete. Temporary usage was made of dormant land – temporary buildings, allotment gardens, stock-piling ground and, in the years before mains drainage, the dumping of the contents of cess pits A business partnership trading in Fleetville for over fifty years, Frank Sear and Thomas Carter, ran a nursery and florist, from premises adjacent to St Paul's Church, now called St Paul's Place.
Sear & Carter's florist shop; behind were several glasshouses. Today the whole is the
location of St Paul's Place.
| Houses today line the Salisbury Avenue junction with Garden Close. |
Sear and Carter carried out extensive trials on temporarily acquired land in and around Fleetville, one of these sites being between Woodstock Road north and Beaumont Avenue & Salisbury Avenue. There, shrubs and other garden plants were grown on. The company also undertook contract work on behalf of residents, businesses and the city council. The site opened onto the road adjacent to where Gleave Close is today. At the other end, access was gained from Salisbury Avenue. The business transferred from Hatfield Road in 1960 to their country trial ground and nursery at Smallford, a site long since occupied by Notcutt's Garden Centre. The small trial sites had closed and were sold for development, including the Woodstock Road trial ground, where the Beaumont Avenue access road became Garden Close; a rather appropriate name considering the location's previous usage.
Above and top: junctions of Lincoln's Close and Cromwell Close and their connecting
roads.
COURTESY GOOGLE STREET VIEW
Nearby another road is named Lincoln's Close. Lincoln was also a frontier town during the Civil War and also became a Parliamentary collection point at this turbulent time, and so could be considered to have an appropriate connection with St Albans. However, an intriguing twist is the styling of the name, for it is called Lincoln's Close (inviting the comical riposte, "Is it? are you sure?) So this is the first of today's uncertain explanations. It is therefore left for readers to help clarify the road name's origin.
| Above and top: Valerie Close at its junction with Campfield Road, and Roland Street at its junction with Camp Road. COURTESY GOOGLE STREETVIEW |
| An early outdoor activity in the grounds of Marshals Wick House. COURTESY HERTFORDSHIRE SCOUTS |
When St Albans City Council developed a residential estate adjacent to Marshalswick Lane in the 1950s, it decided to recognise the spirit, experience and creativity of Charles Dymoke Green and his family. Rather than labelling it Dymoke Green Close or Dymoke Green Drive, the name was left to stand on its own as Dymoke Green.
The name Thomas Edison, the international inventor of electrical, well, electrical anything, is not expected to be closely associated with St Albans. After all, he spent all of his life in his birth country, the United States. But his reputation and inventiveness could be claimed universally,