Hatfield Road passes St Peter's Farm and bends right after passing the pond in 1879. This is pre-park and there is no sign of Clarence Park Road. COURTESY HALS |
The 1897 map shows Clarence Park Road and the park laid out, but no development surrounding the farm. COURTESY NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND |
If you have visited the park and left via the Clarence Road gate you might have taken in the view on the opposite site of the road (photo below). This is what you would see: a 1920s detached dwelling to the right of Clarence Park Mews, with a gap-filling post-WW2 home on its left. Thereafter begins the line of large villas. The Mews was originally the cart entrance to the farm's barns and stores. These survived and were rented out for furniture and other storage and in recent times have been converted for residential use.
View across Clarence Road, the space between the two houses was the former farm cart track leading to the barns, now Clarence Park Mews. |
Clarence Park Mews. |
The Valuation Office records for the period up to 1915 show the block of land with their houses owned by W J Elliott of Chequer Street. William Jermyn Elliott, born in the West Indies, was a piano dealer, whose shop was at 20 Chequer Street. I am not certain whether he was also the developer of 2 to 30 Clarence Park Road or whether he acquired the estate after completion as an investment. Today they remain largely as built, even showing evidence of small cellars and one or two original paths. A few still maintain little decorative front gardens, but most have utility gravel or pavers, bins, and car parking for small vehicles.
The terraces viewed from the park (above) and from the road (top). |
To the Hatfield Road end of the first terrace was added Alexandra House, which incorporated number 2 Clarence Park Road. As an end of terrace dwelling it looks rather different from those on the ends of the other terraces. Alexandra House consisted of a house and two shop units. When the paint was hardly dry in 1903 the left shop was rented by chemist Frederick Fox who, for the previous nine years, had plied his trade on the corner of Laurel Road. It seems likely Mr Fox saw the location of Alexandra House as not only closer to the homes in Stanhope Road, Clarence Road and Granville Road, but the wider corner location giving more visibility, even though he was moving further from the growing district of Fleetville itself. Herbert Pike open his chemist shop between Sandfield and Harlesden roads after Mr Fox had moved downhill. When Mr Fox retired from the corner the business was taken on by chemist partners Shields & Warren who remained until the 1970s, since when it transformed into a bridal shop.
The more prominent building with block facing is undeniably a bank which you would recognise as such even without the sign. Opened just before WW1, it became the first such service in the Fleetville district. Barclays moved further eastwards to the corner of Sandfield Road c1970, by which time all of the major banks also had a presence here – before all of them left the district again. None of the new-style banks have arrived in their place either. The Crown Barclays has had many transformations since, and is now a money transfer business.
So, in a period of fifteen years the wide frontage of the former farm's green space had been replaced by houses and shops; a period during which the whole of Fleetville between the Crown and the Recreation Ground and its parallel roads had been developed.
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