Updated 15 March 2024
Lanes give the impression of being narrow rural roads, often bordered by hedging and maybe trees – or if not, fencing. In addition, they come with unexpected single or double bends, some providing a clue to earlier deviations. An occasional cottage, barn or farm entrance might also turn up.
Cell Barnes Lane continues toward Little Cell Barnes on the map surveyed in 1875. COURTESY NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND |
At Camp Road's Camp Hill exists a T junction which is the beginning of Cell Barnes Lane. It begins close to the former Cunningham Hill Farm, meandering gently downhill and finishing at the former Little Cell Barnes, although it continues at the charmingly named Nightingale Lane and once fed into the eastern side (or end) of London Colney; although today the four lane bypass gets in the way!
BY THE 1897 survey the first two properties, twin cottages lie to the side of the double bend, very close to today's Drakes Drive. COURTESY NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND |
By 1937 the Springfield houses are completed, wrapping around Camp Road into Cell Barnes Lane. COURTESY NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND |
The first major incursion of homes along the Lane occurred in the 1920s when a St Albans City Council post-war housing scheme (Homes for Heroes) was progressed in the mid decade and named Springfield, after the field on which the homes were built. Today a few of them have been demolished and replaced by the more modern houses on the Wingate Way estate. Spare ground before that development had been used as a cycle speedway track by various clubs in the district.
Programme produced by the St Albans EAC Hawkes Cycle Speedway club, with a photo taken at the Cell Barnes Lane track (on the left page). COURTESY BILL GADSBY |
Little Cell Barnes cottages near what was the double bend, now between the two roundabouts in Drakes Drive. |
The site of the two schools, infant and junior, are both post-war and partly occupy an earlier sports field rented by O W Peak, the factory which made coats in Hatfield Road. A pavilion occupied the site which mainly served tennis courts used by the firm's employees.
St Luke's Church's permanent home. |
Electricity for St Albans arrives at the Cell Barnes Lane sub-station, originally coming from a new power station at Hoddesdon in east Herts. |
When housebuilding began in earnest from the 1950s it included the laying of Drakes Drive and a re-arrangement of Cell Barnes Lane at the double bend which provided the opportunity for introducing new junctions, eventually becoming little roundabouts.
Alongside the housebuilding grew the inevitable parade of shops, the Cornerstone Church, a branch library (the only one of the three on the east side of the city still remaining being at Marshalswick). And we should not forget the permeant building of St Luke's Church, having moved from its temporary location in Camp Road and originally being a daughter church of St Paul's in Blandford Road.
This, and the one below, are the same extracts but current surveys. BOTH COURTESY OPEN STREET MAP CONTRIBUTORS |
So, during the period of just over one hundred years a quiet rural lane has become a busy residential road – with a pedestrian crossing and a bus route thrown in.
1 comment:
Hi Mike. My grandmother (Ellen Caroline Reynolds) lived in Dellfield. I know it's sort of on the edge of your patch but I wondered if you were going to do a piece on tha road. Great reading your blog. So very informative.
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