West Hyde
West Hyde | |
Hertfordshire | |
---|---|
St Thomas, West Hyde | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | TQ033912 |
Location: | 51°36’38"N, -0°30’32"W |
Data | |
Post town: | Rickmansworth |
Postcode: | WD3 |
Dialling code: | 01923 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Three Rivers |
Parliamentary constituency: |
South West Hertfordshire |
West Hyde is a little village in Hertfordshire, built around a green and beside the artificial lakes along the valley of the River Colne.
West Hyde is in the south-westernmost finger of the county, with the borders of Buckinghamshire close by to the south and the west and the border of Middlesex to the east, on the Colne. To the north is Maple Cross, Hertfordshire.
The A412 Denham Way runs by from north to south from Maple Cross to Denham, Buckinghamshire. West Hyde lies off the road of today; its main street the original route, since bypassed, and named the Old Uxbridge Road.
The parish church is St Thomas, at the north of the village.
Around and about
East of the body of the village is a series of manmade lakes; the result of gravel workings. By The Oaks a narrow lane, Copper Mill Lane, runs off by and threads among the lakes, the name of the lane bearing witness to the industry which was once prevalent here. It reaches the bridge over the River Colne and its canal (a section of the Grand Union Canal), squeezing over the canal bridge into Harefield, Middlesex at the Coy Carp.
In the Colne Valley here, William Bradbery of West Hyde pioneered watercress production which, though not found now on these waters, is well supported on the River Chess. A road in Maple Cross is named Bradbery to commemorate him.