Charlton

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Charlton
Kent
Charlton House, London.JPG
Charlton House
Location
Grid reference: TQ415785
Location: 51°29’16"N, 0°2’20"E
Data
Post town: London
Postcode: SE7
Dialling code: 020
Local Government
Council: Greenwich
Parliamentary
constituency:
Greenwich and Woolwich

Charlton is a village in Kent, which has been absorbed by the London metropolitan conurbation. It lies between Greenwich to the west and Woolwich to the east. To the north, across the River Thames, lies Silvertown in Essex.

Charlton is the location of Charlton House, a well preserved Jacobean house; and Charlton Athletic Football Club.

History

Toponymy

Charlton is recorded in the 1086 Domesday Book as Cerletone.[1] It is formed from Old English 'ceorl' and 'tūn' and means 'farmstead of the freemen or peasants'. It is a common English placename and the parish was also known as Charlton next Woolwich to distinguish it from Charlton by Dover. During the 19th century the riverside portion of the area became known as New Charlton.[1]

Middle Ages

Charlton is assessed in the Domesday Book of 1086 at one "sulung", which is commonly held to have been the equivalent of two hides. In 1086 it was in the fee of Gundulf, bishop of Rochester, but in 1066 it had been held from the king as two estates, by two brothers, named Godwine and Alweard. Though assessed at only one sulung, it had a slightly higher value than might be expected, at £7, both in 1066 and in 1086. A church dedicated to St Luke is recorded in the village as early as 1077, although no trace of the medieval building survives.[2]

In 1093, the manor of Charlton was given to Bermondsey Abbey by Bishop Robert Bloet of Lincoln. In 1268, the Abbey was granted a Monday market at Charlton, as well as an annual fair of three days, centred on Trinity Sunday, the eighth Sunday after Easter.[3]

Renaissance

Between 1607 and 1612, Sir Adam Newton, tutor to Prince Henry, eldest son of James I, had a new manor house, Charlton House, built in the village. The Jacobean mansion by architect John Thorpe was never used by the prince, who died in 1612. On the northern edge of the house's garden is a mulberry tree planted in 1608 by order of King James in an effort to cultivate silkworms. On the death of Sir Adam, his executors Peter Newton and David Cunningham, 1st Baronet of Auchinhervie were charged to rebuild St Luke's Church.[2][4]

Early Modern

The manor was subsequently acquired by the colonial administrator Sir William Langhorne, 1st Baronet, who is buried in the parish church. Upon his death without issue in 1715 (N.S.), his possessions in Charlton and Hampstead passed to the Conyers baronets, and subsequently to the Maryon-Wilson baronets.

In the early 18th century, Charlton was described by Daniel Defoe as:

a village famous, or rather infamous for the yearly collected rabble of mad-people, at Horn-Fair; the rudeness of which I cannot but think, is such as ought to be suppressed, and indeed in a civiliz'd well govern'd nation, it may well be said to be unsufferable. The mob indeed at that time take all kinds of liberties, and the women are especially impudent for that day; as if it was a day that justify'd the giving themselves a loose to all manner of indecency and immodesty, without any reproach, or without suffering the censure which such behaviour would deserve at another time. (from A Tour through Great Britain)

The Horn Fair (or Charlton Fair) was held regularly on 18 October each year, and retained its reputation for lawlessness; in 1833, for example, police arrested a swindler who had cheated several artillerymen.[5] In 1857, following the abolition of nearby Greenwich Fair, Charlton Fair was described in the Morning Chronicle as "more like a carnival of the very worst and most vulgar class than any fair in the country."[6] The Horn Fair was abolished, along with the livestock fairs of nearby Blackheath, by order of Henry Austin Bruce, the reforming Home Secretary.[7]

In the early nineteenth century, Spencer Perceval, the only British Prime Minister to be assassinated, was buried at St Luke's church; Perceval's wife having been a member of the Maryon-Wilson family. In 1843, Charlton was the site of the death and burial of murdered civil servant Edward Drummond, whose assassination led to the establishment of the M'Naghten Rules for legal insanity.

Industrialisation

The flat land adjoining the Thames at Charlton Riverside has been a significant industrial area since Victorian times. The establishment of heavy industry centred on Charlton Pier, and led to a number of serious fires in the area in the mid 19th century.[8][9] A notable establishment was the Siemens Brothers Telegraph Works opened in 1863, which manufactured two new transatlantic cables in the 1880s,[10] and contributed to PLUTO in World War 2. It was in this industrialised area that Charlton Athletic F.C. was established in 1905, before moving a short distance to The Valley in 1919.

20th Century

From 1903 to 1913 the Italian writer Italo Svevo lived in a house on Charlton Church Lane which now bears a blue plaque in his honour. He had arrived there in his capacity as a director in a Trieste firm selling high-quality underwater paint for ships, on whose behalf he established a factory in Charlton's Anchor and Hope Lane, fulfilling a big contract with the British Royal Navy.[11]

The estates surrounding Charlton House were gradually broken up, and once the Maryon-Wilson family died out in 1925, the surviving open spaces were converted into public parks, two of which bear the family name. The house itself became the property of the local authority and is used as a library and community centre. In 1966, Maryon Park was used as the filming location for the pivotal murder scene in Michelangelo Antonioni's film Blow-Up.[12]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Mills, D. (2000). Oxford Dictionary of London Place Names. Oxford. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 St Luke's Church - Greenwich
  3. Annales Monastici, Luard, H.R. (ed., 5 vols., Rolls Series), 3, 1866.
  4. A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies of England, John Burke (1838), 385
  5. "Charlton Fair". Morning Post: p. 3. 19 October 1833. http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000174/18331019/031/0003. Retrieved 3 July 2014. 
  6. "Charlton Fair". Morning Chronicle: p. 4. 29 October 1857. http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000082/18571029/015/0004. Retrieved 3 July 2014. 
  7. "Town and Country Talk". Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper: p. 11. 31 March 1872. http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000079/18720331/039/0011. Retrieved 3 July 2014. 
  8. "Tremendous Fire at Charlton". Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper: p. 2. 30 May 1858. http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000079/18580530/009/0002. Retrieved 3 July 2014. 
  9. "Destructive Fire at Charlton". London Standard: p. 7. 16 August 1864. http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000183/18640816/044/0007. Retrieved 3 July 2014. 
  10. A Visit to the Works of Messrs. Siemens Bros, The Telegraphist, 2 June 1884.
  11. John Gatt-Rutter, "Italo Svevo: A Double Life", Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1988, Ch. 40 "The Factory in Charlton".
  12. Simon R.H. James (2007). London Film Location Guide. Batsford (London). p. 181. ISBN 978-0-713-49062-6. 
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