Enfield Lock

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Enfield Lock
Middlesex
Government Row.JPG
Government Row, Enfield Lock
Location
Grid reference: TQ365985
Location: 51°40’7"N, 0°1’34"W
Data
Population: 16,469  (2011)
Post town: Enfield
Postcode: EN3
Dialling code: 01992 / 020
Local Government
Council: Enfield
Parliamentary
constituency:
Enfield North

Enfield Lock is a suburban village to the north-east of Enfield Town, beside the River Lea (and the Lea Navigation) in the north-easternmost corner of Middlesex: the corner of the county, the three-shire point with Hertfordshire and Essex is where the M25 motorway crosses the River Lea just haf a mile to the north, over Rammey Marsh.

The village is named from an ancient lock on the Lea here. Today's Enfield Lock was rebuilt in 1922.[1]

Enfeld Lock is reckoned as lying east of the Hertford Road between Turkey Street and the motorway, extending to the River Lee Navigation and including the Enfield Island Village. The area forms part of the Lee Valley Park and the Enfield Lock Conservation Area.[2] On its eastern boundary Enfield Lock has marshland formerly used as a testing site between the Royal Small Arms Factory and the Gunpowder Mills. To the south is Brimsdown, the north Waltham Cross and to the west Bullsmoor and Freezywater.

Name

Enfield Lock is recorded by that name in 1710. Earlier it is found as Norhtlok (1355) and The Locke (1657). The name shows the presence of a lock or barrier on the river long predating the canalisation of the Lea, the Middle English lok representing either.[3]

History

Royal Small Arms Factory

The area was first developed from about 1812 when a government-owned rifle factory, which was later known as the Royal Small Arms Factory or RSAF Enfield, was built. The factory was built towards the end of the Napoleonic War on the instructions of the Board of Ordnance on marshland at Enfield Lock on the banks of both the River Lea and the River Lee Navigation.

The RSAF was closed in the late 1980s, shortly after privatisation, and the majority of the former site has now been redeveloped into a large housing development known as Enfield Island Village. The original machine shop frontage and the older part of the rear structure has been retained and was converted into workshops and retail units by the Enfield Enterprise Agency. The distinctive terraced cottages of Government Row were built as houses for factory workers.

Until the construction of the M25 in the 1980s, and the later building of the A1055, the area was much like a village with only a small population and consisting of only a few roads in the locality. Roads such as Ordnance Road, Salisbury Road and Medcalf Road are still populated by families who have lived in the Enfield Lock area for several generations.

2011 riots

After rioting had spread from neighbouring Tottenham on 8 August 2011, the Sony DADC/PIAS distribution centre on the Innova Business Park was looted and destroyed by fire.[4]

The Home Secretary, Theresa May, was shown the destroyed distribution centre by chief police officers and firefighters on 12 August 2011.[5] In September 2012, the Prime Minister, David Cameron, opened the rebuilt warehouse.[6]

River Lee Navigation above Enfield Lock

Nearest railway stations

  • Enfield Lock railway station
  • Turkey Street railway station
  • Brimsdown railway station

Recreation

Section 18 of the London LOOP, a long distance footpath, can be accessed at Enfield Lock railway station. The path connects with the Lea Valley Walk above Enfield Lock at Ordnance Road, and the (unwaymarked) Middlesex Greenway.

Angling is allowed on the River Lee Navigation upstream and downstream of Enfield Lock. Information from the River Lea Anglers Club.[7]

National Cycle Route 1 follows the River Lea towpath to Gunpowder Park.

Gunpowder Park, which lies to the east of Enfield Lock, is a large open space consisting mostly of marshland and lakes. The land is owned and managed by the Lee Valley Regional Park and is open to the public.[8]

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Enfield Lock)

References

  1. Enfield Lock - a history
  2. Enfield Lock Conservation Area Retrieved 20 November 2013
  3. Mills. A. D. Oxford Dictionary of London Place Names (2001) p76 ISBN 0-19-860957-4
  4. News report
  5. News report Retrieved 14 August 2011
  6. Sony Innova Way
  7. River Lea Anglers' Club
  8. Lee Valley Park-Gunpowder Park