Osidge

From Wikishire
Jump to: navigation, search
Osidge
Hertfordshire
Hampden Square, Osidge.jpg
Hampden Square, Osidge
Location
Grid reference: TQ285945
Location: 51°38’4"N, 0°8’32"W
Data
Post town: London
Postcode: N14
Dialling code: 020
Local Government
Council: Barnet
Parliamentary
constituency:
Chipping Barnet

Osidge is a district of metropolitan Hertfordshire between Brunswick Park and Southgate. It has no formal border and is entirely enclosed within the electoral ward of Brunswick Park, East Barnet;[1] however Oak Hill Park forms a natural boundary to the North and Pymmes Brook to the West, with the A111 to the East and the Piccadilly line to the South/East.

The two main roads in Osidge are Osidge Lane and Hampden Way, which meet at a roundabout called Hampden Square. Around the roundabout are three parades of shops and the Osidge Arms pub. South and west of this roundabout is an area of green belt land, crossed by Pymmes Brook and leading down to New Southgate Cemetery; an adjacent road, Whitehouse Way, provided the backdrop to scenes from Mike Leigh’s film Secrets and Lies.[2]

History

The name is Anglo-Saxon, probably deriving from 'hawe's ege' referring to the Old English 'hawe' and the boundary (edge) of the Southaw wood.[3] It was first recorded in 1176, in a charter from Henry II to the Abbot of St Albans referring to the abbot's woodland property there, adjacent to the land later known as Enfield Chase. The area was variously named as Huzeog, Hossegge, Huzeseg, Hwzeseg, Ousage, Ouzage, Owsage and Ussage.[4][5] The land was sold after the Dissolution of the Monasteries and a large house was built and parkland laid out. A condition of tenure was that the woods should supply faggots for the burning of heretics.} In 1614 the estate passed by marriage to Robert Berkeley, and in 1652 the house became the residence of four generations of the Hadley family.[3] Following the death of John Hadley in 1744 the house was demolished and the estate sold. A new Osidge House was built by 1808 and later occupied by the Lambert and Bosanquet families, being purchased by David Bevan[4] for his eldest child Louisa Bosanquet. After her death the estate was rented and later purchased by Thomas Lipton.

The 1868-1883 Ordnance Survey map of Middlesex[6] shows Osidge as a small rural estate centred around a manor house, adjacent to the Cockfosters Road which forms part of the county border with Hertfordshire (now Chase Side), and Blind Lane (now Osidge Lane). Within the parish of East Barnet,[7] in the Cashio Hundred, the area remained rural well into the twentieth century with only a small number of dwellings on its borders[8] until suburbanisation in the early 1930s.[9] Osidge was then given formal status as an electoral ward covering an expanded area bounded by Pymmes Brook, Oakhill and the Southgate border.[10]

1914 map showing the northern part of Thomas Lipton's Osidge estate

Notable residents

  • Sir Robert Berkeley, judge and politician; lived in the original Osidge manor house.[11]
  • John Hadley, mathematician and inventor; lived in the original Osidge manor house.[4]
  • George Hadley, meteorologist; as above.[4]
  • Sir Thomas Lipton, who moved to the current Osidge House in 1893. After his death in 1931, most of his 60-acre estate was developed (with housing, as well as Osidge School), but Lipton endowed his house as a hostel for nurses.[12] The Sir Thomas Lipton Memorial Home opened in 1935 and closed in 2014,[13] after which the site was redeveloped as Lipton Close.[14] The former manor house gained Grade II listed building status in 1982.[15]
  • Amy Winehouse, singer-songwriter, lived in Osidge while growing up,[16] and attended local schools.[17]
Osidge Library

Education

Osidge is served by Hampden Way Nursery, East Barnet Day Nursery, Osidge Primary, Monkfrith Primary, Ashmole Primary and Ashmole Academy - as well as the nearby Brunswick Park primary school. Osidge Primary made the news in 2005 when chef François Nouaillat, horrified by the quality of the school meals given to his sons, took over the school kitchen.[18] The school celebrated its 80th anniversary in 2016.[19]

Veterans Hall, Osidge Lane, seen from Pymmes Brook.

Leisure

The 5th East Barnet Scout Group are based on Osidge Lane.[20] Adjacent to the scouts hut is the Veterans Hall, which was home to the Monkfrith Boys Club, operational between 1964 and 2003.[21] The Club hosted live music in the 1980s-1990s, including the debut performance of Barnet band Omega Tribe in 1981.[22]

Osidge also has an eponymous library, situated adjacent to Osidge Lane in nearby Brunswick Park.[23]

Religious facilities

Osidge is served by three C of E parish churches just outside the district: the northern part by St Mary the Virgin, East Barnet, Diocese of St Albans, and the central and southern parts by St Andrew's Southgate and Christ Church, Southgate Green, both Diocese of London. The Christian Communion International has a church on Osidge Lane, in the former Veterans Hall.

Osidge and Southgate

Osidge is not seen as a separate locality by most local residents but is regarded as part of Southgate; addresses are occasionally given as Osidge, Southgate. Osidge House - for centuries the most prominent dwelling in the district - has main access from Chase Side, a road forming part of the border of Edmonton Hundred, Middlesex, with Southgate its nearest village.

St Andrew's Southgate is the closest parish church to Osidge House, and its origins are as a chapel-of-ease to Christ Church, Southgate;[24] in 1902, The London Gazette reported on the granting of a Baronetcy to Thomas Lipton, the first and only 'Baronet of Osidge' giving his address as "Osidge, in the parish of Southgate."[25] The history of Osidge has therefore been covered by local historians of the Southgate area, while being recorded officially in histories of East Barnet.

References

  1. https://www.barnet.gov.uk/citizen-home/directories/Directories?view=true&_pecid=373ac375-9115-4d18-8a58-ce6098691e0a&directoryId=54e3854084ae7c2872585d58&directoryRecordId=54e3854184ae7c2872585d6c
  2. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117589/locations
  3. 3.0 3.1 Mason, Tom. "Osidge Through the Ages" in The Story of Southgate, Enfield: Meyers Brooks, 1947
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/herts/vol2/pp337-342#h3-0012
  5. https://archive.org/details/eastbarnet00cass
  6. https://www.british-history.ac.uk/os-1-to-10560/middlesex/007
  7. https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/herts/vol2/pp337-342#h2-0001
  8. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104202409
  9. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104202406
  10. https://maps.nls.uk/view/196759676
  11. https://www.barnet.gov.uk/sites/default/files/assets/citizenportal/documents/libraries/LocalStudies/ChatAboutBarnetAndItsHistory.pdf
  12. http://ezitis.myzen.co.uk/sirthomaslipton.html
  13. https://www.palmersgreencommunity.org.uk/pgc/planning-all-subjects/conservation/1231-43-dwellings-planned-for-osidge-house-site
  14. https://www.mirror.co.uk/money/inside-liptons-iced-tea-estate-14578128
  15. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1294718
  16. http://hidden-london.com/gazetteer/osidge/
  17. Husband, Stuart (22 April 2007). "Friends united - Amy Winehouse and Juliette Ashby". The Observer. Guardian News and Media. https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2007/apr/22/features.magazine57. 
  18. https://www.standard.co.uk/news/school-welcomes-the-french-jamie-7193120.html
  19. https://www.times-series.co.uk/news/14443343.school-struck-by-bombs-during-ww2-celebrates-80th-anniversary/
  20. http://www.5theastbarnetscoutgroup.org.uk/
  21. https://beta.charitycommission.gov.uk/charity-details/?subid=0&regid=302919
  22. Glasper, Ian The Day The Country Died: A History of Anarcho Punk 1980 to 1984. Cherry Red Books, 2007, ISBN 9781901447705
  23. https://www.barnet.gov.uk/citizen-home/libraries/find-your-local-library/osidge.html
  24. Dumayne, Alan Southgate A Glimpse Into the Past, 1987, ISBN 0951228609
  25. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/27457/page/4738

Outside links

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