Stoneleigh, Surrey

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Stoneleigh
Surrey
Stoneleigh Broadway - geograph.org.uk - 32928.jpg
Stoneleigh Broadway
Location
Grid reference: TQ2264
Location: 51°21’50"N, 0°14’56"W
Data
Population: 8,741  (2011[1])
Post town: Epsom, Worcester Park
Postcode: KT17, KT19, KT4
Dialling code: 020
Local Government
Council: Epsom and Ewell
Parliamentary
constituency:
Epsom and Ewell

Stoneleigh is a residential suburb on the edge of the metropolitan conurbation in Surrey. It has a population of almost 9,000 residents. It is situated 11 miles from Charing Cross.

Stoneleigh was extensively developed from fields into a low-rise network of homes in the 1930s, spurred by the building of Stoneleigh railway station. Most of the houses are semi-detached. Stoneleigh's main amenities are the station and Stoneleigh Broadway, with its main street, with shops and a post office in the angle between the A240 and the A24.

History

Early history

The Roman road Stane Street passed along the eastern boundary of what is now Stoneleigh (the modern day London Road/A24) on its way from London to Chichester via the nearby spring at Ewell.[2] In the 17th century, the area which is now Stoneleigh was part of the Great Park of Nonsuch Palace. In 1731 the Nonsuch estate was sold off and the Great Park, by then known as Worcester Park was divided up and turned into farmland.

Bowling Green and Coldharbour farms in the north of the park were run jointly and in 1860 were acquired by John Jeffries Stone. He had a large house he called 'Stoneleigh', close to the Bowling Green Farmhouse, which gave its name to the district (a map published in 1871 names a cluster of buildings located between the modern-day Elmwood Drive and Ewell Park Way as "Bowling Green Farm", yet a map published in 1897 names a cluster of buildings on the same plot as "Stoneleigh"[3][4]).

In 1859 the London and South Western Railway opened the Wimbledon and Epsom Line, passing through Stoneleigh, although no commuter station was opened for a further 60 years.[5] Farming was at its peak at the start of the 20th century when there were nearly twenty farms, but the number reduced rapidly after the First World War, as there was great demand for housing it became profitable to sell off the farmland for development.

Later history

St John the Baptist Church, Stoneleigh.

Between the world wars, demand for housing on commuter routes into London meant the area grew rapidly. Maps from 1931 show the land was mainly "Meadowland and permanent grass" with patches of "Forest and woodland" and "Heathland, moorland, commons and rough pasture".[6]

Stoneleigh railway station was opened in July 1932, on land acquired from the Stoneleigh Park Estate in July 1931.[7] The first houses were built in 1933 and the first shops on Stoneleigh Broadway opened in November of the same year. The Stoneleigh Hotel, a pub that was never a hotel and is now a Grade=II-listed building, opened in November 1935[8] and additional shops were built on the Broadway in the late 1930s.

Stoneleigh railway station was originally to be named 'Stoneleigh Park' to denote that it was an area of market gardening, but this did not happen, probably due to the next three stations on the line north all being called 'Park' (Worcester Park, Motspur Park and Raynes Park).[7] In 1938 the Rembrandt cinema was opened, next to the railway line on the Kingston Road. It operated for 60 years until its closure in April 1998. The building was subsequently demolished and replaced by flats.[9] The red-brick Anglican church of St John the Baptist, next to the station, was built in 1939.[10] Two large schools were built in Stoneleigh in the 1930s to accommodate the large suburban growth in the area, as well as several churches.[7]

From the Victorian era until c.1939 many homes were built in Stoneleigh Park, replacing market gardens and small farms. There was also a brick, tile, and pottery works, called the Nonsuch Works and two flour mills.[11]

Geography

Stoneleigh comprises the residential areas either side of the Mole Valley Line including Stoneleigh Broadway towards its midpoint, which is roughly three miles from Epsom town centre. The suburb has no high-rise buildings. It contains or borders two mostly dual carriageway A-roads; the north-east side of the A240 Kingston Road and Ewell Bypass, and the A24 from near the Organ Crossroads to the traffic lights with Sparrow Farm Road, via a hill beside Nonsuch Park with two entrances to the park near where Stane Street used to be.

Economy

Stoneleigh Library

Stoneleigh has one main shopping area: The Broadway, next to Stoneleigh railway station. It is about 260 yards in length and has around 40 retail units including some chains and restaurants, as well as a post office and two pubs. The largest shops are a Co-Op on the south side of the Broadway and a Sainsbury's on the north side. Also on the north side of The Broadway is Stoneleigh Library, which opened in 1966.[12] It has been run by volunteers since 2013.[13] Stoneleigh also has smaller parades and shopping areas including:

  • Stoneleigh Parade and Kingston Parade, both at the junction of Stoneleigh Park Road and the A240 Kingston Road.
  • Cuddington Parade on Vale Road, which has a post office. This is located on the border with Worcester Park.

The Organ Inn

The Organ Inn was a landmark pub located on the southern boundary junction of Stoneleigh where the A24, A240 and B2200 roads intersect. It opened in the 1780s as the drinking place of the workmen who fitted the Father Willis organ in St Mary’s Church in Ewell.[12] It was later converted into a bar/restaurant, firstly under the name Jim Thompsons and finally The Organ and Dragon.

The pub closed on 18 July 2012 after around 230 years of business. The building was demolished in June 2014 after supermarket chain Lidl bought the site. The demolishing of the Organ and Dragon was criticized by local MP Chris Grayling.[14] Kentucky Fried Chicken had previously owned the site and had unsuccessfully applied for planning permission to turn it into one of their restaurants .[15]

Transport

Stoneleigh railway station is served by trains running between London Waterloo and Guildford or Dorking, via Wimbledon and Epsom.

Three bus routes go either through or along the edge of Stoneleigh. The E16 (Stoneleigh Circular) stops at both Station Approach and Stoneleigh Broadway along its circular route, which also runs through Epsom, Ewell and Worcester Park. The 406 bus (between Kingston and Epsom) runs along the A240 past Park Avenue West, Stoneleigh Park Road and Thorndon Gardens and the 293 bus (between Morden and Epsom) runs along the A24 (London Road) alongside Nonsuch Park.

Education

There are four schools in Stoneleigh: the Mead Infant School and Auriol Junior School are in the Auriol Ward, with Nonsuch Primary School and Meadow Primary School in the Stoneleigh Ward.

The Mead Infant School on Newbury Gardens is for children from nursery year to school year 2. It is adjacent to Auriol Junior School on Vale Road which caters for children in school years 3 to 6. The two schools in the Stoneleigh Ward are both Primary Schools, catering for children up to school year 6. Meadow Primary School on Sparrow Farm Road was formed by the merger of Stoneleigh First School and Sparrow Farm Junior School. Nonsuch Primary School on Chadacre Road is run by Sutton Council despite being situated in Epsom and Ewell.

Residents

Playwright John Osborne lived at 68 Stoneleigh Park Road. His grandparents lived at the end of Clandon Close. He recounted his experiences as an adolescent living in 1930s and 1940s Stoneleigh and Ewell in his 1981 autobiography, A Better Class of Person.[16]

Writer Jane Wilson-Howarth lived in Stoneleigh and was educated at Stoneleigh East County Infants, Junior and Secondary Schools.[17]

Outsidelinks

Notes and references

Notes
References
  1. Key Statistics; Quick Statistics: Population Density United Kingdom Census 2011 Office for National Statistics Retrieved 20 December 2013
  2. "Roman Ewell" Epsom & Ewell History & Archaeology Society
  3. "Surrey XIII 1871" National Library of Scotland
  4. "Surrey XIII.SW 1897" National Library of Scotland
  5. "Epsom railway history" Epsom and Ewell History Explorer
  6. "1931 map" Sound Survey
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Alan A Jackson; 'Semi-Detached London', Second Edition, Wild Swan Publications 1991
  8. "Stoneleigh history" Epsom and Ewell History Explorer
  9. "The Rembrandt Cinema Ewell" Epsom and Ewell History Explorer
  10. "About St John’s" stjohnsstoneleigh.org.uk
  11. H.E. Malden (editor) (1911). "Parishes: Ewell". A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3. Institute of Historical Research. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=42967. Retrieved 27 December 2013. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 Matharu, Hardeep "Historic pubto be demolished?" Croydon Guardian 20 July 2012
  13. "History and info - Stoneleigh Community Library" www.surreycommunity.info
  14. Matharu, Hardeep "Grayling slams Lidl's poor behavior in bulldozing Organ and Dragon" This is local London 30 July 2014
  15. De-Keyzer, Amy "KFC withdraws plans after Organ and Dragon appeal dismissed" getSURREY 3 October 2013
  16. Jackson, Linda "The Osbornes in Stoneleigh and Ewell" Epsom and Ewell History explorer - 2014
  17. "About the Author" wilson-howarth.com (see section titled Jane boasts an array of internationally recognised postnominals What the letters after her name mean)