EPW018387 ENGLAND (1927). Skottowe's Pond and the town centre, Chesham, 1927. This image has been produced from a copy-negative.
© Copyright OpenStreetMap contributors and licensed by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Cartography is licensed as CC BY-SA.
Nearby Images (8)
Details
Title | [EPW018387] Skottowe's Pond and the town centre, Chesham, 1927. This image has been produced from a copy-negative. |
Reference | EPW018387 |
Date | June-1927 |
Link | |
Place name | CHESHAM |
Parish | CHESHAM |
District | |
Country | ENGLAND |
Easting / Northing | 495912, 201633 |
Longitude / Latitude | -0.61184273296695, 51.704769627282 |
National Grid Reference | SP959016 |
Pins
Blucher Street |
totoro |
Thursday 27th of November 2014 09:21:23 PM |
White Hill |
totoro |
Thursday 27th of November 2014 09:20:43 PM |
Chesham Park |
totoro |
Thursday 27th of November 2014 09:19:28 PM |
The brick structure still stands and was the water tower for use by steam engines of the day. |
totoro |
Thursday 27th of November 2014 09:18:41 PM |
Chesham Railway Station.
A terminus station, the single line runs to the right for 5955 metres to Chalfont Road (Chalfont and Latimer, later Chalfont) where it meets the London-Aylesbury line.
The first official service on the line left Chesham for London's Baker Street at 6.55 am on 8 July 1889.
Railway traffic included the export of watercress and import of coal.
Originally Metropolitan Railway the line passed to London Transport in 1933.
By 2000 the station was the most Northern and the most Western on London Underground. It then passed to Transport for London. |
totoro |
Thursday 27th of November 2014 09:17:35 PM |
The avenue elms were felled in 1950 as they were thought to have Dutch Elm Disease. Most of the trees, however, were found to have been healthy. |
totoro |
Thursday 27th of November 2014 08:59:31 PM |
High Street |
totoro |
Thursday 27th of November 2014 08:42:52 PM |
Skottowe's Pond
The pond was created in the early 18th Century. Formerly reed edged the edge was concreted in the 1920s.
About 120m x 40m with an island about 20m x 5m.
The pond is named after the Skottowe family, who owned a mansion house, called Bury Hill House, which once stood in the area where the Guide Hut is now located.
During World War One, the park was used for training soldiers in bridge construction across Skottowes Pond. The island was created in the 1920s.
In 1953, the Lowndes family donated Lowndes Park to the Urban District Council.
Grazing of cattle only ended in the park in 1959. |
totoro |
Thursday 27th of November 2014 08:39:21 PM |