1901
1901-1906 |
Ealing Tenants Ltd founded by General Builders Ltd under the guidance of Henry Vivian. Construction began on the first nine houses, 71-87 Woodfield Road (Vivian Terrace) Further building in Woodfield Avenue, Woodfield Crescent and Brunner Road |
1906 | More land purchased and a ‘garden suburb’ plan designed by Parker & Unwin (planners of Hampstead Garden Suburb, founded 1907) |
1907-11 | Construction of Winscombe Crescent, Ludlow Road, Neville Road, Ruskin Gardens, 2–6 Brentham Way, part of Meadvale Road. Most houses designed by F. Cavendish Pearson |
1911-15 | Final phase of estate designed by G. Lister Sutcliffe – Denison Road, Holyoake Walk, North View, lower Brentham Way and Fowlers Walk |
1911 | Brentham Club & Institute opened by Duke and Duchess of Connaught |
1912 | Holyoake House built: 24 small flats for single and retired people |
1916 | St Barnabas Church completed |
1920s | C.G. Butler designed 7–8, 9–19, 10–24 and 72–78 Brentham Way |
1930 | Henry Vivian died. By this time Ealing Tenants had been absorbed by Co-Partnership Tenants. The co-partnership idea was waning and houses were being sold to private purchasers |
1930s | 25-33 Brentham Way & Pitshanger, Holyoake and Winscombe Courts built |
1936 | Estate sold to Liverpool Trust Ltd |
1940 | Bradford Property Trust became owners of the remaining tenanted houses |
1947 | Brentham Club & Institute offered for sale and purchased by the members |
1950s | 21-23a Brentham Way, Rookery Nook in Brunner Road, 186 & 188 Pitshanger Lane built |
1969 | Brentham designated a Conservation Area by London Borough of Ealing |
1970 | Brentham Society formed to encourage principle of conservation |
1973 | Preservation Order served by Greater London Council on Brentham Club building |
1975 | Brentham Garden Suburb awarded Article 4 conservation area status |
1987 | ‘Great Storm’ destroys nearly 70 trees in Brentham |
1999 | Brentham Heritage Society founded as a charitable arm of the Brentham Society; St Barnabas Millennium Hall opened by the Bishop of London |
2000 | Publication of Brentham: a history of pioneer garden suburb 1901-2001 by Aileen Reid; Brentham Heritage Society awarded charitable status by the Charity Commission |
2001 | Centenary of Brentham Garden Suburb |
2004 | Photographic survey of the Brentham Garden Suburb Conservation Area undertaken |
2006 | Centenary of Brentham May Day |
2022 | Archive and Library established in refurbished Tower of Brentham Club |
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What’s New
- Brentham Carol Singing December 20, 2022
- Open House Guided Walk – 2022 September 11, 2022
- Strawberry Tea June 21, 2022
- Open Gardens 2022 June 6, 2022
- May Day Celebrations Return May 21, 2022
My primary school, St. Gregory’s is in Woodfield Road. All fields originally. Very interesting.
Thanks for this bllog post
Extremely helpful history. Thank you. I have a copy of Reid’s excellent book and I live nearby BGS. I am glad the area and housing stock has conservation status. It is, nevertheless, a pity the project was eventually privatised and its co-operative ideals abandoned.
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