West Wickham - PC Hospital
Transcription
West Wickham - PC Hospital
West Wickham Not to be confused with West Wycombe or West Wickham, Cambridgeshire. Coordinates: 0.0193°W 51°22′35″N 0°01′09″W / 51.3765°N West Wickham is a town, formerly part of the southern English county of Kent, and now part of the London Borough of Bromley. The town lies on the line of a Roman road, the London to Lewes Way, and is east of Croydon and south west of Bromley. It is 10.3 miles (16.6 km) south east of Charing Cross. 1 The Swan Public House, West Wickham About the town stocks) that once stood opposite 'The Swan' which was cut The history of West Wickham predates the Norman con- down owing to the requirement to build a new road. The quest of England in 1066.[1] plaque and bark now reside at West Wickham Library, West Wickham is mentioned in the Domesday book with on Glebe Way. the following entry: “In lordship 2 ploughs. 24 villagers West Wickham is also home to Beccehamians RFC a have 4 ploughs. 13 salves; a church; a mill at 20d.; a wood rugby union club founded in 1933 which plays competat 10 pigs. Value before 1066 8; later 6: now 13. Godric itive rugby at Sparrows Den at the bottom of Corkscrew son of Karl held it from King Edward”.[1] Hill.[5] In Tudor times, the Manor House Wickham Court was expanded by the Anne Boleyn family and the area was popular for deer hunting. The Grade II listed building,[2] was built by Sir Henry Heydon in 1469.[3] His wife was Anne Boleyn, a daughter of Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, who was Lord Mayor of London in 1469. She was the greataunt of Anne Boleyn. The house was later sold to the Lennard family in 1580. In 1935, it was sold and adapted for use as an hotel. After World War II, it was sold to the Daughters of Mary and Joseph. An American order of nuns. Currently, it is known as Coloma College (a teacher training college) run by the Daughters of Mary and Joseph, a community of religious sisters.[4] Other clubs nearby include Croydon RFC (formerly Shirley Wanderers), a club that currently competes in Surrey 1, that has a rugby pitch used often for county matches. There are several parks, West Wickham playing fields (McAndrews), Wickham Park and Blakes Recreation ground. All Saints Catholic School was a secondary school located on Layhams Road, West Wickham, London Borough of Bromley which closed in 2007. Formerly known as 'St. John Rigby Catholic College', its name was changed in 2004 as a rebranding because of falling pupil numbers Until the 1900s West Wickham remained a small village. and substantial debts following the conviction in 2003 The inter-war period saw rapid development and trans- of former headmistress Colleen McCabe, who was conformation into a suburb, facilitated by the arrival of the victed of stealing around £500,000 from her school over a five-year period.[6] railway (which had opened in 1882). [7] Modern day West Wickham is a suburb of Greater Lon- The Prime Meridian passes through West Wickham. don, after the London Government Act 1963, which came into effect in 1965, with West Wickham absorbed into the London Borough of Bromley. Like many suburbs 2 Education of Greater London the area consists of local retail outlets, pubs, restaurants and primarily 1930s housing. West Wickham (including Coney Hall as it is a district of It also hosted a plaque containing the original bark of West Wickham) has four schools (all primary schools). Stock Tree (a tree so called as it was behind the village They are Oak Lodge, Wickham Common, Pickhurst and 1 2 9 Hawes Down. Saint David’s and Wickham Court are private schools. In 2012, Wickham Common won a hockey gold medal when they represented Bromley in the London Youth Games. There are no secondary schools in West Wickham, but there are some in the neighbouring towns. Langley School for Boys and Langley School for Girls are located in Beckenham, Hayes School is located in Hayes, and Ravenswood School is located in Keston. Wickham Court serves as a nursery, primary school and secondary school. 6 In popular culture 3 7 Nearest places Transport 3.1 Rail West Wickham station serves the area with services to London Charing Cross, London Cannon Street and Hayes. EXTERNAL LINKS The town appeared in the 2000 UK television series The 1940s House, with 17 Braemar Gardens taking the starring role as a family lived a World War II experience in a typical London suburb.[9] On Saturday 1 August 1964, Blakes Recreation Ground hosted a concert featuring Manfred Mann (featuring Paul Jones), The Merseybeats and the Johnny Dankworth Orchestra.[10] • Eden Park • Shirley • Hayes • Coney Hall • Croydon 3.2 Buses West Wickham is served by several Transport for London buses connecting it with areas including Beckenham, Bromley, Croydon, Hayes, Penge, Purley, Sydenham and New Addington/Addington. 4 Sport and leisure West Wickham has a Non-League football club Glebe F.C. who play at Oakley Road.[8] 5 Notable people from West Wickham • Stephen Dillane, actor • Enid Blyton, writer • Thomas Carew, 17th-century poet • Michael Donovan, voice actor • Crystal Palace • Penge • Beckenham 8 References [1] West Wickham Residents Association [2] Good Stuff IT Services. “Wickham Court – Bromley – Greater London – England”. British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 4 August 2013. [3] “Timeline”. Wickham Court. Retrieved 5 August 2013. [4] “Background History of the West Wickham Site”. Hmtuk.org. Retrieved 4 August 2013. [5] Beccehamians RFC [6] “BBC Two – Programmes”. Bbc.co.uk. 1 January 1970. Retrieved 4 August 2013. [7] The longitude way to walk | Mail Online [8] “Everything we do we always exceed in, says Glebe chairman Rocky McMillan”. Kentishfootball.co.uk. 1 July 2013. Retrieved 4 August 2013. [9] Telegraph [10] “New Musical Express” (904). July 1964. p. 2. Check date values in: |year= / |date= mismatch (help) • Charlie Heather, drummer in The Levellers • Skream, DJ & producer • Gordon Fergus-Thompson, pianist • William Burnside, mathematician 9 External links • For information on the history of West Wickham • Historical images of West Wickham 3 10 10.1 Text and image sources, contributors, and licenses Text • West Wickham Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West%20Wickham?oldid=642833745 Contributors: SimonP, MRSC, Canterbury Tail, YUL89YYZ, Sc147, Peter Shearan, Irenicas, Mtiedemann, Alanmuhammed, Dave.Dunford, RHaworth, A bit iffy, SmackBot, Hmains, Chris the speller, Can't sleep, clown will eat me, Ohconfucius, Bobfrombrockley, Simply south, Karenjc, Cydebot, Richardguk, Ceej t, Artcyprus, JustAGal, Escarbot, Jonny bee3, Paste, Kbthompson, Freedomlinux, Clear air turbulence, DerHexer, Arjun01, Adavidb, Acalamari, CG7, Wikimandia, Deor, Babylon77, Charlesdrakew, Lightmouse, Sphbeck, ClueBot, Binksternet, The Thing That Should Not Be, Rodhullandemu, B1atv, Niceguyedc, ConMendez, TommyD92, Vimy1917, TheHoosiers92, Bogbumper, Rockybiggs, Likelife, Kbdankbot, Addbot, Rondogg, Rexbat, Kalamkaar, Frandawgggg, Clutsi, Popsicle21, Ohmygawsh, Mcleanmuir, Le Deluge, ClickBot, Cnwilliams, Minimac, WikitanvirBot, PBS-AWB, ClueBot NG, Peter James, T08S27A11, NinaGreen, Joyce Walker, Booklung, DavidAnstiss, Orwaite7, Boomboom9, Franhigg, AllinIowa, ArmbrustBot, Sledgegrammar, Dillkid95, Monkbot and Anonymous: 81 10.2 Images • File:Greater_London_UK_location_map_2.svg Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7d/Greater_London_ UK_location_map_2.svg License: CC BY-SA 3.0 Contributors: Ordnance Survey OpenData. Original artist: Nilfanion, created using Ordnance Survey data • File:LondonBromley.svg Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6f/LondonBromley.svg License: CC-BY-SA-3.0 Contributors: Originally from en.wikipedia; description page is/was here. Original artist: Original uploader was Richtom80 at en.wikipedia • File:Red_pog.svg Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/0/0c/Red_pog.svg License: Public domain Contributors: ? Original artist: ? • File:The_Swan_Inn,_West_Wickham_BR4_-_geograph.org.uk_-_41401.jpg Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ commons/7/72/The_Swan_Inn%2C_West_Wickham_BR4_-_geograph.org.uk_-_41401.jpg License: CC BY-SA 2.0 Contributors: From geograph.org.uk Original artist: Philip Talmage 10.3 Content license • Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0