Broomfield Road, W13

Place Name

Agricultural heritage. Takes its name from the field name that was recorded in Ealing’s Tithe Apportionment, part of a survey of the whole of England and Wales which was undertaken in the decade or so after 1836, to establish the boundaries of each parish, and assess the amount of tithe (traditionally one tenth of local produce) due for each parcel of land within it. The act allowed landowners to pay tithes  to the church in cash rather than goods. Common broom bushes (Cytisus scoparius) were a widespread shrub with golden yellow flowers that grew all over the south east. They continued to be a useful commodity up until the invention of the modern broom in the 1800s. J Bryan Lowder in Slate gives a short history of the broom, writing: “Before the 19th century, broom-making was an idiosyncratic art; most were fashioned at home from whatever materials were at hand. The basic design involved binding the sweeping bundle to a wooden stick with rope or linen twine. However, these homespun brooms had short lives and had to be replaced often. The professionalization of broom-making appears to have begun in Anglo-Saxon England, where artisans known as ‘besom squires’ in the southeastern region would take twigs from the many birch trees in the area, trim and then lash them to poles of chestnut and other woods. A bawdy 18th-century folk song called ‘The Besom Maker’ makes fun of a female besom maker’s need to search the local woods for materials, and, along the way, other pleasures.”

 

Loading

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *