Field End Road, HA4



PLACE NAME

From medieval times until the last century, the majority of the population in Eastcote was engaged in agriculture and related trades. Farming methods changed little over the centuries until the 1804 Enclosure Act which resulted in large hedged fields being created predominately to the south where the parish bordered on to the parishes of Northolt and Greenford. Previously this area had been farmed as open arable fields divided into strips for cultivation by individual villagers. After enclosure, tracks leading to these strips from the village became a road, now the modern Field End Road. A feature of Eastcote village was the many “ends”, mostly with small greens, which denoted the boundaries of scattered hamlets. Field End, at the junction of Field End Road with Bridle Road, stood at the end of the open fields, while Hale End, at the bend in the road near Highgrove, marked the western edge of the village. The eastern limit was Pope’s End at the junction of the High Road, Cheney Street and Cuckoo Hill.

 

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