Welcome To Skeletons In The Closet, The Dark Side Of Family History!

Advice & Sales: 0844 822 3699

Basket (£)
ItemQtyPrice

Sub Total: £0.00
Delivery: £0.00
Total: £0.00
Editable Area

We accept

Select Currency
Australian DollarCanadian DollarEuroPound SterlingNew Zealand DollarUS Dollar

Editable Area

CRIMINAL OF THE MONTH

GEORGE SAYERS FOR LARCENY

CHINGFORD PAST BOOK
CHINGFORD PAST BOOK
more products by: LONDON
£7.95

CHINGFORD was a place of mud, marsh and forest, all natural barriers to the rapid development of the 19th century which transformed nearby places like Walthamstow and Tottenham. They were also hindrances to communication and transport in earlier days, so that Chingford remained an inward-looking, self-contained entity until well into the 20th century.

Developers reached it at last and remodelled Chingford as an up-market residential area, but it was its northern and eastern boundary, Epping Forest, given to the people forever in 1882, into which the town melted, and made Chingford quietly different from its neighbours. The Forest continues to prevent the sprawl which has spoilt much of London, and leaves Chingford as a place apart.

Barbara Ray's book tells the story of this gradual transformation, accompanied by numerous illustrations, many of which have not been published before.

'wholeheartedly recommended to anyone who has even the slightest connection with this area.' Essex Journal

245 x 185mm (hardback with 175 illustrations) 144 pages

SPECIAL REDUCED PRICE