Feltham

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Feltham
240px
Feltham town centre
Feltham is located in Greater London
Feltham
Feltham
 Feltham shown within Greater London
Area  6.56 km2 (2.53 sq mi)
Population 27,104 (Feltham North, Feltham West wards 2011)[1]
   – density  4,132/km2 (10,700/sq mi)
OS grid reference TQ105735
Civil parish n/a
London borough Hounslow
Ceremonial county Greater London
Region London
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town FELTHAM
Postcode district TW13, TW14
Dialling code 020
Police Metropolitan
Fire London
Ambulance London
EU Parliament London
UK Parliament Feltham and Heston
London Assembly South West
List of places
UK
England
London

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Feltham (/ˈfɛltəm/) is a suburban town in the London Borough of Hounslow, West London, 13.5 miles (21.7 km) west south west of central London and 2 miles (3.2 km) south of Heathrow Airport. It is the site of Feltham Young Offenders' Institution.

History

Feltham formed an ancient parish in the Spelthorne hundred of Middlesex.[2] It has a record in the Domesday Book which records 21 households and an annual value to its lord of the manor of six pounds sterling, taxable at 12 geld units and was held as lord and tenant-in-chief by Robert, Count of Mortain. A large area of ten cultivated ploughlands is recorded.[3]

Following Mortain's son's forfeit of lands (William's rebellion triggering the attainder), the land was granted to the Redvers/de Ripariis/Rivers family. The heir in that family, Hubert de Burgh ('Chief Justiciar and Earl of Kent') swapped Feltham and Kempton with Henry III for his manors of Aylsham in Norfolk and Westhall in Suffolk.[4]

In 1440 Henry VI granted numerous privileges to his joint royal custodian of the two manors, including a daily income of up to 12 shillings and that "corn, hay, horse and carriages and other goods and chattels should not be seized for the king's use".[4]

While under total royal control following Henry VIII's full annexation of the manor into the Honour of Hampton Court, a lease of all of its manor court rights and "franchises, privileges, emoluments, and hereditaments" was granted under his daughter Elizabeth I to the Killigrew family of Kempton Park, for 80 years.[4]

However the large manor itself (with a rent-holder and future possession interest) passed 40 years later in 1631 by grant to Francis (Lord) Cottington, established at his new Hanworth Park, who had become Lord Treasurer, ambassador and leader of the pro-Spanish, pro-Roman Catholic faction in the court of Charles I.[4] His nephew sold it, after a major fire and a very temporary loss caused by John Bradshaw, who arranged the King's execution, under the Commonwealth of England, to Sir Thomas Chamber(s). His son inherited Feltham manor, whose daughter by an empowering marriage to Admiral Vere (created Lord Vere) of Hanworth in the same historic county of Middlesex (created for him 1750) led to its next owner having a very high title and degree of wealth: her son, Aubrey Beauclerk, 5th Duke of St Albans inherited the manor and a dukedom with considerable land from a cousin. The Duke was a British landowner and a collector of antiquities and works of art, seated occasionally at Hanworth, who funded an excavation in Italy which produced many sculpture artifacts. Parting with much of the Duke's surfeit of large country houses, minor plot sales dividing the two ancient manors took place in the 19th century. Finally in the early 20th century, until death, the land now considered Feltham was either already subdivided by developers and farmers or owned by senior judge Ernest Pollock turned politician, (1st) Viscount Hanworth who saw the very large Hanworth manor, which covered most of Hanworth parish divided up due to taxation and its being equally well-placed to cater to the demand for new homes due to transport links.

In this period in 1784 General William Roy set out the baseline of what would become the Ordnance Survey across Hounslow Heath, passing through Feltham.[5] General Roy is commemorated by a local pub. The MOD Defence Geographic Centre still has a base in Feltham, used as a government mapping office.

In 1831 Feltham occupied an area of 2,620 acres (11 km2), stretching into Hounslow Heath and had a population of 924.[6] The Waterloo to Reading Line established a station here from its construction in 1848. From 1894 to 1904 the Felham parish was included in the Staines Rural District.[2] In 1901 the parish had a population of 4,534[6] and accordingly in 1904 it was split from the rural district to form the Feltham Urban District.[7] In 1932 the parishes of Hanworth and East Bedfont were also transferred from the Staines district to Feltham Urban District.

Feltham Urban District (colloquially known as Feltham council) was disbanded in 1965, along with the Middlesex County Council. It should be noted, however, that though for administrative purposes Feltham is now part of Greater London the geographic and historic county of Middlesex was never abolished by statute. A poll on the "Feltham, Hanworth and Bedfont Appreciation Society" group on Facebook found that Feltham residents overwhelmingly continue to identify their home county as "Middlesex".

Although opened in 1910 major expansion took place in a similar period, at the extreme south-west of the post town, at Feltham Young Offenders' Institution or HM Prison Feltham, which is a major such institution providing a range of employments and rehabilitation schemes for young people.[8] near the town's border with Ashford and the neighbouring village of East Bedfont.

Famous former resident Freddie Mercury (born Farokh Bulsara in Zanzibar, 1946–1991) of rock band Queen was commemorated by a permanent, Hollywood-style granite star in Feltham's town-centre piazza, unveiled on 24 November 2009 (the eighteenth anniversary of Mercury's death) by Queen guitarist Brian May, alongside Freddie's mother, Jer Bulsara, and his sister. In 2011, owing to neglect and weather damage, Hounslow Council removed the memorial, resolving to substitute a smaller one elsewhere.

Leisure and community spaces and buildings

Feltham has in its land use considerably more open spaces than average in (Greater) London[9] — bounding it to the east is a natural small river, the Crane separating off the once vast Hounslow Heath to the east, stretching from north by Harlington south to Hampton, London until the early 20th century. To other sides it includes a country park formed from converted gravel pits (Bedfont Lakes) with rolling adjacent meadows open to walkers by its railway and (within the post town) one of London's first airfields, London Air Park at Hanworth, which has well-trimmed grass, is surrounded by trees and is a large and sports-oriented public open space.

Public venues include Feltham Assembly Hall, opened in 1965 in Feltham Park, community rooms in the new library, as well as several residents association halls and clubs. Since the controversial removal in 2008 of the Feltham Community Association from the Feltham People's Centre (the former Feltham Hotel), the town has lacked a dedicated community centre.

Feltham Community College (originally known as Feltham Comprehensive School when it was formed from two secondary modern and one grammar school) and Rivers Academy West London (known as Longford School/Longford Community School from its foundation in 1935 to 31 July 2011) both have excellent sports facilities. These supplement the Hanworth Air Park Leisure Centre and Library, operated by Fusion Leisure on behalf of Hounslow Council. Leisure West (a privately developed and managed complex of entertainment and dining facilities including a multiplex cinema, tenpin bowling alley, bingo club and restaurants) opened on the former industrial sites around Browell's Lane in the mid-1990s.

Local government and politics

File:Feltham Magistrates' Court - geograph.org.uk - 1161244.jpg
Feltham Magistrates' Court, built in 1902 as a town hall but converted to a magistrates' court in 1906.[10]

There is no specific town council for Feltham, instead a "Bedfont, Feltham, Hanworth Area Forum" of councillors considers issues specific to the area on the London Borough of Hounslow's Council.[9][11]

The town forms part of Feltham and Heston Parliament constituency (and the "South West" London Assembly constituency which elects the geographic element of members who advise, steer, assist and scrutinise the Mayor of London who is directly responsible for only certain designated policy areas such as Transport for London).[12] There are two local government wards falling entirely within Feltham - Feltham North and Feltham West - though locals often consider sections of the Hanworth Park and Bedfont wards as forming part of Feltham.[13] This area was represented in Parliament from 1992 to 2011 by Alan Keen, MP (Lab). After his death, Labour, reflecting the long-standing voting trends of the area, as commented on by The Guardian in 2011, won the by-election with Seema Malhotra.[14]

Redevelopment

File:Feltham, The Centre 1.jpg
The Centre, Feltham

Feltham's town centre developed in a socio-economically indicative way in the period 1860-2010 when the focus of the village moved north from by St Dunstan's Church - the coming of the railway and immediate establishment of a station was in 1848. For most of the twentieth century, it had a traditional-looking High Street, including more mock tudor shop fronts, and a large medieval manor house which was controversially demolished in the mid-1960s to make way for a Ford car dealership and petrol station. This has since been demolished but replaced with a hardware, carpets and supermarket site Manor Park.

Most of the original High Street shops were also demolished in the mid-1960s through to the early 1970s. Victorian and Edwardian tall-storey terraced, semi-detached and detached homes are particularly on Hanworth Road and adjoining roads, and in the small conservation area at Feltham Pond on the High Street. Many old cottages and workman's terraces were demolished alongside the railway line to make way for brutalist high rise blocks of housing, of originally purely social housing to house the homeless and overcrowded people in the borough such as Belvedere House and Hunter House and Home Court, demolished in the 2000s and replaced with mixed-ownership apartments in a more ornate style in a cluster, incorporating designer balconies and architectural demonstrations of free-form structure such as propped overhangs and an unobtrusive at street-level, multi-faceted floor plan.

The current shopping hub,[9] The Centre, Feltham (also known as "the Longford Centre", if only by the original developers and some retail tenants), opened in 2006. It retained and refurbished many of the shop units built in the 1960s to replace the demolished buildings, along the High Street frontage, but replaced most of the others with new, larger units. Also added as part of the re-development was a Travelodge hotel, 800 homes, a new and larger library, and a medical centre. The "anchor" (and largest) store in the Centre is an Asda hypermarket, coupled with fashion chains, small restaurants, a public house and cafés. Near to the retail park mentioned is a Tesco superstore and numerous grocery outlets are dotted along the area's High Street. Added to this are regular local trades/services in small clusters in the main named neighbourhoods of North Feltham and Lower Feltham.[9]

In retail, the closest destination with more than 100 outlets is Hounslow, centred less than 2 miles (3.2 km) to the north-east, followed by Kingston and Staines (both -upon Thames).

Economy

File:Fetham rooftop view.jpg
Skyline of West Feltham and Bedfont Lakes looking north-west.

The main economic activity of the Feltham area was market gardening until well into the twentieth century. A popular variety of pea known as the "Feltham First" is so-named for being first grown in the town. The market gardens were largely replaced with light industry, gravel and aggregate extraction, and new housing from the 1930s onwards.

Feltham has been associated with land and air transport for more than a century. In what is now the Leisure West entertainment complex of various buildings including cinema, bowling alley and restaurants, the Feltham tramcar was once manufactured and ran along the tracks of many municipal operators, though never in Feltham itself. In the same area of the town, aircraft manufacture was an important industry, particularly during the war years. Feltham was in the early and mid 20th century home to Britain's second largest railway marshalling yard which was geared towards freight, and was a target for German air force bombs during World War II.

The motor car manufacturer Aston Martin had its main factory in Feltham between 1926 (when it bought the former Whitehead Aircraft factory) and 1963.[15] The site is now occupied by part of Leisure West.

A former company based in Feltham from 1911 until the closure of its factory in the 1980s was Minimax Limited, manufacturers of fire extinguishers.

Inevitably, the largest local employer is Heathrow Airport. Many businesses based in Feltham, particularly in logistics, serve the needs of the world's busiest international airport by passenger volume. Menzies Aviation has its head office in Feltham.[16][17]

However, accessibility of parts of Central London and a good local road network have also made Feltham a base for a number of high-tech companies, including DHL and Arqiva.[n 1] The latter is notable in having a telecommunications port ('teleport') in Feltham which provides transmission and distribution facilities for TV companies including Sky and Channel 5.

Sport and leisure

Feltham has a Non-League football club Bedfont & Feltham F.C. who play at the Orchard in East Bedfont.

Religion

The town remains among the largest ecclesiastical parishes of the Diocese of London within the Church of England. The parish church of St Dunstan and the Parish of Feltham have joined with two other churches to create a larger "Ecumenical Parish of Feltham" founded in the late 1970s. This joins the church together in activities and church services with Southville Methodist Church and the United Free Church of Feltham.

19th century religious sites

On 24 June 1868 Father Ignatius founded an Anglican Benedictine convent in the parish. Feltham Priory, or Feltham Nunnery, was dedicated to Saints Mary and Scholastica (twin sister of St Benedict).[4] It lasted five years before the nuns initiated a series of moves which would see them relocate to Curzon Park Abbey in Chester in 1988.

The tall spire fronting tower of an additional church first built 1880-1898, to St Catherine, opposite the railway station forms the façade of St Catherine's House, a London Borough of Hounslow Housing office and temporary housing accommodation.[18] As of August 2014 St Catherine's House is now closed because the council have moved out and relocated elsewhere.

Transport

Tube

Nearby Hatton Cross tube station, which is on the Heathrow branch of the Piccadilly line provides a Central London and Heathrow rail option to Feltham, with bus routes 90, 117, 235, 285, 490, H25 and H26 running frequent services through the town.

Railway

The town is served by all passenger trains, including semi-fast trains through Feltham railway station, except for some weekend specially timetabled steam trains, with services terminating at Waterloo. On the Waterloo to Reading Line, the other terminus is Reading. Two branch line services operate on the line here, to Windsor and Weybridge.

Buses

The town has London Buses services to Kingston upon Thames, Richmond, Brentford, Heathrow, Staines-upon-Thames, Northolt, Isleworth and Sunbury on Thames. Intervening places such as Hayes, Hounslow, Hampton Court/Hampton and Ashford are called at.[19]

Long distance express services are offered predominantly from various sides of Heathrow to places such as Slough, Reading, Berkshire and Croydon, the latter under the London Buses pricing and operational scheme.[19]

Topography

The land is relatively flat but well-drained, and Feltham is centred 13.5 miles (21.7 km) west south west of central London at Charing Cross and 2 miles (3.2 km) from Heathrow Airport.[20]

The neighbouring settlements are Hounslow, Ashford, East Bedfont (including Hatton), Sunbury-on-Thames, Cranford and Hanworth.[20]

Notable people

Freddie Mercury and Brian May with fellow Queen band members
  • Freddie Mercury (1946–1991) of rock band Queen lived in Feltham 1964-1968; his parents were residents until shortly before he died
  • Singer Cheryl Cole lived in Feltham when she was aged 9–11
  • Film writer and director Edmund Goulding (1891–1959) was born in Feltham
  • Olympic gold medalist Athlete Mo Farah attended Feltham Community College

Demography and housing

2011 Census Homes
Ward Detached Semi-detached Terraced Flats and apartments Caravans/temporary/mobile homes/houseboats Shared between households[1]
Feltham North 235 1,697 1,120 1,145 17 6
Feltham West 181 1,516 1,796 2,296 5 19
2011 Census Households
Ward Population Households % Owned outright % Owned with a loan hectares[1]
Feltham North 11,563 4,220 24 35 338
Feltham West 15,541 5,813 12 34 318

Notes and references

Notes
  1. A logistics and a communications infrastructure (media services) company respectively.
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Key Statistics; Quick Statistics: Population Density 2011 census Office for National Statistics
  2. 2.0 2.1 Vision of Britain - Feltham parish history (historic map) Archived 26 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Domesday map
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Harley (1969)
  6. 6.0 6.1 Vision of Britain - Feltham parish area and population
  7. Vision of Britain - Feltham UD
  8. politics.co.uk - politics.co.uk - What is a Young Offender Institution? Archived 13 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 "New future for Feltham - About Feltham" Hounslow London Borough Council. 14 July 2006.
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Vision of Britain - Hounslow UD
  12. Hounslow London Borough Council - GLA Member
  13. Hounslow London Borough Council - Your Councillors by Ward
  14. The Guardian Feltham and Heston byelection – it's Labour's to lose Labour has a reported 22-point lead in the west London seat dominated by ups and down The Guardian 8 December 2011
  15. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  16. "Contact Us." Menzies Aviation. Retrieved on 18 February 2011. "Menzies Aviation plc, 4 New Square, Bedfont Lakes, Feltham, Middlesex, TW14 8HA, United Kingdom."
  17. "Head Office Location." Menzie's Aviation. Retrieved on 18 February 2011.
  18. St Catherines, Grade II listing Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Transport for London - Buses from Feltham
  20. 20.0 20.1 Hounslow London Borough Council - Borough map

References

  • Harley, J.B. 1969, cartographical notes to Reprint of the first edition of the one-inch Ordnance Survey of England and Wales, Sheet 71 London, David and Charles, ISBN 0-7153-4615-6

External links

  • British History Online - Spelthorne Hundred - Feltham. (1911)
  • [1] - FelthamWest.info - Local Community Website with local community information for Feltham residents

Schools in Feltham and around the area - Hounslow Borough

There are many schools around the area of Feltham:

  • Feltham Community Center
  • Rivers Academy West London
  • Sparrow Farm Infant and Nursery
  • Sparrow Farm Junior School
  • Southville Infant and Primary
  • Feltham Hill/Oak Hill Academy
  • Edward Pauling Primary School
  • Heathland
  • Brentford School For Girls
  • Cardinal Road School