Hampstead High Street Explained

Hampstead High Street is located in the London Borough of Camden. It is the main high street for Hampstead Village and is part of the A502. Heading southeastwards from a junction with Heath Street and Holly Hill by Hampstead tube station it runs downhill and features a number of pubs, restaurants and shops before becoming Rosslyn Hill which connects it further on to Haverstock Hill, the whole stretch of which was one called Hampstead Road. Streets and alleys running off it include Flask Walk, Perrin Court and Prince Arthur Road.

It is based on an ancient route and was known in the fifteenth century as Kingswell Street after the wells that supplied water for the village and was later called Hampstead Hill.[1] Many nearby developments took place in the late seventeenth century and early eighteenth century when the fashionable Hampstead Wells were at their height.[2] The top end was widened in the late nineteenth century leading to the demolition of many alleyways and courtyards. In 1907 the Northern Line Edgware extension built its surface station on the former Minerva Court site.[3]

In 1835 the old King's Head pub was renamed the William IV after the reigning monarch William IV rode up Haverstock Hill to visit Ken Wood on the Heath.[4]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Wade p.61-62 & p.68
  2. Cherry & Pevsner p.233
  3. Wade p.68
  4. Wade p70