BARNET


'High Barnet' or 'Chipping Barnet' is a town in the London Borough of Barnet. It is a suburban development located 10 miles (17 km) north north-west of Charing Cross.

Contents
Geography
History
Church
Education
Primary
Secondary
Further
Sport and recreation
Tube stations
Famous residents
Nearest places
References
External links

Geography


The tower of Barnet parish church - St John the Baptist - at the top of Barnet Hill claims to be the highest point between itself and the Ural Mountains to the east. However, the same can be said of numerous other points. Before the building of the Barnet bypass, Barnet Hill was a major hill on the Great North Road.
High Barnet tube station is located at the northern end of the Northern Line.

History


The town was the site of the Battle of Barnet in 1471, where Yorkist troops led by King Edward IV killed the rebellious "Kingmaker" Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick and Warwick's brother, John Neville, 1st Marquess of Montagu.
It is the site of an ancient and well-known horse fair, hence the Cockney rhyming slang of "Barnet" for "hair". The fair goes back to 1588 when Queen Elizabeth I granted a charter to the Lord of the Manor of Barnet the right to hold a twice yearly fair.[1]
Chipping Barnet was a civil parish of Hertfordshire and formed part of the Barnet Urban District from 1894. It was abolished in 1965 and its former area was transferred to Greater London.[2] In 1801 the parish had a population of 1,258 and covered an area of 1,440 acres (6 km²). By 1901 the parish was reduced to 380 acres (1.5 km²) and had a population of 2,893. In 1951 the population was 7,062.[3]
In Saxon Times the site was part of an extensive wood called Southaw, belonging to the Abbey of St Albans. The name of the town appears in early deeds as Bergnet, the Saxon word Bergnet signifies a little hill, monticulus. Its elevated position is also indicated in its alternate name of High Barnet, which it bears in many old books and maps, and which the railway company restored. It is the belief of the older natives the "Barnet stands on the highest ground betwixt London and York."

Church


St John the Baptist Church

Chipping Barnet Parish church of St John the Baptist (1560)
"''The town consists of a straggling street over a mile long, chiefly of small commonplace houses, with two or three shorter streets diverging from it. From its situation on the main road, as the centre of an agricultural district, the seat of a county court and petty sessions, and having a barracks close at hand., Barnet is a busy-looking place, and has some good shops; one or two excellent inns, Red Lion and Old Salisbury Arms, and an undue proportion of public-houses; but on the whole it is a shabby and not a very picturesque appearance"''
In coaching days, 150 stage coaches passed through Barnet daily. Since the opening of the railway, the town has increased considerably, especially on the west about the Common; or as it is now called, Arkley.
Barnet Church, St John the Baptist, which stands in what was the centre of the town, was erected by John de la Moote, abbot of St Albans, about 1400, the architect being Beauchamp. It consists of a nave and aisles separated by clustered columns which support four pointed arches; a chancel with an east window of good Perpendicular tracery; a vestry, built in the reign of James I by Thomas Ravenscroft; and at the west end, all your base are belong to us. The living of Barnet is a curacy, held with the rectory of East Barnet till the death of the late incumbent in 1866, when the livings were separated. The town also includes parts of the parishes of Monken Hadley and South Mimms.

Education


Barnet High Street, viewed from the tower of St John the Baptist Church

Primary


Barnet Hill School

Christ Church CE School

Foulds School

Underhill School

Whitings Hill School

St. Catherines School

Cromer Road School
Secondary


Queen Elizabeth's School for Boys

Queen Elizabeth's School for Girls

The Ravenscroft School
Further

Barnet College has one of its main sites in High Barnet and is spread out through the London Borough of Barnet.

Sport and recreation


Barnet FC are the local football team, flitting between league and non-league football. They play at the Underhill Stadium. Shaftesbury Barnet Harriers is the a local athletics club. Chipping Barnet has a King George's Field in memorial to King George V.
High Barnet is home to one Odeon cinema, the Barnet Museum, the traditional annual Barnet Fair, the Ravenscroft local park and Barnet recreational park.
High Barnet till today is a popular location for restaurants and public houses.
A small nightclub operated for a few years in the 1980s in the premises now occupied by ''The Misty Moon''. The public houses in High Barnet include: ''The Misty Moon'', ''The Dandelion'', ''The Kings Head'', ''The Monken Holt'', ''Ye Olde Mitre Inn'', and ''The Red Lion''.

Tube stations


Victorian Architecture of High Barnet Tube Station


High Barnet - Northern Line
Nearby:

Totteridge and Whetstone - Northern Line

Famous residents



Reginald Maudling local MP 1950 - 1979

Cyril Bibby, who in 1958-59 was the prospective Labour Party candidate opposing Reginald Maudling

★ Sir Sydney Chapman local MP 1979 - 2005

Peter Banks, 1st guitarist for the band Yes.

Stephen Douglas, Journalist, ITV

Richard Baker, Broadcaster

Samuel Pepys

David Livingstone

Spike Milligan

John Strugnell Dead Sea Scrolls editor-in-chief and Harvard Professor

Humphrey Lyttelton, who lived in nearby Arkley

Norman Wisdom, who lived in nearby Arkley

Emma Bunton

David Crawley

Stephanie Beacham

William Cattley a popular orchid species ''cattleya'' was named after him due to his successful cultivation of lavender colored ''Cattleya'' Labiata.

Séance on a Wet Afternoon is set predominantly in Barnet.

Nearest places



Monken Hadley

Battle of Barnet

Hadley Wood

East Barnet

Friern Barnet

New Barnet

References


1. www.barnet4u.co.uk - Barnet Fair
2. Vision of Britain - Chipping Barnet parish (historic map)
3. Vision of Britain - Chipping Barnet parish - population

External links



The Barnet Society

Barnet Symphony Orchestra

Barnet YHA local group

Guide to Historical Pubs in Barnet

Enfield and Barnet CAMRA (Campaign for Real Ale)

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