Epsom, Meadway 1927
Photo ref: 79668
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Photo ref: 79668
Photo of Epsom, Meadway 1927

More about this scene

Each day at dawn, strings of racehorses would pass gracefully up the hill, as they had 100 years earlier. But the view from the Downs had changed since then; fields were giving way to housing everywhere between Epsom and London. Harry and Frank Roll built up Hookfield, where Basil Braithwaite had held his garden parties, and Ron and John Harwood developed ten roads in the old grounds of Woodcote House. But the real profits were to be made in Ewell, which had remained a village surrounded by farmland until 1930. Now it was ringed by new estates, most of them focussed on the commuter station of Stoneleigh. It was the same throughout north-east Surrey, and the Rural District could no longer cope. It was broken up in 1933 and became part of Epsom Urban District, as had the former parishes of Ewell and Cuddington, immediately increasing its population by 50%. The rateable value went up in proportion, and this may have persuaded the councillors to commission a Town Hall in the Parade. Previously they had met in rooms upstairs at the Public Hall, or in Bromley Hurst, a private house sold to them by Edmund Wilson the town clerk. Now Bromley Hurst was pulled down, and on its site the council built a new fire station. This was designed by the same architects, Pite Son & Fairweather, but in a functionally modernist style rather than the neo-Georgian chosen for the town hall.

A Selection of Memories from Epsom

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Epsom

Sparked a Memory for you?

If this has sparked a memory, why not share it here?

These were the original gateposts that marked the entrance to Nork Park. These originally where placed at the entrance to The Drive, that leads to Nork Park. Later in the 1930's, they where moved to their present site at Ruden Way when the Nork Estate and Country House was sold. Luckily, two of these posts remain in the same place today. This is the view I wake up to every morning! EpsomHistorian.
Ebbisham Hall for dances. White Hart next door. Spread Eagle opposite. Eclipse pub West Hill. Nelsons open air pool. Snooker hall above Burtons. Cafe in South Street. Arthur Wheeler Waterloo Road where I bought my first bike. And I loved the racing.
Who remembers the Cabin shop in the alleyway between Longrove Rd and Horton Hill. Mum sent me shopping there many times with a list. Quite scared sometimes as there were a lot of mental patients wandering around the alley. Cute little shop though . Barbara Sainsbury
During the war I attended Sherwood Boarding School on Church Street and Downs Road. Behind the house was an abandoned and overgrown chalk quarry (The Pit) with an old cottage, our arts and crafts classrooms. The cottage is gone and it is now called "Elizabeth Welchman Gardens" On Saturdays we also went to the Odeón morning matiné. One of our group would pay to get in then open the side door for the rest of us! Inside ...see more