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Essendon

Essendon maps

Historic maps of Essendon and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Essendon maps

Essendon photos

We have no photos of Essendon, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Hatfield| Welwyn Garden City| Hertford| Lemsford| Potters Bar| Digswell| Bengeo| Waterford| Welwyn| South Mimms| Cheshunt| Broxbourne| Wormley| Turnford| Westmill| Amwell Hill| Great Amwell| Ware| Ayot St Lawrence| Waltham Cross| Wheathampstead

Essendon area books

Displaying 1 of 8 books about Essendon and the local area.   View all books for this area

Memories of Essendon

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Add your memory of Essendon or of a photo of Essendon.

Hertfordshire memories

Meadow Dell

We moved to Hatfield "new town' from the east end.  Went to Howe Dell School and lived on Meadow Dell, off Cavendish Way.  It was still a small country town then.  Happy Memories.  Sue

Old Hatfield

I was employed as an electrician, by a company known as J.Hodge and spent 18 months in Hatfield House re-wiring the East Wing. I knew Old Hatfield intimately as I lived in Hatfield for 20 years. When I went back there in 1995 I was very disappointed to see how this part of the town had been changed and, not for the better in my opinion. Many of the old roads had been altered beyond recognition. Is this progress or what?

Growing up in Hatfield

I was born in Barnet, but we lived on Hatfield Garden Village estate from 1949. My mother still lived there until July last year where she died peacefully in her chair. Over the sixty years I have seen many changes, most of them disappointing. I remember Hatfield Common before they built the shopping precinct in the 1960s. The White Lion pub, Blue Seas fish and chip shop and Dollimore's the greengrocer's shop, Tingey's, Williams Brothers, Mandley and Sparrow. All these shops and pub now sadly gone. The town centre is a mere shadow of its former self. Shame. Brother Alan and I used to spend a lot of time in Hatfield Park, climbing over the old tank that used to be there or walking all the way down to Mill Green and back. We both went to Green Lanes School, which celebrated its 70th birthday last December. I was very glad that I attended. The old building still there but with many additions - a real success story. So... Read more

My Favourite Place as A Kid

The Swimming Pool c1960
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I spent most of the summers of the mid 60's in this pool and learnt to dive off the platform board in 1967.  I swam all of my major medal and cetificate swims in this pool. The fountain was a place to play when not swimming.

WGC Station Memories

Station Approach c1955
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Having left London to live in WGC in 1957, our family often went back to visit relatives so that was one of our most regular excursions. In the fifties and sixties we did not have a car and nor did many of our neighbours. We relied on the green double-decker 324 bus service to get us to the station. As it was a circular service, we could cross the road and go one way or wait at the bus stop on our side of Howlands and go via Hollybush. The building in the picture was demolished to make way for the Howard centre. As you entered the station, the ticket office was on the left-hand side and the newsagents was on the right hand side. At that time, steam trains were gradually being phased out and, especially in Kings Cross, there was sometimes a choice of train home. I preferred the modern trains having no nostalgia for the age of steam with its hot and dirty engines. Thanks to locomotive... Read more

Memories of Stone Hills.

Stone Hills 1958
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This picture was taken from the corner of the Co-operative shop and features the Cherry Tree public house before it was turned into Waitrose. In about 1965, my friend’s mother remarried and my family was invited to the reception in the restaurant there. The single storey building nearest the Cherry Tree was a shop called Munts, which was a kind of Aladdin’s cave with bicycles and prams being amongst the many items on sale. The road in front of the Cherry Tree was a T-junction but this disappeared along with the single storey buildings when the sunken roundabout was built. The other buildings do not seem to have changed much

More Memories of Stonehills

Stone Hills 1958
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Just out of the picture to the left, was the location of the old police station, before it moved to its new home off of the campus, behind the council buildings. Now it's just an open space providing the walkway between Debenhams and John Lewis (formally the Co-Op and Welwyn Department Stores).

To the left of The Cherry Tree (Waitrose ), used to be the old Fire Station.

I used to live in Longcroft Lane and remember walking into the town and along this route (aged 5 at the time).

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