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Arnos Grove

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17-498: Arnos Grove ( / ˈ ɑːr n ɒ s ˈ ɡ r oʊ v / ) is an area of north London , England, within the London Borough of Enfield . It is centred 7.5 miles (12 km) north of Charing Cross . It is adjacent to New Southgate . The natural grove , larger than today, was for many centuries the largest woodland in the chapelry of Southgate in the parish of Edmonton . It became inter-related with Arnos Park when its owner

34-425: A desirable area to live in. The southward expansion of Arnos Grove, which was initiated by the bias of facilities to the south of the original estate, was aided by the destruction of parts of New Southgate during World War II . There is now an almost continuous line of shops between Arnos Grove and New Southgate, via Betstyle Circus, making the areas closely linked. Until the building of its tube station Arnos Grove

51-515: A late medieval chapelry in the mid 19th century, and closely associated with New Southgate later in that century, which is south of Arnos Grove and overlaps. The tube terminus station, Arnos Grove tube station , has cemented its own district status in the popular naming of UK urban places which is rarely rigorously defined. The relatively recent creation of the local Anglican parishes, civil parishes and later changes in early local government body name and electoral wards in this area means Arnos Grove

68-518: Is a crossroads between Bowes Road, Wilmer Way and Telford Road. This is one of the few junctions on the A406 that the road does not run straight through or under. Arnos Grove tube station is on the Piccadilly line which passes through Haringey to Heathrow Airport via King's Cross St Pancras tube station and international rail hub. The station building is considered to be a significant example of

85-488: Is now Morton Crescent. The road that runs from Morton Crescent eastward (to Southgate) is also called Arnos Grove. The area's name derives from that of an estate called Arnoldes Grove or Arno's Grove , i.e. 'grove or copse of the Arnold family'. The Arnolds were local landowners who are mentioned in documents dating from the 14th century. Arnos Grove was, until the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII , owned by

102-553: Is rarely mentioned with reference to any of its parent areas. In political representation – for electoral purposes – the area has generally been in national and local areas including the rest of Southgate and mentioning the name Southgate. One of the main features of Arnos Grove is Arnos Park (44 acres or 18 ha in size). Arnos Park is a remnant of the Arnos Grove estate, and was opened in 1928 after having been purchased by Southgate Council. The Pymmes Brook flows through

119-678: Is the Anglican parish church of New Southgate and was consecrated in 1873. The building was designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott in the Early English style . It consists of chancel with north and south chapels and south bell turret and aisled nave . The fabric, which was severely damaged by bombing in 1944, was restored by R. S. Morris by 1957. Arnos Grove is near the A406 road (North Circular) between Palmers Green and Bounds Green . The junction most commonly associated with Arnos Grove

136-525: The Nuns of Clerkenwell . It was known as Armholt Wood in the 14th century, and later as Arnolds. A Tudor manor house was erected on the site, but was demolished in 1719 – presumably by James Colebrook , who bought the estate in the same year and built a mansion called Arnolds in Cannon Hill, Southgate . Locals called the estate Arno's and the next owner, Sir William Mayne (later Lord Newhaven), renamed

153-519: The 1930s. These include Arnos Pool and Bowes Road Library, both of which underwent major refurbishment in the mid-2000s, like Arnos Grove tube station. The library and swimming pool, along with Arnos Park, the extensive facilities at Arnos Grove station (such as Ash House, the seven sidings, and three tracks through the station with four platforms) and the proximity of Arnos Grove to the North Circular , which had been built in 1929, made Arnos Grove

170-472: The Middle Ages." London boroughs are the result of amalgamations of hundreds of ancient parishes that date from at least the 12th century and are in some cases based on earlier manors . Download coordinates as: These are the areas of London that are variously described as districts, neighbourhoods, suburbs, towns or villages. New Southgate Too Many Requests If you report this error to

187-591: The eastern 'That Part Beyond the Tower'. As London expanded, it absorbed many hundreds of existing towns and villages which continued to assert their local identities. Mark Twain described London in 1896 as "fifty villages massed solidly together over a vast stretch of territory". Steen Eiler Rasmussen observed in 1934 that "London became a greater and still greater accumulation of towns, an immense colony of dwellings where people still live in their own home in small communities with local government just as they had done in

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204-572: The house and estate Arnos Grove , which is now pronounced as though it never had an apostrophe. On 19 September 1932 Arnos Grove Underground station was opened, as part of the extension of the London Underground Piccadilly line to Cockfosters . In the years that followed Arnos Grove changed from a rural area to being fully developed – the part of the estate to the north of Arnos Park was, for example, built up by 1939. The main public facilities at Arnos Grove were built in

221-442: The park, which contains diverse woodland but is mostly grassy fields. A large brick viaduct , with 34 numbered arches, carries the Piccadilly line beyond Arnos Grove tube station towards Southgate through the western end of the park. The park contains a large playground for children as well as several tennis courts. The Pymmes Brook Trail passes through the park. Also, evidence of the abandoned New River loop can be found within

238-594: The trees in the north side of the park. Our Lady of Lourdes is a Roman Catholic Church. The Parish was established in the Diocese of Westminster in 1923, and mass was said in the presbytery until the church was built in 1935. Our Lady of Lourdes Roman Catholic Primary School was built in 1972 on the land owned by the Church to provide an education for the children of the parish. St. Paul's , in Woodland Road,

255-797: The work of architect Charles Holden . These buses serve Arnos Grove: List of areas of London London is the capital of and largest city in England and the United Kingdom . It is divided into the City of London and 32 London boroughs , the result of amalgamation of earlier units of administration that can be traced back to ancient parishes . Each borough is made up of many smaller areas that are variously called districts, neighbourhoods, suburbs, towns or villages. John Strype 's map of 1720 describes London as consisting of four parts: The City of London , Westminster , Southwark and

272-463: Was largely undeveloped and rural. As its name suggests it was not a manor, parish or district in its own right. Edmonton which included all parts of Southgate was one of five parishes of Edmonton Hundred , one of five hundreds in Middlesex . The heart of the hundred became the London Borough of Enfield . As new parishes arose, the area became, in turn, a westerly part of Southgate upgraded from

289-532: Was permitted to enclose much of its area through the widespread legal practice of inclosure of the common land to create the former park, the heart of which is now public parkland. It is close to its borough's borders with two others: Barnet and Haringey . The area is centred 1km north of the North Circular Road . The modern area of Arnos Grove is centred on the western end of Bowes Road . The estate from which it gets its name centred on what

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