- Forty Hill
infobox UK place
country = England
map_type = Greater London
region= London
population=
static_
static_image_caption=Forty Hill
official_name= Forty Hill
london_borough= Enfield
constituency_westminster=Enfield North
post_town= ENFIELD
postcode_area = EN
postcode_district = EN1, EN2
dial_code= 020 8
os_grid_reference= TQ336981
latitude= 51.665748
longitude= -0.067274Forty Hill is a largely residential suburb in the north of the
London Borough of Enfield ,England . To the north is Bulls Cross, to the southEnfield Town , to the west Clay Hill, and to the eastEnfield Highway .History
There have been houses in the road now known as Forty Hill since at least 1572.cite web|title=Enfield: Growth before 1850|publisher=Victoria County History|work=A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5: Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham, pp. 212-218.|url= http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=26949|date=1976|accessdate=2008-03-25] The area includes the historic
Forty Hall , built in the 17th century in the grounds of the former Tudor palace of Elsyng. In its grounds is the older (16th or early 17th-century) Dower House. Other older buildings nearby include the early 18th century Worcester Lodge and later 18th century Elsynge House and Sparrow Hall, and the 19th century Elms and Clock House.George Birkbeck (founder of what is nowBirkbeck, University of London ) lived at Forty Hill in the 1820s. Jesus Church, near Maiden's Bridge, was built in 1835 and the nearby school in 1851. Goat Lane is named after a pub established before 1794 [cite web| title=Enfield: Social life|publisher=Victoria County History|work= A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5: Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham, pp. 239-241|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=26954|date=1976|accessdate=2008-03-25] which was replaced by a large building in mock-Elizabethan style in the 1930s; this has since been converted to flats. Some housing was built during Victorian times but most of the area consists of terraced houses and maisonettes built in the 1930s.Transport
There are many bus services which serve the area. Also nearby is
Gordon Hill railway station . The area was formerly crossed by theA105 road , running north from Enfield Town past Forty Hall and Myddelton House to meet the A1010 nearWaltham Cross . This was altered to terminate at the A110 in Enfield Town, and the main route cut to discourage through traffic from using the narrow Maiden's Bridge. There are now no major roads crossing the area, which is by-passed by the A110 to the south and the A10 to the east.Places of interest
Forty Hall Manor and Country Park is a manor with gardens, both of which can be explored. It is open all year round. Many events and exhibitions are held here. The
London Loop long-distance footpath follows theTurkey Brook to the north of Forty Hall. Nearby to the north in Bulls Cross are Myddelton House Gardens (former home of botanist E. A. Bowles, open at certain times during the year) and Capel Manorhorticultural college with convert|74|acre|km2|1|lk=on of grounds open to the public, including a maze and themed gardens. Special events take place here throughout the year. Also nearby are Whitewebbs Park and Clay Hill House.Geology
The hill which gives its name to the district lies to the north of the built-up area and is mainly occupied by Forty Hall and its grounds. It rises to a plateau around convert|50|m|ft|lk=on above sea level composed of the Boyn Hill Gravel, a deposit laid down by a former course of the Thames. To the west and north is the valley of the
Turkey Brook , which meets theCuffley Brook here before flowing east to the Lea; the valley has cut through the gravels to the underlyingLondon Clay . To the south and east are the lower and later gravels and 'brickearths' of the Lea Valley. The former course of the New River runs up the north side of the Turkey Brook valley north and west of the hill, before crossing the valley to run south-east between Forty Hill and Clay Hill, the limit of the higher glacial hills to the west. [BGS 2006, "England and Wales Sheet 256 North London", 1:50,000 Geology Series, British Geological Survey, Keyworth, ISBN 075183427-0] The New River has since been straightened to flow southwards to the east of Forty Hill, using an aqueduct to cross Turkey Brook near Maidens Bridge.External links
* [http://www.enfield.gov.uk/448/Forty%20Hill%20A%20History.htm Graham Dalling: Forty Hill a history]
* [http://jesuschurch.org.uk: A Church of England church in Forty Hill]
* [http://fortyhill.com: The school linked with Jesus church]References
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