1
Railway north of Gordon Hill
The Hertford Loop line viewed from the Lavender Hill bridge. This has a particularly high and awkwardly wide parapet.
Image: © Robin Webster
Taken: 3 Nov 2012
0.05 miles
2
Lavender Hill bridge
Just to the north of
Image
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 13 Aug 2008
0.10 miles
3
Disused chapel, Lavender Hill Cemetery
This is a mirror image of a second chapel on the other side of the cemetery entrance. That chapel remains in use.
Image: © Robin Webster
Taken: 3 Nov 2012
0.12 miles
4
Roundabout at junction of Lavender Hill and Holtwhites Hill, Enfield
Image: © Christine Matthews
Taken: 18 Mar 2008
0.13 miles
5
The disused Nonconformist chapel in Lavender Hill Cemetery
Lavender Hill Burial Board was set up in 1871 and opened the 9 acre Lavender Hill Cemetery in 1872, with two chapels, one Anglican and the other Nonconformist, as well as a stone lodge at the main entrance. Lavender Hill is so-called after the lavender that was once grown in this area. The cemetery was enlarged in 1897 by three acres, and has since been further enlarged. The western Nonconformist chapel seen here is no longer in use and became a store. A photograph of the Anglican chapel can be seen at http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5314042
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 15 Mar 2017
0.13 miles
6
A train leaves Gordon Hill station
The Alexandra Palace-Hertford-Stevenage loop was built mainly as a by-pass for the approaches to King's Cross on the main line from Hatfield and was built to main line standards for much of its length. However, it has never carried regular long-distance passenger services and has always primarily been a suburban branch, apart from when there is engineering work or other disruption on the East Coast Main Line through Hatfield.
The line was opened as far as Enfield, which was then the terminus, on 1st April 1871. The line was extended to Cuffley from 4th April 1910 and on to Stevenage for freight on 4th March 1918, but passenger trains only started beyond Cuffley on 2nd June 1924.
When Gordon Hill opened on 4th April 1910, it was very much a suburban terminus at the limits of London and it retained a frontier atmosphere until the early 1970s. At Gordon Hill villa and cottage development had begun in the late 1880s. To the south of the station the Great Northern Railway opened an 11 acre sports ground for its staff, issuing special cheap tickets from all its London stations. The sports ground is still there although now private.
The Piccadilly line extension to Cockfosters took much of the traffic from the line between Bowes Park and Gordon Hill and the late 1940s and 1950s were described by Alan A Jackson in 'London's Local Railways' as "doldrum years for a line which smelt of decay and declines as grotty 'quad-arts' were trundled to and from Hertford North by filthy and now wheezing N2 tanks." The line was electrified in the 1970s.
This view from the up platform looks down the line to a train which has left the down platform. The next station in this direction is Crews Hill.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 15 Mar 2017
0.13 miles
7
Junction on Lavender Hill, Enfield
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 28 Jan 2021
0.13 miles
8
Lavender Gardens, near Enfield
Lavender Gardens is a short residential cul-de-sac on the fringe of north London.
Image: © Malc McDonald
Taken: 22 Feb 2020
0.13 miles
9
Approaching road junction on Drapers Road
With Holtwhite's Hill.
See
Image] for old road sign.
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 23 Apr 2016
0.15 miles
10
New apartment block in Lavender Hill, Enfield
This new apartment block has been built on the site of a derelict house and has been constructed in a style sympathetic to the appearance of the surrounding properties.
Image: © Christine Matthews
Taken: 18 Mar 2008
0.15 miles