1
Hertford Road at the junction of Green Street
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 12 Feb 2013
0.03 miles
2
Shops on Hertford Road, Green Street, Enfield
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 12 Feb 2013
0.05 miles
3
Local shops, Enfield Highway
Looking west along Green Street to the junction with Hertford Road
Image: © Stephen Dawson
Taken: 16 May 2005
0.07 miles
4
Hertford Road, Green Street, Enfield
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 12 Feb 2013
0.08 miles
5
Woolworths Enfield Highway
Woolworths local on the Hertford Road. 7 days from closure, the store has recently been broken into hence the boarded up window.
Image: © Matthew Singh
Taken: 20 Dec 2008
0.09 miles
6
Enfield Highway Public Library
Carnegie Library of 1909, built to the designs of local district surveyor R. Collins. (Ref: The Buildings of England. London. 4: North (1998), p. 440)
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 30 Jul 2016
0.09 miles
7
St James’s Church, Enfield
Image: © Alan Hughes
Taken: 2 Mar 2024
0.11 miles
8
St James?s Church, Hertford Road, Enfield
St James’s Church was built as a chapel of ease in 1831 on ground south of Green Street given by Woodham Connop (Lord of Durants and Suffolks Manors).
The church is a plain-aisled building of stock brick, in 'Commissioners’ Gothic', with a western tower and battlemented exterior. The chancel in the Early English style was added in 1864. There were galleries round three sides of the nave by the end of the 19th century. The north and south galleries had been removed by 1967, when a fire seriously damaged the east end of the church. It was restored in 1969. For more about the church and parish see http://www.stjameschurch.cc/parish/
The church has a large churchyard and to the east, as an extension, is Hertford Road Cemetery. The land for the cemetery was acquired by the Enfield Burial Board in about 1880 and the cemetery was developed as a separate entity from the adjacent churchyard. The Burial Board was wound up in the 1920s. This view of the church is from the churchyard.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 12 Jul 2017
0.11 miles
9
St James?s Church, Hertford Road, Enfield
St James’s Church was built as a chapel of ease in 1831 on ground south of Green Street given by Woodham Connop (Lord of Durants and Suffolks Manors).
The church is a plain-aisled building of stock brick, in 'Commissioners’ Gothic', with a western tower and battlemented exterior. The chancel in the Early English style was added in 1864. There were galleries round three sides of the nave by the end of the 19th century. The north and south galleries had been removed by 1967, when a fire seriously damaged the east end of the church. It was restored in 1969. For more about the church and parish see http://www.stjameschurch.cc/parish/
The church has a large churchyard and to the east, as an extension, is Hertford Road Cemetery. The land for the cemetery was acquired by the Enfield Burial Board in about 1880 and the cemetery was developed as a separate entity from the adjacent churchyard. The Burial Board was wound up in the 1920s. This view of the church is from the churchyard.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 12 Jul 2017
0.11 miles
10
St James?s Churchyard, Hertford Road, Enfield
St James’s Church was built as a chapel of ease in 1831 on ground south of Green Street given by Woodham Connop (Lord of Durants and Suffolks Manors).
The church is a plain-aisled building of stock brick, in 'Commissioners’ Gothic', with a western tower and battlemented exterior. The chancel in the Early English style was added in 1864. There were galleries round three sides of the nave by the end of the 19th century. The north and south galleries had been removed by 1967, when a fire seriously damaged the east end of the church. It was restored in 1969. For more about the church and parish see http://www.stjameschurch.cc/parish/
The church has a large churchyard and to the east, as an extension, is Hertford Road Cemetery. The land for the cemetery was acquired by the Enfield Burial Board in about 1880 and the cemetery was developed as a separate entity from the adjacent churchyard. The Burial Board was wound up in the 1920s. This view is of the churchyard.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 12 Jul 2017
0.12 miles