1
Former KX300 Telephone Kiosk in Winchmore Hill
Situated in Coleshill Lane HP7 0NR near Fagnall Lane, this telephone kiosk has a BT notice above the payphone indicating that it will shortly be removed due to lack of usage. The former BT Piper logo can be seen each side of the kiosk whilst a "No Smoking" notice is at the base. Update: the telephone kiosk has since been removed from this location.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 1 Apr 2017
0.01 miles
2
The Potters Arms, Winchmore Hill
The pub takes its name from the village's old pottery industry.
Image: © Mark Percy
Taken: 14 Jul 2022
0.01 miles
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The Plough at Winchmore Hill
Image: © Peter S
Taken: 23 Jan 2019
0.02 miles
4
The Potters Arms
First recorded as a beer house in 1830, the pub takes its name from a pottery kiln next door, which was demolished in 1932.
The leaseholder in the 1870s was Wheeler’s Brewery of High Wycombe, but shortly after 1887 the freehold of the pub was purchased by William Hobbs - the last potter to work in Winchmore Hill.
The Potters Arms is now a freehouse after landlord Richard Edwards and local brothers Pete & Danny Gilbert bought the pub from the brewery in December 2018.
Image: © Mark Percy
Taken: 15 Aug 2023
0.02 miles
5
Cross Road at Winchmore Hill
Cross Road of Coleshill Lane and the Common at Winchmore Hill
Image: © Shaun Ferguson
Taken: 22 Mar 2008
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The Hill at the junction of Coleshill Lane
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 8 Oct 2015
0.03 miles
7
Display Board at Winchmore Hill
This photo shows the display board at The Common which was jointly commissioned and supported in 2015 by the Penn Parish Council, the Winchmore Hill Residents Association and the Trustees of Winchmore Hill Memorial Hall. It has the following wording:
Winchmore Hill
Winchmore Hill stretches back to about the 12th Century with a small settlement supporting farms grouped around a Common and a pond. In 1958 the pond was filled in but the Common survives, on the fringes of what was once Wycombe Heath, 4,000 acres of open common land providing grazing for animals and a source of firewood and building materials. The hamlet straddled three separate parishes - Amersham, Penn and Coleshill ( a detached part of Hertfordshire until 1844). This sharp boundary at the crosswords and once marked by a stone, mat provide the derivations of our name - "wincel" being an old English word meaning a corner or angle and "maer" a boundary.
By the 17th century, a number of larger farms had been established down Fagnall Lane- Glory Farm, Fagnall and Lowlands. The villages shared two common fields divided into strips - Collins and Horsemoor, with the strip holdings on Horsemoor surviving until 1855. There still exists about 8 houses in the village with probable 17th century origins, including "The Plough". As well as four pubs, there used to be four shops in the village.
Clay in the Chilterns area is highly suitable for the production of pottery, tiles and bricks. By 1726 pots were being made in Coleshill Lane, Winchmore Hill, with a working shop, kiln house and stable owned by William Bovingdon. There were several other potteries nearby in Coleshill and Penn. In the 1770s a pot-kiln and workshops were erected overlooking The Common, on the corner of Fagnall Lane, and manufacture at this important Pottery continued throughout the 19th century. A range of domestic "brown ware" was produced, including bread-pans, milk pans and flower-pots, and taken to neighbouring market-towns by pack-horse.By 1830 the adjacent "Potters Arms" was a beer house, and later in the century the publican was often also the owner of the pottery.
Opposite the Potters Arms, a Wesleyan Chapel was opened in 1861, reflecting a strong Methodist tradition within the village. A Primitive Methodist Chapel was built on The Hill in 1860 and regular services continue to this day.
In the early 20th century, the Pottery was owned by Joseph Hobbs. It was finally demolished in 1932 and the bricks were used to build the semi-detached houses now on that site. One of the last potters to work at Winchmore Hill was Thomas Sears, one of a family living in the village through several generations.
Children from Winchmore Hill have always attended two local schools, at Coleshill and Penn Street. A plan in 1913 to establish a school within the village was abandoned because of local opposition.
In the First World War about 50 men from the village and surrounding area volunteered or were called-up and the names of 18 men killed are commemorated at the Memorial Hall. The Hall was opened in November 1921, a much-appreciated and lasting commemoration of these brave men.
Since the 1930s the chair-factories in the village have closed, the demand for agricultural labourers has sharply reduced and people have become more mobile. Employment has diversified with various local trades and some commuting to London. The original division between three parishes was superseded in 1955 when the village voted to become part of Penn Parish. The population of Winchmore Hill in 2015 is about 550 in 240 households.
18th century improvements in road transport enabled Buckinghamshire carpenters in the Chilterns area to assemble furniture and chairs for the London market, based on plentiful local supplies of beechwood. A number of chair-manufacturers became established in Amersham, and in 1845 David Hatch set up his business as a chair-maker near the "Queens Head" in Whielden Lane. The family business prospered, employng some 30 men by 1900.
George Pursey, innkeeper of "The Plough" built a saw-pit and a row of sheds in about 1870 for turning chair-legs. Other small factories were established on The Hill and in Coleshill Lane and Fagnall Lane. By 1901 chair-making was in fact the main village employment. According to the 1901 census, 46 out of 99 men in Winchmore Hill worked in chair-making compared with 31 agricultural labourers.
Local farms were mainly arable - wheat, barley and oats - but cherries were also an important local crop.
William Pursey established another chair-making factory on the west side of The Hill. This business was taken over by Frederick Rose in 1922 in partnership with Frederick Sears and Sidney Hext. In 1964 the business was sold to George Fassnidge. Around this time, the firm employed 28 people, making up to 1,000 chairs a week. It was the last surviving chair-factory in Winchmore Hill, and continued until 1988.
The last chair-maker in the village was life-time resident Eric Hazell, who died in October 2014, aged 91. His predecessors had also lived in the village, and this display-board is a tribute to Eric and other local families stretching back through the generations who have given strength, character and history to Winchmore Hill.
The photos on the display-board show the following;
Top left hand corner: The Pottery and "Potters Arms" Winchmore Hill 1912
Bottom left hand corner: A Local Potter - Thomas Sears 1910
Top right hand corner: George Sawyer, chairmaker, Winchmore Hill, 1910
Bottom right hand corner: Eric Hazell, chairmaker, 1988
In the centre of the display-board is an Ordnance Map of Winchmore Hill, 1898
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 19 May 2016
0.03 miles
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Annual Village Show coming up
Publicity for the village show on the back of the parish notice board opposite The Plough pub in the middle of the village.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 10 Aug 2023
0.03 miles
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Houses by village green, Winchmore Hill
The large block is Royal Cottages.
Image: © Robin Webster
Taken: 27 Mar 2015
0.04 miles
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The Plough, Winchmore Hill
Among the Plough's past owners was actress Barbara Windsor. She bought the pub with husband Stephen Hollings in 1986. They ran it for nine years until their divorce.
Image: © Mark Percy
Taken: 14 Jul 2022
0.04 miles