1
Door hood, Lower Edmonton Sorting Office
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 22 Dec 2011
0.04 miles
2
Lower Edmonton Sorting Office
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 22 Dec 2011
0.04 miles
3
Lower Edmonton Sorting Office
A fine example of single-storey Edwardian sorting office, built in red brick with stone dressings in Baroque style. Similar examples in the Greater London area may be found in Dulwich, Finsbury Park, Hanwell, and Winchmore Hill.
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 3 Feb 2010
0.04 miles
4
All Saints Churchyard, Edmonton
All Saints Church was founded in 1136 by Geoffrey de Mandeville. The west tower dates from the 15th century, as does much of the interior, including the nave roof. However, there is still evidence of the earlier 12th century church here as there are fragments of a Norman doorway and other pieces of Norman evidence built into the west wall.
The tomb in the foreground dates from the 1760s. The tower blocks in the distance are at Edmonton Green - see http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5312935
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 15 Mar 2017
0.09 miles
5
Edmonton Green Railway Station
Image: © David Robinson
Taken: 4 May 2021
0.09 miles
6
Looking north from Edmonton Green station
The line from Edmonton via Lower Edmonton to the centre of Enfield opened on 1st March 1849. At Lower Edmonton (now Edmonton Green) a single platform occupied a central position at the edge of the village green. At Enfield Town where the line terminated in the centre of Enfield, a three-storey, late 17th-century mansion, latterly a school attended by John Keats, was available to become the station house and offices. A little steam railmotor called 'Enfield appeared on the branch soon after its opening.
The first stage of a more direct line from Bethnal Green station to Stoke Newington station was opened by the Great Eastern Railway on 27th May 1872, and the route was continued on to Lower Edmonton on 22nd July 1872 and to Edmonton Junction on 1st August 1872. From 1st August 1872 trains ran on to Enfield Town via a new double line.
Edmonton Green was opened as Edmonton (High level) on 22nd July 1872 by the Great Eastern Railway on its new, more direct line from London. Edmonton was renamed Lower Edmonton (High Level) on 1st July 1883, with the suffix being dropped when the low level station closed. The name of Edmonton Green was adopted in 1992.
The line from Bury Street Junction, north of Edmonton Green, to Cheshunt was opened by the Great Eastern Railway on 1st October 1891
On 31st May 2015 the station and all services that call here became part of the London Overground network.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 15 Mar 2017
0.09 miles
7
All Saints Churchyard, Edmonton
All Saints Church was founded in 1136 by Geoffrey de Mandeville. The west tower dates from the 15th century, as does much of the interior, including the nave roof. However, there is still evidence of the earlier 12th century church here as there are fragments of a Norman doorway and other pieces of Norman evidence built into the west wall.
The tower blocks in the distance are at Edmonton Green - see http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5312935
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 15 Mar 2017
0.10 miles
8
All Saints, Church Street, Edmonton - Wall monument
Image: © John Salmon
Taken: 1 Feb 2014
0.10 miles
9
Edmonton Green station
Formerly called Lower Edmonton
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 29 Jan 2009
0.10 miles
10
High-rise flats in Edmonton Green
next to Edmonton Green railway station, looking across the roundabout to Edmonton Green shopping centre, currently being redeveloped, and the high-rise flats.
Image: © Stephen Dawson
Taken: 17 May 2005
0.10 miles