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INTRODUCTION |
Why NORTH Town? North of what?
Since North TOWN takes its name from its main
thoroughfare North Lane, the real QUESTION is
why NORTH Lane and It is here that the clues
begin to appear.
Firstly, it is certainly NOT north of the
earliest known Aldershot Village around the foot
of Church Hill – it is in fact due EAST of
Aldershot.
Secondly it has been NORTH LANE for a very long
time much longer than the formation of The Camp.
The venerable Col. Cole tells us that it appears
as such on 1841 when only four roads are shown
in the area. They were :-
1. Cranmoor Lane (then called Cranemer Lane
after the farmer through whose fields it passed
to link to the old London Portsmouth Road with
the Parish Church)
2. Church Lane and Church Hill these latter two names are Self explanatory
bearing, bearing in mind the location of the a
Parish Church and the original Aldershot village
at the foot of the hill on which it was built.
We are left with this wretched North Lane which
is North of nothing in Aldershot and for which
there is no local reason.
ts significant, I believe, is not local at all.
It rests in the old 18th and 19th Century
Drovers Routes from the West Country to London.
Col. Cole traces their route to the slopes of
the Fox Hills and through the village of Ash
towards Aldershot. The same Drovers Route has
been clearly identified across Bagshot Heath
The line of North Lane is directly South to
North of these two points. Its locality also had
the three requirements at Drovers sought
avoidance of inhabited areas, free pasture and
abundant water provided by Deadbrook Pond (a
prominent expanse of water in the area at that
time)
I suggest that this is the true origin of North
Lane not a North Lane of Aldershot but THE North
Lane to London.
Apart from a few farm buildings of which only
Shawfields Farm House still stands, North Lane
remained unchanged until the coming of the Camp
in 1854. The Aldershot we know today was already
mushrooming around the High Street area but here
was a location which might be called the "back
door" to the Camp within walking distance of
both North and South Camps
This point was not lost on a speculative builder
from Brighton who constructed rows of mean
terraced houses in an area off the Lane which
became Queen Street, Alexandria Street and
Denmark Street
North Town had begun to take shape . By 1879 it
had grown into a rather embarrassing working
class annex to the more august Parish of St.
Michael's Aldershot.
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