Kirkdale / Colingtree Road
Kirkdale / Colingtree Road
The above text and lowest photo appear to contradict each other; did shops really continue from Cobb's Corner down to Peak Hill or not?
Two maps showing the same part of Kirkdale in 1894 and 1914 respectively. Anyone know anything about this wooded junction of kirkdale before Colingtree Road was built over it? Do the contour lines represent a stream or path? I think it's too northly to be the Springhill stream. Either side appears to have a line of trees, reminiscent of Jews Walk, and might have something to do with the name "Colingtree"?
Any help with these historical questions would be much appreciated!
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- Posts: 606
- Joined: 4 Oct 2004 05:07
- Location: Upper Sydenham
No, I don't think they did. Both the 1894 and 1912 street directories show shops between Peak Hill Avenue as far as the bench-mark (BM 179.4) on the 1914 map. They were occupied by a bootmaker, tailor, Victoria Wine Co and so on. The first of the semi-detached villas (on the site of what I take to be the present entrance to the Collingtree Triangle) was occupied by a dairyman, so it is reasonable to assume that the triangle was where he grazed his cows. The rest of the villas were private homes, as shown in the photograph.did shops really continue from Cobb's Corner down to Peak Hill or not?
The piece of woodland in the 1894 map was the entrance to a large and rather eccentric house built in 1860 at the point where Collingtree Road now meets Peak Hill. Originally called The Retreat (by 1894 it was renamed Leahurst) it was built George Baxter (a well known and highly collectable printmaker) who died there in 1867. His monument is still prominent in Christ Church churchyard and, of course, Baxter Field was named after him.