Chipping Barnet
Adjacent Parishes: East Barnet, Elstree, Finchley (Middx), Friern Barnet (Middx), Handon (Middx), Monken Hadley (Middx, now Herts), Ridge, Shenley, South Mimms (Middx, now Herts), Totteridge
It was in Cashio Hundred and Barnet Union
Barnet was transferred from Hertfordshire to Middlesex in 1965.
Arkley parish was created in 1905.

Post card (posted 1905) showing Barnet Church.

Wrotham Park [from Historic Barnet]
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This well was visited by Samuel Pepys in August 1667. It was mentioned by Fuller along with Tunbridge Wells and Epsom, but is now no longer in use. On Barnet Common in Arkley, 135 acres of which were inclosed in 1728–9, and part in 1731, there is a mineral-water well, which was at one time in high repute for its medicinal properties. Its discovery is noted in 1652, and Fuller in his Worthies in 1662 says that 'already the catalogue of cures done by this spring amounteth to a great number; insomuch that there is hope in process of time the water rising here will repair the blood shed hard by and save as many lives as were lost in the fatal battle at Barnet.' Pepys in his diary records under date 11 July, 1664, that he took five glasses of the water, but he adds that 'when he arrived home he was not very well, and so went betimes to bed, and during the night got worse and worse so that he melted almost to water.' On 11 August, 1667, he went again to Barnet, but remembering his former experience he took only three glasses and then went to the 'Red Lion,' where he says that he 'ate some of the best cheese cakes I ever did eat in my life.' (fn. 8) This inn is the old 'Red Lion' at Underhill near the railway bridge. In 1677 Mr. Owen, an alderman of London, gave 20s. a year to Barnet in trust to be paid by the company of Fishmongers for the repair of the Physic Well, and in an Act of Parliament of 2 Geo. II for an inclosure of part of Barnet Common a clause was inserted for the due security of the right of the medicinal well to the inhabitants of Barnet for ever. About 1808 a subscription was raised by the neighbouring gentlemen for arching over the well and erecting a pump, for the house formerly built over it was beginning to fall into decay, and was demolished in 1840. The well still exists, and is reached from Wood Street by Wellhouse Lane, a road which terminates in a grassy lane. |
Book: Historic Barnet
Book: Down and Out in Hertfordshire: The Diary of Benjamin Woodcock, Master of the Barnet Union Workhouse, 1836-1838.
Book: The Barnets and Hadley
Book: The Blue Plaques of Barnet
Book: Chroniclers of the Battle of Barnet - War of the Roses, 1471
Book: The Story of St John the Baptist's Church. Chipping Barnet
Book: Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Barnet

Barnet Horse Fair
Census: 1851 & 1871: Parts of area included in Middlesex on Ancestry
Ephemera: Battle of Barnet Quincentenary 1971

Website
containing a private collection of postcard images
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Quick links to
extra
postcard images. click on thumbnail picture to enlarge |
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Congregational, Barnet |
Parish Church, Barnet |
Parish Church, Barnet |
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Parish Church, Barnet |
Xmas Card, High Barnet |
Boys Farm Home |
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Multiview from 1902 |
Girls School |
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See also Vital Records
If you know of other books, websites, etc, relating to this place, please tell me.
Last updated July 2007