A map showing the Streatham ward of Wandsworth Metropolitan Borough as it appeared in 1916
Streatham means "the hamlet on the street". The street in question, theLondon to Brighton Way, was theRoman road from the capitalLondinium to the south coast nearPortslade, today withinBrighton and Hove. It is likely that the destination was a Roman port now lost tocoastal erosion, which has been tentatively identified with 'Novus Portus' mentioned inPtolemy'sGeographia.[3] The road is confusingly referred to asStane Street (Stone Street) in some sources and diverges from the main London-Chichester road atKennington.
Streatham's first parish church, St Leonard's, was founded inSaxon times but an early Tudor tower is the only remaining structure pre-dating 1831 when the body of the church was rebuilt. The medieval parish covered a wider area includingBalham andTooting Bec.[4] The southern portion of what is now Streatham formed part of Tooting Graveney ancient parish.[5]
A charter states that in the late seventh century, land in Streatham and Tooting Graveney was granted byErkenwald andFrithwald toChertsey Abbey, a grant which was later confirmed in the time of Athelstan in 933.[6]
St Erkenwald is recorded as granting land in the area to Chertsey Abbey.
After the departure of the Romans, the main road through Streatham remained an important trackway. From the 17th century it was adopted as the main coach road toCroydon andEast Grinstead, and then on toNewhaven andLewes. In 1780 it then became the route of theturnpike road from London toBrighton, and subsequently became the basis for the modernA23. This road (and its traffic) have shaped Streatham's development.
Streatham Green with the spire of the Catholic English Martyrs Church beyond
The village remained largely unchanged until the 18th century, when its natural springs, known as Streatham Wells, were first celebrated for their health-giving properties. The reputation of the spa, and improvedturnpike roads, attracted wealthyCity of London merchants and others to build their country residences in Streatham.[8]
In spite of London's expansion, a limited number of developments took place in the village in the second half of the nineteenth century, Streatham Vale sprung up to the South later still and the smallparade of shops by Streatham Common Station has become known colloquially as Streatham Village.
Wellfield Road, which had previously been known as Leigham Lane, was renamed to reflect its role as the main route from the centre of Streatham to one of the well locations. Another mineral well was located on the south side of Streatham Common, in an area that now forms part of The Rookery, where it can still be seen and visited within the formal gardens.[9]
One large house that survives is Park Hill, on the north side ofStreatham Common, rebuilt in the early 19th century for the Leaf family. It was latterly the home ofSir Henry Tate, sugar refiner, benefactor of local libraries across south London, includingStreatham Library, and founder of theTate Gallery atMillbank.
Development accelerated after the opening ofStreatham Hill railway station on theWest End of London and Crystal Palace Railway in 1856. The other two railway stations followed within fifteen years.Some estates, such asTelford Park to the west of Streatham Hill, were spaciously planned with facilities liketennis clubs.[11] Despite the local connections to the Dukes of Bedford, there is no link to the contemporaryBedford Park in west London. Another generously sized development was Roupell Park, the area near Christchurch Road promoted by theRoupell family. Other streets adopted more conventional suburban layouts.Three more parish churches were built to serve the growing area, including Immanuel and St Andrew's (1854), St Peter's (1870) and St Margaret the Queen's (1889).
At the end of the 19th Century the heart of the old heart of the village of Streatham was sweepingly remodelled to the architectural designs of the young local architectFrederick Wheeler FRIBA, creating the streetscape which remains to this day.
Frederick Wheeler's terraces, Streatham High Road, 1910'The Dip' flanked by Wheeler's terraces, 1930s.
Between 1884 and 1891 a comprehensive scheme of four-storey,Queen Anne Revival styleshop houses was designed by Wheeler and built by the local firm Hill Brothers. Running down from the High Road as it diverges south from Mitcham Lane and past Streatham Green the parade continues, almost unbroken, to the entrance ofStreatham Station. The scheme meets, visually, at the bottom of the steep hill and cross-roads known locally as 'The Dip' in a pair of matched developments namedThe Broadway andThe Triangle on what is now Gleneagle Road. South of this junction the development continues with Wheeler's Queens Parade terrace of 1885 rising up towards the railway bridge andStreatham Station.
The Queens Parade by Frederick Wheeler, 1920.
This long run of matching red-brick parades, topped with high red-brick'Dutch gables' and decorative chimney stacks all enlivened by decorative plasterwork, banded brickwork and multiform timber sash and tripartitedormer windows, was noted byPevsner.[12][13] Wheeler's comprehensive development also includedStreatham Hall, which served for some time as the localtown hall in the early 1900s, standing at 344 Streatham High Road between 1888 and its demolition in 1980.[14]A surviving parade of shops fronting Streatham Green on Mitcham Lane has also been ascribed to Wheeler, who contributed a large number of other buildings to the local area including the (listed) Methodist church on Riggindale Road, Sussex House on the corner of Tooting Bec Gardens and the large houses built on the Manor Park (Wheeler lived at No. 7 Rydal Road)[15] and Woodlands estates as well and the discreetelectricity substation in a "15th century Gothic style" beside the English Martyrs Church on Mitcham Lane.[16]
Wheeler later went on to find fame with hisArts & Crafts influenced St Pauls Studios residences for bachelor artists, onTalgarth Road, Hammersmith.
There is now a mixture of buildings from all architectural eras of the past 200 years in the Streatham conservation area.
After theFirst World War Streatham developed as a location for entertainment, with theStreatham Hill Theatre, three cinemas, the Locarno ballroom and Streatham Ice Rink all adding to its reputation as "the West End of South London". With the advent of electric tram services, it also grew as a shopping centre serving a wide area to the south. In the 1930s large numbers ofblocks of flats were constructed along the High Road. These speculative developments were not initially successful. They were only filled when émigré communities began to arrive in London after leaving countries under the domination ofHitler's Germany. In 1932 the parish church of theHoly Redeemer was built in Streatham Vale to commemorate the work ofWilliam Wilberforce.[17]
Pratt's department store in summer 1978. The store closed down in 1990 and the building was demolished in 1996.[18]
In the 1950s Streatham had the longest and busiest shopping street in south London. Streatham became the site of the UK's firstsupermarket, whenExpress DairiesPremier Supermarkets opened its first 2,500 square feet (230 m2) store in 1951;[19]Waitrose subsequently opened its first supermarket in Streatham in 1955, but it closed down in 1963.[20]
However, a combination of factors led to a gradual decline through the 1970s and a more rapid decline in the 1980s. These included long term population movements out toCroydon,Kingston andSutton; the growth of heavy traffic on theA23 (main road from central London toGatwick Airport andBrighton); and a lack of redevelopment sites in the town centre. This culminated in 1990 when the closure ofPratts, which had grown from a Victorian draper's shop to adepartment store operated since the 1940s by theJohn Lewis Partnership, coincided with the opening of a largeSainsbury's supermarket half a mile south of the town centre, replacing an existing, smaller Sainbury's store oppositeStreatham Hill railway station.
Several recent additions, such asArgos,Lidl andPeacocks, are located in new retail spaces on the site of Pratt's but, in common with other high streets, retail recovery has been slow, and a substantial proportion of vacant space has been taken by a growing number of restaurants, bars and coffee shops.[21]
In August 2011, Streatham was selected as one of the areas to benefit from Round 1 of the Mayor of London'sOuter London Fund, gaining £300,000. Later, Streatham was awarded a further £1.6 million, matched by another £1 million by Lambeth.[22] The money from this fund was spent on improving streets and public spaces in Streatham. This includes the smartening up of shop fronts through painting and cleaning, replacing shutters and signage as well as helping to reveal facilities behind the high street such as The Stables Community Centre.[23] Streatham Library has also undergone a £1.2 million refurbishment. The Tudor Hall behind the library was brought back into public use asThe Mark Bennett Centre providing a meeting and performance space. Streatham Skyline introduced new lighting to highlight some of Streatham's more attractive buildings and monuments with the aim of improving safety and the overall attractiveness of the area.[23]
Streatham Common. Avenue of autumn trees looking down Streatham Common towards Streatham High Road
In September 2002,Streatham High Road was voted the "Worst Street in Britain"[24] in a poll organised by theBBCToday programme andCABE. This largely reflected the dominance of through traffic along High Road.
Plans for investment and regeneration had begun before the poll, with local amenity group the Streatham Society leading a successful partnership bid for funding from central government for environmental improvements. Work started in winter 2003–04 with the refurbishment of Streatham Green and repaving and relighting of the High Road between St Leonard's Church and the Odeon Cinema. In 2005 Streatham Green won theMetropolitan Public Gardens Association 'London Spade' award for best public open space scheme in the capital.
The poll was a catalyst forLambeth London Borough Council andTransport for London's Street Management to co-operate on a joint funding arrangement for further streetscape improvements, which benefited the section of the High Road between St Leonard's and Streatham station, and the stretch north of the Odeon as far as Woodbourne Avenue. The section between Woodbourne Avenue and Streatham Hill station was not completed until 2015. Any further improvements north of Streatham Hill have been halted because of TfL's budgetary shortfall.
Streatham Festival was established in 2002. It has grown to a festival with over 50 events held in an array of locations, from bars to churches and parks to youth centres, attracting over 3,000 people.[25]
After several years of delay and controversy over phasing, construction started in the autumn of 2011 on theStreatham Hub - a major redevelopment next toStreatham railway station. The project was a joint development by Lambeth Council andTesco. The project involved the demolition ofStreatham Ice Arena, Streatham Leisure Centre and the former Streatham Bus Garage, and their replacement with a new leisure centre and a Tesco store with 250 flats above it. Streatham Leisure Centre closed in November 2009 due to health and safety concerns when part of the pool hall ceiling collapsed.[26] Streatham Ice Arena closed on 18 December 2011, having celebrated eighty years of operation in February 2011. For two years a temporary ice rink was provided at Popes Road, Brixton.
In November 2013, the new Streatham Ice and Leisure Centre opened to the public.[27] The leisure centre houses a 60 m x 30 m indoor ice rink with 1,000 rink-side seats on the upper floors,[28] a six-lane 25 m swimming pool, 13 m teaching pool, four-court sports hall and a gym with 100 stations.
The jazz venueHideaway continues Streatham's long entertainment tradition. It features live performances of jazz, funk, swing andsoul music as well asstand-up comedy nights. It won the Jazz Venue/Promoter of the Year category in the 2011Parliamentary Jazz Awards.[29]
On 2 February 2020 at around 14:00 GMT,Sudesh Mamoor Faraz Amman attacked and injured two people using a machete on Streatham High Street in what police declared a terrorist incident.[30] Alongside the machete, Amman was also wearing a vest with components made to look likeimprovised explosive devices.[31] He was pursued by armed police and was fatally shot outside aBoots pharmacy.[32]
Streatham High Road also was host to Cat's Whiskers which later became Caesar's nightclub[33] in the early 1990s through to 2005, which closed to become the site of the newly developed block of flats with a Marks and Spencer supermarket and Starbucks.
^H.E. Malden, ed. (1912)."Parishes: Streatham".A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 4. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved4 November 2014.