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Showing posts from September, 2020

The Kilbourne Stream

Kilburn derived its name from the ancient stream which passed through the village until the 1860s. The stream was part of the Westbourne, which started in Hampstead and flowed down the hill through the village of West End (now West Hampstead) to Kilburn.  In ancient documents, Kilburn is spelt in various ways such as, Kyllbourne, Kelebourne, Kilebourne, Kilbourne, Kulleburne. The meaning of the name has been the cause of much debate but is probably derived from the Anglo-Saxon Kyle (cold) and Bourne (water). The stream was never a large river, and the locals called it a brook or a bourne. It went through what is now the Grange Park and ran parallel to the High Road along what is today’s Kingsgate Road, before passing under the High Road (the Edgware Road) at Kilburn Bridge. In November 1860 a deputation from Kilburn presented a letter to the Metropolitan Board of Works which complained that the lives of the inhabitants were jeopardised and the value of the property was most seriously d

Wartime Heroes in the Battle of Britain

Today we are commemorating Battle of Britain Day which occurred 80 years ago on 15 September 1940 when the Luftwaffe launched a massive attack on London hoping to draw out and destroy the RAF fighters. Although War was declared on 3 September 1939 and there was an air raid warning, the Germans did not bomb London during the so called ‘phoney war’ until a year later when the Blitz began on 7 September 1940. Here we look at two war heroes from Kilburn and West Hampstead. Gordon Wedlock Gordon Victor Wedlock was born in December 1918 when his parents William and Edith were living at 64 Gascony Avenue in Kilburn. About 1926 they moved to 9 Homestead Park near Gladstone Park in Willesden. Gordon was a pupil at Dudden Hill School and then won a scholarship to Kilburn Grammar School. He joined the Electricity Department of Willesden Council in 1936, working under the aptly named Mr Spark and the following year, signed up for the RAF Volunteer Reserve. This meant many of his evenings and most

Kilburn Heroes in the Blitz

It is 80 years since the Blitz, which lasted from 7 September 1940 to 11 May 1941. The intense night bombing of London damaged buildings and killed or injured thousands of civilians.  We have discovered that two people from Kilburn were awarded medals for their bravery in 1941. Clifford Stratton Seventeen-year-old Clifford Stratton was an electrical engineer’s assistant who lived at 42 Buckley Road in Kilburn (later in the 1950s and 60s he is shown at No. 48). He had been a volunteer warden for six months. On the night of Wednesday 16/17 April 1941, 685 German bombers attacked London. This was the largest attack since the Blitz began and some planes made two or even three sorties that night. A huge number of buildings were destroyed, and 1,720 Londoners were killed in what became known as 'The Wednesday'. Clifford was part of a team of stretcher bearers who rescued a man and two girls trapped on the fourth floor in flats in Portpool Lane, off the Grays Inn Road Holborn. The bui

The Nutters: from Kilburn to The Beatles and Elton John

In the story we look chronologically and alternate between what was happening to David and his brother Tommy Nutter. David Nutter was born in Edgware in May 1939 and Tommy four years later in April 1943 while his parents were living in North Wales. Their great grandfather had been a builder in Kilburn and their mother Dorothy (Dolly) Bannister was born there. In 1937 she married Christopher Nutter who worked as a seating upholster in the de Havilland aircraft factory at the Stag Lane aerodrome in Edgware. After their marriage he and Dolly ran ‘John’s Café’ at 7 Handel Parade Whitchurch Lane in Edgware for his brother-in-law John Cross. When Christopher was discharged from the Army in February 1946, the family returned to Edgware where they lived over the café. By 1961 the family had moved to 24 Eresby Road, one of the houses built in Kilburn by Dolly’s grandfather, Edward Tribe. The entire road, which ran from Kilburn High Road to Kingsgate Road, was demolished as part of the building