Battersea is mentioned in the few surviving
Anglo-Saxon geographical accounts as and later . As with many former parishes beside tidal flood plains the lowest land was reclaimed for agriculture by draining marshland and building culverts for streams. By the side of this was the
Heathwall tide mill in the north-east with a very long mill pond regularly draining and filling to the south. Battersea () appears in the
Domesday Book of 1086 in Surrey within the
hundred of
Brixton () as a vast manor held by
St Peter's Abbey, Westminster. Its
Domesday assets were: 18
hides and 17
ploughlands of cultivated land; 7
mills worth £42 9s 8d per year, of
meadow,
woodland worth 50
hogs. It rendered (in total): £75 9s 8d. Price inflation was close to zero in the 11th and 12th centuries, so netting an annual income of £75 9s 8d would be .
St Mary's Church, completed in 1777, hosted the marriage of
William Blake and
Catherine Boucher in 1782.
Benedict Arnold, his wife
Peggy Shippen, and their daughter were buried in the
crypt of the church.
Battersea Park, a northern rectangle by the Thames, was landscaped and founded for public use in 1858. Amenities and leisure buildings have been added to it since. Until 1889, the parish of Battersea was part of the county of
Surrey. In that year a new
County of London came into being and the parish was made part of it.
Agriculture Before the
Industrial Revolution, much of the large parish was farmland, providing food for the
City of London and surrounding population centres; and with particular specialisms, such as growing
lavender on
Lavender Hill (nowadays denoted by the road of the same name),
asparagus (sold as "Battersea Bundles") or pig breeding on Pig Hill (later the site of the
Shaftesbury Park Estate). At the end of the 18th century, above of land in the parish of Battersea were occupied by some 20 market gardeners, who rented from five to near each. Villages in the wider area: Wandsworth, Earlsfield (hamlet of Garratt), Tooting, Balham – were separated by fields; in common with other suburbs the wealthy of London and the traditional manor successors built their homes in Battersea and neighbouring areas.
Industry Industry in the area was concentrated to the northwest just outside the Battersea-Wandsworth boundary, at the confluence of the River Thames and the
River Wandle, which gave rise to the village of
Wandsworth. This was settled from the 16th century by
Protestant craftsmen –
Huguenots – fleeing religious persecution in Europe, who planted lavender and gardens and established a range of industries such as mills, breweries and dyeing, bleaching and
calico printing.
Railway age bombing at Battersea, 27 January 1945. Battersea was radically altered by the coming of railways. The
London and Southampton Railway Company engineered their railway line from east to west through Battersea, in 1838, terminating at the original
Nine Elms railway station at the north east tip of the area. Over the next 22 years five other lines were built, which continue to carry all of the trains to and from London's
Waterloo and
Victoria termini. An interchange station was built in 1863 towards the north west of the area, at a junction of the railway. Taking the name of a fashionable village a mile and more away, the station was named '
Clapham Junction': a campaign to rename it "Battersea Junction" fizzled out as late as the early twentieth century. During the latter decades of the nineteenth century Battersea had developed into a major town railway centre with two locomotive works at
Nine Elms and
Longhedge and three important motive power depots (Nine Elms, Stewarts Lane and Battersea) all in an initial pocket of north Battersea. The effect was precipitate: a population of 6,000 people in 1840 was increased to 168,000 by 1910; and save for the green spaces of
Battersea Park,
Clapham Common,
Wandsworth Common and some smaller isolated pockets, all other farmland was built over, with, from north to south, industrial buildings and vast railway sheds and sidings (much of which remain), slum housing for workers, especially north of the main east–west railway, and gradually more genteel residential terraced housing further south. The railway station encouraged the government to site its buildings in the area surrounding
Clapham Junction, where a cluster of new civic buildings including the town hall, library, police station, court and post office was developed along
Lavender Hill in the 1880s and 1890s. The
Arding & Hobbs department store, diagonally opposite the station, was the largest of its type at the time of its construction in 1885; and the streets near the station developed as a regional shopping district. The area was served by a vast music hallThe Grandopposite the station (nowadays serving as a nightclub and venue for smaller bands) as well as a large theatre next to the town hall (the Shakespeare Theatre, later redeveloped following bomb damage). All this building around the station shifted the focus of the area southwards, and marginalised Battersea High Street (the main street of the original village) into no more than an extension of Falcon Road.
Social housing estates Battersea has a long and varied history of social housing, and the completion of the
Shaftesbury Park Estate in 1877 was one of the earliest in London or the UK. Additionally, the development of the
Latchmere Estate in 1903 was notable both for
John Burns' involvement and for being the first estate directly built by a council's own workforce and therefore the first true "council estate". Indeed, both of these earlier estates have since been recognised as
conservation areas due to their historical and architectural significance and are protected from redevelopment. Battersea also has a large area of mid-20th century public housing estates, almost all located north of the main railway lines and spanning from
Fairfield in the west to Queenstown in the east. There are four particularly large estates. The
Winstanley Estate, perhaps being the most renowned of them all, is known as being the birthplace to the garage collective
So Solid Crew. Winstanley is close to Clapham Junction railway station in the northern perimeter of Battersea, and is currently being considered for comprehensive redevelopment as one of the London Mayor's new Housing Zones. Further north towards Chelsea is the
Surrey Lane Estate, and on Battersea Park Road is the Doddington and Rollo Estate. East, toward Vauxhall, is the
Patmore Estate which is in close proximity to the Battersea Power Station. Other smaller estates include: York Road (see
Winstanley Estate), Ashley Crescent, Badric Court, Carey Gardens, Chatham Road, Ethelburga, Falcon Road, Gideon Road, Honeywell Road, Kambala, Peabody, Robertson Street, Savona, Somerset, Wilditch and Wynter Street.
World War I: The Battersea Battalion On the outbreak of
World War I in August 1914
Earl Kitchener of Khartoum, issued his famous call to arms: 'Your King and Country Need You'. But the flood of volunteers overwhelmed the ability of the Army to absorb them, and units began to be raised by local initiative rather than at regimental depots, often from men from particular localities or backgrounds who wished to serve together: these were known as '
Pals battalions'. The 'Pals' phenomenon quickly spread across the country, as local recruiting committees offered complete units. Encouraged by this response, Kitchener approached the 28
Metropolitan boroughs of the County of London, and the 'Great Metropolitan Recruiting Campaign' went ahead in April 1915, with each mayor asked to raise a unit of local men. One such unit was raised on 3 June 1915 by the
Mayor and Borough of Battersea as the
10th (Service) Battalion, Queen's (Royal West Surrey Regiment) (Battersea). (Although Battersea was by then in the County of London, the
Queen's (Royal West Surrey Regiment) was still the
Regular Army regiment covering South London, while the
London Regiment, including the
23rd Battalion based at Clapham Junction, consisted entirely of part-time soldiers of the
Territorial Force (TF).) The Battersea Battalion served alongside Pals battalions from
Lambeth (11th Queens),
Bermondsey (12th
East Surreys) and
Lewisham (10th
West Kents) in
41st Division on the
Western Front, including the battles of the
Somme,
Messines, and
Ypres, on the
Italian Front, and then back in the west against the
German spring offensive and in the final victorious
Hundred Days Offensive. The Battersea Battalion was kept up to strength with dismounted cavalrymen from the
Surrey Yeomanry (TF), based at
Clapham Park. After the
Armistice it took part in the
Occupation of the Rhineland and was finally disbanded in 1920. ==Governance==