The village was in the
Godley hundred, a
Saxon division for strategic and taxation purposes. Byfleet appears in
Domesday Book as
Byeflete. It was held by Ulwin (Wulfwin) from
Chertsey Abbey. Its domesday assets were: cultivated
hides; 1 church, 1
mill rendering 5 shillings per year,
fisheries worth 325
eels (per year), of
meadow,
woodland worth 10
hogs. It was taxed to render all in all £4 for the year
to its overlords.
Industrial history Byfleet expanded considerably after the opening of the
Brooklands motor circuit in 1907 and when major aircraft factories opened there during
World War I. A large housing estate for Vickers aircraft workers was built between Chertsey Road and Oyster Lane in World War I and although sold off by the early sixties, these houses still exist today. The
Tarrant Tabor bomber, the largest aeroplane built in Britain during World War I, was constructed in Byfleet by W G Tarrant Ltd but crashed fatally at
Farnborough on 26 May 1919 on its first attempted take-off. Several other aeroplanes were built in Byfleet by Glenny & Henderson Ltd in the late 1920s. The influence of the aircraft industry on the village's development continued between the wars and during World War Two and most of the new aeroplanes built at Brooklands took off over the centre of Byfleet on their first flights – the most spectacular being the first flight of the pioneering
Vickers VC10 in 1962. The urgent need to supply the
Vickers Valiant V-bomber to the RAF led to the removal of the central section of the race track's Byfleet Banking when a new hard runway was built in 1951. Various aircraft crashed in and around Byfleet during the first half of the last century; these include a
Vickers Viking amphibian (on 13 April 1922, flown by record-breaking England-Australia
Vickers Vimy pilot Sir
Ross Macpherson Smith and Lt Bennett – both men died when they crashed behind the Byfleet Banking just after take-off), the prototype
Vickers Wibault (in June 1926, flown by chief test pilot
'Tiny' Scholefield – he baled out and the aeroplane crashed on the Vickers Sports Ground), an RAF Taylorcraft
Auster (on 12 March 1943, flown by Capt W Whitson who hit a barrage balloon cable on bad visibility and crashed) and an RAF
North American P-51 Mustang III (on 6 April 1944, flown by S/Ldr Szawblowsky who struck a balloon cable and crashed near Oyster Lane). On 2 January 1945 a
Vickers Warwick GRV, s/n PN773, flown by test pilot Bob Handasyde crashed beside Rectory Lane in Three Acre Field close to St Mary's Church and just missed road-sweeper Jack Smith with a wing-tip. A single wooden propeller blade recovered from the scene in 1945 survives today in the Brooklands Museum collection.
World War II s in the
Battle of Britain were assembled in a major factory on the village boundary. Great effects also took place in this part of the county: evacuees, British and Canadian soldiers and German prisoners of war were all accommodated locally and the
Vickers factory on the east side of Brooklands was bombed with heavy loss of life on 4 September 1940. By 2200hrs the following day, 21 barrage balloons with rope lines and other military defences were deployed locally including along the nearby Seven Hills Road. The
Hawker aircraft factory on the Byfleet side of the aerodrome was targeted two days later resulting in major damage to certain buildings but with no loss of life nor any serious disruption to
Hurricane production. The importance of Brooklands to the war effort was emphasised by the construction circa 1941 of a large anti-aircraft gun tower just east of the village at Manor Farm, together with two similar structures built on the north side of Brooklands. Gun crews on each of these 'flak' towers manned a 40mm
Bofors gun against further enemy air attacks. A fatal accident in the centre of Byfleet on 24 September 1942 saw a
Bren Gun Carrier operated by the
Welsh Guards collide with the corner of The Plough pub killing a regular customer, Miss Edith Minnie Wyatt. She visited the pub regularly around midday and was co-owner of 'The Old Log Cabin' (a small shop opposite nearby Binfield Road). She died outside the premises having been pinned against the pub's bay window. This part of the building was then shored up with timber for a considerable period of time afterwards. In 1944 many troops stationed locally departed for France on
D-Day and older residents still recall a column of Canadian tanks and other military vehicles which passed through the village at that time with a long tail-back running for two days along High Road between the War Memorial and The Clockhouse. Byfleet also came under attack from
V-1 'Doodlebug' flying bombs – two fell beside Byfleet Road on 21 August and slightly injured two people. That same year a new Vickers flight test airfield opened just south of Byfleet at
Wisley.
Motor racing Brooklands' record-breaking racing driver
J G Parry-Thomas and
Bert Denly, motorcycle racer, lived in Byfleet in the 1920s and the renowned race-tuner Robin Jackson lived at St George's Hill and had an engineering works in Byfleet after World War II. Also post-war, Brooklands' engineer
Francis Beart had a small workshop in High Road, from 1947 to 1956/57, specialising in tuning
Norton motorcycles. Beart had also been a record-breaking motorcyclist at Brooklands, holding the Test Hill record on a
Grindlay Peerless. After World War 2, the village became a greater centre for automotive-related businesses, garages, showrooms and workshops and these included post-war racing driver
Duncan Hamilton's racing workshop and car showroom in the west end of High Road, the base for his successful C-type Jaguar victory at Le Mans in 1953.
Sporting venues During July 2012 Byfleet became a host of the
London 2012 Olympic Games when the road cycle races passed through the village. The races took place on 28th (men's), and 29th (women's), of July 2012. The route passed west along the A245, Parvis Road, from
Weybridge towards
West Byfleet. The route was lined with London 2012 Olympic banners, making the event a real spectacle as it passed through. ==Landmarks==