The name
Goodmayes and
Goodmaistrete is recorded in 1456, and the name is likely to be associated with the family of John Godemay who was referred to in a document of 1319. A farm called
Goodmath is recorded on the
Chapman and Andre 1 inch to one mile map of Essex from 1777. Barley Lane is believed to be named after Dorothy Barley, the sister of
Henry Barley, Dorothy was the last
Abbess of nearby
Barking Abbey (elected 1527). Goodmayes was part of the Chadwell ward of the ancient parish of
Barking,
Essex. In 1888 the Chadwell and Great Ilford wards of Barking became a new parish of Ilford. This became Ilford Urban District in 1894 and was the
Municipal Borough of Ilford from 1926 to 1965. The
London Borough of Redbridge was formed in 1965 from Ilford and other areas. Councillors for the
electoral ward of Goodmayes were first elected in 1964. Goodmayes was largely undeveloped until the end of the 19th century, when large scale suburban development took place as London expanded. Most of the area here and in neighbouring
Seven Kings was only built up between 1898 and 1910 by the developer
A. C. Corbett who used new stations on the
Great Eastern Railway to promote the new suburbs.
Goodmayes station was built in 1901. Since then, little has changed in the area, although there have been, and still are, regeneration projects taking place within the area. However, the lines of
Edwardian terraced housing continue to dominate the district with relatively few more recent additions. Former extensive railway sidings near Goodmayes Station were closed in the 1970s and later redeveloped for retail purposes. A large
Tesco store and a branch of
Wickes and
Masala Bazaar now occupy the site. On the
A118 road, a Homebase store occupied the site until it was demolished in early 2023, and several flats being built in place of it, known as “One Goodmayes”- as of 2025. ==Facilities==