Toponymy The
settlement was called
Henamsted or
Hean-Hempsted in
Anglo-Saxon times and Hemel-Amstede by the time of
William the Conqueror. The name is referred to in the
Domesday Book as
Hamelamestede, but, in later centuries, it became
Hamelhamsted and possibly
Hemlamstede. In
Old English,
-stead or
-stede simply meant "place" (reflected in German
Stadt and Dutch
stede or
stad, meaning "city" or "town"), such as the site of a building or pasture, as in clearing in the woods. This suffix is used in the names of other English places, such as
Hamstead and Berkhamsted. One theory suggests that a previous name for the settlement became corrupted to something similar to Hempstead, and that Hemel originated as a way of specifying Hemel Hempstead, as opposed to nearby Berkhamsted. Hemel is reflected in the Dutch
Hemel and German
Himmel, both of which mean 'heaven' or 'sky'; it could be that Hemel Hempstead was in a less-forested area open to the sky, while Berkhamsted (which could mean '
birch', reflected in the Dutch
berk) was in a forest of birch trees. However, this is speculation and unsupported by place name dictionaries. Another suggestion is that Hemel came from
Haemele, the name of the district in the 8th century, and was most likely either the name of the landowner or meant "broken country". Emigrants from Hemel Hempstead, led by John Carman, settled in the
American colonies in the early 17th century and founded the town of
Hempstead, New York in 1644.
Early history The first recorded mention of the town is the grant of land at
Hamaele by
Offa, King of Essex, to the Saxon
Bishop of London in 705 AD. Hemel Hempstead on its present site is mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as a
vill, Hamelhamstede, with about 100 inhabitants. The parish church of
St Mary's was built in 1140, and is recognised as one of the finest
Norman parish churches in the county. The church features an unusual
spire, added in the 12th century, one of Europe's tallest. This maintained its court into the 19th century. In 1290,
King John's grandson, the
Earl of Cornwall, gave the
manor to the religious order of the
Bonhommes when he endowed the monastery at
Ashridge. The town remained part of the monastery's estates until the
Reformation and
break-up of Ashridge in 1539. In the same year, the town was granted a
royal charter by
Henry VIII to become a
bailiwick with the right to hold a Thursday market and a fair on
Corpus Christi Day. The first bailiff of Hemel Hempstead was William Stephyns (29 December 1539). Henry VIII and
Anne Boleyn are reputed to have stayed in the town at this time. In 1953, a collection of unusually fine
medieval wall paintings dating from between 1470 and 1500 were discovered in a cottage in
Piccotts End, a village on the outskirts of the town. This same building had been converted into the first
cottage hospital providing free medical services by Sir
Astley Cooper in 1827. In 1581, a group of local people acquired lands – now referred to as
Boxmoor – from the
Earl of Leicester to prevent their
enclosure. These were transferred to trustees in 1594. These have been used for public grazing and they are administered by the
Box Moor Trust. Remains of
Roman villa farming settlements have been found at
Boxmoor and
Gadebridge, which span the entire period of
Roman Britain. A well-preserved Roman burial mound is located in Adeyfield. A major Romano-Celtic temple complex was unearthed at Wood Lane End in Maylands in 1966.
18th to mid-20th century In the 18th and 19th centuries, Hemel Hempstead was an agricultural
market town. Wealthy landowners built a few large
country houses in the locality, including
The Bury, built in 1790, and
Gadebridge House, erected by the noted
surgeon and
anatomist Sir Astley Cooper in 1811. As the
Industrial Revolution gained momentum, commercial travel between the
Midlands and London increased greatly. Hemel Hempstead was located on a direct route between these areas of industry and commerce; this made it a natural waypoint for trade and travel between the two. Initially the
Sparrows Herne Turnpike Road was opened in 1762. In 1793, construction began on the
Grand Junction Canal, a major project to provide a freight waterway between the Midlands and the
Port of London. In 1798, the canal from the Thames reached Two Waters, just south of the town, and opened fully in 1805. Hemel's position on the commercial transport network was established further in 1837 when the route of the new
London and Birmingham Railway reached the town. The line's construction had been delayed for several years by vigorous lobbying by a number of powerful local landowners, including Sir Astley Cooper of Gadebridge House, who were all keen to protect their estates from invasion by the "
iron horse". Their campaign was successful and the main line was routed along the
River Bulbourne instead of the
River Gade, skirting around the edge of Hemel Hempstead. As a result, the town's railway station was built one mile outside the town centre at[Boxmoor;
Boxmoor and Hemel Hempstead station (now
Hemel Hempstead) opened in 1837. The railways continued to expand and, in 1877, a new route opened connecting Boxmoor to the
Midland Railway at . The Harpenden to Hemel Hempstead branch railway — affectionately known as the
Nickey Line — crossed the town centre on a long, curved
viaduct, eventually serving three local stations in the town at , and Godwin's Halt. A new
Hemel Hempstead Hospital was established at the bottom of Hillfield Road in 1832. Despite the incursion of various forms of transport, Hemel remained principally an agricultural market town throughout the 19th century. In the last decades of that century, development of houses and villas for London commuters began. The town steadily expanded, but only became a borough, with its headquarters at the
old town hall on 13 July 1898. During the Second World War, ninety high explosive bombs were dropped on the town by the
Luftwaffe. The most notorious incident was on 10 May 1942 when a stick of bombs demolished houses at Nash Mills killing eight people. The nearby
John Dickinson & Co. factories which were used to produce munitions, were the target.
New town After the Second World War, in 1946, the government designated Hemel Hempstead as the site of one of its proposed
new towns designed to house the population displaced by the
London Blitz, since slums and bombsites were being cleared in London. On 4 February 1947, the Government purchased of land and began work on the New Town. The first new residents moved in during April 1949 and the town continued its planned expansion through to the end of the 1980s. The town grew to its present population with new developments enveloping the original town on all sides. The original part of Hemel is still known as the "Old Town". Hemel Hempstead was announced as candidate number three for a New Town in July 1946, in accordance with the government's "policy for the decentralisation of persons and industry from London". Initially, there was much resistance and hostility to the plan from locals, especially when it was revealed that any development would be carried out not by the local council but by a newly appointed government body, the
Hemel Hempstead Development Corporation (later amalgamated with similar bodies to form the
Commission for New Towns). However, following a public inquiry the following year, the town got the go-ahead. Hemel officially became a New Town on 4 February 1947. The initial plans for the New Town were drawn up by architect
Geoffrey Jellicoe. His view of Hemel Hempstead, he said, was "not a city in a garden, but a city in a park." However, the plans were not well received by most locals. Revised, and less radical plans were drawn up, and the first developments proceeded despite local protests in July 1948. The first area to be developed was Adeyfield. At this time, the plans for a revolutionary double roundabout at Moor End were first put forward, but in fact it was not until 1973 that
the roundabout was opened as it was originally designed. It was quickly christened "The Magic Roundabout" by locals, echoing the name of
the children's TV show. The first houses erected as part of the New Town plan were in Longlands, Adeyfield, and went up in the spring of 1949. The first new residents moved into their new houses in February 1950. At this time, work started on building new factories and industrial areas, to avoid the town becoming a dormitory town; the first factory was erected in 1950 in Maylands Avenue. As building progressed with continuing local opposition, the town was becoming increasingly popular with those moving in from areas of north London. By the end of 1951, there was a waiting list of about 10,000 wishing to move to Hemel. The neighbourhoods of Bennett's End, Chaulden and Warner's End were started.
Queen Elizabeth II paid a visit shortly after her accession in 1952 and laid a foundation stone for a new church in Adeyfield; this was one of her first public engagements as Queen. The shopping square she visited is named ''Queen's Square'' and the nearby area has street names commemorating the then-recent conquest of
Everest, such as Hillary and Tenzing Roads. This conquest is also celebrated in the name of a pub in Warners End – the "Top of the World". The redevelopment of the town centre was started in 1952, with a new centre based on Marlowes south of the old town. This was alongside a green area called the Water Gardens, designed by Jellicoe, formed by ponding back the river Gade. The old centre of the High Street was to remain largely undeveloped, though the market square closed and was replaced by a much larger one in the new centre. The former private estate of Gadebridge was opened up as a public park. New schools and roads were built to serve the expanding new neighbourhoods. New housing technology, such as prefabrication, started to be used from the mid-'50s and house building rates increased dramatically. Highfield was the next neighbourhood to be constructed. The M1 motorway opened to the east in 1959 and a new road connecting it to the town was opened. By 1962, the redevelopment of the new town as originally envisaged was largely complete, though further expansion plans were then put forward. The nearby
United States Air Force base of
Bovingdon, which had served as the town's 'de facto' airport, reverted to
Royal Air Force use at this time; it continued as an active military airfield until 1971. A campus of
West Herts College, the library, new police station and the Pavilion (theatre and music venue) were all built during the 1960s. The town seemed to attract its fair share of celebrity openings, with shops and businesses opened by
Frankie Vaughan,
Benny Hill,
Terry-Thomas and the new cinema was opened by Hollywood star
Lauren Bacall. The last of the originally-planned neighbourhoods, Grovehill, began construction in 1967. However, further neighbourhoods of Woodhall Farm and
Fields End were later built as part of the extended plans. Like other first-generation new towns, Hemel is divided into residential neighbourhoods, each with their own village centre with shops, pubs and services. Each neighbourhood is designed around a few major feeder roads, with many smaller
cul-de-sacs and crescents, intended to minimise traffic and noise nuisance. In keeping with the optimism of the early post-war years, much of the town features
modernist architecture with many unusual and experimental designs for
housing. Not all of these have stood the test of time. A significant issue was how to choose names for all the new roads. Many areas of the new town used themes, such as fields, birds, rivers, poets, explorers and leaders. In 1974, the government abolished the Borough of Hemel Hempstead and the town was incorporated into Dacorum District, along with Tring and Berkhamsted. The first chairman of that council was chairman John Johnson (1913–1977). In the 1980s, Dacorum District Council lobbied successfully to be recognised as the successor for the Royal Charter, establishing the Borough of Hemel Hempstead; it thus regained the Mayor and its Aldermen and became Dacorum Borough in 1984. ==Geography==