Latchmere probably combines
Old French '
lache', lazy or slow-moving and
Old English '
mere', a lake or pond; it may however relate to
lammas land, a type of common land with church associations. The
Latchmere stream or
Latchmere brook started as drainage
ditches in the
Canbury manor to the north-east of
Kingston railway station that, historically in low gradient seasonally flooded. Flooding is abated by some drains in its catchment now draining to the Thames or Hogsmill River and by many soakaways for the roof of homes. Some surface water still drains north-east then north, added to by percolation of water in Richmond Park into the very small, hillside Gallows Pond. Exactly 305 metres of the south of the Kings Road forms its abrupt dip in Richmond Park's south-west side. Owing to flood deposition centuries ago of the untamed river Thames, the Thames/Latchmere watershed (divide), from the town northward shifts eastward e.g. is 220m from Richmond Road, as to Latchmere Road. The stream's lower course lines the south of the east side of
Ham Common, about 50 metres west of Ham Gate of the Richmond Park, via which it joins the Sudbrook just below Ham Gate Pond which together skirt the west side of the Park against the Common. From
Roman to
Saxon England or later, the north of Kingston town centre formed a series of island fields formed by a branch of the Hogsmill River and a drainage channel linked to this stream. With the increase of urbanisation of Kingston in the early 19th century, residents of Canbury used many of their ditches as open sewers, causing a public nuisance and a health hazard:
The stench from this ditch, which is an open one, is always bad, but in summer it is beyond words to describe reported the Kingston
Board of Guardians on 19 June 1866. This and other open sewers were the cause of serious public health problems, and by in the early 1890s a sewerage works served Kingston, on the Thames. However the slow brook, used as or percolating to the main source of water for a few, still caused some fatal
infant diarrhoea and
diphtheria. Public information not to drink from streams, ditches or shallow wells in urban zones was widespread by the early 20th century. Expansion of residential housing across former agricultural land has resulted in the Latchmere stream being culverted, but its course is revealed during periods of heavy rainfall. Its streets are the subject of
pluvial flood risk management. ==References==