Until the mid 19th century the village was a local centre for
brick-making, the local
clays being recognised as particularly good since the Roman period. Examples of clay roof tiles produced in this area for the nearby Roman town of
Calleva Atrebatum (near modern
Silchester) can be seen at Reading Museum. A major part of the village was confiscated from the Englefield family and given to the Benyon family during the late
Tudor period. Other parts were gifted in payment to
The Queen's College, Oxford. It is assumed that this was in return for education, although it may not have been. This legacy can be seen by the names of farms,
pubs and houses in the area. The village has grown organically from a few houses, being effectively one street with no social centre to small village of about 120 properties. The village was originally a small hamlet comprising a few farms, two public houses and farm worker's dwellings. In the 19th Century, two brickyards were on either side of the road near The Plough, continuing a tradition dating from Roman times. It is a desirable location, resulting in upper quartile house prices typical of rural Hampshire. The village has one Pub, The Plough, which maintains a very traditional 'English Pub' environment. 'Little London' is a common village name in England, assumed by some to have its origins in the quantity of seasonal Londoners who would camp for the harvest season. However, in common with many 'Little Londons' approximately or so from London, it has also been claimed that the name was given by settlers escaping the
Great Plague of London of 1665. Alternatively, it could have been corrupted from 'Little Loddon', the name of a stream that marks the Southern extent of the village. Little London at Tadley would have been established by the Welsh cattle drovers in the second half of the 16th century. It was on a main drovers route into London, like that at Oakley in Buckinghamshire. There have been at least 70 communities established in England and Wales, many of which still exist. They were temporary "homes" for the long distance drovers, moving their cattle to London, and the great fairs and markets of England. Tadley was on the route to the fairs of Blackbush, Farnham, Croydon and Kingston, and London's Smithfield market. The sites were established on common land away from other communities. The drovers had a licence to travel, granted by Elizabeth 1st, and were regarded as "foreigners" by the local parishioners who could not travel without a "settlement certificate". ==Governance==