Newington Green's history is marked by several streets in the area taking their name from this period, such as King Henry's Walk, Boleyn Road (formerly Ann Boleyn's Walk), Wolsey Road and Queen Elizabeth's Walk. Many other thoroughfares are named after the Mildmay estate, including Mildmay Park, Mildmay Grove North and Mildmay Grove South. By 1611, what became known as the Mildmay estate was owned by the Halliday, or Holliday, family. In 1673 ownership passed to Henry Mildmay, second son of
Sir Henry Mildmay, who in turn was grandson of
Sir Walter Mildmay, via the female line of the Halliday family owing to a lack of male heirs. Sir
Walter Mildmay was the
Chancellor of the Exchequer under
Elizabeth I. He was one of the special commissioners in the trial of
Mary, Queen of Scots, and founded
Emmanuel College, Cambridge in 1584. His grandson Sir
Henry Mildmay served as MP and was Master of the Jewel House for
Charles I. Henry was critical of the king's religious policies, supported Parliament during the
civil wars and attended the king's trial. After
the Restoration Henry was arrested for his part in the
regicide, but granted leniency because he had refused to sign the king's death warrant. Instead of the death penalty he was sent to the
Tower of London, stripped of his
knighthood and his estates and sentenced to
life imprisonment. Mildmay was the base for a very influential missionary organisation founded by the Reverend
William Pennefather, after he became vicar at St Jude’s, Mildmay (now St Jude & St Paul’s) in 1864. The organisation trained deaconesses for helping the poor, ultimately training 200 at any one time and serving 20 missions throughout the UK, of which 12 were in London. In 1866, inspired by the
cholera epidemic of 1866, a nursing branch was started that supported the Mildmay cottage hospital and from 1874 a medical mission in
Bethnal Green. In 1869 the organisation had a new conference centre built on land south of Newington Green that could accommodate 2,500-3,000 people. From 1885 nurses lived in numbers 9 and 10, Newington Green and a training home was opened at The Willows, near
Clissold Park.
Mildmay Mission Hospital was founded in 1892. It was absorbed into the
National Health Service (NHS) in 1948, and in the 1980s began pioneering work into the treatment of patients with HIV/AIDS, which it continues. In February 2024, it was announced that the
North London line and
West London line of the London Overground were to be renamed the '
Mildmay line' after the hospital.
Mildmay Park, located on the street of the same name, was a station on the
North London Railway. Opened in 1880, it closed in 1934. The station building was demolished in 1987, but remnants of the platforms can still be seen at track level. The
Mildmay Club, formerly the Mildmay Radical Club, is a working men's club and member of the
Club and Institute Union. It was founded in 1888 and is located at 33-34 Newington Green. The prominent building, which was completed in 1905, hosts community events and an original snooker hall, being one of the largest such clubs in London. ==Nonconformists and the Dissenting Academies==