Toponymy The name of the town is derived from "Wixan's Bridge", which was sited near the bottom of Oxford Road where a modern road bridge stands, beside the
Swan and Bottle public house. The Wixan were a 7th-century
Saxon tribe from
Lincolnshire who also began to settle in what became
Middlesex.
Anglo-Saxons began to settle and farm in the area of Uxbridge in the 5th century, clearing dense woodland. Archaeologists found
Bronze Age remains (before 700 BC) and medieval remains during the construction of
The Chimes shopping centre; two miles (3.2 km) away at
Denham, Upper
Paleolithic remains have been found. Uxbridge is not mentioned in the
Domesday Book of the 11th century, but a hundred years later St Margaret's Church, was built. The town appears in records from 1107 as "Woxbrigge", and became part of the
Elthorne Hundred with other settlements in the area.
Early developments The Parliamentary Army garrisoned the town upon the outbreak of the
English Civil War in 1642 and established their headquarters there in June 1647 on a line from
Staines to
Watford, although the king passed through Uxbridge in April 1646, resting at the
Red Lion public house for several hours. Charles I met with representatives of Parliament at the Crown Inn in Uxbridge in 1645, but
negotiations for the end of hostilities were unsuccessful due in part to the king's stubborn attitude. The covered market was built in 1788, replacing a building constructed in 1561. In the early 19th century, Uxbridge had an unsavoury reputation; the jurist
William Arabin said of its residents "They will steal the very teeth out of your mouth as you walk through the streets. I know it from experience." For about 200 years most of London's flour was produced in the Uxbridge area. The
Grand Junction Canal opened in 1794, linking Uxbridge with
Birmingham and the
River Thames at
Brentford. By 1800 Uxbridge had become one of the most important market towns in
Middlesex, helped by its status as the first stopping point for stagecoaches travelling from London to Oxford. The development of Uxbridge declined after the opening of the
Great Western Railway in 1838, which passed through
West Drayton. A branch line to Uxbridge was opened in 1856, but it was the opening of the Metropolitan Line in 1904 which restarted Uxbridge's growth by giving the town its first direct link to London. Harman's Brewery was established in Uxbridge by George Harman in 1763, and moved into a new headquarters in Uxbridge High Street in 1875. The eventual owners of the brewery,
Courage, closed the headquarters in 1964. It was demolished and replaced by a Budgen's supermarket, which in turn was demolished with the construction of The Chimes shopping centre. The brewery building in George Street remained in place until it was demolished in 1967. The office building Harman House was built on the site in 1985, named after the brewery.
Urban development s within Hillingdon Parish. The main
enclosures effected in the parish of Hillingdon, by statute in 1819, saw the reduction of Uxbridge Common, which at its largest had been in circumference. It originally straddled Park Road, north of the town centre, and covers . In 1871 the town's first purpose-built police station was built in Windsor Street. The building included three cells and stables. The
Metropolitan Police continued to use the building until 1988, when operations moved to a new site in Harefield Road. The building subsequently became the
Old Bill public house in 1996, renamed the
Fig Tree in 2006. In the early 1900s the Uxbridge and District Electricity Supply Company had been established a
power station in Waterloo Road, and much of the town was connected by 1902, although some houses still had gas lighting in 1912. A water tower on Uxbridge Common was built in 1906, resembling a church tower, to improve the supply to the town. Wood panelling from a room in the
Crown & Treaty public house was sold in 1924 to an American businessman, who installed it in his office in the
Empire State Building in New York. It was returned in 1953 as a gift to the newly crowned Queen Elizabeth II and returned to the house, although the monarch retained ownership. On 31 August 1935 Uxbridge Lido, an outdoor swimming pool built in the "Moderne" or
Art Deco style, was officially opened. Before the opening, many residents swam in a section of the
Frays River near Harefield Road, and the
Colne. The pool, pavilion building, entrance building and both fountains were designated
Grade II listed buildings in 1998. Despite the listing, the pool was closed to the public and the buildings became subject to heavy vandalism. The Uxbridge open-air pool was fully refurbished during 2009 and re-opened in May 2010. Added to the site, renamed Hillingdon Sports and Leisure Complex, was a 50 m indoor competition pool, a leisure pool, a 100-station gym, a wide range of exercise classes, an athletics stadium and track, 3G floodlit pitches, a sports hall, a café and a
crèche. The Grade II listed buildings are still standing. During the Second World War Uxbridge adopted the
Royal Navy destroyer in 1942, to help towards the ship's costs;
Intrepid was lost to enemy action the following year. The town and surrounding areas suffered bombing by the
Luftwaffe.
V1 flying bombs fell on the town between June 1944 and March 1945. The first recorded bombing using a V1 was on 22 June 1944 at 07:00, when the bomb passed over the top of a bus and hit four houses nearby. Seven people were killed and 25 injured, leaving 46 houses in the area uninhabitable. In all the Uxbridge Urban District suffered 79 civilian deaths through enemy action in the war. In 1958 the Lowe & Shawyer
plant nursery to the west of RAF Uxbridge entered voluntary liquidation. The nursery had stood in Kingston Lane since 1868, and was the largest producer of cut flowers in the country. Demolition work began in 1962, and the construction of
Brunel University commenced.
Chrysanthemums are included the coat of arms of the Borough of Uxbridge in memory of the nursery. The
Uxbridge (Vine Street) railway branch line, which partly ran alongside the site, was closed in 1964 and in 1966 the university opened, The Uxbridge Cricket Club moved from Cricketfield Road in 1971 to make way for the new Civic Centre. The club had been at Cricketfield Road since 1858, but moved to a new site on part of Uxbridge Common on Park Road. The Market Square shopping precinct in the town centre was built in the late 1970s, but its lack of shelter made it unpopular and it did not attract the expected levels of custom. Many buildings along the High Street and Windsor Street had been demolished to make way for the new precinct, which was eventually sold to the
Prudential Assurance Company and redeveloped with a roof in the early 1980s to become the
Pavilions Shopping Centre. The
Peacock public house (later renamed The Chequers) in one of the two main squares was built partially underground having two flights of steps down into the pub at either end. It was demolished and replaced with a café named also named The Chequers, which remains. Rayner's pharmacy shop was also demolished during the Market Square development, although the shopfront was saved by the
Museum of London and is held in storage. on the High Street
The Chimes shopping centre was built beside Uxbridge station in 2001, incorporating many of the existing buildings into the new structure. The centre was originally to be named St George's Centre in plans dating back to the early 1990s, though this name was eventually taken by
another shopping centre in
Harrow. Instead, The Chimes was said to refer to the sound of the bells from the nearby
market house on the High Street. An
Odeon cinema opened as a major part of the centre, with the smaller cinema at the opposite end of the High Street closing. Some houses on Chippendale Way and the St George's car park were demolished to allow for the construction of the new shopping centre car park. The offices of the local building company Fassnidge were also included in the new development; built in the 19th century, they house a
Pizza Express restaurant. Preserved timber from earlier demolished buildings in Uxbridge was used in the construction of a new building beside the former offices of Fassnidge, designed to resemble a much older structure. In 2002 the dry ski slope near Park Road and the Uxbridge Lido was closed and the remaining buildings and structures removed. The Hillingdon Ski Centre had been subject to several arson attacks during 2001 and the company operating it became insolvent. The slope, which had been built in 1977, was left to return to nature. Work began in 2008 to extensively refurbish and extend Uxbridge Lido, and it reopened to the public in February 2010 as the
Hillingdon Sports and Leisure Complex. On 8 September 2010 the 75th anniversary of the first opening of the Lido was celebrated at the pool. ==Governance==