Bulletin 231

[caption id="attachment_14188" align="alignright" width="80"] Download Bulletin 231[/caption]

Continue Reading

Memories of the New Merton Board Mills 1964-1976

by Robert Parkin

Continue Reading

Merton Mail

The Society’s e-newsletter is published monthly, lists and reviews MHS and other organisations’ events and reports on local topical issues. Selected articles are reproduced here.

Continue Reading

Bulletin 230

[caption id="attachment_13782" align="alignright" width="80"] Download Bulletin 230[/caption]

Continue Reading

test

Continue Reading

Bill Rudd Archive

Continue Reading

Research Notes

The Society has inherited from former members various files containing their research notes. Although some of these have been published as standalone booklets or articles in our Bulletins, many contain incomplete and unpublished research material, or additional material to update published works.

Continue Reading

Bulletin 229

[caption id="attachment_12841" align="alignright" width="80"] Download Bulletin 229[/caption]

Continue Reading

About the Society: Test layout

Continue Reading

Anglo-Saxon sites in Merton (test page)

[leaflet-map lat=51.39775775212129037 lng=-0.1974538333757714 zoom=13]

Continue Reading

Bulletin 228

[caption id="attachment_12005" align="alignright" width="80"] Download Bulletin 228[/caption]

Continue Reading

Bulletin 227

[caption id="attachment_11831" align="alignright" width="80"] Download Bulletin 227[/caption]

Continue Reading

Medieval Morden: Neighbourhood and Community

This study focuses on social interaction and community dynamics, in the light of the demands made of Morden’s inhabitants by the State, by the Church and in particular by Westminster Abbey as manorial lord, but also by the local community and the family. Most of the information comes from manorial court rolls, and the role and processes of the manor court are examined at the outset. Other chapters consider differences in status and in wealth, the role of credit, the evidence for conflict and cooperation and for the exercise of power and influence by local people. From brewers and bakers to priests and parishioners, this book explores the strengths and the tensions that worked together to form and to challenge a sense of neighbourhood and community in Morden especially in the centuries following the Black Death.
This volume also includes a substantial biographical register of over 1000 individuals who appear in the surviving records and who played their part in creating medieval Morden’s communal life.

Continue Reading

Medieval Morden: Neighbourhood and Community

Morden is now a suburb within the London Borough of Merton, its only claim to fame being as a terminus of London Underground’s Northern Line. However, only a century ago it was still a small agricultural community and its medieval origins were still in evidence. Although almost nothing now remains of its medieval structures, we are fortunate that a considerable archive survives, detailing its layout and its day-to-day life.

Continue Reading

Motspur Park and West Barnes Memories 1920 to 1947: Collections & Recollections

Local History Notes 37: by Bruce S Bendell, with further memories by his friends Douglas Headley and Fred Gilden. Written in 1988, these memoirs were lodged with Merton Local Studies Centre. They recall Mr Bendell’s memories of first visiting grandparents in the West Barnes area of Merton, and then moving there as a child until his marriage in 1940. His recollections of walks with his brothers in what was then countryside are especially vivid. He particularly remembers his work at the knitting factory of Boulanger, in Seaforth Avenue. He also details the development of the local housing estates between the Wars.

Continue Reading

Bulletin 226

[caption id="attachment_11660" align="alignright" width="80"] Download Bulletin 226[/caption]

Continue Reading

Bulletin 225

[caption id="attachment_11561" align="alignright" width="80"] Download Bulletin 225[/caption]

Continue Reading

A History of Fry’s Metal Foundries and the Tandem Works

Studies in Merton History 12: by Michael J Finch

This account focuses primarily on the foundation of Fry’s, the companies that existed long before Fry’s that shaped Fry’s future, and the people who made it happen through belief, determination and hard work, not to mention the willingness to take chances. It is a fascinating story of success and a rise from nothing that justifies the effort to tell the story, because there is little information otherwise available. The fact that information is scant is the biggest surprise, given the enormous impact Fry’s Metals had on the print metal industry in those early days, the number of people they employed, not just at the Tandem Works, but also at the branch foundries and overseas, and the impact of the company on local communities.

Continue Reading

Properties – download a relevant article from our Bulletins

[leaflet-map lat=51.39775212129037 lng=-0.1974538333757714 zoom=13]

Continue Reading

Properties – find a relevant publication

Continue Reading