History'Peckham' is a Saxon place name meaning the village of the river Peck, a small stream that ran through the district until it was enclosed in 1823. Archaeological evidence indicates earlier Roman occupation in the area, although the name of this settlement is lost. Peckham appears in Domesday Book of 1086 as Pecheham. It was held by the Bishop of Lisieux from the Bishop of Bayeux. Its domesday assets were: 2 hides. It had land for 1 plough, 2 acres of meadow. It rendered £1 10s 0d.[4] The manor was owned by King Henry I who gave it to his son Robert, Earl of Gloucester. When Robert married the heiress to Camberwell the two manors were united under royal ownership. John of England probably hunted at Peckham and local anecdotes suggest that the right to an annual fair was granted to celebrate a particularly good day's sport. The fair grew to be a rowdy major event lasting three weeks until its abolition in 1827. Peckham became popular as a wealthy residential area by the sixteenth century and there are several claims that Christopher Wren had local links. By the eighteenth century the area was a more commercial centre with extensive market gardens and orchards growing produce for the nearby markets of London. Local produce included melons, figs and grapes. The formal gardens of the Peckham Manor House, rebuilt in 1672 by Sir Thomas Bond were particularly noticeable and can be seen on the Rocque map of 1746. The Manor House was sacked in 1688, as its then owner Sir Henry Bond was a Roman Catholic and staunch supporter of James VII and II. The house was finally demolished in 1797 for the formation of Peckham Hill Street, as the Shard family developed the area. Today Shard's Terrace, the block that contains Manze's Pie and Mash shop, and the western side of Peckham Hill Street represent this Georgian planned expansion. The village was the last stopping point for many cattle drovers taking their livestock for sale in London. The drovers stayed in the local inns (such as The Red Cow) while the cattle were safely secured overnight in holding pens. Most of the villagers were agricultural or horticultural workers but with the early growth of the suburbs an increasing number worked in the brick industry that exploited the local London Clay. In 1767 William Blake visited Peckham Rye and had a vision of an angel in a tree. In 1993, at the request of the Dulwich Festival, artist Stan Peskett painted a mural of Blake's vision next to the Goose Green playground in East Dulwich. At the beginning of the nineteenth century Peckham was a "small, quiet, retired village surrounded by fields". Since 1744 stage coaches had travelled with an armed guard between Peckham and London to give protection from highwaymen. The rough roads constrained traffic so a branch of the Grand Surrey Canal was proposed as a route from the Thames to Portsmouth. The canal was built from Surrey Commercial Docks to Peckham before the builders ran out of funds in 1826. The abbreviated canal was used to ship soft wood for construction and even though the canal was drained and backfilled in 1970 Whitten's timber merchants still stands on the site of the canal head. In 1851 Thomas Tilling started an innovative omnibus service from Peckham to London. Tilling's buses were the first to use pre-arranged bus stops, which helped them to run to a reliable timetable. His services expanded to cover much of London until his horses were requisitioned for the army in World War I. Before Peckham Rye station was opened in 1865 the area had developed around two centres: north and south. In the north, housing spread out to the south of the Old Kent Road including Peckham New Town built on land owned by the Hill family (from whom the name Peckham Hill Street derives). In the south, large houses were built to the west of the common land called Peckham Rye and the lane that led to it. With the arrival of the railway and the introduction of horse-drawn trams about ten years later, Peckham became accessible to artisans and clerical staff working in the City and the Docks. Housing for this socio-economic group filled almost all the remaining fields except the Rye. In 1868 the Vestry of Camberwell St Giles bought the Rye to keep it as common land. Responding to concerns about the dangerous overcrowding of the common on holidays the Vestry bought the adjacent Homestall Farm (the last farm in the area) in 1894 and opened this as Peckham Rye Park. With the influx of younger residents with money to spend Rye Lane became a major shopping street. Jones & Higgins opened a small shop in 1867 (on the corner of Rye Lane and Peckham High Street) that would become the best known department store in south London for many years. It closed in the 1980s. The late nineteenth century also saw the arrival of George Batty, a manufacturer of condiments, whose main business stood at Finsbury Pavement. The company's Peckham premises occupied 19 railway arches. It was acquired by H. J. Heinz Company in 1905 as their first UK manufacturing base. The southern end of Peckham was the location for the railway line that once served The Crystal Palace in Sydenham. Though the line was eventually dismantled due to the collapse of the embankment into the gardens of Marmora Road it is still possible to see large sections of it. The flats on Wood Vale and the full length of Brenchley Gardens trace its route. Marmora, Therapia, Mundania and Scutari Roads all derive their curious names from locations during the Crimean war. Close by to them is the Aquarius Golf Course which is located over an underground reservoir. When the reservoir was built it was the largest covered reservoir in the world. Camberwell Old Cemetery, on Forest Hill Road, is a later example of the ring of Victorian Cemeteries that were built to alleviate the overcrowding of church yards that was experienced with the rapid expansion of London in the 19th Century. The Stone House at its main entrance was used in the filming of Joe Orton's Entertaining Mr. Sloane (released 1970). It was gutted by fire in the mid 1970’s and rebuilt some years later. Camberwell Old Cemetery did not have the grandeur of nearby Nunhead Cemetery, which was one of the original London necropoles, and once full it was replaced by Camberwell New Cemetery on Brenchley Gardens. Brenchley Gardens park follows the route of the old line to The Crystal Palace culminating at the High Level station. The park runs behind Marmora road and the remains of the embankment then continues along Wood Vale where flats were built on it. The line was closed in 1954 following a decline in its use after the destruction of the Crystal Palace in 1936 and due to slippage in the structure of the embankment. [5] In the 1930s George Scott Williamson and Innes Pearse opened the Pioneer Health Centre in Queens Road. They planned to conduct a large experiment into the effect of environment on health. 'The Peckham Experiment' recruited 950 families at one shilling a week. The members joined something like a modern sports club with facilities for physical exercise, games, workshops and socialising with no mandatory programme. The centre moved into a purpose built modernist building by the architect Sir Owen Williams in 1935. North Peckham was heavily redeveloped in the 1960s, consisting mainly of high-rise flats to rehouse people from dilapidated old houses. It was popular on its completion for offering a high quality and modern standing of living, but soon entered a decline that turned it into one of the worst residential areas in Western Europe. Urban decay, vandalism, graffiti, arson attacks, robberies and muggings were commonplace, and the area became an archetypal London sink estate. As a result, the area was earmarked for total regeneration in the late 1990s. After the beginning of the regeneration, the estate gained nationwide notoriety in the media when 10-year-old Nigerian resident Damilola Taylor was stabbed to death on the estate on 27 November 2000.[6] However, by 2002, 90% of the redevelopment was complete. The new homes were better laid out and offered improved security, though few local people were convinced that better housing would equate to a better area. In the early 1990s Peckham was a nexus of underground music, partly due to a large squat in a disused, 2 floor DHSS building near Peckham High Street. Already famous among mods from the 1980s for the cover shot of a pictorial biography of 1960's mods, which featured mods from the 60's on their customised scooters outside the then Camberwell labour exchange in Collyer place Peckham. In 1989 The squatters adopted the name Dole House Crew and along with another local group of squatters called the "Green Circus", held regular gigs/parties in the building every second Saturday of each month. Upstairs was a large live gig room, and downstairs was a rave music DJ set up. Also in the large squat were 2 bars, a vegan cafe selling cups of tea and vegeburgers, and a chill out lounge. The sound system was provided by various hired sound rigs until early 1990 when grebo's Zounds Alive PA system became the permanent house/and free festival sound system, (referring to Reknaw some of whose members also lived in and helped create the squat (Dread messiahs K and B of DHS and Sea?). During the week, any empty rooms were utilized for bands or artists to work out of. Some notable bands who regularly played gigs at the Dole House were: The Levellers, Poisoned Electric Head, Citizen Fish, Back To The Planet, The Sea,The Dave Howard Singers,One Style MDV,Primary Colours, Totentanz,Radio Mongolia Ruff Ruff and Ready, Watt Tyler, the Suicidal Supermarket Trolleys, Tottenham AK/47's, Dread Messiah, Coitus, 2000DS, Mongoloid Droid, and Radical Dance Faction (RDF). Up to 1000 people could be squeezed into the squat,and from Feb 1990 it was regularly filled to capacity (and beyond). In spite of the fact that it was not going to last forever the people involved put on as many cheap and varied shows as they could even expanding to provide free music at various free festivals in the 1990s and also providing much assistance to the then budding deptford urban free festival (later the Fordham park urban free festival). They moved on to many other South East London venues eventually after the Peckham Dolehouse was evicted in late Oct 1990. On the same principles, the Spike Surplus Scheme was established in 1998 on a fly-tipped, vandalised site on Consort Road. In the tradition of free spaces, it provides rehearsal/recording facilities, health/martial arts space and a community garden. Always running on a free-where-possible or donations level, the facilities have been used by a wide variety of local talent including Fear of Fear, The Influence, Rubella Ballet, Fill Planet, Monkey Rush, Headjam, Pain, Dan Sharp, Excentral Tempest, AOS 3, Critical Practice, Unity and Devision, Pamoja, The Slackers, Kaya, Nubian Sunshine, AYO 42, Speakers Corner, The Impossibles, Bartosz, Pinstickers, Rhythms of Resistance Samba Band, Lisa Lora, Do-bop-sh'bam, Chris Liberator, Guy Planet, Saddam and the Look-alikes, Daisy, Manu Chau, Jamie Woon, Nouvelle Croix, Sarah Bear, Captain Hotknives, Tarantism (alongside many many more). Other users have been community garden permaculture groups, martial arts and various alternative therapy groups. The space is presently negotiating with the council for its survival (May 2008). RegenerationThe European Union has invested heavily in the regeneration of the area; partly funding the futuristic, award-winning Peckham Library, a new town square and swathes of new housing to replace the North Peckham Estate. Throughout the area state funding is being provided to improve the housing stock and renovate the streets. This includes funding for public arts projects like the Tom Phillips mosaics on the wall of the Peckham Experiment restaurant and the South London Gallery. The main shopping street is Rye Lane, and the large Peckham Rye Park is nearby. The oldest surviving building in Peckham is 2 Wood's Road, built in 1690. Peckham in fictionPeckham was the setting of the television situation comedy Only Fools and Horses", although the series was filmed elsewhere. The Television Situation comedy Desmond's was made by Channel 4 and was filmed and set in Peckham. CrimeOver the years Peckham has been known, along with Brixton, as the most crime infected area in Europe with an average of a murder a day. There are many gangs in this area who are collectivley known to the media as "The Peckham Boys" who are a notorious gang responsible for the murder of Damilola Tayor. In 2004 Tony Blair branded Peckham "Pecknam" after vietnam claiming it is a war zone. In Feburary 6th 2007 15-year-old Michael Dosunmu was shot dead by gunmen as he slept in his bedroom in Diamond Street on in the early hours. North peckham is one of the notorious places in London Jacqui Smith admitted earlier in 2008 that she was too scared to walk the streets alone at night, although she had been out for a kebab near her home accompanied by police. http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1050000/images/_1050971_search.300.jpg Notable residents
Transport and localeNearest placesNearest railway stationsExternal links
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