Thursday 24 October 2019

The Village that Street View forgot

Longford Village today

Middlesex as a county has lost its identity under the urbanisation of London. Most Middlesex towns are referred to simply as a London Borough of something. A few places to the north and west, and within the M25 unofficial boundary of Greater London, still proudly proclaim Middlesex as their county, but soon even more of its territory will be removed from our sight, our memory and our history.


The village of Longford will disappear with the expansion of Heathrow airport. To those that live there it will be a sad bitter time. To those that have yet to visit the village it will be a disappointment to find that you are unable to use Google’s Street View app to navigate through its streets. Street View cameras have only ventured to the outskirts of the village and omitted to capture any images of the historic core. Why is this? Street View has not offered an explanation to me. Was it a deliberate omission requested by the Government to stop any record of the village being preserved prior to its demolition, or just a casual mistake?

The village of Longford, within the London Green Belt and a Conservation Area, is a peaceful (ignoring the sound of screaming jets overhead) rural setting which has hardly altered over time. It has nine Grade II listed buildings, and five others of special architectural interest. The village, from Saxon times and earlier, has been a farming community. The prime horticultural land grew fruit and vegetables for London’s Covent Garden market. It straddles the Great Bath Road from where, for centuries, its four inns provided travellers with hospitality. Six miles from Windsor Castle the village was the usual stopping place for the Royals to change their horses on the way to and from London and Windsor.
Longford Village 1920

The villagers were witnesses to many events, rejoicing at some and turning a blind eye to others. Highwaymen prayed on the coach travellers who had to cross the notorious Hounslow Heath to get to Longford, but if any villagers were aware of the culprits they kept it to themselves. With four rivers (two artificial) and acres of orchards and market gardens it was a thriving rural community up to the second world war when an airfield was built nearby to aid the war effort. This airport became the country’s main civil airport at Heathrow and from then on Longford was blighted. It has been threatened with extinction since the fifties, but the cohesive supportive community are proud of its history and have fought to prevent its destruction.

Google’s Street View boasts that it now has full coverage of the road networks for the whole of the United Kingdom, so why is Longford missing? Street View is not just a tool for navigation, but is becoming a social history resource. Google has an ongoing programme of re-surveying and, whilst the current image is presented to the user first, a clock symbol in the top-left of the screen can be clicked to see older images. This is a great asset to family or local history researchers, or just the curious, who want to track the transition of locations through time.

Sadly, because the village of Longford has not been visited by the Street View cameras, when the third runway is built no one will be able to see images of the village that once stood there, and with the loss of images will also go the story of centuries of village life. To preserve Longford’s history I am writing a book on the life of the village through time. Even if the physical village disappears I hope the lives, loves, tragedies and triumphs of its people will live on in print.

The Colne River, Longford, today


Monday 14 October 2019

The Giraffe That Could Not Stand Up


The Giraffe That Could Not Stand Up

George III’s son, the Prince Regent, was a man of excess. He loved elaborate architecture, glamorous women, and excessive amounts of good food and drink. He also liked exotic animals. He begun accumulating rare animals many of whom were presents from Heads of State who were trying to ingratiate themselves with the British monarchy. The King housed these animals in a menagerie in Windsor Great Park built next to the crenellated mock-gothic mansion in Windsor Great Park called Sandpit Gate Lodge.

Sandpit Gate Lodge 2011. Privately owned since 1995.

By the time the Prince Regent became King George IV in 1820 this menagerie had grown and there were, among other creatures, gnus, black buck, kangaroos, and a variety of exotic birds, but his most prized possession was still to come.  On 11 August 1827 an eighteen-month old Namibian giraffe arrived in London a gift from Mehmit Ali, Pasha of Egypt. The giraffe was eighteen months old and although not fully grown was already ten feet tall. She was the first giraffe in Britain and arrived with two cows to provide it with milk and two Egyptian attendants who did not speak a word of English. She was a great curiosity because many believed that giraffes were just a myth and didn’t actually exist. The British people suddenly became fascinated with anything to do with giraffes. Magazines promoted fashions and furnishings that matched the design and colour of the giraffe’s skin. Household objects and ceramics celebrated this animal and newspapers throughout the country carried regular reports on the giraffe.

The animals at Sandpit Gate Lodge were kept in specially constructed enclosures each with thatched-roofed sheds, but a special building was constructed for the giraffe with stable-type double doors twelve foot high. She was an amiable creature who was happy to be petted and stroked. She was painted for George IV by Jacues-Laurent Agasse in 1827, with a degree of artistic licence.[1]


The painting shows the giraffe standing with its two cows and two Egyptian attendants, but this is an idealised image of the giraffe. In real life it had difficulty standing up. The poor creature had been captured in Sudan as a calf and endured a year-long journey over land and sea before it arrived in London. During the first part of the journey it was too weak to walk for long periods so it had been strapped to a camel with it legs tied together. The tightness of the binding and the long journey resulted in the knees becoming deformed, and varies remedies were tried to restore it to health.

King George IV was delighted with his gift, and had great sympathy with his crippled giraffe. He too, because of gout and obesity, had a weakness of the knees. The King was 64 in August 1827 and spent nearly all his time at the Royal Lodge in Windsor Great Park from where he took daily carriage rides around Windsor Great Park which included stopping at Sandpit Gate Lodge to spend time with the animals and check on the health of his prized giraffe.


Melville, King George IV taking his favourite exercise, near the Sandpit Gate, Windsor Park. 1830 (Royal Collection)

Although the giraffe grew over a foot in height whilst at Windsor it never reached a normal height for a giraffe. The King and the giraffe were in synchronised decline and by July 1828 both were unable to stand on their own and were growing weaker. At the menagerie a hoist and sling were constructed to allow the giraffe to stand upright and newspapers throughout the land printed daily bulletins on the giraffe’s condition. [2]  Both the giraffe and the unpopular King were ridiculed in song and pictures.

A caricature by William Heath, 1829 showing George IV and his mistress Lady Conyngham trying to lift the giraffe by pulley.

George IV and the nation were very upset when the giraffe finally died on 11 October 1829. It was taken to the Zoological Gardens in Regent’s Park for dissection.  A taxidermist, Mr John Gould, was asked to make a replica of the giraffe using a wooden form covered with the animal’s skin. The skeleton of the animal was exhibited alongside the stuffed model at the Zoological Society’s Museum until it closed in August 1855. Their current whereabouts are unknown.
George IV outlived the giraffe by only eight months. When William IV inherited the throne the menagerie was disbanded and the animals and birds moved to the new London Zoo at Regents Park, together with the residue of the Royal Menagerie still held at the Tower of London. The London Zoological Society received its Royal Charter in 1829 from George IV, and it has had a Royal Patron ever since.

I came across this story whilst researching my family history. My great, great, great, great grandfather, William Kell, was an usher to George IV and lived at Sandpit Gate Lodge at the time of the menagerie. His exact role in the royal household is unknown, but his proximity to the menagerie and the fact that Edward Cross (shown with the giraffe and the Egyptians in the picture above) was the executor of his Will indicates that he performed a duty connected with the giraffe and animals.



[1]  Nubian Giraffe (1827), Jacques-Laurent Agasse Photograph: Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2015 www.royalcollection.org.uk
[2] Lancaster Gazette – Saturday 12 July 1828; Edinburgh Evening Courant - Monday 19 May 1828; Clonmel Herald - Wednesday 04 November 1829