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  Until the 1900s Golders Green was a hamlet in the parish of Hendon . Much of Golders Green was originally in a sub-manor called Hodford (c1200s). The meaning of the name is obscure. It may derive from a name which first appears in the 15th century in the form of Goldherd's mill (located further south). Or it may derive from the local family called Godyere. The green itself probably developed during the 16th century, and was recorded as Golders Green by 1612. Described as a waste, the green extended either side of Golders Green Road in the 18th century roughly between Hoop Lane (named after the 18th century Hoop Inn), and the river Brent where it converged to meet the bridge, at which time the Manor of Hendon allowed a number of houses to be built and the first hamlet of 16 houses had appeared by the 1750s. Brick making was carried out in Golders Green in same period. By 1814 the area was described in Brewer's Beauties of England and Wales as having “many ornamental villas and cottages surrounded with plantations”. By 1830 the new Finchley Road turnpike cut through the district. By 1828 this ribbon development had encroached on most of the green, in March of 1872 the streets received their first five gas lamps, and by 1878 the manorial waste was finally enclosed. A horse bus ran regularly along the Finchley Road by the 1880s. Robert Suckling, a blacksmith, is mentioned in the census of 1821; their last blacksmith “Alf” Wheeler died in 1940.

With the advent of a new tube station (1907), trams, and motorbuses, the area began to be developed into suburban streets of semi-detached houses, a process which continued into the 1930s. By 1911 the population had grown to 4,465, and by 1931 it had reached 17,837. The Hippodrome Theatre was opened on boxing day 1913. By 1940 the area had developed into a centre in its own right, separate from Hendon, with a theatre (Hippodrome 1913), a library (1935), cinemas (the Ionic 1913 now closed). The Refectory, now a pub, was opened February 1916, and is thought to by some to be the first ever public restaurant supplied by electricity. The shopping district (called “Cheapside”), was well established by 1914. In June of 1918 a Handley Page bomber crashed near to houses in Golders Green . And in December 1920 a Handley Page passenger aircraft crashed into houses in Basing Hill. The War Memorial was unveiled in April 1923. The area has had many famous residents, who are too numerous to list but they include, Marie Lloyd , Desmond Tutu (curate at St Alban's church in the early 1960s), and Oliver Postgate, the children's programme maker, who was at school here.

Since 1907 Golders Green has been a very cosmopolitan place, and regarded by many as an extension of Hampstead. It is for its Jewish community that Golders Green is mostly famous. There were Jewish businesses and homes in Golders Green even by 1910, and by 1915 there were thought to be about 300 Jewish families living in Golders Green. By 1959 around a quarter of the population of the Borough of Hendon (which included Golders Green) was Jewish. In 1913 the first public service was held in West Heath Drive and in 1915 a meeting was held in the Ionic Cinema to establish a congregation, which had grown by September to 90 families. Dunstan Road synagogue, Golders Green, opened in 1922. Its most famous Rabbi has been Rabbi Sacks, the current Chief Rabbi of Great Britain and the Commonwealth. For more information please check http://www.tfl.com.

Golders Green
Details of local services in Golders Green, including transport and travel.

General Details
Golders Green is in the Greater London council area (Postcode: NW11).
This site has details of local bus and coach services, updated to Feb 2006.
Click here for a list of other nearby transport destinations.

Bus and coach Services
A list of the 19 local bus and 62 coach services is available here, and a list of all the possible destinations is shown below. For a list of the local transport operators, click here. Click here for National Express bookings and services from Golders Green.

Maps
A simple online map can be found here. To buy Ordnance Survey or other paper/electronic maps of Golders Green click here, or here for an aerial map

Train Services
A list of the 2 local train services is available here. Click here for train bookings and services from Golders Green.

Accommodation

Information on hotels near Golders Green is available here, holiday cottage information is available here and holiday park information here. Other local services
Books about Golders Green are available here. Details are also available for travel insurance, flights from Golders Green.

Library
156 Golders Green Road, Golders Green, London, NW11 8HE click here for more detail and also you can follow other Library  in Burnt Oak, Childs Hill, Chipping Barnet, Church End, East Barnet, East Finchley, Edgware, Friern Barnet, Golders Green, Grahame Park, Hampstead Garden Suburb, Hendon, Mill Hill, North Finchley, Osidge, South Friern, Totteridge

School and Collage
To find all the school and collage please click here

GP and Hospital
You can find the local GP and hospital from here and barnet council is http://www.barnet.gov.uk/

 

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