Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Crews Hill

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Population
  
566

London borough
  
Enfield

Country
  
England

Local time
  
Friday 3:19 PM

Ceremonial county
  
Greater London

OS grid reference
  
TQ315995

Region
  
London

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Dialling code
  
020

UK parliament constituency
  
Enfield North

Crews Hill

Weather
  
11°C, Wind SE at 14 km/h, 83% Humidity

Santa s grotto train ride at springtime nurseries crews hill


Crews Hill is an elevated and green-buffered former hamlet of Enfield grown into a small village-size community in the northern outskirts of London centred 12 miles (19 km) north of Charing Cross. It forms part of the London Borough of Enfield and economically has many garden centres and plant nurseries. It is the northernmost settlement in the entire Greater London.

Contents

Etymology

Named from its association with the Crew family, mentioned in local records of the mid-18th century.

Transport

The area has one bus service (route W10). Crews Hill is served by Crews Hill railway station with trains to Hertford North, Stevenage, Hitchin and Letchworth, in the north, and Moorgate, or King's Cross, to the south.

Demography

Crews Hill is part of the large Chase ward, which also covers Botany Bay, Clay Hill and Bulls Cross. The 2011 census showed that 77% of the ward's population was white (64% British, 11% Other, 2% Irish). 5% was Black African and 3% Black Caribbean.

Places of interest

Nearby, there is Crews Hill Golf Course, which dates from 1916. John White, the Tottenham Hotspur and Scotland national football team player, was killed by lightning while sheltering under a tree at the golf course on 21 July 1964.

On Whitewebbs Lane there is the Whitewebbs Museum of Transport.

Further up the road is Whitewebbs Park. This is a country park and includes the Enfield Municipal Golf Course.

Crews Hill originally had a large area of glasshouse production, to serve the nearby London market with cut flowers, pot plants and vegetables. As this became less economic, these sites transformed into a number of garden centres and retail nurseries. Describing the horticultural output of Crews Hill, journalist Ian Jack wrote: "The greenhouses at Crews Hill ('Britain's horticultural mile') used to supply London with flowers and salads. Then came garden centres. Now there are warehouses filled with flowers, chilled at a permanent 7C, the same temperature that has kept them fresh in the six-hour lorry and rail journey through the tunnel from the auctions in Holland."

Turkey Brook flows through Crews Hill.

References

Crews Hill Wikipedia