Bexleyheath

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Bexleyheath
Bexleyheath (Greater London)
Bexleyheath
OS grid reference TQ485755
London borough Bexley
Ceremonial county Greater London
Region London
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BEXLEYHEATH
Postcode district DA6, DA7
Dialling code 020
Police Metropolitan
Fire London
Ambulance London
UK Parliament Bexleyheath and Crayford
London Assembly Bexley and Bromley
European Parliament London
List of places: UKEnglandLondon

Coordinates: 51°27′32″N 0°08′18″E / 51.4589, 0.1384

Bexleyheath, formerly known as "Bexley New Town", part of the London Borough of Bexley in South East London, consists of a suburban development located 12 miles (19.3 km) east-south-east of Charing Cross.

Contents

[edit] Shopping and leisure

The modern town area of today features a bingo-hall, Cineworld cinema, hotel, magistrates' court, reference-library, six-a-side football centre and ten-pin bowling alley (Ten Pin) among the more usual retail outlets provided to upgrade conditions for shoppers and to respond to the competition from the Bluewater Shopping Centre in nearby Greenhithe, Kent.

Further current regeneration-work on the Mall shopping-centre aims to increase its size slightly and to give the shopping-centre a more modern look.

[edit] History

As recently as 200 years ago, Bexley Heath comprised an area of scrub-land with few buildings (Bexley Heath windmill stood at the corner of Erith Road and Mayplace Road). The heath bordered Watling Street, the ancient Roman road between London and Canterbury. In 1766 Sir John Boyd had Danson House built in parkland (now Danson Park between Bexleyheath and Welling).

In 1814 the land to the north of Bexley that would become Bexleyheath became subject to an Enclosure Act. In 1859 architect Philip Webb designed Red House for the artist, reforming designer and socialist William Morris on the western edge of the heath, in the hamlet of Upton — before Upton became largely developed as a London suburb. Red House forms an early essay in a romantically-massed, non-historical, brick-and-tile domestic vernacular style; it has diverse windows and an extravagant stairway. The National Trust acquired the house in 2003.

Bexleyheath's parish church, Christ Church, dates from 1841; and the parish of Bexleyheath from 1866; the building of the current church finished in 1877.

Alfred Bean, railway-engineer and one-time owner of Danson House, furthered the development of Bexleyheath as a London suburb by championing the Bexleyheath Line in the 1880s to support the growth of the estates around Danson Park. The clock-tower at the centre of the modern shopping area, built in 1912, commemorates the coronation of King George V.

[edit] Notable residents

[edit] Places of worship

  • Bexleyheath Community Church, 14 Grace Avenue, Bexleyheath
  • Bexleyheath United reformed Church, Geddes Place
  • Christ Church (Church of England), Broadway
  • St John Vianney Roman Catholic Church, Heathfield Road
  • St Peters (Church of England), Pickford Lane
  • St Thomas More Roman Catholic Church, Long Lane
  • Trinity Baptist Church, Broadway
  • The Salvation Army, Lion Road
  • Bexley Christian Life Centre (Pentecostal), Rowan Road

[edit] Transport and locale

[edit] Nearest places

[edit] Buses

[edit] Rail

Two railway stations serve Bexleyheath: Bexleyheath Station and Barnehurst Station, both located on the Bexleyheath line. Trains go to London Charing Cross or London Victoria to the west, and to Dartford to the east. Some trains in peak hours go to Slade Green Station.

[edit] Nearest railway-stations

[edit] External links

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