The Talk Genealogy Podcast
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/64595/fan_mail/new] Here are the shownotes. Check out my blog for research guide and biblio. In this episode, Malcolm Noble explores three major population movements that reshaped London and the surrounding counties between the end of the First World War and the late 1940s. These shifts—Addison Act rehousing, the rise of Metroland, and the towntocountry movement—offer essential context for family historians tracing ancestors in the southeast of England. Episode Outline Opening · Broadcast from “the corner of a country lane in the middle of England.” · Warm welcome and checkin on listeners’ familytree progress. · Reminder: the podcast explores techniques, sources, and historical contexts for genealogists. Main Topic: Three Population Movements (1919–1948) 1. The Addison Act Rehousing Programme (1919–1921) What it was: · The Housing and Town Planning Act 1919 (“Addison Act”), aimed at providing Homes for Heroes. · First largescale statesubsidised housing for workingclass families. · Municipal, nonspeculative, tenurecontrolled. Key features: · Local authorities built lowdensity, sanitary estates following the Tudor Walters Report (1918). · Designed for manual workers; rents controlled; houses not for sale. · Estates located on city edges, near industrial employment. Research clues for genealogists: · Addresses on known Addison estates (1919–1924). · Council rent books, tenancy agreements, housing committee minutes. · Electoral registers, rate books, 1921 census occupations. · Estate maps and planning files in borough archives. 2. Metroland (1920s–1930s) What it was: · A commercial suburban expansion driven by the Metropolitan Railway. · Railwayowned farmland in Middlesex, Buckinghamshire, and Hertfordshire converted into building plots. · Marketed as “Be master of your own small house with a large garden.” Key corridors: · Main line to Chesham & Amersham · Watford branch (opened 1925) · Uxbridge branch (expanded 1920s) · Stanmore branch (from 1932) Notable districts: · Wembley Park – early showcase, dramatic transformation. · Pinner – posterchild blend of old village and modern suburb. · Ruislip Manor – nearcomplete planned suburb with civic infrastructure. · Rayners Lane & Eastcote – modernist station, carfriendly avenues. · Northwood Hills, Rickmansworth, AmershamontheHill – semirural, higherincome commuters. Lifestyle characteristics: · Lowermiddle and middleclass salaried commuters. · Semidetached houses, mortgages via building societies. · Predictable commute, modest local amenities, stable routines. Research clues: · Addresses near Metropolitan Railway stations (1920s–30s). · Title deeds, mortgage records, Metropolitan Railway Estate Company papers. · Planning applications, electoral rolls, 1939 Register occupations. · Surviving railway season tickets. 3. TowntoCountry Shift (1938–1948) What it was: · A movement away from London driven by airraid anxiety, the Munich crisis, and wartime disruption. · Broader and more socially mixed than Metroland or Addison housing. Characteristics: · Families sought distance from London, not proximity. · Included professionals, business owners, retirees, and middleincome households. · Relocations often temporary or improvised: cottages, farmhouses, smalltown rentals. · Schooling reorganised; employment patterns altered; some severed ties with London entirely. Research clues: · Sudden rural addresses in late 1930s–1940s. · Evacuation records, school logs, wartime correspondence. · Temporary tenancy agreements, rural rate books. · Business relocation records and wartime civildefence files. Quiz Segment — Occupations Questions: 1. Which craftsman uses ebony, pine, mahogany, and spruce on the same job? 2. What is a black saddler? 3. What is a carvel man or carvel builder? (Answers given in the episode.) Magazine Section Video: How Mail Coaches Revolutionised Communication in the 18th Century (YouTube) Podcast: The History of the English Language Book: Roland Parker — A Common Stream Blog Update · Malcolm discusses poetry and its relationship to local history. Check out A Practical Introduction to Medieval Genealogy by Malcolm Noble
8 episodios
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