a few months ago I said that I would start to write a history the Kidbrooke area - although any industry there probably won’t turn up until one of the last episodes. I started off by saying that I would work down the three Kid Brook streams describing some of the history of the area. They flow down from Shooters Hill and go eastwards and cover most of the area which we now call ‘Kidbrook’’. That would give me lots of opportunities to comment on stuff in the area. Following these watercourses helps us understand what a wet and muddy place it must have been in the past and how that influenced what is there now.
So, I did a number of episodes on the Upper Kid Brook a few months ago. That stream, now in an underground pipe, goes along what is essentially the northern boundary of what we call ‘Kidbrook’ today.
The Middle Kid Brook is probably rather shorter than the others but I think it’s going to take me a bit longer to write. I need to describe some of the institutions and things of interest which lie between the Upper and Middle Kid Brook streams. I’ll worry about the stuff near the Lower Kid Brook when I get there - that’s a much longer water course. The Middle Kid Brook is relatively short but it looks to be a lot more complicated. So let’s see how I get on!
Every book or web site I’ve looked at gives a different spot for where it originally rose. It should be shown on the 1872 Ordnance Survey map which should be a good source. It predates much of the housing which is now in the Shooters Hill area so we see can it on the map as an area of open land and farms but with main roads in place – in particular what is now called Shooters Hill Road – it has also been ‘the Dover Road’, ‘a Roman Road’, ‘Watling Street’, ‘; A2’, A207, or whatever. The problem with the 1872 map however is trying to sort out all the various dotted lines on it. The stream is shown as one sort of dotted line and then there are all the boundary lines for Parliamentary constituencies, counties and parishes and various other stuff and you are left squinting at it wondering which is the Middle Kidbrook! Michael Egan, writing about the stream, notes how it runs parallel to the Roman Road and speculates that it might actually have been a drainage channel for the road.
Then Middle Kid Brook seems to have risen somewhere near the site of the now demolished Brook Hospital. For those who don’t remember it The Brook was a large hospital built on as 37 acre site in 1896 to handle fever epidemics. Initially it had 488 beds but greatly expanded particularly in the Great War when thousands were treated here. Under the NHS it was renamed the Brook General Hospital with 644 beds. It closed in 1995.
However we are looking for somewhere on this huge site for a
spring for the start of the Middle Kid Brook. Others have looked and guessed.
Blogger, Mr. Running Past, has looked at the site and seen the water tower
which has now been converted to housing – the most prominent relic of the old hospital.
He says “for the want of a more tangible source, it seems an appropriate
starting point for following the course of the Mid Kid Brook”. However he also
thought there might be something on the local London
Marathon Playing Fields citing “a large manhole cover and a sound of running
water underneath”.
There are however other options.
In all the various accounts of this site and the stream
there is something very obvious that none of them seem to have noticed. Stand in
Shooters Hill Road and look at the hospital site -and the red brick wall which surrounded it.
Just before the vehicle entrance the wall ends and there is a single storey
stone faced building.
It has recently has –I think – been converted into a private house but
previously it had been an agency for out of hours medical care - Grabadoc - and called Headway House. In fact when it
was originally built it was nothing to do with medicine – it was a water works pumping
station built around 1860 by the Kent Water Co.
Jack Vaughan, who was the first Chair of Greenwich Industrial
History, lived just up the road and researched this little building as far as
he could. Jack was into steam engines and he said there
were ‘two Cornish Boilers by Harvey & Co. used with a pair of horizontal
engines supplied by T.W.Cowan of the Kent Iron Works, Deptford Bridge, Greenwich
in 1862-4. They were scrapped in 1925. The
equipment was used to pump water to reservoirs. Now I
understood that the water they pumped came from the main Kent Water Works at
Brookmill but it would be a remarkable coincidence if it was built by chance at
the source of the Middle Kid Brook. However there is no suggestion of a well
here, albeit that in the 1860s the Kent Water Co. shifted their supplies almost
entirely to extraction from wells.
Perhaps we should continue to go westwards down Shooters Hill Road following a probable route of the Middle Kid Brook flowing some yards parallel with the main road. We should follow the Brook Hospital’s red brick wall on past the Ambulance Station and some offices. The first building which is not part of the NHSB is the Co-op Supermarket - and many people will remember when that shop was a pub – the Brook Hotel.
In 1960 I was a typist allocated to work for a rather glamorous young man. Rather than work he told me lots of outrageous stories but he never told me how in November 1944 he had seen the Brook Pub hit by a V2 rocket and blown up – the story he tells on a pub history web site. Following the hit to the pub an 89 bus in the road exploded and 29 people died. He says he saw all that and helped with the rescue work – he was just 14.
The Brook pub had earlier been called ”The Earl of Moira” and was situated at Shooters Hill on what was then the Dover Road. I wonder if it was some sort of coaching inn. A newspaper report of 1821 seems to describe it as a known stopping place on the main road but also as a pub well known to artillery officers based in Woolwich. Only two men held the title of Earl of Moira, one of whom was a political appointee to the role of Master of the Ordnance – clearly important in Woolwich. It was also the name of a boat with a particularly grisly shipwreck in 1821. It seems to have been a sporting pub with grounds to the rear where pedestrian races were a speciality. However none of this seems to have any relevance to the Middle Kid Brook stream.
Before the hospital was built next to the pub there was a large pond here alongside the main road. Was this pond a source for the Middle Kid Brook? There was a path between it and the pub and which continued behind it and went uphill as an access path going to Hill Farm. Now it is an internal road in the ambulance station. There was another reservoir just inside the hospital site but up past the farm. In his 1979 article for Greenwich ‘Transactions’ Michael Egan notes a pond at Hill Farm and says the Middle Kid Brook may rise there. He says he thinks it then ran parallel to the main road but then turned to run southwest – and this does make sense in terms of dotted lines on the OS map. Perhaps we should note that when it turns south west it does so at the edge of a ‘brickfield’.
Ken White in his book on the Quaggy elaborates on this, pointing to a ‘low point’ in Shooters Hill Road which is slightly before reaching the junction with Weyman Road and that this would be where the stream turned. He says he was told that in very wet weather it would be joined by a flow from a sports ground - presumably the Hervey Road field, also the source of the Upper Kid Brook.
Before I end can I suggest a walk further down Shooters Hill Road. Down past the shops and many blocks of flats we come to an ‘Animal Clinic’. The final building has a plaque telling us this was the Blackheath and Charlton Cottage Hospital - a far smaller affair than the Brook, it had at first just four beds. The modern middle building here is a care home called ‘Arnold House’, named, we are told, after local Arnold’s Farm.
I noted above that the Middle Kid Brook turned at a brickfield – that brickfield was the site of Arnold’s Farm.