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Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

History

Medieval Period
[http://www.stlaurencecowley.org.uk/ St. Laurence Church] was in recorded as in the parish of Cowley in the 1086 ''Domesday Book'' along with the parish land feudal system Westminster Abbey, valued as worth to its lord £2 per year in 1066 and at £1.5 (£1 10s) in 1086; its independent male householders were two villagers, one cottage-owner with one cultivated ploughland for one lord's plough team — lord's lands (also referred to as a manorial park) took up 1.5 ploughs of land and meadow half a plough, woodland here was worth 40 pigs (per year) — a mill here accounted for £0.25 (5s) per year.[http://domesdaymap.co.uk/place/TQ0582/cowley/ Entries from the Domesday Book from the Domesday Map website]

A lay jurisdiction of the church was held in 1293 by Lucy Peachey, whose name is reflected in several of the roads and by the local government ward of ''Cowley Peachey''.

Cowley was surrounded by Hillingdon parish, of which the town of Uxbridge itself and Uxbridge Moor, which separated Cowley from Buckinghamshire on the west, formed part. Part of the Moor is now the M25 motorway Within the triangle formed where the River Pinn and Fray's River meet, Cowley parish was so intermixed with Hillingdon that parts of it were entirely detached from the rest, while other parts, some detached, lay farther east across the Pinn. For this reason most of the general history of the parish has to be dissected from that of Hillingdon. These complex parish borders were those of just one manorialism carved out before the Norman conquest from Hillingdon. While Hillingdon parish administered to many areas now in Cowley, most of these were in one manor within Hillingdon whose name is preserved by few places in maps, Colham.

In the west, along the main road between Uxbridge and West Drayton, and mostly to the north of the Iver Lane turning, lay the village formerly known as '''Cowley Street''', mostly in Cowley parish. This hamlet and the church hamlet formed the main areas of settlement within the parish, though there were a few houses elsewhere, including some at what is now called '''Cowley Peachey''', the southern part of Cowley. This name, however, is of recent origin as applied to the hamlet as its older name of 'Three Households' or 'Three Houses' indicates — Cowley Peachey was not a settlement in itself: part in any case lay outside the parish bounds. Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

Post Reformation and Boundaries

Before 1882, when the first important changes were made in its boundaries, the parish of Cowley spanned irregularly shaped but mostly south of Uxbridge, between a branch of the Colne called Fray's River on the west and the River Pinn, which runs into Fray's River on the east. A small piece () of glebe land belonged to Cowley church on the other side of Hillingdon by Long Lane.

In 1796 Cowley Field was inclosure, with the statutory object of consolidating the parishes of Hillingdon and Cowley. As a result Cowley received several blocks of land, of which the largest were connected to the part of the parish by the church and to the part at Cowley Street by roads which the Commissioners decreed were to be repaired by Cowley parish and which therefore became part of it. Four parts of the field north of the Greenway were also assigned to Cowley but remained detached, and so did two others farther south by the High Street and by Maygoods Lane. Nomansland, across the Pinn, also remained cut off from the rest of the parish, while the little field of glebe nearly 2 miles away in Long Lane was unaffected by the award.

In 1547 the parish contained 36 'houseling' people, in 1719 there were 109 inhabitants, and in 1801 the population was 214. Because of the division of the village, the manor and parish never constituted a real community, the manorial court made Regulations about the fencing of the open fields, meadows, and commons, and the stinting of the animals pastured there. Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

Post Industrial Revolution

During the later 19th century increasing amounts of land were given over to market- and nursery-gardens, and to brickworks. About 1800 the stretch of the Grand Union Canal through Cowley was opened, and packet boats ran for a while in 1801 and occasionally in the next few years between Uxbridge and London. The Packet Boat public house at Cowley Peachey, licensed in 1804, commemorates the period, and the small group of buildings had appeared around two docks there by 1825.

The Uxbridge branch of the Great Western Railway was opened in 1856 and ran through Cowley, but there was no station here until 1904, and despite the spread of building from Uxbridge in the north, the beginnings of industry at Cowley Peachey, and the three large mills just outside the western boundary of the parish, Cowley remained an almost entirely rural village until after World War I In 1891, just before the parish was enlarged, the population was 322. In 1901, after the enlargement, it was 869, and this had only risen to 1,170 by 1931. During the 1930s there was a good deal of building, partly by Uxbridge council, and the population of the same area was 3,687 in 1951. Until 1965 a great many more houses were built, bringing the total provided by the council to nearly 1,000 in 1959, so that much of the area east of the main road and south of Station Road has been covered, though allotments remain between Hillingdon and Cowley. The diversion of Peachey Lane in 1938 and the blocking of Maygoods Lane about 1953 have destroyed the old road plan of this part of the parish.

Cowley became part of the urban district of Uxbridge in 1929 and part of Uxbridge civil parishes in England in 1937. Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

Geography

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Cowley lies on a southwest-sloping ridge above mean sea level and is a village wikt:contiguous with Uxbridge to the north, in the west of the London Borough of Hillingdon — a largely suburban development, it is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by the Metropolitan Green Belt, the River Colne, Hertfordshire and Buckinghamshire. Between the boundaries marked by the Pinn and Colne the soil is traditionally called (fertile) brick-earth which has medium permeability whereas east of the Pinn covering most of London is London clay and gravel, a mixture of good and poor drainage. On more descriptive modern analysis the soil is "slowly permeable seasonally wet acid loamy and clayey soil", with non-permeable loamy soil marking the lowest part.[https://www.landis.org.uk/soilscapes/ Cranfield University National Soil Resources Institute]

Two conservation areas are in the village: Cowley Church (St. Laurence), designated in 1988 and '''Cowley Lock''', designated in 1975, which includes all of Old Mill Lane, Cowley Lake, wet woodland, Little Britain and Cowley bridges.[http://www.hillingdon.gov.uk/article/22670/Conservation-areas-in-Hillingdon Conservation areas in the London Borough of Hillingdon]

[http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/941452 Little Britain Lake] in the west of Cowley extends for about 450 metres between the Colne and a channel of it known as Frays River.[http://getamap.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/getamap/frames.htm?mapAction=gaz&gazName=g&gazString=TQ048812 Ordnance survey website]

;Little Britain Lake
At , Little Britain Lake, which approximately resembles the shape of the British Isles, contains small islands and can be reached from Iver or Cowley and is of note for the number of less common water birds present, such as Gadwall and Great Crested Grebe, as well as many of the more common species such as Mute Swan and Grey Heron, the wider conservation area is in the Colne Valley regional park.

{{Geographic location
|title = '''Nearest Settlements'''
|Centre = Cowley
|North = Uxbridge
|Northeast = ''across Brunel University and Hillingdon Golf Course''Hillingdon
|East = Hillingdon
|Southeast = Yiewsley
|South = Yiewsley
|Southwest = ''across Thorney, Buckinghamshire and the M25 motorway''Richings Park
|West = ''across Uxbridge Moor and the M25 motorway''Iver
|Northwest = ''across Uxbridge Moor and the M25 motorway''Iver Heath (village)
}} Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

Landmarks

A number of older buildings survive, forming in Cowley all but one of the 15 architecturally listed buildings, the other being the main lecture building of Brunel University.

Cowley House, and the Manor Farm are the most architecturally and historically significant. In the High Street, Old Vine Cottage, ''The Crown'', and Maygood's Farm date from before 1700, and there are several detached 18th-century houses there, some of which may incorporate earlier work. At Cowley Peachey are two timber-framed houses: the Old Cottage probably dates from the 15th or early 16th century and is a three-bay house of which the central bay was originally an open hall. At some later date the hall was divided into two storeys and a brick chimney was inserted.

Church
St Lawrence's Church is listed higher than all of the other buildings in Cowley architecturally, at Grade II*, this building was in existence by the 12th century, stands near the Pinn on the eastern side of the manor: there is no evidence of a proper settlement of any size here, though there were probably always one or two buildings beside the church.

Brunel University

The main "Uxbridge campus" of the university is in the north east of Cowley which is in the Uxbridge post town and therefore postally referred to as Cowley, Uxbridge.[http://www.achurchnearyou.com/st-laurence-cowley The Church of England - Map of St Lawrence's Ecclesiastical Parish]


Adhya Shakti Mataji Temple
The Adhya Shakti Mataji Temple is a Hindu Temple in Cowley High Street. It was the subject of a suspected arson attack in June 2013. Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

Transport

Nearest tube station
* Uxbridge tube station (Metropolitan Line and Piccadilly Line lines) north of the northern boundary of Cowley

Nearest railway stations
* West Drayton railway station south of the Cowley Peachey border[http://www.gridreferencefinder.com Grid reference Finder measurement tools]
* Iver railway station west of Packet Boat Lane in Little Britain, Cowley

Uxbridge branch was a two-track railway operating from 1836 to 10 September 1962 between West Drayton in Yiewsley on the Great Western Main Line and Uxbridge, with an intermediate station at Cowley railway station. Station Road in Cowley has bridges where the tracks once were. Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

Notable people

* Roger Williams (theologian) (1603-1683), important early proponent of religious freedom and separation of church and state, was born in Cowley

* Barton Booth (1681-1733), one of the most famous actors of the early 18th century, lived and is buried in Cowley

* John Rich (producer) (1692-1761), the "father of English pantomime", lived in Cowley

* William Dodd (clergyman) (1729-1777), writer and clergyman, once Royal Chaplain, was buried in Cowley after being Hanging at Tyburn

* Botanist John Lightfoot (biologist) (1735-1788) lived in Uxbridge from 1767 and is buried here where he was curate from 1768 to 1786.

* England national football team footballer Jim Taylor (footballer born 1917) (1917-2001), born in Cowley

* Racing driver Robin Widdows (1942-), born in Cowley

* Natasha Baker (born 1989), Para-equestrian and double Gold medallist at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, lives in Cowley. The main postbox in Uxbridge town centre was painted gold by Royal Mail in her honour, as was done for all Team GB and British Paralympic Association gold medallists.

* Sir Kevin Oliver III, Lager connoisseur, pub brawler & a devoted L'Oreal patron. Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

External links

* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=22299 History of Cowley: British History Online]
* [http://www.stlaurencecowley.org St Laurence Church website] Cowley is a village wikt:contiguous with the town of Uxbridge in the London Borough of Hillingdon. A largely suburban village with 16 listed buildings, Cowley is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) west of Charing Cross, bordered to the west by Uxbridge Moor in the Metropolitan Green Belt and the River Colne, Hertfordshire, forming the border with Buckinghamshire. Cowley lies on a ridge above mean sea level.

Notes and References

;Notes

;References




Category:Areas of London
Category:Districts of Hillingdon
Category:Districts of London listed in the Domesday Book

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