Seen here are the houses between Sefton Avenue and Deans Drive, the two houses on the far left were later converted into shops
Originally the Linen and Woollen Drapers estate it was established to provide for retired shop workers and founded in 1895
Seen here look up towards The Ridgway a the junction of Daws Lane
The butchers shop, now Mill Top, at the top of Hammers Lane survived for nearly 200 years until 1997, the last shop in Mill Hill Village.
According to Ralph Calder, the local antiquary, from which a John Evans ran a cab service to the new stations at Mill Hill East during the 1870s
Apart from the Adam and Eve the last remaining public house on the Ridgway
Here showing Marshall Hall this estate was to provide for retired shop workers and founded in 1895
The traveller Celia Fiennes, on whom the nursery rhyme "Ride a cock horse to Banbury Cross" is based, lived here from 1713 to 1737, however it is also famous as the location for a Dakota air crash in 1950
This view was taken from Bunns Lane
Taken near the junction with Hankins Lane
The strip of clapperboard cottages called Angel Cottages, on left, have been replaced by modern houses