This view is recognisable today. The trams were established in 1905. Note the car on the left has a GB marking.
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
Middlesex Regimental depot, later Inglis barracks, was built in 1905. This is the officersÕ mess, which was preserved with the redevelopment of the barracks in 2012
The hall was used by the Voluntary Aid Detachment from 1915 to 1919
Typical late Edwardian shopping parade. Note the milk cart on the right
Foot of Bittacy Hill junction of Sanders Lane
Nieuport IV was used by the Air Battalion Royal Engineers, the forerunner of the Royal Flying Corps
The old forge at Holcombe Hill was the last active forge in Mill Hill and in later life was a tea shop
Originally called Guttershedge Farm it was home to Francis Petit Smith co-inventor of the screw propeller
Originally Gutterhedge Lane the road was renamed by the 1890s to Park Road