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Putney Vale is a small community in south west London. It lies between and , to the east of and . Its main features are a housing estate, a superstore and a large cemetery. The A3 runs through it.


Description

Political geography
Putney Vale is part of the London Borough of Wandsworth and is currently within Roehampton ward and Putney Parliamentary constituency. In the Church of England, it has been a part of Roehampton since its separation from Putney parish in 1845. (Accessed 5 July 2021)


Housing
Most of the housing is provided by an estate built in the mid-1950s, on land originally earmarked for a possible cemetery extension. (Access date 4 July 2021) It consists of local authority-built (mainly duplex, four-storey) maisonettes and short . Many homes are now privately owned, with the balance owned and let by the Borough. The estate's curved access road, Stag Lane, has a row of shops.

There is further privately owned housing beside the A3, and on Friars Avenue – built in 1983 – adjacent to playing fields and Wimbledon Common.


Amenities
The non-denominational Putney Vale Cemetery and Crematorium, in which a number of well-known people are buried, is north and east of the housing estate. Covering 47 acres, it was established in 1891 and the crematorium in 1938. Wandsworth Borough Council website

Beaver's Holt on the estate was closed in 1992 due to falling roll numbers. It was then sold to the private Hall School Wimbledon to house its junior branch. In 2019 the site was sold to Thomas's London Day Schools to provide further teaching space for all four of its preparatory schools. (Access date 14 July 2021)

Kingston University's Roehampton Vale campus is situated beside the A3. It has facilities for students on engineering courses. (Access date 5 July 2021)

Shortly before the First World War, 175 acres were added to Wimbledon Common, including much of Newlands Farm, which had been here since the Middle Ages. The extension also created extensive playing fields at Putney Vale named the Richardson Evans Memorial Playing Fields in honour of the scheme's sponsor, . The fields host Saturday/Sunday league football teams, as well as number of annual schools' rugby and women's football tournaments. It is the home ground of London Cornish RFC. (Access date 5 July 2021)

Allotment fruit and vegetable gardens, let by the Borough, are to the south-west of the housing estate. (Access date 5 July 2021)

An superstore is situated beside the A3.


History
The lower part of Putney Vale, nearer , was known as Putney Bottom (Accessed 5 July 2021) until the mid-nineteenth century.Early references to Putney Vale include property notices on front page of : 24 Nov 1849, 14 June 1850.

There are four Wimbledon Common rangers' cottages on Stag Lane and Friars Avenue. On the north east side of the playing fields, Stag Lane becomes a track called Kings Ride. The origin of the Kings Ride name is believed to date from when Henry VIII, while chasing deer from Richmond Park would pursue them onto the common before the wall to the park was built.

The first significant building in Putney Vale was the Halfway House, later the Bald Faced Stag, an established about 1650 on the corner of Stags lane and the Portsmouth Road (now the A3). In the eighteenth century the road here was a well-known spot for robbers. The inn was reputedly a haunt of the highwayman until his execution in 1795, after which his body was displayed in a at Putney Vale. (Accessed 5 July 2021)

In 1912 Kenelm Lee Guinness, a member of the brewing dynasty and a motor racer, acquired the by-then disused Bald Faced Stag inn, where he developed a more efficient for use in car and aircraft engines. Small-scale production began at the former inn, and by 1914 Guinness was producing 4,000 plugs a week. The First World War led to an increase in demand, and in 1916 the company was incorporated as KLG. In 1917 larger premises, known as the Robin Hood Engineering Works, were opened to the east of the old premises. This employed over 1,200 mainly women workers,

(2025). 9780198614111, Oxford University Press.
making the factory the largest employer in the area. By 1918, the bulk of the factory's output was reserved for the Royal Air Force. The Sphere. 'In the petrol world.' 25 January 1919, page 26.

In 1919 Guinness sold the firm's distribution rights to . In the inter-war years KLG sparking plugs made at Putney Vale were used in the majority of British cars. This included 's Golden Arrow and 's Blue Bird series, which set world land speed records. In 1927 Smith & Sons bought KLG and in the 1930s built a new spark plug factory, in an style, on the Putney Vale site. The factory was demolished in 1989 and replaced by an Asda . Asda donated the old factory gates, bearing the KLG logo, to the Brooklands Motor Museum. Staines & Ashford News. 'Museum gets KLG gates.' 16 February 1989, page 8.


Surroundings
Beyond relatively large – playing fields, a golf course, , and – and beyond adjoining Roehampton Vale, are:

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