TSP
W.A.
|
61 of 114
Mon 27th Aug 2018 3:26am
On 16th Sep 2013 7:56pm, Doddman said:
Jardine Crescent was called after my great Uncle Danny Jardine. He was the Scottish site agent who was in charge of the construction of the Tile Hill Housing Estate. My grandad (Hugh Easton) was also involved working alongside Uncle Danny.
|
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Tile Hill Girl
|
62 of 114
Sat 9th May 2020 11:52am
A friend of mine is trying to research the origin of the name Grayswood Avenue (running between Holyhead Rd and Allesley Old Rd), and also of Gray's Wood, which is part of Lake View Park (along the banks of the Sherbourne, between Grayswood Ave and Four Pounds Ave). But it's proving rather tricky! So far, it seems that Grayswood Ave was built around the 1930s. And it appears that allotments were cleared to make way for the wooded area of Gray's Wood around the 1980s. Which seems to suggest that the road was not named after the wood. Does anyone know what could be the origin of the name? Could they have been named after someone called Gray? Thanks! |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Helen F
Warrington
|
63 of 114
Sat 9th May 2020 12:36pm
Hi, Tile Hill Girl. Welcome to the forum.
Looking at the old maps and Goodle satellite view, the land before the development had no wood and no reference to Gray. The 'wood' just looks like abandoned allotments which still reflect the layout of the original plan, including the old septic tank.
Old Maps - zoom out for map
It looks like Gray may come from either the farmer (probably High Field farm) who owned the land or the builder. |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Tile Hill Girl
|
64 of 114
Sat 9th May 2020 3:17pm
Thanks Helen. That's a useful idea to follow up on High Field Farm. Do you know where there could be records of the owner?
We also wondered about the builder idea, as there was a very well known builder in Cov called John Gray, who built the war memorial at the Memorial Park, and bought Coombe Abbey, in the 1920s (so shortly before Grayswood Ave was probably built). We found info that he had built a couple of other housing areas in Cov, but no reference to the Grayswood Ave area.
Thanks! |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Helen F
Warrington
|
65 of 114
Sat 9th May 2020 4:10pm
File relating to building at Coventry Collections
File relating to planning appeal by Barwal Estates Ltd re corner site land on the Highlands Building Estate, Allesley: proposal to build a total of 16 houses at Cranford Road, Dulverton Avenue, and at the junction between the two roads.
I searched using some of the other road names. You may get what you're looking for by linking Gray with likely references. Although ultimately you may have to pop into the Herbert Archives.
A reference that may be relevant
And another
Was the farm involved Brooklands instead?
Follow links that you think might go somewhere and see what turns up.
|
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Tile Hill Girl
|
66 of 114
Sat 9th May 2020 8:59pm
Thanks very much Helen. Lots of new lines of enquiry to follow up on! |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Old Lincolnian
Coventry
|
67 of 114
Fri 19th Mar 2021 3:52pm
I know that many streets are named after famous or local people, for historical reasons or just because they sound nice, however I am puzzled by the origin of Sapphire Gate in the Stoke/Binley area. It doesn't seem to have anything in common with the surrounding street names and is the only one called Gate. Could it be anything to do with either the Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire car or turbojet engine?
Anybody got any ideas?
|
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Helen F
Warrington
|
68 of 114
Fri 19th Mar 2021 4:12pm
The other roads look like authors and poets. |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Osmiroid
UK
|
69 of 114
Fri 19th Mar 2021 5:36pm
Up Eastern Green way, or near, it sounds more like New York with the street names:
Pelham Bend
Mohawk Bend
Niagara Close
Manhattan Way
Astoria Drive
Placid Close
Jefferson Way
Steinway
|
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Helen F
Warrington
|
70 of 114
Fri 19th Mar 2021 6:30pm
A few of the names don't come up with a poet of the right era but I looked up Wyver and it's in a place called Poet's Corner. At least one of the names is a pen name eg Lord Lytton was an MP and sometimes poet who wrote under the name Owen Meredith. |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Old Lincolnian
Coventry
|
71 of 114
Fri 19th Mar 2021 9:17pm
Helen, it's always been known as Poets Corner as far as I know and most of the names are fairly obvious but some are somewhat tenuous, maybe they ran out of names and so used really obscure poets (or even made some up).
Osmiroid, that's the relatively new Bannerbrook Estate isn't it, it's one of the great places to get lost when you go there the first few times, I know I've done it. |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Osmiroid
UK
|
72 of 114
Fri 19th Mar 2021 11:43pm
Yes, I only know it from maps. A few years ago I googled an old Middlemore's postcode and it came up as Mohawk Bend!
|
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
|
73 of 114
Tue 23rd Mar 2021 8:30am
Poets Corner was near the Forum, built in the 1930 I believe, not sure, but just before the war. |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Midland Red
|
74 of 114
Tue 23rd Mar 2021 8:55am
Quite correct, Kaga - road names include Longfellow, Browning, Shelley, Tennyson, Coleridge... |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|
Positively Pottering
East Midlands
|
75 of 114
Tue 23rd Mar 2021 9:19am
Apologies if this has been covered before but I can't see any reference using the search tool.
Is the area at the junctions of Harnall Lane East, Swan Lane, Nicholls Street and Burlington Road knows as J(G)erards Cross and if so what's the origin please? |
Memories and Nostalgia -
Street / road names and their origins
|