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When
Barnet was the gateway to the North, back in the 19th century, over
150 coaches would pass through the town every DAY. Here local historian
and author Richard Selby takes you on a fictional coach journey
to the top of the hill.
Rain
spiked my face and blurred my vision and neither the brim of my
hat nor the high collar of my cloaked coat kept it from running
down my neck. I held on to a rail for dear life as the coach lurched
and swayed over the rutted track and I took no solace that the other
nine passengers perched perilously across the roof were just as
miserable.
I
bruised my back on the sharp corners of a trunk or one of the cases
which shared the spine of the coach and I had to steady myself by
locking my feet under other luggage which had been strapped to its
sides. The coach was dreadfully overladen and perilously top heavy.
My shoes had been soaked in soggy mud and I shivered in the dampness.
The journey had been tiring, although we had been gone from Holborn
for only two hours. An average of about five miles an hour was to
be expected in those conditions and at least I was not walking to
Barnet.
Some
of the road users stepped aside into the bushes to avoid the mud
which splashed around the horses' hoofs and from the great wheels.
I looked past the driver and saw steam rise from the labouring animals.
Their backs were a lustre of sweat and rain and their odour filled
the air.
We had not stopped at Whetstone for the gate had been opened when
the keeper heard us coming. Our guard had sounded his distinctive
tarantara when three furlongs distant which gave the gatekeeper
at least two minutes to don his cloak. All of us apprentices recognised
the particular calls of the coaches. The Mail Coaches horned authoritative
fanfares for they had a time schedule to uphold. Woe betides their
drivers who let a precious minute be lost. We were only riding on
a stage coach which would get to its destination when it could.
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Water
lay in dark pools and puddles for despite the road having been metalled
with block some years previously ruts had been worn through the
surface and were full of sludge. We never knew just how deep they
were until the wheels sank to their axles. However, the coachman
deliberately drove us through the well-worn tracks, for to miss
a furrow would have meant that the coach would ride up on one side
and probably upturn us. There were ladies trying to retain some
modicum of modesty and bearing beside me. They, likewise, had chosen
to pay half fare for the topside ride. Those who could afford to
ride inside, four men that day, were being thrown about a claustrophobic
cabin. We considered ourselves lucky that we were the outsiders.
Despite the rain there was nothing as exhilarating as that kind
of journey. Sometimes the coachman would let me take the reins,
and that was a treat with all four horses responding to my left
hand. My right held the whip and occasionally I used it to spur
the charges ahead. But that day all I could think about was staying
in my place.
The
coach slowed to cross tracks as the bulk of a covered waggon appeared
ahead. It too was making for Barnet but its journey was very slow.
The waggoner walked beside its train guiding the leaders along the
road. As we passed them I counted eight heavy horses linked in pairs
struggling to grip the mud. Each step of their way was laboured
as they sank to their fetlocks in the mud-filled ruts. They were
caked in layers of filth and their burden seemed more than the load
they hauled.
The wagon probably carried a dozen tonnes and I wondered what it
was that it transported.
Could it have been building materials or foodstuffs? I let the thought
fade as the coach returned to its original tracks with much rocking
and noise. The springs holding the carriage above the axles were
of leather and steel so they screeched loudly as they stretched
to their limits. When another coach approached from the other direction
we came to a halt and the coachmen exchanged tidings. It was quite
four minutes before ours was reminded of his purpose by a shout
from within and we continued. Each of us gave greetings to the passengers
on the opposite vehicle with much hat touching and waving of hands.
They were delighted to hear that Trafalgar had been won as we called
the good news across the road.
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The
hamlet was before us but we had first to negotiate the decline of
Pricklers Hill. We passed Underhill House and descended again towards
the cottages which lay below the next climb into Barnet. It would
have been nightfall before we arrived but I held an introduction
to a Mrs Scarbody who owned the Queens Head in Hadley. She would
find me a bed for the night if I could afford no other, and I was
ready for her hospitality. The coach rolled down into the yard of
the Lower Red Lion where two of our passengers alighted. I helped
to throw down their portmanteaux and other luggage.
The
coachmen checked that an additional team was available and ostlers
brought a pair from their stables already harnessed for attaching
to our leaders. The guard shouted out a warning to us to hold on
and the coach, now with six horses, was led out for the procession
to Barnet.
The train was led by the ostler from the Red Lion riding astride
the front pair and we proceeded at his pace, which in all honesty
was not much slower than the journey we had so far endured. On my
previous visit no spare teams had been available and the most nimble
of the passengers had been made to walk the hill.
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The incline steepened and the horses strained more than they had
in the past ten miles. They had coped well with the climb to Islington
and had overcome Highgate Hill without flagging. Their passage through
Finchley Common had been a drag and I was full of admiration at
this, their final challenge of the day. I wondered just how many
teams would need to be linked to the wagon which we had passed fifteen
minutes previously.
The hill took a few minutes to ascend but the lights of the town
lay ahead of us, and I began to anticipate the hot meal and a glass
or two of ale. The tower of the church was silhouetted against the
last colours of the evening sky which had begun to show through
the breaking clouds.
Slowly, ever so slowly, our coach approached the houses, cottages
and inns. Most of their chimneys exuded smoke which hung in the
damp, windless air. The rain had eased but the road remained slippery
despite the surface of the hill having been prepared in a proper
manner, and plentiful hay had been strewn to soak up the mud and
manure. Our way was blocked by a lone cow but the leadsman gave
it a kick and it returned down a side alley. The bulk of Middle
Row divided the road as it widened. Inns and taverns, alehouses
and shops were around us when we reached the brow of the hill and
we stopped for the spare horses to be unhitched.
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“To
those who ride with us to Biggleswade,” shouted the coachman,
“be in the yard of the Boar’s Head at seven of the clock.
That is in one half hour, if you please."
I glanced at the clock on the church and wondered if it chimed the
hours. Thankfully I was not to be continuing my journey until the
morrow.
We dismounted and I watched to see where my fellow passengers retired.
The gentlemen from within stretched their legs and walked into the
Kings Head. Moments later liveried boys ran out to collect their
luggage. I nodded farewell to my companions and stepped out on to
the High Street as the coach was led through the arch of the Boar’s
Head. I looked around to recall my memories for it had been awhile
since I had ventured this way on my journeys home to the Midlands
and I intended to spend the evening with acquaintances that I had
met on an earlier visit.
There was a pennant hanging bedraggled from the mast on the church
tower.
The stones in its graveyard stood worn and ready to fall, and the
few that had toppled were already overgrown with the briars of neglect.
The town was old and the houses were an assortment of design and
purpose. Cooking pots within teased my nose with vapours which escaped
through open windows.
Alleyways
seemed to tunnel themselves between the overhanging timbers of adjacent
houses, down which I spied goats tethered amidst sleepy hens in
the yards behind.
Hearty laughter turned my head to the open door of an ale-house
through which I could see the flames of the hearth adding warmth
to its patrons’ fellowship. “It is good to be here again,”
I remember saying to myself with an air of blissful recollection,
and in heady anticipation stepped out towards Hadley.
The foregoing account is an imaginary journey to Barnet at the start
of the nineteenth century. However it would indeed have been as
romantic, for the details are correct as far as records tell us.
Barnet Hill was not an easy route to travel until it was straightened
and smoothed out in the 1820’s, but it lay on the Great North
Road and just before the divide of the roads at Hadley. The town
was a staging point where the horses were changed; a place where
passengers could alight, rest and take refreshment in their journey
north, or freshen up before the final stage into London. Barnet
abounded with establishments solely for the replenishment of man
and beast and this book is their story
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Richard Selby wrote the popular “Barnet Pubs”
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