Beaver Hall

Beaver Hall The Seat of John Locke Esq. Southgate Middlesex. John Hassell, London, 1804.[1]
Beaver Hall (centre) and Arnos Grove on a mid 19th-century Ordnance Survey map[2]
Plan of Arnos Grove from 1918 sale particulars incorporating the former Beaver Hall and Minchington Hall estates[3]
Remains of Beaver Hall stables, Waterfall Road. They were demolished in 1924.[4]

Beaver Hall was a country house in Middlesex, England. It was set in grounds of around 40 acres (16 ha) that stood to the east and south of the current Waterfall Road, then known as Waterfall Lane and Church Hill, near the old centre of Southgate. The grounds stretched as far south as the Pymmes Brook where Arnos Park was later built.[5] Beaver Hall was acquired by John Walker of the Taylor-Walker brewing family in 1870. The house was demolished in 1871 and the grounds merged into the adjacent Arnos Grove estate.

  1. ^ Beaver Hall, Southgate. published 1 Jun 1804. Royal Collection Trust. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  2. ^ Sheet 007 Map of Middlesex. Originally published by Ordnance Survey, Southampton, 1868–1883. British History Online. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  3. ^ Dumayne, Alan. (1987) Southgate: A Glimpse into the Past. London: Alan Dumayne. p. 131. ISBN 0951228609
  4. ^ Newby, Herbert W. (1949) "Old" Southgate. London: T. Grove. p. 39.
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference duma was invoked but never defined (see the help page).