Early years
Industry
Churches
Railway
20th century development
Ealing Road renaissance
21st century Alperton
Local history articles
Alperton is situated in the south of Brent, between Wembley and Ealing.
Early years
Alperton is first recorded as ‘Alprinton’, in 1199, when it consisted of 12 buildings. It probably started off as 'the farm of Eahlbeort'. There was a wooden bridge in Alperton over the river Brent by 1432-33. The lords of the manor of Harrow and Ealing paid for its upkeep.
There were around 60 people living in Alperton in 1661. A blacksmith's shop opened in 1680. The village expanded, with several cottages built before 1714. Soon after, The Plough inn was licensed as a pub (1722), and the Chequers pub followed (by 1751).
By 1805, there were 21 houses, including 14 farms. However, enclosure in 1817 (which allowed farmers to fence off farms and claim common land), reduced the number of farms to four by 1851. At the same time, the population grew, from 199 to 234 in 20 years.
Flick through this album of old photos of Alperton from the Brent Museum and Archives collection:
Industry
In 1801, the Grand Junction Canal was dug, crossing Alperton. Its effect on trade was immediate. It created work in handling shipments of sand, hay, gravel and coal. It also attracted tourists, with passenger boat trips to the Pleasure Boat pub.
The area became ‘a celebrated resort for anglers [fishermen]’, and Alperton's countryside was a popular place to visit. Postcards featuring ‘Greetings from Alperton’ were readily available around 1900.
A local brickfield (where clay is dug up to make bricks) would have been used to build the Grand Junction Canal. Henry Haynes ran one such brickwork in Alperton. Haynes, the son of a local hay-dealer, owned 70 out of the 100 buildings in Alperton. Haynes was the largest employer in the area employing nearly 150 people, most of the people of working age in the village.
To accommodate the growing population, new cottages were constructed, some by Haynes. Haynes also paid for shops, a church and the new Alperton Park Hotel.
In the late 19th century, as the most industrialised village in Wembley, Alperton was famous for disgusting smells. The source included a sewage farm, two recycling plants producing manure, and three large piggeries. Around this time, punch-ups were common among the brickfield labourers, and bareknuckle boxing bouts and cockfights took place on Sundays at Honeypot Lane.
The decline of the brickfields, and the creation of Wembley Urban District Council in 1894, led to a reduction in anti-social behaviour and improvement in air quality.
Churches
From 1828, there was a Baptist chapel on the site of the present Alperton Station (which opened in 1903). The first Anglican church came later, developing out of a mission tent used for meetings on nearby Honeypot Lane. In 1904, a separate Anglican parish was created, and in 1912, St James' Church was consecrated to cater for growing numbers of people moving south from Wealdstone in Harrow.
Railway
From its opening in 1842, the nearest station for Alperton residents was Sudbury Station (now Wembley Central Station). In 1903, Perivale-Alperton Station (called Alperton from 1910) opened, along with an extension from Park Royal & Twyford Abbey Station to South Harrow Station. Unusually, the line from Acton Town to South Harrow was electrified. Power was supplied by a generating station next to the canal at Alperton, until, in 1905, Lots Road Power Station was set up to supply power to all of London’s electric railways.
The railway encouraged development and Alperton expanded rapidly after the First World War.
20th century development
By 1911, there were rubber, fireproofing and motorcycles factories in Alperton. The construction of the North Circular Road (1921-34) encouraged more industry to move in from Park Royal.
In the 10 years from 1921, the population grew from 2,468 to 6,444. Following further industrial growth after the Second World War, it grew again, reaching 14,432 in 1951.
In 1930, Honeypot Lane was still rural, but, by 1933, fields had been built over and Alperton was ‘developed’. A sub-Post Office (run by a self-employed postmaster) opened in 1934, the Plough pub was rebuilt in 1936, and a London Transport bus garage started running in June 1939.
By 1961, the population had declined to 12,804.
Flick through this album of photos of Ealing Road in Alperton from the Brent Museum and Archives collection:
Ealing Road renaissance
In the 1970s, Ealing Road was an unimportant 'secondary parade' facing possible demolition. Then East African Asians, mainly Gujaratis, rejuvenated the area, taking over shops along the high street. Ealing Road has since become known as ‘Little India’ with many shops selling food, clothing and jewellery for the local Gujarati population.
21st century Alperton
Alperton has one of the highest populations of global majority people in London. In 2011, 64.6% of Alperton’s population identified as Asian or British Asian.
Local history articles
Find out more about this area by looking at our local history articles, written by volunteer researchers and members of local history societies:
- Alperton's 1948 Olympic Village (.pdf, 862.2kB) by Philip Grant. Imagine Usain Bolt sleeping in your school classroom - that's how it was at the 1948 London Olympic Games!
- Macari's Musical Exchange (.pdf, 956.4kB) by Philip Grant. Read about this historic Ealing Road shop and its connections to the music industry, including its influence on a young Keith Moon, drummer for The Who.
Self-guided walks
- Brent Walk: Sudbury, Harrow and Shri Sanatan Hindu Mandir (.pdf, 4.50MB)
Further reading
Much of the information you have read on this page came from the following resources, some of which are held by Brent Museum and Archives, and available to look at. For more information, contact us by phone 020 8937 3600 or email museum.archives@brent.gov.uk.
British History Online – A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 4 (London: Victoria County History, 1971)
Day, J.R. – The Story of London's Underground (London Transport, 1974)
Field, J. – Place Names of Greater London (Batsford, 1980)
Hewlett, G. (ed.) – A History of Wembley (Brent Library Service, 1979)
Mills, A.D. – A Dictionary of London Place Names (Oxford University Press, 2001)
Snow, L. – Brent, A Pictorial History (Phillimore, 1990)
Spencer, A. – Britain in Old Photographs: Wembley & Kingsbury (Alan Sutton, 1995)
UK Census Data for Alperton (2011)
Wadsworth, C. – Traditional Pubs of Brent, Volume 2 Wembley (CAW Books, 1999)