Heathrow - the forgotten hamlet
Heath Row was a small hamlet along a minor country lane called Heathrow Road in the ancient parish of Harmondsworth, Middlesex. Heath Row’s buildings and all associated holdings were demolished in 1944 for the construction of London Airport. During the Second World War, the decision was made to locate Britain’s principal civil airport. The use of wartime powers circumvented the need for a public inquiry. In just a few months in 1944, four square miles of concrete and tarmac buried centuries of history. The ghosts of residents past didn't get to tell their story. Here, we try to put some of that right... To answer an oft-asked question, the mapping software used can be found at www.theundergroundmap.com And the second oft-asked question is “which of the shots in the old film used depict Heath Row and which shots are simply 1940s stock footage?” The answer is that all of the movie footage depicts scenes within the confines of the modern airport from farmers to surveyors to children playing to demolitions. It’s all Heath Row 1944-1946.

Historic Croydon Airport - a key part of aviation history

Hitler's dream of Berlin, and what became of it

West of England (1951)

Edwardian Britain in Color | RARE Film Footage COLORISED and RESTORED

Exploring Isambard Kingdom Brunel's London

How WW2 Rationing shaped Britain

Greenwich Foot Tunnel: The Crossing London Forgot It Built

Dulwich - London’s Exclusive Village, Scandalous Origins & Art Heists

London Airport - Heathrow Construction Film

The TERROR of Soviet La-5 Fighters Against the Luftwaffe, 1943

Vintage transport film - Moving Millions - 1947

The genius logic of the NATO phonetic alphabet

The Fascinating History Of London's Airports | Our History

1940 Britain: Life in the Blitz

The Battle Over London's $80 Billion Airport

Heathrow: Britain's Busiest Airport - S4 E1 | Our Stories

France Created the Most Advanced Car in 1955 — Until Complexity Scared Buyers Away

How Was The London Underground Built? | Our History

Vintage railway film - Forward to First Principles - 1966

