An illustrated history of Gerrards Cross through the years
Gerrards Cross, with its fine open common and picturesque Latchmore Pond, has been a place of resort ever since the Old Berkeley Hunt began to meet there in the 1790s. Genteel houses sprang up around the Common and St James's Church was built on the Oxford Road. By the 1860s, Gerrards Cross was attracting so many wealthy visitors that it began to be known as 'the Brighton of Bucks'. The opening of the Great Western and Great Central Joint Railway in 1906, with a station at Gerrards Cross, gave hundreds of Londoners the opportunity to live in 'Beechy Bucks'.
>
This book celebrates the energy and imagination of those pioneer architects, builders and estate agents who made Gerrards Cross a high-class residential area, both socially and architecturally. It also applauds the entrepreneurs who offered their services when commuter houses were still on the drawing board, and the newcomers who brought their families to live in the country and depended utterly on their train service to London.