Online Encyclopedia

BRENTFORD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 497 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRENTFORD  , a

market
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town in the Brentford
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parliamentary division of Middlesex, England, 1o4 m . W. of
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Waterloo
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terminus,
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London, by the London & South-Western railway, at the junction of the
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river Brent with the
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Thames . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 15,171 . The
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Grand Junction Canal joins the Brent, affording ample
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water-communications to the town, which has consider-able
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industries in
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brewing,
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soap-making, saw-milling, market-gardening, &c . The Grand Junction waterworks are situated here . Brentford has been the county-town for elections since 1701 . In 1o16 Brentford, or, as it was often called Braynford, was the scene of a
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great defeat inflicted on the Danes by Edmund Ironside . In 1280 a toll was granted by
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Edward I., who granted the town a market, for the construction of a
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bridge across the river, and in the reign of Henry VI. a hospital of the Nine Orders of Angels was founded near its western side . In 1642 a
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battle was fought here in which the royalists defeated the parliamentary forces . For his services on this occasion the Scotsman
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Ruthven,
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earl of Forth, was made earl of Brentford, a title afterwards conferred by William III. on Marshal Schomberg . Brentford was during the 16th and 17th centuries a favourite resort of London citizens; and its
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inn of the Three Pigeons, which was kept for a time by John Lowin, one of the first actors of Shakespeare's plays, is frequently alluded to by the dramatists of the period . Falstaff is disguised as the " Fat Woman of Brentford " in Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor, and numerous other references to the town in literature point, in most cases, to its reputation for excessive dirt .

The " two

kings of Brentford mentioned in Cowper's Task, and elsewhere, seem to owe their ), mythical existence to the
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play, The Rehearsal, by George Villiers, second duke of Buckingham, produced in 1671 . South of Brentford, towards Isleworth, is Sion House, a mansion founded by Lord
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Protector Somerset in 1547, and rebuilt and enlarged by the loth earl of Northumberland and
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Sir
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Hugh Smithson, afterwards duke of Northumberland, the architects being Inigo Jones and Robert Adam . The gardens are very beautiful . The site of Sion or Syon House was previously occupied by a convent of Bridgetine nuns established at
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Twickenham by Henry V. in 1415 and removed here in 1431 .

End of Article: BRENTFORD
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