Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

When we first moved into our house, we found a Kelly's post office directory from 1935 in the attic which I unearthed again today. It lists all the addresses in the then Hornsey borough and who was the head of household.

Our house was occupied by Arthur Jackson for instance. What is also fascinating is that there was a synagogue on Wightman Road (the current church opposite the mosque) and a lot of residents with German or jewish names living on the ladder (remember, this was 1935).

The unfortunate resident of 26 Priory Gardens N6 was one Mrs Hitler, who I'm sure changed her name by 1939.

If you want to know who lived in your house or anyother address in 1935, just let me know.

Tags for Forum Posts: history of harringay, who lived in your house

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Great stuff, thanks.
Mr Henry Brown
Thanks for that Michael.
Hi I'm new to this site...But I do have a question? well more like a request!
Has anyone got any old photos of South Tottenham?..Seven Sisters, and in particular Stonebridge Road N16.
It's changed since I last remember it in the early 60s, it was a cobble street with old houses, and loads of character. now it's a Houseing Estate with no character...."Shame"!
Your best bet is probably to go to Bruce Castle where they'll certainly have some photos of the areas you're interested in. You need to make an appointment to get in to the archive room. Not sure where Stonebridge Road N16 is, but if it's Hackney then you'll need to visit their archive collection.
Hey Hugh ...

Stonebridge Road ran/runs? from Seven Sisters Road, just East of the Enfield - Liv.St. railway bridge, to Tottenham High Road and is of course in postal district N15 and not N16..
As it's name suggests it runs over the course of the Stonebridge Brook.

It was a street of regular Tottenham style terraced housing of differing styles.. There used to be a two storey factory (with wonderful enamel signs) at it's junction with Seven Sisters Road. All were swept away in the early 1970s.
Hi Stephen...Sorry my mistake.. your quite right Stonebridge Road is N15..not N16.
And yes it runs from Seven Sisters Road/through to South Tottenham Station.
Although you can't drive through anymore..theres only one entrance in and out, was'nt there an old church in Stonebridge Road..before they demolished the whole Street???
Also I'm very much interested in the old familys of Tottenham??? Also was'nt Jack Spot from
Tottenham?? I remember family connections.
Nice Talking to Tottenham Residents x
@ Michael... I think the Mrs Hitler was related.. I think she was the (ex?) wife of a half brother.. but don't quote me YET.. I seem to have lost the book where I found some info on her again.. She went to the USA or Canada before 1939..
That's interesting - not perhaps the notoriety we need for the area - but interesting.
Yes -- I read this recently too, in the Hornsey Gazette I think, but just googled and got this

Paddy Hitler, 26 Priory Gardens, N6 - The Times
Good find. Thanks for that. Have added the ref to the Wikipedia article on Highgate.
This is a quotation from the Times Online-Dec 15th 2007.

As it happens, for many years some of Hitler's closest relations were living in Britain. Keen to make a name in the safety-razor trade, his half-brother, Alois, moved to Liverpool. He set up home with Brigid, his Irish wife, in Toxteth. It was there, in 1911, that their son, William Patrick Hitler, was born. Sadly, Alois, who apparently had a bit of a temper, deserted his family. Returning to Germany, he married bigamously and while his sibling was ordering Europe around, Alois was running a tearoom in Berlin.

Between 1930 and 1939, home for Brigid and her son Pat was 26 Priory Gardens, Highgate. Those who knew “the Hitlers at No 26” spoke well of them. Even as Europe's skies darkened in 1938, the Führer's sister-in-law was cheerfully assuring The Daily Express: “Nowadays it's a bit embarrassing to be Mrs Hitler, but the people who know me don't mind, and the others don't matter.”

As late as 1972, The Times could confirm: “The Hitlers were good and friendly neighbours, according to people who still remember them in Highgate.” By then though, they had long since departed North London. Mrs H pre-empted a court summons for non-payment of rent set for the day that her brother-in-law invaded Poland by emigrating to New York. From there, she helped out with the British War Relief Society.

Pat Hitler also arrived in the United States, denounced “My Uncle Adolf” and served in the US Navy. But he had previously hoped to cash in on the Führer's fame in Germany rather than notoriety abroad. Moving to the Reich in 1933 and becoming a car salesman, he repeatedly approached his uncle hoping for preferment. When he was rebuffed and told to renounce his British nationality, he threatened to allege to the press that the family had Jewish antecedents. Soon persuaded that this would be unwise, he packed his bags and departed Germany.

After the war, the Hitlers settled in Long Island and opted for anonymity under an assumed name. Brigid died in 1969 and Pat in 1987, leaving behind his German-born wife and three children, Alex, Louis and Brian. None of these sons became fathers.

Only two mysteries remain. What possessed Pat Hitler to have his son Alex christened in 1949 with the middle name Adolf? And, given the Führer's admiration for the racial theorist, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, was it not unfortunate that the family adopted as its new surname Stuart-Houston?

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