Robin Hood Ferry (River Lea): Difference between revisions

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robin-hood-ferry-river-lea-google-earth-street-view.jpg|Somewhere around here the Robin Hood Ferry would have taken its passengers across the Lea / Google Earth Street View.
robin-hood-ferry-river-lea-google-earth-street-view.jpg|Somewhere around here the Robin Hood Ferry would have taken its passengers across the Lea / Google Earth Street View.
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Revision as of 11:11, 15 May 2020

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Here the Robin Hood Ferry once took passengers across the Lea.

[[File:|thumb|right|500px|British Waterways. Robin Hood Ferry, Clapton (LL 5) (Enfield, Middlesex, [s.d.]). Photographic postcard (b./w.). 150 x 106 mm. / Private collection.]]

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-02-15. Revised by 18.224.0.25, 2020-05-15.

A ferry across the Lea was named after Robin Hood as early as 1810. At some point in the 19th century the ferry came to be operated by the publican at the Robin Hood Tavern at High Hill Ferry.[1] The ferry, which took people from Leyton to Clapton, ceased operating after WWII.[2]

While the reference to Robin Hood Ferry in the 1810 Old Bailey case summary (see Records below) most probably concerns the general area rather than the ferry itself, it clearly implies that the ferry was then named after Robin Hood. Template:PnItemQry

Gazetteers

Sources

Discussion

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Notes

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