Wood That Built London
A Human History of the Great North Wood
- author
- C. J. Schüler
- Narrator
- Nick Biadon
- Length
- 10 hours 2 minutes
- Publisher
- W. F. Howes
- Catalogue #
- 18625
- Categories
- History - British
- Reviews
- 0 star rating
- Sponsored
- The Lennox Hannay Charitable Trust
It is hard to imagine that the busy townscape of South London was once a great wood, stretching almost seven miles from Croydon to Deptford or that, scattered through the suburbs, from Dulwich to Norwood, a number of oak woodlands have survived since before the Norman Conquest. These woods were intensively managed for a thousand years, providing timber for construction, furniture and shipbuilding, and charcoal for London's blacksmiths, kilns and bakeries. Now they afford important green space, a vital habitat for small mammals, birds and insects.
Drawing on a wealth of documents, historic maps and environmental evidence, The Wood That Built London charts the fortunes of the North Wood from its earliest times: its ecology, ownership, management, and the gradual encroachment of the metropolis.
