Metro-Land was reviewed in The Times on September 4th, 2004.
"Metroland is an evocative term. A kinder word than “suburbia”, and favoured by its eulogist John Betjeman, it is clearly defined geographically: it embraces those areas northwest of London in the counties of Middlesex, Hertfordshire and Buckinghamshire originally served by the Metropolitan Railway Company.
The name was invented in 1915 by the railway’s marketing chaps — even the trains’ brass doorplates were engraved “Live in Metroland” — to stimulate house-building for commuters outside London. These estate developments really took off after the end of the First World War, when the vast network of red-roofed boxes began to burgeon across London’s hinterland, north and south, in the 1920s. Developers obliterated medieval villages and linked ancient market towns into one homogenous suburban sprawl..."
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