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Metro-Land

British Empire Exhibition 1924 Edition

with a new introduction by Oliver Green
reviews and coverage

Metro-Land review in the London Review of Books, Vol. 26 No. 23, 2nd December 2004

In Evelyn Waugh’s Decline and Fall the society woman who ships girls to Rio is called Lady Metroland. Her husband, Viscount Metroland, takes his ‘funny name’ (as Paul Pennyfeather sees it) from a fantasy fiefdom of the London Metropolitan Railway, an advertising man’s conceit which tickled the imagination of the public in the 1920s. Metroland was the commuter catchment area for the line running north-west from Baker Street station through a string of ‘unspoiled’ arcadias and ancient pocket boroughs into the Chiltern Hundreds and the Vale of Aylesbury. The originators of successful brand names deserve to be remembered. According to Alan Jackson’s London’s Metropolitan Railway (1986), the name Metroland was the inspiration of James Garland, a copywriter in the company’s publicity department, who was laid up with flu but leapt out of bed in high Archimedean excitement when the name entered his head. The public first heard of Metroland in 1915, when the railway used it in a penny booklet listing country walks. The ultimate intention was not merely to attract rail passengers but to encourage residential building in areas cannily retained by the company’s Surplus Lands Committee. However, 1915 was hardly the time to embark on grand building projects. As a schoolboy at that time I played in half-built houses abandoned, with ladders and unemptied privies, by their builders, in whose homes window cards proclaimed: ‘This House has sent a Man to fight for King and Country.’ Those who came back from the wars were promised ‘homes for heroes’, but all too few heroes could afford to live in the sylvan recesses of Metroland, where ‘jaded vitality and taxed nerves’ were soothed away by pure air, and (as a song said) hearts were lighter and eyes were brighter...

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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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Metro newspaper Metro newspaper In conjunction with the London Transport Museum, the London Metro newspaper ran a promotion for their readers to win copies of Metro-land, published by southbank publishing.
 
Watford Observer newspaper Word doc of Watford Observer article [large file]
BookData
Pub Date:July 2004
Extent:144pp plus
20 colour photos,
50 B&W photos
and fold-out colour map
Format:Crown Octavo
(184 X 124mm )
Binding:Hardback
Price:£16.99
ISBN:1-904915-00-0
Territory:World