While carrying out my New Year’s Resolution of having a bit of a tidy up/clear out, I was looking over my Blackfen research papers (I have boxes and boxes of them…), and I came across a copy of the Survey and Valuation of all the Rateable Property in the Borough of Bexley taken on 11 April 1822. It provides a fascinating snapshot of the Bexley area at that time.
Blackfen at that time was just a tiny hamlet. Its inhabitants consisted of:
BLACK FENN
James Townsend: house, garden and orchard (owned by James Townsend)
Edmund Newsted: house, garden and orchard (owned by James Townsend)
Thomas Tyler: farm house, barn, yard, stables, garden, orchard, arable and meadow land (owned by Lord Sidney)
Robert Ingram: farm house, yard, barns, stable, garden, arable and meadow land (owned by Messrs Day)
Thomas Warde: house and garden (owned by John Johnston, Esq.)
William Smith: house and garden (owned by John Johnston, Esq.)
Staples: house and garden (owned by John Johnston, Esq.)
Newsted: house and garden (owned by John Johnston, Esq.)
Foster: house and garden (owned by John Johnston, Esq.)
Near Black Fenn, on Danson land, were the Whale family living in a cottage with stable and garden. This fascinated me at the time because whale jaw bones had been discovered when Westwood Lane was made up in the 1930s. I had no idea what whale jaw bones were doing there and wondered if it was anything to do with this family named Whale!