CAMBERWELL


'Camberwell' is a district of London, England, in the London Borough of Southwark. It is an inner-city district located 2.7 miles (4.3 km) southeast of Charing Cross. Its western edge borders the London Borough of Lambeth.

Contents
History
Camberwell today
Transport
Camberwell population
Hospitals
Art
Notable people born in Camberwell
Notable people who have lived and worked in Camberwell
Camberwell Beauty
Nearest places
Trivia
Other places called Camberwell
External links

History


The name Camberwell might derive from the old English Cumberwell or Comberwell, meaning Welsh well. Springs and wells are known to have existed on the southern slope of Denmark Hill, especially around Grove Park. Alternatively, the name Camberwell may have come from the Saxon language, meaning Cripple Well, which developed as a hamlet where people from the City of London were expelled when they had life threatening diseases like leprosy, for treatment by the church and the clean waters from the wells. It was already a substantial settlement with a church when mentioned in the Domesday Book, and was the parish church for a large area including Dulwich and Peckham.
Camberwell appears in Domesday Book as ''Cambrewelle''. It was held by Haimo the Sheriff (of Kent). Its domesday assets were: 6 hides and 1 virgate; 1 church, 8 ploughs, 63 acres of meadow, woodland worth 60 hogs. It rendered £14.[1]
Up to the mid-nineteenth century, Camberwell was visited by Londoners for its rural tranquillity and the reputed healing properties of its mineral springs. Like much of inner South London, Camberwell was transformed by the arrival of the railways in the 1860s. From 1899 to 1965 Camberwell was part of the Metropolitan Borough of Camberwell.

Camberwell today


Camberwell today is a mixture of relatively well preserved Georgian and twentieth century housing, including a number of tower blocks. Camberwell Grove and Grove Lane have some of London's most elegant and well preserved Georgian houses.
Camberwell Green

The crossroads at the centre of Camberwell is the site of Camberwell Green, a very small area of common land which was once a traditional village green on which was held an annual fair of ancient origin which rivaled that of Greenwich. The green was once a peaceful place, but, owing to the noise of passing traffic, now could not be described as peaceful. An extensive range of bus routes have stops at Camberwell Green (see the link to the bus spider map below for details).
Camberwell Leisure Centre

The Salvation Army's William Booth Memorial Training College, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott, was completed in 1932: it towers over South London from Denmark Hill. It has a similar monumental impressiveness to Gilbert Scott's other local buildings, Battersea Power Station and the Tate Modern, although its simplicity is partly the result of repeated budget cuts during its construction: much more detail, including carved Gothic stonework surrounding the windows, was originally planned.

Transport


Camberwell railway station on Camberwell Station Road, closed in 1916

Camberwell is connected to London by Camberwell Road and Camberwell New Road. It is very well served by bus routes: its location means that it is easy to travel into central London with journey times of 12-20 minutes, though often much longer in the rush hour. Camberwell railway station was closed in 1916 "temporarily" owing to the First World War but it never reopened. London Underground have planned to extend the Bakerloo Line from Elephant and Castle to Camberwell on at least three occasions since the 1930s, and this is again said to be under consideration.[1]
Nearest railway stations:

Loughborough Junction railway station

Denmark Hill railway station

Camberwell population


Camberwell College of Arts. (October 2005)

The local ethnic mix includes a large proportion of people of Caribbean and African descent, a Greek Cypriot community, and number of immigrants of Middle Eastern origin. Nestled within this thriving multicultural hotspot is the little known but highly celebrated Camberwell Institute of Literature and Arts. The area is also popular with art students, as it is home to the Camberwell College of Arts (part of the University of the Arts London - formerly the London Institute) on Peckham Road. King's College London (part of the University of London) also has a hall of residence (King's College Hall) on nearby Denmark Hill. Goldsmiths College is also found in nearby New Cross with many students living in Camberwell.

Hospitals


Camberwell is home to one of London's largest teaching hospitals, King's College Hospital with associated medical school the Guy’s King’s and St Thomas’ (GKT) School of Medicine.
The Maudsley Hospital, an internationally significant psychiatric hospital, is also located in Camberwell along with the Institute of Psychiatry.

Art


As well as the significant Camberwell College of Arts Camberwell is home to several art galleries including the South London Gallery and numerous smaller commercial art spaces. The annual Camberwell Arts Festival is well supported.

Notable people born in Camberwell



Pete Bennett

Jérôme Napoleon Bonaparte

Robert Browning

Joseph Chamberlain

Pat Coombs

Leslie Grantham

Patricia Hayes

Giant Haystacks

Benjamin Jowett

Boris Karloff

Timothy Laurence

Clement le Neve Foster

Anthony James Leggett

Martin McDonagh

Nosher Powell

Kenny Sansom

Edward Burnett Tylor

Claude Rains

Steven Walsh

Notable people who have lived and worked in Camberwell



Syd Barrett

The House of Love

Lord Avebury

Robert Browning

Jarvis Cocker who lived in a squat in Camberwell and frequently visited the art college in the early 1990s - Pulp's song 59 Lyndhurst Grove is about going to a party in Lyndhurst Grove on the Camberwell/Peckham border

Humphrey Lyttelton

Mike Leigh

Tim Roth

John Ruskin

Jack Jones

Jenny Eclair

Jeremy Bowen

Emma Thompson

Kenneth Branagh

Nicholas Serota

Albert Houthuesen

Robbie Coltrane

Howard Hodgkin

Richard Long

Antony Gormley

Michael Landy

Anish Kapoor

Euan Uglow

Bill Woodrow

Cathy de Monchaux

Gillian Ayres

Maggi Hambling

Gillian Wearing

Tom Phillips

Terry Jones

Bryan Ferry

Michael Caine

★ Steve Chandra Savale (guitarist and composer) Asian Dub Foundation

Lord Whitty of Camberwell

Zoe Williams

Erin O'Connor

John White

Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen

Jenny Agutter

Camberwell Beauty


Camberwell Beauty butterfly
The Camberwell Beauty is a butterfly (Nymphalis antiopa) which is rarely found in the UK - it is so named because two examples were first identified on Coldharbour Lane, Camberwell in 1748.

Nearest places



Brixton

Denmark Hill

Dulwich

Kennington

Peckham

Vauxhall

Walworth

Trivia



Jarvis Cocker frequently visited the art college in the early 1990s - Pulp's song 59 Lyndhurst Grove is about going to a party in Lyndhurst Grove on the Camberwell/Peckham border

Camberwell carrot" is the name of the enormous spliff rolled using 12 rolling papers, by Danny the dealer in the film Withnail and I. His explanation for the name is that "I invented it in Camberwell and it looks like a carrot".

Felix Mendelssohn stayed with relatives in 1842 and wrote a piano piece called 'Camberwell Green', whose popularity increased after it was renamed the 'Spring Song'.

W. S. Gilbert also made ironic mention of it in the comic opera, Trial by Jury.

Jenny Eclair's novel ''Camberwell Beauty'' is set in a house on Camberwell Grove.

Muriel Spark's novel, ''The Ballad of Peckham Rye'' also makes mention of places in and around Camberwell

★ UK dance act Basement Jaxx released a track called I Live in Camberwell

Other places called Camberwell



Camberwell is a small village in New South Wales, Australia.

Camberwell is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

External links



Camberwell Arts

Camberwell College of Arts

Camberwell Society

Minet Conservation Association

South London and Maudsley NHS Trust

SE5 Forum, a community group

The CamberwellOnline blog

Camberwell Environment

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