Coney Hall

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Coney Hall
Location on map of Greater London
Location
OS grid reference: TQ394653
Latitude: 51.3699°
Longitude: 0.0016°
Administration
London borough: Bromley
County level: Greater London
Region: London
Constituent country: England
Sovereign state: United Kingdom
Other
Ceremonial county: Greater London
Historic county: Kent
Services
Police force: Metropolitan Police
Fire brigade: London Fire Brigade
Ambulance service: London Ambulance
Post office and telephone
Post town: WEST WICKHAM
Postal district: BR4
Dialling code: 020
Politics
UK Parliament:
London Assembly: Bexley and Bromley
European Parliament: London
London | List of places in London
The main shopping district.
Enlarge
The main shopping district.

Coney Hall is a suburban district, centred on the Coney Hill Estate, part of West Wickham in the London Borough of Bromley, England.

The typical architecture comprises two-storey houses with polygonal bay windows and half-timbered gables.

One of many owner-occupied estates arising during the inter-War housing boom, it was built in the 1930s on hilly farmland south of West Wickham bought by the developers, Morrell Brothers, from Coney Hall Farm. In the previous decade, opposition to road developments adjacent to West Wickham Common and Hayes Common had left the area accessible only by steep and narrow lanes. In Coney Hall's early days. London Transport refused to provide a bus service, and a free private coach service connected the estate to the nearest railway station, Hayes.

The estate achieved minor national prominence in the late 1930s via the legal disputes involving Jim and Elsy Borders, residents who headed a 1937 'mortgage strike' , withholding repayments in protest at the poor building quality. Although they ultimately lost, their case exposed abuses of the building society system and was one of the factors leading to its regulation by an amendment in 1939 to the Building Societies Act, 1874.

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