The eastern part of Surbiton, mostly built up between the wars. ‘Berry’ was a variant of the Old English ‘beorg’,
or barrow. The manor of la Bergh was recorded in 1241 and a licence granted the enclosure of land at Berowe in 1439. For almost
half a millennium the area was to remain in agricultural use, dominated latterly by two large farms – Berry Lodge, on
the Tolworth border, and Berrylands to the north. By the early twentieth century housing had begun to encroach on the fields
but the watershed event was the opening of the Kingston by-pass in 1927. Berrylands was soon being aggressively marketed as
a new suburban haven, marking the end of the dairy herd at Berry Lodge Farm and its supply of milk to Surbiton. Seven local
developers clubbed together to find over 90 per cent of the cost of Berrylands station, which opened in 1933. The following
year saw the creation of a small park with a swimming pool called Surbiton lagoon. The much-loved pool closed for repairs
in 1979, never to reopen. The site has been turned over to trees and grass, while the houses of Meldone Close have replaced
former tennis courts. Nearly 90 per cent of Berrylands’ residents are white. The proportion of one person households
is very high for a suburban district.
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