Did you know that...
Heathrow was a hamlet in the ancient parish of Middlesex. In 1944, the buildings and everything were demolished to make room for the London Heathrow Airport. The settlement goes back to the Neolithic era. Artifacts, arrowheads, pottery fragments, and other items suggest that humans lived in this TW6 area since the early days. Remains of an Iron Age village were found here as well. The first Heathrow mention comes from the 15th century. The area was then called La Hetherewe. In the 16th century, 14 houses stood here. The nearby Duke of Northumberland’s River caused severe flood damage to the area in the 17th century. The residents unofficially blocked the river and petitioned to oppose the reopening.
Heathrow Hall farmhouse dates from the 18th century. It was the residence of the Tillyer family for the best part of the 19th century. Around 1900, Jonathan Swift bought the farmhouse and used it as a residence. The Old Magpies pub was demolished in 1951. Heathrow Airport Terminal 5 is built on the site of the Burrows Hill Close Estate that was taken down in 2001. Heathrow School was established in 1877 on Bath Road. The Mission Church of St. Saviour was built close to the school three years later. It was a corrugated iron construction.
The new Heathrow runway will be the first one to have been built in the southeast of London since World War II (the first new full-length runway). Heathrow Airport is one of the largest single-site workplaces in the UK. This West London airport is the world’s second-busiest airport by international traveler traffic. It’s the seven busiest by total traffic and Europe’s busiest by traveler traffic. Terminal 1 was built in 1968. Queen Elizabeth II attended the opening one year later. The terminal closed in 2015 to make more room for Terminal 2.