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Looking For An Stamford Hill Plumber ? : Stamford Hill Emergency Plumbers have a team of engineers covering the whole of Stamford Hill and Its Surrounding Areas.
We provide an immediate response and particular attention to customer satisfaction, time, and quality of service.
Plumber Stamford Hill: If you are looking for a plumber our Stamford Hill plumbers have no call out charge.
Plumbing Stamford Hill: Stamford Hill Emergency Plumbers offer an honest competitvely priced service along with a reliable and punctual appointment system.
We will provide you with a fully qualified Stamford Hill Emergency Plumber at a reasonable cost.
Plumber In Stamford Hill: We offer "A Class" engineers to cover all of your Boiler, Plumbing, Central Heating, and Drainage needs.
Plumbing Repair Stamford Hill: We can offer you emergency plumbers in Stamford Hill on a genuine 24 hour, 365 day basis.
24 hour Plumbing Stamford Hill: Having a 24 hour, 365 day service means that we can provide a solution to your problem day or night.
Gas Safe Engineers Stamford Hill: All of our boiler engineers are gas safe registered in accordance with new legislation taken over from CORGI.
Central Heating Repair Stamford Hill: Our qualified heating and boiler engineers are main agent trained and fully approved.
Drain Clearance Stamford Hill: For blocked drains Stamford Hill is covered by our team of specialist fully equipped drainage engineers
Drain Repair: drain clearance, drain jetting or drainage repair? Our specialist team are on hand for all types of drain problems.
Stamford Hill, N15
Stamford Hill is a place in the north of the London Borough of Hackney, near the border with Haringey. It is home to one of Europe's largest Hasidic Jewish communities.
Stamford Hill lies on the old Roman road of Ermine Street, on high ground above Stoke Newington, where it crosses the road from the medieval village of Clopton (the modern Upper and Lower Clapton) into Hackney.
Development of the area began around 1800, and many prosperous dwellings were built around Stamford Hill over the next 100 years, including the residence of Samuel Morley MP. The London Road became a busy commercial centre to serve the needs of the burgeoning population. Around 1880, not only were railways serving the area, but this was the point where the tram systems coming north from the city, met the Hackney tram system, and so it became a busy interchange, with a depot opening in 1873. Electrification commenced in 1902, and by 1924 a service was commenced between Stamford Hill and Camden Town, along Amhurst Park.
Stamford Hill had many eminent Jewish residents including the Montefiore family. Italian-born Moses Vita Montefiore (d. 1789), lived there by 1763. His son Joseph (d. 1804) married Rachel Mocatta and his grandson Abraham Montefiore (d. 1824) married Henrietta, whose father the financier Nathan Meyer Rothschild lived near the modern Colberg Place, from 1818 to 1835. The Montefiores' property, a little farther south, was to be turned by Abraham's grandson Claude Montefiore into Montefiore House school. With the spread of building, such distinguished families moved away: in 1842 there were few of the wealthy Jews who had once settled in Hackney.
From the 1880s a new influx of Jews arrived in the area, escaping from the poverty of the East End, and in 1915 the New Synagogue was transferred to Stamford Hill to serve this growing population. In 1926 the Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations was established here, and this became a magnet for other strictly observant sects, many fleeing both Stalinist and Nazi persecution in the years before and after World War II. Also, many Jewish families came here from other areas of London, refugees in their own way from bombing and post-war clearances for housing.