Enfield Highway

It is roughly located in the area either side of Hertford Road (Enfield Highway) between Hoe Lane and The Ride.

[2] Enfield Highway is marked thus on the Ordnance Survey map of 1822, it is a settlement mainly from the eighteenth century named from the kings highe way leading to London 1610, the highway being the Roman road Ermine Street (now the A1010 Hertford Road).

[4] Thomas Ford in his history of Enfield (1873) records the existence in Enfield Highway of "a school for 160 boys, with a master's house, built in 1872, near the Church, under a certificated master and three pupil teachers" and a "girls' and infants' school at the Highway, for 260 children, taught by a certificated mistress, and four pupil teachers.

"[5] A public library, built with the aid of a grant from the Carnegie Foundation was opened Enfield Highway in 1910.

It comprised the whole of the parish of east of a line drawn at a distance of 150 yards to the west of the main road from Edmonton to Cheshunt.

St James' church