Ludgrove

Ludgrove, or Ludgrave, or Ludgraves, was an estate and farm in Middlesex between Monken Hadley in the west and Cockfosters in the east in what is now north London.

It was centered on Ludgrove Farm (the Blue House) near to Cockfosters.

At that time it consisted of a messuage (probably the farm house near Cockfosters) and 120 acres of land, 80 of wood in Hadley.

[3] At the start of the reign of Elizabeth I, Thomas Tyndale, later the member of Parliament for Marlborough, was living at Ludgrove when the estate was stated to have been formerly held by John Perte.

[4] It was later owned by Sir Roger Wilbraham who built almshouses in nearby Monken Hadley in 1612.