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I've expanded this article, largely based on Gillian Clegg's excellent book on Chiswick. It still feels a bit light on contemporary description and heavy on history.
Sailing club
Strand on the Green has a sailing club that mostly sails on Sundays. I had heard it said when a child that the Island in the middle of the river was called Oliver's Island as Oliver Cromwell had hidden there at one point. Don't know if this was just local myth tho' Also local history - the riverside used to have a large number of boat builders (wharfs) and ferry crossings. —The preceding
unsigned comment was added by
135.196.1.86 (
talk •
contribs) 17:44, 29 October 2006.
river Thames → River Thames. This needs fixing throughout the article.
Fixed all.
Royal Family is capitalized inconsistently and linked at second mention. Also, I think the link should lead to the British Royal Family instead of just royal family in general.
Linked, and l/c for all.
Link Brentford.
Linked.
"could be called" → "was called"
Done.
Link The Constant Nymph and Pathé.
Linked.
"Zoffany House, is Grade II* listed" → What's the asterisk for?
The star means a bit up from ordinary Grade II in English Heritage's scheme of life, in other words a specially fine building.
Having two short paras start with "Next are" is repetitive.
Fixed.
"The actress Eileen Atkins and the novelist Margaret Kennedy, who set her bestselling 1924 work The Constant Nymph there." → Doesn't make grammatical sense.
Fixed.
What makes Hidden London a reliable source?
It's systematic, long-standing, and cites its sources properly.