North End, Hampshire

North End is a mainly residential neighbourhood in the middle of Portsea Island in Portsmouth, England. It developed rapidly after a horse-drawn tram route was opened between Portsmouth and Cosham. The area is composed of mainly late Victorian to early 20th-century buildings. It is bounded to the west by Stamshaw, to the south by Buckland and Kingston, to the east by Copnor and by Hilsea to the north.

Name

North End's name is derived from its origin as a northern expansion of the (then) village of Kingston, forming the "northern end" of Kingston.

Shopping, leisure and recreation

  • North End continues to support a wide range of small traders, supermarkets and other retailers, as well as a variety of pubs and budget fast food outlets.
  • The Odeon cinema, opened in the 1930s and built in the Art Deco style, was a prominent local landmark until its closure in January 2008. The building was designed by Andrew Mather.[1] The Odeon was turned into an OJs then turned into a Sainsbury's which has now been closed.
  • A public library operates near the junction of North End with Gladys Avenue.

Churches

There are two main Anglican churches in the area:

  • St Mark, Portsea, which is sited in Derby Road just off the main London Road shopping centre. The church stood from 1874 to 1970 on the corner of London Road with Derby Road, before being rebuilt in the late 1960s at its present site in Derby Road opposite the former site.
  • The Church of the Ascension in Stubbington Avenue, which was carved out of the old St Mark's Parish. The worship at this church is high Anglican.

There is also a Roman Catholic church on Gladys Avenue, Corpus Christi.

References

  1. Smith, Jane (2002). The book of Hilsea Gateway to Portsmouth. Halsgrove. p. 36. ISBN 1-84114-131-3.

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