Hackney Brook
The Hackney Brook is one of the subterranean rivers of London. Rising in Holloway, it crossed the northern parts of the current London boroughs of Islington and Hackney, before emptying into the River Lea at Old Ford in Tower Hamlets.
Course of the river
The brook rose in two sources, both close to Holloway Road in Islington, travelled past the old Arsenal stadium and then along Riversdale Road immediately to the west of Clissold Park.In Hackney, the river ran through the northern part of Clissold Park, where its course is now marked by two lakes. It crossed the artificial New River, which flowed at right angles to the brook and left the park to the south. The two Clissold Park lakes are now fed from the main water supply, not the brook.
It then wandered through Abney Park Cemetery. Isaac Watts used to enjoy spending time observing the island heronry on the Hackney Brook in the grounds of Abney Park, on which Abney Park Cemetery is today sited. It then went on to cross at the bottom of the road Stamford Hill to run along the north side of Stoke Newington Common. In the 1860s, at this point, builders found very early evidence of human occupation in the form of 200,000-year-old palaeolithic flint axes, which were being made on the banks of the brook. These are among the earliest human artifacts found in Britain.
From here, the brook followed the western side of Hackney Downs, then ran south-east to cross Dalston Lane and Mare Street in Hackney Central near Bohemia Place. Many 18th- and 19th-century illustrations show the ford here, which was at the bend in the road where the North London Railway bridge now crosses Mare Street.
In central Hackney, the brook was joined by the Pigwell Brook which flowed down from Dalston, roughly following the line of Graham Road. From Hackney Central it ran through Homerton, reaching Hackney Wick where it turned south, parallel to the Lea, before reaching Old Ford, where Victorian OS maps show a confluence with the Lea immediately south of the Northern Outfall Sewer and immediately north of what the maps show as the location of the former 'Old Ford' across the Lea.
In its heyday, until the late 1830s, the brook was a substantial river, 10 metres wide in full flood at Stoke Newington and perhaps 30 metres wide at its junction with the Lea.
Its course can be seen on some old maps .