History of Staines-upon-Thames


History of Staines-upon-Thames in the historic county of Middlesex and Surrey County Council, England
relief in London Road, Staines, representing the town's Roman history
since the Norman Conquest, was Thomas Knyvet, 1st Baron Knyvet.
He arrested Guy Fawkes in the cellar of the Houses of Parliament when Fawkes was planting explosives to kill King James VI and I and was convicted of high treason while rough justice was dispensed on others alleged to have conspired. Knyvet's actions and those of the Catholic peer who was forewarned, and Edward Doubleday in preventing this intended murder are celebrated annually on Bonfire Night.
He was often seated in his earlier acquisition at Stanwell Manor, Stanwell and rented Knyvett House on the site of what later became 10 Downing Street, Westminster.
was the main crossing on the road from London to much of Hampshire and to the south-western counties.
It returned to use for transport to Salisbury, Winchester, north Hampshire, Southampton, Dorset, Devon and Cornwall from at least 1222 until the late 1940s. The town then became bypassed by long-distance road traffic using the Runnymede Bridge designed by Edwin Lutyens. It further became bypassed by long-distance traffic after the construction of the M4 in England in 1971 and most of the M3 by 1974.
and built 1892–94 with the aid of Sir Edward Clarke