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Property Auction Uxbridge
Landmark Auctions UK Ltd was formed in 2006 to bring homeowners and businesses, individual and unique Sash Windows in Uxbridge. Our windows and doors are handcrafted at our fully equipped workshop in Barkingside, by joiners with exceptional experience and training. Members of our skilled team are FENSA registered.
Our company is renowned for combining the latest technology with traditional design to make elegant windows that stand the test of time. All our sash and casement windows perform high in terms of energy efficiency, and our doors meet high-security standards.
Auction Guide
These guides are to help you through the process of selling, buying and bidding at auction.
Sell Now
If you haven’t got time to wait for our next auction date to sell your property, we can offer you a free cash valuation.
Valuations
Interested in finding out much your property is worth? Our team are here to help with no obligation.
Online Auctions
Landmark Auctions have a wealth of experience in the property and auction industry and pride ourselves in offering the best service, whether you are selling or buying with us.
Our auctions are in-house, online and live streamed across the country. Each auction offers residential and commercial property, development, investments and land.
We will guide you through the auction with all the information you need.
Landmark Auctions – are focused
on selling property nationwide.
Facts about Uxbridge
General Info
Uxbridge is a suburban town in the historic County of Middlesex and the administrative headquarters of the London Borough of Hillingdon 15.4 miles west-northwest of Charing Cross. It is one of the major metropolitan centers identified in the London Plan. Historically formed as part of the parish of Hillingdon in the county of Middlesex and was a significant local commercial center from an early time.
Several historical events have taken place in and around the town. Including attempted negotiations between King Charles I and the Parliamentary Army during the English Civil War. The public house at the center of those events, since renamed the Crown & Treaty, still stands.
History of Uxbridge
The name of the town is derived from “Wixan’s Bridge”, which was sited near the bottom of Oxford Road where a modern road bridge now stands, beside the Swan and Bottle public house. The Wixan were a 7th-century Saxon tribe from Lincolnshire who also began to settle in what became Middlesex. Anglo-Saxons began to settle and farm in the area of Uxbridge in the 5th century, clearing dense woodland. Two other places in Middlesex bore the name of the Wixan: Uxendon (“Wixan’s Hill”), a name now preserved only in the street names of Uxendon Hill and Crescent in Harrow, and Waxlow (“Wixan’s Wood”) near Southall.
Archaeologists found Bronze Age remains (before 700 BC) and medieval remains during the construction of The Chimes shopping centre; two miles (3.2 km) away at Denham, Upper Paleolithic remains have been found. Uxbridge is not mentioned in the Domesday Book of the 11th century, but a hundred years later St Margaret’s Church, was built. The town appears in records from 1107 as “Woxbrigge”, and became part of the Elthorne Hundred with other settlements in the area.