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Great Eastern Railway to Shenfield. Shenfield

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The Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Shenfield
The railway from Brentwood Station arrives at Shenfield

Post to the south Hutton Mount

Alexander Lane
Shenfield High School. The school dates from 1962 and is now an ‘academy’. It was built by Essex County Council in 1959 as Shenfield County Technical School.
Alexander Lane Recreation Ground, sports fields.
Alexanders Farm and pond. This stood on the north side of the bend at the eastern end of the lane.  There were farm cottages across the road from it.

Chelmsford Road
Wynbarns Farm. This includes a 16th Barn which is Timber-framed,
and weatherboarded. The roof was retiled following Second World War damage.
The Rose Pub. This was a terrace of 4 cottages dating from around 1700. It was converted to a beer-house in the early 19th. The building is timber-framed and plastered.

Hunter Avenue
Car park –another large car park on the site of railway sidings to the west of the main line. This is also a work site for Crossrail.

Hutton Road
Shenfield Station. A station first opened here in 1843 but was closed for lack of passengers by 1850. It reopened in 1887 as Shenfield and Hutton Junction. It had three platforms along with extensive goods sidings. A brick water tower stood south of the platforms. The platforms are on an embankment and the original ticket hall was at ground level below the embankment on Hutton Road. It dated from 1888, when the Great Eastern Railway added the loop line destined for Southend on the west side of the main line. In the 1930s two more platforms were added and a new signal box replaced a box which had stood on the platforms. The station front was rebuilt in a sort of modern style in the 1970s. But the late 19th platform buildings and canopies remain on the island platform and western platforms. Some carriage sidings remain to the north of the station
Railway Bridge
Possible Second World War Spigot Mortar Emplacement, on the east side of the railway, beside southern wall of the railway bridge

Long Ridings
Long Ridings Primary School.

Mount Avenue
Herrington House ‘Preparatory’ School. This private fee paying school was founded in 1936 as a private day school.
Masonic Hall. This now includes Mount Avenue Banqueting Suite. The Hall was built in 1925 and 15 different lodges hold their meetings there. The temple is laid out with a large black and white rug called the Square Pavement, with the black squares representing the lows in life and the white the highs. The master's chair stands as the focus of the room with candle holders either side.

Railway
The Southend loop line diverges from the main line and descends from embankment to ground level running to the west. In the next square it passes under the main line of the east

Rayleigh Road
Hutton Junction Hotel. This has been called just The Hutton, and now The Hutton Junction. Pub which probably dates from the 1880s.
Bishops Hill. Adult Community Learning College run by Essex County Council. This was the school hall of a residential home built in 1905 for destitute children from the London Borough of Poplar. It closed in 1982.


Sources
Brennand. Ilford to Shenfield
Brentwood Gazette. Web site
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Essex County Council. Web site
Crossrail Archaeological Impact Assessment. Web site
Long Ridings Primary School. Web site
Shenfield High School. Web site

Great Eastern Railway to Chingford. Bethnal Green

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Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Chingford
The Great Eastern Railway turns north from East Junction and Bethnal Green Station

Post to the south Three Colt Lane
Post to the west Bethnal Green

Ainsley Street
Flats.  The area was cleared of its 18th housing in 1868-1880 for blocks of Sydney Waterlow's Improved Industrial Dwellings Co. This was his company's first attempt on this scale with five-storey blocks on both sides of the street. They were selectively demolished in 1985.


Bethnal Green Road The road linked the Green with the edge of the City as housing spread from Spitalfields and Shoreditch in the late 17th.
379 The Old George. This is stucco-trimmed and balustraded one of the oldest surviving pubs in Bethnal Green originating probably in 1703.  It has modern board fascias: 'TRUMAN FINE ALES ... LONDON BREWERS SINCE 1666', plus eagle illustrations. It was the first pub to be owned by Balls Brothers in the 1860s
423 Bar Valente. This was Bohola House, a pub which with a stone plaque at first floor level with a winged tankard over the date 1767 - an old Charrington's logo. It seems originally to have been called The Albion. Bohola is a town in Ireland.
441 The Sun. This pub dates from before 1870 but closed in 2013. Reopened as a cocktail bar,
449 Quicksilver. Amusement ‘park’. The Yoga place is on the upper floors.  It was previously Wolchovers hardware manufacturers who owned the site from the mid 19th
456 Misty Moon. This was the Camden’s Head, when it was a Wetherspoon's pub, and before that the Lord Camden, when it was Charrington’s. It was established in 1766 but rebuilt, probably in 1864 by Edward Brown.
458 Former police station of 1917. The building by John Dixon Butler is an enlarging and re-fronting an earlier station of 1892 by his father, John Butler. It now belongs to the Providence Row Housing Association. This is a is a small, specialist housing association focused on the East End of London Providence Row Housing Association former Police Station.  Now with a rather severe domestic iron and two bow windows, stone faced on the ground floor. In the back yard are two-storey married quarters and a section house in yellow brick with three short pointed gables. Now flats
460 The Shakespeare. This pub has a 1890s glazed green faience front on an older pub. It has signage on the gable with lettering on cream tiles 'THE SHAKESPEARE ... TRUMAN HANBURY, BUXTON & COY LTD'. There is 'STOUT MILD ALE PORTER' written on a frieze above the door.  It is now a Greene King house.
462-464 La Forchetta in what was Lupin House. This includes a 19th clothing warehouse with an arcaded front and terracotta tiles beneath the top floor windows.
463 City View House.  Flats in what was a red brick bakery for Kearley & Tonge converted in the late 1980s. As International Stores, Kearley and Tonge opened their bakery here in 1906.
465 HSBC. This was built as the London City & Midland Bank by T.B. Whinney in 1905. It is on a corner site to be conspicuous
464a English and Son. Funeral directors. The building appears to be a hall, and connected with the Congregational Church behind
473 The Ship. This closed in 2000 and has been used as a shop, but the pub sign remains
488 the corner with Gale's Gardens has a shop front with pilasters. It was built for the Sun Life Insurance Company in 1882 by A. & C. Harston who also carried out slum clearance here for the Bethnal Green House Property Association
Great Eastern Railway bridge. This dates from 1893 and built by the Horseley & Co., Staffordshire.
502 Salmon and Ball.. The pub dates from at least 1733 and two weavers were hung in public outside in 1769 as a result of the Cutters Riot. The current listed building is late 19th.
Street Market. Some stalls remain on the south side of the road


Birkbeck Street
Sunlight Square. Flats on the site of part of the Allen and Hanbury's, later Glaxo, factory.
Site of Meeting House on the north corner with Cambridge Heath Road. This was founded in 1662. In 1771 John Kello was pastor and it became known as Kello's Meeting House. Then In 1819 he opened a Congregational chapel on the corner of Birkbeck Street. In then sold to a William Ellis as the Birkbeck school, Which George Lansbury attended.  In 1882 it became the church hall for St. Andrews and in 1928 rebuilt as the church of St Francis. The site is now the electricity transformer station.
Transformer Station. This was built by the LEB in the 1950s. In 1997 it was used as a committee room and offices for London Borough of Tower Hamlets.


Cambridge Heath Road
The name of Cambridge Heath is first recorded in 1275. This end of the road was known as ‘Dog Row’ and was first built up from about 1700.
255 This was the East End District Office for the London Electricity Board built in 1959 by Watson and Coates. It consisted of showrooms, offices, workshops and canteens.  It passed into the ownership of London Borough of Tower Hamlets, post privatisation and now they want to pull it down. In the meantime it is used as offices and for voluntary sector projects.
287 City View Hotel. This was the Green Man Pub which was present by 1750. It was rebuilt in 1885 and closed in 2002.Its green tiled frontage and Truemans signage was removed and covered in cream render. It was a fish and chip shop by 2004 and now a hotel.
289 New Life Bible Church. This began in the home of Pastor Joshua Jama and his wife Toyin in 1989. The church started in Hackney, in 1991 along with a counselling centre for the homeless, unemployed and needy people of that area which was called Sanctuary Church. In 1996, a building was acquired in Bethnal Green and in 1988 the name changed to Good News Assembly and in in 2006, the name was changed to New Life Bible Church.
305 Bethnal Green Mission Church. This is The Annie Macpherson Home of Industry. Annie was a friend of Dr Barnardo. She opened a ‘home of industry’ in 1866 to help people to read and write and to get medical attention. Initially this was work with workers in the match industry and the project also arranged for children to be sent to Canada.  They concentrated on medical work from 1925.  The present building dates from 1952 as a medical practice under the National Health Service and a church was also established here.
313 Flats in what was a three storey warehouse and office building formerly used by Balls Brothers Wine Merchants and built in brown brick in 1973.
339 Dundee Arms. Pub. A sunken hook on the right hand side of the entrance is for handling barrels in and out of the cellar.


Canrobert Road
40 General Canrobert Pub. This dated from around 1870 and closed after the Second World War.  Canrobert was a 19th French military gentleman.


Clarkson Street
Middleton Green. Open space which includes what was Canrobert Street Open Space. There is a ball games area, pathways and play facilities.


Derbyshire Street?
Oxford House Settlement. This was opened by Oxford undergraduates and The building is from 1890-2 by Sir Arthur Blomfield and Refurbished 1999-2002 by All Clear Designs Limited It  was commissioned by Rev. Winnington-Ingram, later Bishop of London, as 'a house to hold twenty residents . . . along with a lecture room, classrooms and club premises'. Oxford House began in 1884 set up by staff and students of Keble College and New College as a rival to the Universities Settlement at Toynbee Hall. In 1886 they founded the Federation of Working Men's Clubs and helped various recreational and educational clubs in the East End.  It now functions as an arts and community centre.


Ellsworth Street
Flats by Howes & Jackman for the London County Council from 1948-9 and extended 1957-62 around a square.
64 Duke of York. This pub was closed in 2006 and has since been demolished. It had 'WINES ... TRUMANS ALES & STOUT ... SPIRITS' painted out on the ground floor fascia; and a small Truman's lantern.


Hollybush Gardens
Joshua Galvin Academy. Hairdressing training school.
BJ house. Building containing offices and other units including an art gallery
Lead Works. This stood on the east side of the road at the north end. Henry Grace was making white lead here by 1828 and in 1901 Henry traded there as colour manufacturers and makers of white lead. They had closed by 1921.
Iron foundry, this lay behind the houses on the east side in the late 19th
Timber yard. Thos lay on the east side at the south end in the late 19th.
East London Silk Mills. This was owned in 1851 by John Warner. Warner and Sons was founded in 1870 as Warner, Sillet & Ramm by Benjamin Warner although The Warner family had been involved in the silk industry since the 17th, manufacturing traditional patterns. Benjamin Warner was interested in contemporary design and the firm supplied Liberty & Co, Collinson & Lock and Debenham & Freebody. By 1872 by Warner & Ramm employed in- and out-workers who produced furniture silk. In 1893, the Duchess of Teck visited the factory and commissioned them to make the finest white silk for the forthcoming royal wedding. The company moved to Braintree in 1895and specialised in high-quality textiles. The company ceased weaving in Braintree in 1971, but examples of fabrics produced there are held at the Warner Textile Archive.
Hollybush Urban Growers. This is an offshoot of the Rocky Park Community Garden and is managed by tenants of the Hollybush Estate. Tower Hamlets Homes planted an orchard consisting of about 30 young fruit trees, including apple, plum, peach and greengage.


Mansford Street
Chalice Foundation. Garratt Centre. This was a Unitarian church but originally it was Congregational. It was built in 1871 and designed by R. Church in brick. Inside is a tile mosaic which is an example of opus sectile work. It was unveiled in 1903 to commemorate Miss Elizabeth Jaqueline Garrett and is called "Emblemic of Charity". It scene shows two women helping the poor and destitute. It is attributed to Henry Holiday. The chapel began in a group around the London City Missioner James T. Bennett. They leased the Mansford Road site and built the chapel but divisions led to its sale. The chapel was bought by the London District Unitarian Society as a mission in 1889. It was reconstructed as Chalice foundation 1985 and in 1989 became a community centre and with activities for. Church Action with Unemployment and the Rathbone Society. It was converted to the Garrett centre acting for the community
Manse. This is attached to the chapel and now part of the Garrett Centre
Community House. This is part of Lawdale School
Lawrence Primary School.  This opened in 1883 as Mansford Street Board School but was renamed Lawrence by 1905. It was designed by E.R. Robson, with a straight, sheer facade with tall windows. After the Second World War it was reorganised for juniors with a nursery class by 1964.  In 1975 it was amalgamated with Teesdale Primary to form Lawdale Primary School
Lawdale School. This was formed in 1975 by amalgamating Lawrence and Teesdale Primary Schools in the old Lawrence buildings.  There is one new building.
Charles Dickens House.22 storey tower block built in 1969.
Excelsior Swimming Baths and Hall. This was on the corner with Florida Street. It was built in 1889 as the Excelsior Hall & Swimming Baths by A. Wooster Reeves and from 1898 was owned by Oxford House Settlement. It was later converted into a cinema.
Excelsior Kinema. This was the Excelsior Hall & Swimming Baths which in 1921 was converted into the Excelsior Kinema, by Emden & Egan with later work in 1926 by Frank Matcham and Co. The floor of the pool became the stalls, making use of the slope from shallow to deep end, with access by the original stone steps leading to the floor of the pool. The walkway round the pool was an intermediate balcony the old cast iron observation balcony above. The programmes were films plus variety. In 1939 it was remodeled again in Art Deco style by Maple & Co. It screened Bollywood films until its demolition in 1969. There is now housing estate on the site.

Middleton Street
Bethnal Green Nature Reserve. Phytology medicinal field is in the North West corner. St Jude’s was built in 1842 but destroyed in Second World War bombing. The ruins remained untouched becoming wilder and wilder. Eventually local people Helped by the Environment Trust started to clear the land. In the late 1990s Teesdale and Hollybush Tenants and Residents Association took responsibility for the site. Since they changed its name to Bethnal Green Nature Reserve.


Old Bethnal Green Road 
The road was once called the Driftway and it has been speculated that it was the Roman Road to the Lea. In 1747 it is shown on the Roque map as Coats's Lane, a track skirting the boundary of Coats' Farm.
Mansford Secondary School. This was opened in 1896 and built by T.J. Bailey as a senior section Mansford Street Board School. In 1906 it was reorganised as a Higher Elementary school and as a Central School in 1911 in an attempt to provide technical training in an industrial district. After the Second World War it became Mansford Secondary Commercial and Technical School until it was amalgamated with Daniel Secondary to form Daneford School in 1959
Daneford Comprehensive School was formed in 1959 by the amalgamation of Daniel and Mansford Secondary schools.  The upper school was in the Mansford buildings but the school eventually moved to new buildings
St. Bernard's Roman Catholic Secondary Comprehensive school was formed 1965 by amalgamating three schools. The middle school moved to the former Daneford premises in Mansford Street. In 1991 the school moved elsewhere and the site was used for Oaklands School.
Oaklands School. This opened as secondary school on the site of St. Bernard's School in 1991. It has a central block with a single-storey hall and classroom with wings for workshops. It is linked by a bridge across Bethnal Green Road to an Arts Building which was designed by Edwin Brear Associates in 1994
43 The Flower Pot Pub.  This was a Charrington’s house established by 1872 and rebuilt in 1908.  The building is now converted for use as offices.
67 The Kings Arms pub was there in 1856 and closed in 2001.  It was a Watney’s house and is now flats.
Saint Jude's Church. This was built 1846 by Henry Clutton, It church supported a young men's association, provident society and library and much else. Mission services and open air services were also held. The church was destroyed in Second World War bombing and demolished.
St. Jude's Church of England Secondary school was opened by 1846 as a Sunday school in the old chapel. A day school was built plus a teachers' house east of the church in 1846 with a parliamentary grant and was passed to the National Society in. 1848. After many uncertain years a new bldg. opened in 1895. Under the London Plan of 1947, it was reorganised in a new building on the same site as a voluntary assisted Church of England school. It was amalgamated with the Raine's Foundation in 1977 and used for the lower school.
Raines Foundation School. This is the latest school of that originally founded in 1719 by Henry Raine. It is a Church of England voluntary aided school. Henry Raine lived in Wapping, and created a school where poor children could get an education for free. In 1719 the school was opened but it has moved many tines. In 1977, Raine's merged with St Jude's Secondary School and became a comprehensive school and in 1985, the lower school for years 7 and 8 moved to Old Bethnal Green Road.
118 Dover Castle Pub. This was a Truman’s house pub and was present by 1866.  It closed in 2005 and later used as a snooker club.  It has since been demolished.

Paradise Row
Part of Cambridge Heath Road. But stands slightly back from the road behind part of the original green. 
2-11 terrace built in 1800, although there have been some substantial alterations.
3 Blue plaque to Daniel Mendoza the prize-fighter who lived here. He was Champion of England and defended his title in 1790 in a fight lasting 72 rounds; he founded a Boxing Academy in the City of London and wrote ‘The Art of Boxing’ in 1789. 
5 home of Mary James from 1900 that came here to use her fortune to assist the needy. She was the first woman to preside over a Metropolitan Poor Law body and a borough councillor from 1919 to 1922, representing the Progressive Party, and then the Liberals 1928-31
Paradise Gardens. A small strip of land that once formed part of the Bethnal Green common land. This was the west paddock let to a gardener. Paradise Gardens today consists of a strip of grass with plane trees, seats and a curving path running through it and it is enclosed by railings.

Pott Street
Horwood Estate. This was cleared by the London County council in the 1930s and large blocks built, which remain
Pott Street Chapel. The Chapel and schools were built by John Tarring in, 1849, for Calvinistic Independents. The remains consist of a ragstone tower, a school below and meeting room. It was much damaged by Second World War bombing. The Ground floor was adapted for worship in 1985 for Praxis, a United Reformed church; with new flats and offices adjoining.
Bethnal Green Meeting House. United Reform Church
Praxis was founded in 1983, by the Robert Kemble Trust.  A legacy of the late Robert Kemble to help pursue social justice rooted in Christianity.

Punderson’s Gardens
Named for Capt. Jonathan Punderson who built this area up in 1783

Sources
Bethnal Green Mission Church. Web site
Brewery History Society. Web site
British History online. Bethnal Green. Web site
Business Cavalcade of London
CAMRA City and East London Beer Guide
Clarke. Glimpses of Ancient Hackney and Stoke Newington
Closed Pubs. Web site
Clunn. The Face of London
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford.
East London History Society. Newsletter
GLIAS Newsletter
Grace’s Guide. Web site
Great Eastern Railway Journal
Kimber. William Nicholson
Lawdale School. Web site
London Borough of Tower Hamlets. Web site
London Gardens Online. Web site
London Encyclopaedia
Nairn.  Nairn’s London
New Bible Church. Web site
Oaklands School Web site
Pevsner and Cherry. East London
Pevsner and Cherry. London North
Pub History Web site
Raines Foundation School. Web site
Skyscraper News. Web site
TBIAGC A Survey of Industrial Monuments of Greater London
The Green
The Warner Silk Mill in Braintree. Web site
TourEast. Leaflet

Great Eastern Railway to Chingford Cambridge Heath

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Great Eastern Railway to Chingford
The Great Eastern Railway continues northwards from Bethnal Green Station and East Junction.

Post to the south Bethnal Green

Andrews Road
48-50 Beehive Works, James Hoyles and Son. This is a working iron foundry on the site of an old timber yard. They claim to have been founded in 1880
50-53 warehouses are the former Ashmore’s Furniture Works


Bishops Way
15 George and Dragon Pub. Open by the 1860s and closed after the Second World War
Printing works north side behind houses


Cambridge Crescent
Some addresses in this street were once in Felix Street.
Peabody flats built in 1910
25 Duke of Cambridge. Pub now closed but latterly a Belhaven Brewery house.


Cambridge Heath Road
172 Odeon Cinema, This was close to the Bethnal Green Museum and opened as the Museum Cinema in 1912. It was closed in 1931 for internal re-construction by Leslie H. Kemp. It was taken over by the independent Eastern Cinemas Ltd in 1936 and in 1943 taken over by Oscar Deutsch’s Odeon Theatres Ltd. Chain and renamed in 1950. It closed in 1956. It was demolished and Mayfield House was built on the site
210-214 Allinson Ltd. Ever since the industrial revolution most flour was produced using roller mills which meant that many nutrients and fibre were lost. Dr. Thomas Allinson purchased his own stone-grinding flour mill in Bethnal Green, to produce whole meal flour. He set up The Natural Food Company under the slogan ‘Health without medicine’, and began baking bread. Because of his theories he was struck off the medical register, but Allinson Flour became successful and famous.
Cambridge Heath Road Infirmary. In 1882, the Local Government Board imposed restrictions of the
numbers of patients in Bethnal Green’s workhouse sick wards and thus created a need for a separate infirmary. A site was selected on Cambridge Heath Road and purchased from the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews, in 1896 the infirmary was commissioned from Giles, Gough and Trollope and built in brick Thomas Rowbotham of Birmingham and opened in 1900. It was intended mainly for the chronically ill. In 1915 the military authorities took over the building for wounded soldiers and it became the Bethnal Green Military Hospital under the London District Command.  Patients and staff returned in 1920 and a wider range of services were added, including an Orthopaedic Clinic for ex-servicemen with damaged joints. There was also a VD clinic. The LCC took control in 1930 and in 1948 it joined the NHS as the Bethnal Green Hospital   From 1977 it changed from acute to geriatric care.  In 1990 the Hospital closed following protests and demonstrations from staff. All buildings have been demolished except for the administration block. The Victoria Park Housing Association redeveloped the site with houses and flats by Baily Garner, 1990-3.
Administration block. This is the only remaining building of Bethnal Green Hospital. The clock from
the demolished Chapel belonging to the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews was installed on the tower. This block once contained the medical officer's residence and office, the dispensary, the chaplain's office, matron's sitting room and bedroom, accommodation for 80 nurses and 12-14 female servants, along with the kitchen, staff dining room and storerooms.  The basement was used for storage of coal, firewood and heavy goods.
220 Cambridge Court. Cambridge Heath Estate. Housing on the corner of Parminter Street designed by E.C.P. Monson in 1926-7 for Bethnal Green Council.  The estate was originally called the Lenin Estate but the incoming liberal–progressive admin¬is-tration changed the name to the Cambridge Heath estate in 1928.
Cambridge Heath Station. This lies between London Fields and Bethnal Green stations on the Greater Anglia Railway. It was opened in 1870 south of the bridge over the Regent’s Canal with two platforms and has since been much remodelled. The original part, on the side of the line facing Clare Street, had blind windows and curved gables.  Two more tracks were added on the viaduct in 1894 but there were no extra platforms here. A new street level building was added. It was closed as a wartime economy between 1916 and 1919.  The downside platforms were removed in the 1960s.  It was burnt down in 1984 and closed for two months and then closed again while it was rebuilt and reopened in 1986.  Everything was then removed and replaced by small modern shelters.  Currently Chingford bound trains do not stop here/
Signal Box. This was at the north end of the station platforms and closed in 1935.
222-226 Warehouse and factory building. The upper three storeys have big windows. This belonged
to L. Silberston & Sons, long established in Cambridge Heath Road, specialized in uniforms for a many military units including the Royal Horse Guards and the Air Ministry. They also supplied civilian uniforms including for the post office.   Were there until early 1960s
234 Metropolis. This was The Arabian Arms pub established by 1869 and rebuilt in 1902.  It was a Watney’s house.  It was renamed Beachcomber by 1983, then called Martin’s and by 1993 was Metropolis, a ‘gentlemen’s club’.
236 this was the White Horse pub. It was a Whitbread pub, present by 1872 and rebuilt in 1888.  It closed in 2005.  .
244-254 Cambridge House.  London Essex International College. Also snooker hall in what appears to be an old industrial building.
260 Bestway.  This is a large site comprising frontages and addresses in surrounding road.  In the 19th and early 20th this was a saw mill but was later a haulage depot and a printer.
349 Tower Hamlets Labour Party
393 This was the Red Deer Pub opened before 1817.  This was a Watney’s house but is now Homefinders Estate Agents since closure in 2006
505 The Hare. This pub is said to have been present by 1800


Canal
This is the Regent's Canal which runs just north of central London to provide a link from the Paddington arm of the Grand Union Cana to Limehouse Basin and the Thames.
Gas Holders for The Imperial Gas Company together with a wharf. The holders are in Marion Street. An inlet ran into the site from the canal.
National Grid Pumping Station.  In 1979 the Central Electricity Generating Board installed underground 400 kV cables in a trough below the towpath and they now form part of the National Grid. Pumped canal water is circulated as a coolant for the high-voltage cables and there is a pumping station on the towpath here.
Railway Bridge on the line leaving Cambridge Heath station over the canal
Oblique brick arch on the south side of the canal between the two bridges was the entrance to a basin which served a timber yard running south west from the canal.
Mare Street Bridge.  Road bridge over the canal


Claredale Street
Keeling House.  Rising assertively, belongs to the post-war age. It was built in 1955-9 by Denys Lasdun of Fry, Drew, Drake & Lasdun, and is a sixteen-storey 'cluster' block. Two-storey maisonettes are in four stacks linked at angles by bridges to a service core. By 1993 Tower Hamlets had evacuated the block, for structural reasons ad it was refurbished for private owners in 1999-2001 by Munkenbeck & Marshall, with Lasdun as consultant; they added a penthouse and a glass entrance with a bridge over a pond and stream.
Bradley House. This was a slab block by Denys Lasdun & Partners, with purple tile facings. It has been replaced by a mix of new housing by Designed by Karakusevic Carson Architects,
Claredale House. Council housing, by E.C.P Monson, 1931-2.  This is now student accommodation.


Corbridge Crescent
5-10 Containerville. Upcycled shipping containers to turn into offices
3 Empress Coach Hire.  Founded in 1922 and here with ‘extravagantly derelict premises’. Edward Thomas Stanton was a bus driver who bought his bus in 1923 and created a fleet operating from a yard in London Fields. In 1927, he bought the property in Corbridge Crescent but when the buses were nationalised in 1933, he made £35,000 from the sale and changed the business from buses to coaches. At first, the bodies of the vehicles were removed in the winter to convert to flat trucks out of season. They were requisitioned in the Second World War to drive personnel around airfields in Norfolk. There were six beanos every Saturday in the summer but there are very few now.
Corbridge Works. Socialist Worker Printers and Publishers

Emma Street
Royal Mail. Bethnal Green delivery office.
Lewis Milk Supplies. Dairy and delivery service


Hackney Road
Appears at least in part to have been pre-Roman,
501/505 Chandler's Wiltshire Brewery. Charles Porter and William Henry Dieseldorff, trading as Chandler & Co, operated the brewery in Hackney. A 120 foot chimney was added in 1895. Closed in 1911 with 35 tied houses and a half share went to Charringtons.  The buildings are still standing, in other use, and front onto Grove Passage.
408 Durham Arms. Pub dating from at least 1814. Closed 2007. This was a Trueman’s house and features some Trueman’s signage.
460 Norfolk Arms. This pub closed 2007 and is now a restaurant.


Marion Place
Pritchards Road Day Centre.  Local authority centre for those with mental health issues.
Imperial Gas Light and Coke Co.  Gas holders here are on a site used as a holder station for the Imperial Gas Company’s Haggerston works. It is still in British Gas use but the holders have been decommissioned. The site here was purchased in 1853 and originally contained a large pond, and an inlet with a lime wharf alongside. There were originally four holders here but the oldest now was built in 1865-6 by Joseph Dark, the company's engineer. The ironwork was cast by the Staveley Co. of Derbyshire. It has Two tiers of girders and 16 cast-iron columns It’s much taller neighbour was built in 1888-9 by after the Imperial had been taken over by the Gas Light and Coke Co., by their engineer, George Trewby in lattice steelwork.


Minerva Street
Peabody Estate. This estate is crammed into a wedge of land of which Minerva Street is one of the constituent streets. The estate has eight blocks, inward facing to a courtyard later used as a playground. It dates from 1910 and said to be the first by Peabody Estate with large 'numbers of self-contained flats. It continues the radiation of the simple elevations developed by Darbishire in the Trust's buildings of the 1860s, albeit in a red brick. The stair towers go above the roofline with ironwork surrounds.  An extension is in the next generation of Peabody Trust's design, by Victor Wilkins, 1915-16.
Estate office added in matching style, in 1998.


Mowlem Street
Industrial premises many of which are now in use as art galleries of various sorts.
Mowlem Street School. Originally the school fronted onto Mowlem Street. It opened in 1887 as Mowlem Street Board School and has been extended and altered since. After the Second World War it was reorganised for juniors and with nursery s class by. A new single-storeyed building was opened in 1971.


Old Bethnal Green Road
Minerva Estate. This was the London County Council’s first large deelopment in 1946- after the Second World War.  It had 253 dwellings in long, three- and four-storey blocks, named after Greek heroes. It was built by the London County Council Valuer's Department under Cyril H. Walker, based on plans by J.H, Forshaw. It used a rapid construction technique of concrete slabs laid on load-bearing concrete walls. The blocks were refurbished in 2003 with pitched roofs and lift towers.


Palestine Place
The Bethnal Green hospital was built on land purchased from the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews.   The site had previously contained a chapel - the Episcopal Jews' Chapel - and had been known as Palestine Place.


Parmiter Street
This was once called Gloucester Street
Almshouses. In his will of 1682, Thomas Parmiter left money for six almshouses in Bethnal Green and for the building a school. The first Parmiter's Almshouses were off Brick Lane in 1722 but in 1839, the Almshouses moved here. They were destroyed by a V2 rocket in 1945. The almshouses were rebuilt in Clacton.


Patriot Square
Town Hall Hotel. This was as Bethnal Green Town Hall and is in two sections. The old Town Hall was opened in 1910 for the new borough of Bethnal Green the wing fronting Patriot Square was opened in 1939. It remained the Town Hall when London Borough of Tower Hamlets was set up but moved to Mulberry Place in 1993. The original building was designed by Percy Robinson and W Alban Jones offices, council chamber, mayor's parlour and committee rooms. The 1939 extension it was to the designs of E C P Monson and was never completed. There is a seated female figure and cherubs by Henry Poole to represent the Council protecting the industries of the Borough and there is also is a figure of Justice with sword and scales. The 1930s extension has a relief of the Blind Beggar over the entrance. Inside the hall and staircase is in green, grey and white marble. The council chamber has heraldic glass including the arms of Middlesex, Gresham, the City of London and De Bathonia and rhere are Pillars with motifs of Truth and Happiness, Industry and Temperance, also by Poole.  It is now a hotel.


Poyser Street
Road running alongside railway arches which house small businesses, workshops and the ubiquitous art galleries


St.Jude’s Road
Beatrice Tate School. This began as a voluntary enterprise in Bethnal Green Godsends. A new building for handicapped children here was authorized in 1967 and designed by John D. Hume, Tower Hamlets Borough Architect. It opened in 1970 as Junior Training Centre by Tower Hamlets Social Services and later transferred to the Inner London Education Authority. It is single storey with timber shell-dome over the hall and there is also, coloured tile work on the theme of 'the Silk Road' by Freeform Arts Trust 1997. The school has moved in 2013 to Southern Grove and to a new building

Teesdale Close
Four-storey dwellings of the type erected by philanthropic companies with open stair- cases, cast-iron balustrades and two self-contained dwellings per unit,


The Oval
Lithuanian Church St Casimir's Roman Catholic.  This was first established in 1899 in Cable Street and moved here in 1912. It has a: four-storey presbytery above it. The front has large circular windows over the entrances. There are capitals painted in pale green and cream with Lithuanian folk patterns and the fittings reflect the Lithuanian tradition, of Catholic Baroque art. There is a painted altarpiece given to the church in 1912 and said to be Tyrolean. There are many other statues and wooden Lithuanian candelabra
7-8 Place of Victory. The Redeemed Christian Church of God was founded in 1952 in Nigeria. Previously H.F. Greenfield, Leather goods
29-32 Oval Space. Office, art gallery and what have you.  The building also includes some furriers, and was used by A.J.Cope for the storage of scientific instruments. Cope however made wooden furniture here before 1981.
13-14 Pickle Factory. For arts professionals, pop up school, films, etc. It was Baron’s Crown Pickle Works.
R.H,Barratt. Bottle works. This was close to the canal on the west side.


Treadway Street
Reliance Safes.  There is a large concrete sign on the wall advertising these. Edward Tann was a smith of Old Street in 1790. In 1814, with his son Edward they occupied a factory in what is now Treadway Street. The advertisement incised in the gable dates from around 1890. In 1843 Edward's company designed and patented their "Reliance" lock, which was to become the company's trademark. In 1845 Edward transferred the business to his son becoming John Tann Ltd. An example of their 'fire-proof ' safe was shown at the Great Exhibition at the Crystal Palace in 1851 and by 1900 the factory had moved to Old Ford.


Winkley Street
Housing. An example of speculative development of 1899-1904 by Charles Winkley, a Hackney builder. He replaced four existing streets with a planned area which included shops, houses, warehouses and workshops. The homes were Four-storey flats similar to those built by philanthropic companies.


Sources
Brewery History Society. Web site
British History Online. Bethnal Green. Web site
CAMRA. City and East London Beer Guide,
Clarke. Glimpses of Ancient Hackney and Stoke Newington
Closed Pubs. Web site
Clunn. The Face of London 
Empress Coaches. Web site
Essex Lopresti. The Regents Canal
Friends of the Earth.  Gas works sites in London
Grace’s Guide. Web site.
Lost Hospitals of London.  Web site
Lost Pubs. Web site
Morris. Archives of the Chemical Industry
Municipal Dreams. Web site
Parmiters Charity. Wikipedia. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry.  London North
Spitalfields Life. Web site
Stewart. Gas Works in the North Thames Area
TourEast, Leaflet

Great Eastern Railway to Chingford. South Hackney

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Great Eastern Railway to Chingford
The railway line to Chingford continues north running from Cambridge Heath Station

Post to the south Cambridge Heath
Post to the north London Fields

Andrews Road
Before the Second World War the area to the north of the curve in Andrews Road was houses in residential streets.
43 London Borough of Hackney. Car pound.


Ash Grove
Before 1900 Ash Grove was a residential street and there appear to have been a number of charitable religious institutions in them.
St Mary.  Franciscan convent also described as Franciscan Nunnery. Present in the 1870s
Orphanage. This was for boys orphaned by cholera and opened in 1866 by the Revd. R. Tuke of St. Anne's, Soho. He set up the order of St. Joseph, which adopted the Franciscan habit but which was disbanded on his conversion to Roman Catholicism in 1867. It appears that some of the sisters working at the orphanage also converted with him.
Orphanage and guild for working girls opened by the Sisters of St. Margaret, East Grinstead as a centre for their work in South Hackney, Haggerston, and Shoreditch.
St Augustine’s Convent, with chapel by Harold Gibbons, noted by Pevsner as existing in 1925. Demolished
British Penitent Female Refuge.  This large institution moved here in 1842 having originated in Hackney. It is also said to have originated in Welclose Square at the Maritime Penitent Female Refuge.  The frontage on St. Andrews Road survives in the Firmback Works.
King Edward Industrial School for Girls. This had begun in Mile End in 1872 and seems to have moved, or set up a branch, here in 1875 using the Female Refuge premises. .
Firmback Works. This was the works of Messrs. Cinnamon. Makers of Cintique furniture. They were established in 1908 to produce high grade chairs and settees when Jack Cinnamon started the firm in a former House of Correction for women alongside the Regents Canal as frame-makers to the furniture trade. By the 1920s Cintique were making complete chairs.
Bush chemical works. William Bush had set up a chemical works in Bishopsgate in 1851, making tinctures, extracts, flavours and essential oils. W.J. Bush & Co. is credited with being England's first maker of flavourings and essences. He later moved to Liverpool Street and then here, to Ash Grove. The firm expanded enormously to become an international concern and eventually in the 1960s merged with Stafford Allen and are now part of International Flavours and Fragrances
Bus Garage. The garage was built on the site of the Bush chemical works. It was opened in 1981 by London Buses. It had space for 140 buses undercover and 30 in the yard. The roof is carried by ten 35-ton triangular trusses, said to be the largest in the UK. When London Buses was split into separate companies Ash Grove became part of London Forest but closed in 1991 when they were wound up. The garage re-opened in 1994 for Kentish Bus and renamed it Cambridge Heath garage. It re-opened again in 2000 for East Thames Buses but they then moved to other new premises.amd it is used as a depot by Arriva.
Bridge over the Bethnal Green and Hackney Downs railway. Built in 1885 on brick arches to minimise expense because of property prices.

Beck Road
The street was due for demolition and many properties were squatted by artists, musicians – many subsequently famous – and so on.  The Council handed to Acme Properties who let houses to artists and others. At one time forty-two artists lived in the street.

Bocking Street
This was previously Essex Street
46 Westgate Centre, small business and trading area.
48 Bocking Street Warehouse, centre for events, gallery, etc. -
Broadway Market
This lies between Mare Street and Kingsland Road and survivals of the 1840s are interspersed with 20th buildings.  The road is said to be part of a route called the ‘Market Porters’ or Porters’ Route, a way to London markets for produce and livestock from Essex. From 1811 the road was called Duncan Place, and a market was held here by 1835. It was called the Broadway in 1881 and was Broadway Market from 1937.
2 La Vie en Rose restaurant. This was the Sir Walter Scott pub and the name is still on the frontage. It was open by 1851 and rebuilt in its present form in 1909. It closed as a pub in 1999.
24 Dove free house.  Pub
30-32 The Market House. Old pub now used as a restaurant. This was there by 1871 and was a Watney’s House. In 1990 it was sold to Belhaven and was closed in 1999. 
75-77 retains a shop front of 1830 but may be older behind.  . It is now an art gallery.
76 Cat and Mutton.  Very old pub on the site and a wide range of theories about how it got its name – was it about barges called cats, or is it about cattle passing with drovers. Nearby are fields called Shoulder of Mutton from the shape. There are also stories of a poltergeist in the cellar.  Dates back to 1731, and it is shown on Roque’s Map of 1769. By 1790, the Public House was at the end of a row of buildings in what was then Mutton Lane with Shoulder of Mutton Field to the west. The area attracted City people and apparently once a week a pig’s tail was greased and the clientele attempted to it round their heads.
79-81 early 19th terraced houses with shops on the ground floor.
Hackney Bun House., This is said to have stood on the east side of the road at the canal end of the market and sold spicy buns.

Canal
Gerver’s Basin or North Street or Northiam Basin. This was on the north bank east of Mare Street Bridge, dating from 1827 it was privately owned and square.  Gerver was a timber merchant based in Mare Street.  The tiny Basin was used to unload timber and stone from barges.  Once disused the iron basin entrance was blocked with sheets of corrugated iron. It was infilled in 1976 and the bridge over entrance removed but the corner coping stones of the basin are still visible on the towpath.  In the 1970s and early 1980s housing was built on the site.
Cunningham Timber Wharf.  The north bank of the canal here between Victoria Park and Mare Street was largely taken up by Cunningham’s Timber Wharf
Stone wharf. This lay to the west of Northiam Basin.
Horse ramp. These installations occur at intervals along the canal and were to help horses which had fallen into the canal to be got out.

Croston Street
In the early 19th this was George Street, and later Hamburg Street –changed again during the Great War. The houses date from the 1830s.
5 This was the offices for the City of Dublin Bottling Co. – a sign for which ran across the fascia – with a manager’s flat above.   In the 1890s the owner, a Mr. Quin, retained one room where he slept once a week.  A corner entrance is now a window.  It appears to date from 1909 but the company was on this site in the 1890s. It is now housing and the rear yard appears to be in separate use.

Dericote Street
In the early 19th this was John Street, and later Bremen Street – which changed again in the Great War. A development of 1830-40.

Jackman Street
This was previously Goring Street
Broadway Market Green. This is a small park on a site which was once housing

King Edward Road
3 St. John the Baptist. Roman Catholic church.   Services are said to have begun in an old brewery in Elsdale Street. A church was built here in ragstone by W. W. Wardell in 1847. It was damaged in the Second World War and services were held elsewhere until the current church was built in 1956: by Peter Lamprell-Jarrett and consecrated in 1972 
St. Johns the Baptist Church School. This opened in 1849 as Triangle or Hackney Triangle Roman Catholic School in a rented building. A new school was built adjoining the presbytery in 1851. It occupied part of London Fields School from 1951 to 1968, when it moved to Bonner Road.
4 Ayahs home. In 1900 the London City Mission took over the organization of the Home and it moved from Aldgate to 26 King Edward's Road. In 1921, it moved to no 4 The Home dealt with about ninety ayahs a year and also nurse-maids from other countries who were brought over by families and required assistance in returning.
45-65 Durigo house. This was Horne Brothers factory from 1922 until  1987. Menswear manufacturers who began in 1886 and dissolved in 1993.

Lansdowne Drive
This is ex Mutton Lane

London Fields
This square covers only a small section on the park at the southern end.  London Field was common land in Hackney with Lammas Rights. By the mid 19th the area was under development pressure and rights were passed to the Metropolitan Board of Works. Facilities include The park keepers’ service yard, with manager’s office, storage and rest room which have been next to the Lido since the 1960s.
Lido. The outdoor pool was built in 1930 by agreement between the London County Council and the Metropolitan Borough of Hackney, The original pool was different from what had gone before. It was the earliest to have an   advanced filtration plant, a tiered fountain, a large sunbathing area, a refreshment kiosk and a first aid room. It was designed in house by the London County Council probably by Rowbotham & Smithson. The Lido opened in 1932 and remained open until 1939 to reopen 1951 and then close in 1988 following cut backs in council funding and the abolition of the Greater London Council. After many years of local campaigning by local people it re-opened in 2006 and is now managed by Greenwich Leisure Ld.
Pebble sculpture of flower sellers and sheep by Freeform Artworks (1988-9) at the southeast corner of the Fields.

London Fields East
This was once called London Place
Darcy House - originally Darcy Buildings which were built on the site of Pacifico’s almshousesby the London County Council as their first housing in Hackney
Pacifico's Almshouses.  These were forSephardic Jews with funds given in 1851 by Emanuel Pacifico. They were supported after 1880 by the Spanish and Portuguese Jews' congregation of London, but were demolished by 1900. The congregation offered accommodation at new almshouses which it had built for Barrow's charity in Mile End
Jubilee Chapel. This was a Primitive Methodists' chapel built in from 1863. By 1873 it was called the Jubilee chapel. It closed before 1938.

Mare Street
12-20 This is an early 19th terraceat the southern end of the street. It was originally called Clifton Place and  built on the site of some brick kilns. They may predate the canal.
13-15 The Rose and Crown. The pub may date from as early as the 17th and it was said to be the first building over the canal bridge in Hackney in the 19th. The plaque above the door shows a previous name of the pub as The Cambridge. By 1905 it was a Whitbread house, and some Whitbread signage remains of the building. In 1977 it passed to Young’s Brewery and then returned to Whitbread.
51 Home for deaf and dumb children opened here in 1900 by Barnardo.  Originally it was for girls but later took boys and blind children,
70 Salvation Army. London Central Division
125-127 Morley Hall.  This is now part of Hackney Community College. The hall was a cinema 1910-1919.  It had begun as a 'masonic' hall and was completed by Cambridge Heath Congregational church, with help from Samuel Morley. It had three storeys and it was used for recreation in 1920 and by clothiers Gerrish, Ames & Simpkins. It was damaged by Second World War bombing . It is now part of the City Edge, Business Training & Conference Centre, with a modern building in front.  At the back ‘Morley Hall’ is visible in the stonework, when viewed from the railway line.
129-131 Space. Charitable organisation finding cheap studio spaces for artists. This is in Triangle House which was for Hackney Technical College’s Building Department.
137 The London Fields. Pub. This was originally called the Warburton Arms and dates from the mid 19th.
St Joseph's Hospice. This was set up in 1905 on the estate of Cambridge Lodge, - a house, garden, and 6 houses by Marmaduke Matthews from 1856. They had been the homes of the Booth family, co-founders of the Salvation Army in 1865-7.  The Hospice was set up by Father Peter Gallwey, Rector of Farm Street Jesuit Mission who asked the Irish Sisters of Charity to come to work in the East End with funding in 1899 from a Grace Goldsmith. When Cambridge Lodge was sold the anonymous buyer gave it to the Sisters of Charity as a hospice for the dying. The hospice expanded and in 1936 the area of Cambridge Heath Congregational Church was added. In The Second World War it was requisitioned for war and badly bombed. The chapel built in 1932, is now the oldest part remaining. In the 1950s Dr Cicely Saunders developed pioneering methods here and in 1958, the first purpose-built hospice unit in the UK was built here. Modern buildings have since replaced this and also the 19th hospice buildings. Special care is taken of the garden and a garden room looks onto the main garden. A Centenary Garden which won a medal at Chelsea Flower Show in 2005 is now part of a Garden Restaurant and a water sculpture has been installed in the front courtyard. A new convent for the Sisters has also been built.
Cambridge Heath Congregational Chapel. This was an Iron chapel from 1861. It was replaced by a church in ragstone designed by Joseph James in 1865. It closed in the 1930s.

Mowlem Street
47 The Wayward Gallery

Sheep Lane
A renamed section of Mutton Lane

Triangle Road
Ann Taylor Childrens' Centre

Tudor Road
8-10 City and Hackney Mind. Mental Health Charity in old factory building, 8 was previously the site of Melbourne House, home of Thomas Bearman, local baker and confectioner and noted numismatist.

Vyner Street
This was previously called. It was renamed after the Vyner family in 1902
1 Ombra restaurant. This has mushrooms on the roof by Christian Naagel
3-7 Gallery – this has had various names
Lime Wharf. Cultural innovation hub and artistic laboratory.
Victoria wharf. This was to the west of Lime Wharf and was at one time used as a saw mill. Clearly saw mills would have been necessary for timber importers serving the large east end furniture manufacturing industry – before the artists moved in!
27 The Victory.  Pub which dates from before 1860
30 All Saints Mission. This is now the Empire Gallery with “Trapped in Freedom” as the logo on the outside.  All Saints Mission dates from 1896 with a clubroom and gymnasium.  It later became as shoe factory owned by M.Rubin and employing 300 people
63 Anchor of Hope. Christian fellowship. This was previously a warehouse

Warburton Road
The road replaced the gardens of Dr. Warburton's house - aka Pembroke House
365-366 London Fields Brewery. This opened in 2011.

Warburton Square

Westgate Street
1 Hackney Council Departments and Hackney Community College. Keltan House. This was an old commercial building which was taken over by the college in 1970. It had previously been Netil House and owned by North Eastern Timber Ltd. as the head office of a group of related companies. It has now been renamed Netil House and is let as studio space.
London Fields Primary School. The school was originally opened in 1874.


Sources
British History Online. Bethnal Green. Web site
Bush, Boake and Allen. Wikipedia. Web site
CAMRA. City and East London Beer Guide,
Cinema Treasures. Web site
Clarke. Glimpses of Ancient Hackney and Stoke Newington
Closed Pubs. Web site
Clunn. The Face of London
Essex Lopresti. The Regents Canal
Glazier. London Transport Garages
London Borough of Hackney. Web site
London Borough of Tower Hamlets. Web site
London Fields Brewery. We site
London Fields User Group. Web site
London Gardens Online. Web site
Lost Pubs. Web site
Morris. Archives of the Chemical Industry
Pevsner and Cherry.  London North
Sinclair. Hackney. That Rose Red Empire
St. Joseph’s Hospice. Web site
Watson. Gentlemen in the Building Line.
Watson. Hackney and Stoke Newington Past

Great Eastern Railway to Chingford. London Fields

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Great Eastern Railway Line to Chingford
The Line running from Cambridge Heath Station goes northwards

Post to the south South Hackney


Bayford Mews
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association and a blue plaque which says they were founded here in 1959.

Bayford Street
Bayford Street Industrial Centre
Site of Pembroke House which has been built in the 17th by William Parker.  In 1799 it became a school for the deaf and dumb founded by Thomas Braidwood who had moved here from Edinburgh in 1783. It continued here by his family until 1810. In 1818 the house was used by an institution to house East India Company employees who had become insane in India. It remained here until 1880 when the area was acquired by the Great Eastern Railway.  Warburton was involved and managed this as he did with other insane asylums in east London and it was later known as Dr. Warburton's House.


Exmouth Place
On the site of what was Flying Horse Yard.

Gransden Avenue
5a Seasonal Disorder. Art Gallery

Helmsley Place
Helmsley Piano Works. This works was owned by Broadwood, White & Co.  in the 1920s. They made quality upright pianos.  It was later an office equipment store,

Lamb Lane
This was once Tower Street, after a house at the east end which had a tower like structure.
St.Michael and All Angels. Built in 1864 on the site of a brickfield. It was destroyed in Second World War bombing and rebuilt on a different site.
Vicarage. House of ragstone, built in 1873 as the vicarage for St Michael and All Angels which stood opposite. Probably designed by Hakewell
School. This was a National School opened in 1873 on part of the site of Pembroke House which had been purchased in 1871 from the Great Eastern Railway.  It was attached to the church, despite the board school being adjacent.  It was also the church hall. It closed after 1939.
Lamb Lane Board School. This was opened in 1873 but later became a school for special instruction
Pembroke Hall. Headquarters of the Rifle Volunteers of Tower Hamlets. East of the church.  The Tower Hamlets Rifle Volunteers dated from 1864 and there were 12 corps.  This was the 2nd corps and was here from 1860 having previously been in Richmond Road. Joseph Samuda, the shipbuilder, was one of the officers. By 1868 they had amalgamated with another corps and moved.
Charismatic for Christ Ministries, Hackney Branch

London Fields
In 1275 the area of London Fields was common pastureland but the name of London Field is not found until the 1540s.  It was one of several areas in Hackney with Lammas Rights. It is thought to have been called London Field because the paths with the most direct rotes to the City ran alongside it.   Some surrounding roads have names connected with sheep and this might indicated sheep grazing or being driven across here. By the mid 19th the area was being dug for brick earth and developers were eying it up and local people began to object. Under the Metropolitan Commons Act, 1866, the Hackney District Board petitioned for the inclosure of a group of local commons of which London Fields was one. The manorial rights were purchased by the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1881. Once it had become a park lines of plane trees were planted. A bandstand built which was later demolished and replaced by one to the southeast, which itself was removed after the Second World War – three oaks remain of the eight which originally surrounded it.  The area was heavily bombed in 1940 and as a result the park was increased to cover the areas of demolished buildings. The lines of London plane trees surrounding the cricket pitch to the north and east mark the old park boundary. The war left many people without homes and 18 prefabs were built in 2 rows on the west side o the field. Another 21 were built on what had been the south end of Eleanor Road. These were removed by 1951 but the west side ones lasted into the 1960’s.       After the war the netball pitches were removed and the hard tennis courts were moved the site of demolished houses in Richmond Road. The grass tennis courts were removed in the 1970’s. The lido is in the square to the south of this one.


London Fields East Side
Part of this was once London Place. The road consists of a row of early 19th houses overlooking the park

London Lane
The Lady Eve Community Garden. This is a guerrilla garden on the corner with Mentmore Terrace. It is currently maintained by Carlsson & Co. with a community group. It has herbs, vegetables and flowers and some attractive graffiti.


Mare Street
146 St. Mungo’s Hostel for the Homeless in a converted police section house. This was originally designed by McMorran and Whitby in 1950-51
149 Flying Horse.  This pub was long-established and may have been present as early as 1593.  It was closed in 1914 and demolished in the 1930s. 
150 ABC Cinema. This was The Regal Cinema built for Associated British Cinemas and designed by their in-house architect William R. Glen on a difficult triangular site. It opened in 1936. It was re-named ABC in82 and closed in 1975. In 1977 an Independent operator re-opened it as the Mayfair Cinema and this closed in 1981. The stalls area was converted into a snooker club which closed in 1994. It was 1998 and there is now housing on the site.
155 originally a National Provincial Bank. This is now a betting shop
165 The Dolphin.  Pub. Built around 1850 but might have an earlier core. There may be an earlier pot house at the back. Inside the back bar has a dolphin decorated on the end. There is an old dining room with a screen decorated with dolphins in coloured glass. There are tiled walls with patterns of birds and foliage in blue and white. On either side of the entrances are painted panels over coloured tiled dados. A picture in the saloon shows Airon with his lyre summoning a dolphin to his rescue painted by W B Simpson and Son of St Martin’s Lane.
St Thomas's Square. This was a development built by Robert Collins in 1771/2 on land leased from St Thomas's Hospital.  By the late 19th ‘the centre was a field with an irregular fence around it’, but a little interest attaches itself to some of the inhabitants of the Square.' In 1892 Hackney District Board leased the laid it out as public gardens through grants from the Metropolitan Board of Works, Metropolitan Public Gardens Association and the London County Council.. Hackney Borough Council purchased it in 1915 for £50, by 1928 it was 'laid out as an attractive ornamental garden”. Housing around it was bombed in the Second World War and then compulsorily purchased by the London County Council and flats as the Frampton Park estate. The garden now has lawns with flower beds, shrub planting and mature trees along perimeter beds.
Drinking fountain. This is in pink and grey granite and dates from 1912. Taps are screened by columns with capitals carrying a circular cup. The inscription reads: 'presented to the Hackney Borough Council by Morris Nelson Esq in memory of his wife Esther. Unveiled by Councillor William Hammer Mayor of Hackney 31st October 1912'.
St Thomas's Chapel on the south west corner of St Thomas Square built in 1771. This related to a group of Presbyterians established before 1636. Following a dispute a faction formed the Old Gravel Pit Chapel; the other faction moved across the street and built this chapel, naming after the landowner, St.Thomas's Hospital and enlarging it in 1824.
184 Essoldo Cinema. This was an adaption of the Chapel. In 1912 it was converted into the Empress Electric Theatre.  A ‘straight’ organ was installed, and it has been conjectured that this was a new installation or the original Chapel organ. In early-1933 it was closed and George Coles re-designed it as an Art Deco styled cinema, A Compton 3Manual/5Ranks organ was installed. It re-opened as Empress Electric Theatre. It remained independently operated until 1955 when it was purchased by the Essoldo Circuit and re-named. It closed in 1967. It was converted into a Bingo Hall Latterly as a Top Rank Bingo Club which closed in 1993. The building was demolished in 1995.
Gateway to St Thomas Chapel burial ground.
182 This was built in 1877 as Lady Eleanor Holles School, an independent school founded in 1710. It is in red brick with Portland stone dressings.  With a relief of a castle and scrolls as well as ‘Founded AD 1710’ and ‘Erected AD 1877’. The centre was added, with the rear wing, in 1905 by F. S. Hammond. The school had moved here in 1878 but in 1935 it moved to Hampton. In 1946 Cordwainers' Technical College moved to the site from Bethnal Green. The college had begun as the Leather Trades School, established in 1887 helped by the Worshipful Company of Cordwainers and they took responsibility for this trade school from 1913. It became known as the Cordwainers' Technical College but in 1989 it changed its name to Cordwainers' College; and in 2000 became part of the London College of Fashion, part of the University of the Arts, London and runs specialist courses in shoes and footwear. There is also anew student residence block for Cordwainers' College.
184 St.John the Theologian.  This is now a Greek Orthodox Church but it was built in 1873 for the Catholic Apostolic Church By John Drake of Rochester. This church was formerly known as the Catholic Apostolic Church. It is a Gothic church built in polychrome brick and stone.
195 18th house and the second oldest house in Hackney.  Originally a family home. From 1860 - 1913 it housed the Elizabeth Fry Institute for Reformation of Women Prisoners to which there is a commemorative plaque on the gatepost. Thos was set up after her death in 1845 and continued until 1913 when it moved to Limington.   It then became a working men’s club, the Lansdowne Liberal and Radical Club, then the New Lansdowne Social Club, which closed in 2003. It then became derelict and squatted.  It is set back from the street in Brown brick.
201 Cyntra Place. Site of the Tre-Wint Industrial Home for Girls in the 1870s moving to Hampstead by 1902.  A large laundry was attached where girls could be trained to work.  By the 1920s Turney Turbines, turbine manufactures
206 this corner building was a Liberal club by 1880 and later became Hackney Conservative club. However it appears to have been use by many local organisations including freemasons and photographic societies. It is now a take away restaurant.
208 site of Madras House, 19th school. It was named for Madras system whereby monitors took responsibility for younger boys. It was claimed that the school dated from 1796 but Allen first took pupils in Mare Street in 1817, moving to larger premises in 1821. The school produced a number of distinguished alumni - the lexicographer Sir William Smith, John Curwen , writer on music, and Sir Charles Reed chairman of the London school board. Madras House passed to Thomas Garland, who ran it in 1861, and to Messrs. W. Paine and Wilson, who described it as a grammar school in 1869 and also took boarders until 1879. From 1892 the buildings were used by the Essex Volunteer Regiment in 1892.
215 Nam. This is a Vietnamese fashion company and community hub.  Before the Great War this address was that of the London Aircraft Co. taken over by Jackson Aircraft in 1917. Then it became a furniture manufacturers
219 Methodist Church. The church was built in 2000 in a development with Islington and Shoreditch Housing Association. Inside it was influenced by Le Corbusier's 1955 church in Ronchamp. The windows have colours and shapes similar to the shapes of recesses at the front of the church.  They reflect the style of buildings in middle eastern countries and the catacombs of the early church. The outside) was designed by FreeForm, a community arts project and children’s pictures are etched into the windows
229 Nags Head. This pub may have been present as early as 1593. It was rebuilt in 1875, but is now demolished. The site was on the south side of the London Lane junction.  It was a traditional meeting place for cricketers from London fields
255 This was the Horse & Groom pub which closed in 2013 after a stabbing. It was then known as Maddigan's, also the V Bar and/or The Heart of Hackney.
257 Richmond Court. Flats over shops built 1937 in art deco style. It was offices and workshops for the Berkeley Piano Co, in the 1920s.
Victor House is accessed through a passage under Richmond Court and is made up of trading units and studios.

Martello Street
Was previously Tower Street.  
19 Pub on the Park. This used to be called The Queen Eleanor

Mentmore Terrace
London Fields Station. Built in 1872 this now lies between Hackney Downs and Cambridge Heath. It was opened by the Great Eastern Railway to serve south Hackney. In the Great War it was closed from 1916 to 1919.  Electrification was instituted in 1960. It was burnt down in 1981 and subsequently closed. It reopened in 1986 with all old structures removed and replaced by something minimalist but new upside buildings had been put in place. The Chingford trains used to serve the station as well as the current Lea Valley Line but they now pass through on the eastern pair of tracks and stop at Hackney Downs instead.
Signal Box.  This was north of the station and closed in 1935.
5 City Co.Seals.  Makers of company and other official seals.


Sources
British History online. Hackney. Web site
CAMRA . Real Beer in London
Carlsson & Co. Web site
Cinema Treasures. Web site
Clarke. Glimpses of Ancient Hackney and Stoke Newington
Clunn. The Face of London
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford
Grace’s Guide. Web site
Hackney Methodist Church. Web site
London Borough of Hackney. Web site
London Encyclopaedia
London Fields User Group. Web site
London Gardens On line. Web site
London Railway Record
Pevsner and Cherry.  London North
Robinson.  Lost Hackney
Robins. North London Railway
St. Michael and All Angels. Web site
Watson. Gentlemen in the Building Line
Watson. Hackney and Stoke Newington Past

Great Eastern Railway to Chingford. Hackney Central

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Great Eastern Railway to Chingford
From London Fields Station the line swings north westwards and divides with a single line diverging north westwards to join the North London line running westwards and the line to Chingford continuing northwards.

Post to the south London Fields

Amhurst Road
Hackney Central Station.  Opened in 1850 it now lies between Homerton and Dalston Kingsland Stations on the North London Line. The first station opened with the line in 1850, with a substantial building against the viaduct on the east side of Mare Street. There was also a goods and coal depot from 1851. This was replaced on the opposite side of Mare Street in 1870 by a building by the Company’ architect, Edwin Henry Home, whose buildings were distinctive. The street level was built to impress, with the company’s name shown in a frieze below the roofline. From 1885, footways linked the west end of the platforms with the Great Eastern station at Hackney Downs and this interchange remained although it was closed 1917- 1923. Passenger services east of Dalston Junction were withdrawn in 1944 and the station was closed. Little visible damage appears to have happened during the Second World War itself but dereliction soon set in.  The platform buildings were demolished and by 1964, little remained although the main building survived but Humps indicated the site of the platforms. The cement plaques which once displayed 'North London Railway - Hackney Station’ were rendered over. When the Camden Road - North Woolwich passenger service opened in 1979, work began on a new station.  On the site, and it opened in 1980as 'Hackney Central'. BR built a ticket office on the Woolwich-bound platform with access from the street, two new platforms were connected by a footbridge, and small brick shelters were built. All terraces of the old covered way leading to Hackney Downs with a stairway and the booking office have gone. The old street level building was used by a firm of greengrocers. The structure remains intact, and is one of only three examples of North London Railway station architecture to survive. However the main building is no longer in use by the railway and is now a bar and music venue called Oslo.
Hackney signal box stood to the south of the viaduct, immediately east of Mare Street,
Coal depot. This closed in 1965.
1-5 Gibbons. This was an old established family business which sold furniture toys, prams and cots, etc on the south side of the road with a row of shops. The business was founded in 1831 and moved to this site in 1890 closing in 2002. They were the largest cash-only furniture store and a sign for this was displayed latterly.  Thomas Gibbons originally dealt in china and glassware in Morning Lane. His daughter Elizabeth took over the business and she acquired a row of nine shops in Amhurst Road in 1890.   In 2003 the furniture shop went up for auction, but didn’t reach the reserve price. Some of The shops were burnt down a month later.  Despite attempts to list the remaining shops they were found to be structurally unsafe and were demolished.


Eleanor Road
Wayman Court. 17 storey tower block
46 Prince Alfred Pub. There is now modern housing on this corner site.

Graham Road
Graham Mansions. Two parallel four storey blocks of flats separated by a closed off internal passageway.
Boscobel House. 12 storey block of flats dating from 1959.
Entrance to rail site
Graham Road curve. This rail line between the line from London Fields Station and the North London line was built in 1986 as part of the redevelopment of Liverpool Street station and the closure and demolition of Broad Street.   It was to allow Liverpool Street trains to access the North London line, but is apparently rarely used.

Hackney Grove
This passageway runs along part of the west side of Mare Street and is the remains of an old back lane.
Hackney Grove Gardens.  This was a community garden by Freeform Artworks, set up in 1982. It is said to have been on the site of a burnt out toy factory
23 Boxing Academy. Educational centre for excluded pupils with a sporting focus.
25 A few pre-mid 19th houses survive here. There is an early 18th brick wall with a square pier at the end and contemporary wrought iron railings
40 Shelley and Shelley. Shirt and pyjama manufacturers. On site 1930s.
45 Woolpack Hosiery Manufacturing Co. all clothing items made of wool. On site late 1920s
55-57 Litholite Insulators, Ltd.  The company dated from 1906 and was on site in the late 1930s.
69 Samuel Coleby & Son, boot maker 1919
Gunpost used as a bollard

Hillman Street
Previously called Hackney Grove
It has been suggested that this is named after flat-earther Ellis Hillman, Greater London Council member for Hackney –or it could be Baptist Minister Alderman John Hillman, given the freedom of the Borough in 1928.
Bunker.  There is a concrete entrance to a blockhouse in a comer of the Town Hall car park.  It has a locked gate and inside a flight of steps goes now with a 90-degree turn near the bottom where there was once an airlock. Once through door the bunker lies eastwards for 23 metres. It has four rooms, elsan style toilet cubicles, ventilation and filtration plant room with filters made by Sutcliffe & Speakman. If the power failed the pumps could be operated by pedal power via bicycle frames mounted on concrete plinths. The largest room was the control room and there is a wooden table along the wall labelled 'Medical Officer of Surface Health' .  A short iron ladder fixed to the wall gives access to an escape 'tube' half way up the wall leading to a hatch to the car park but which can only be opened from the inside.  It was built in 1939 as an ARP control centre and was probably part of a network of regional war rooms.
Drill Hall and TA Centre. The 10th (Hackney) Battalion of the County of London Regiment had its headquarters here before the Great War.  When the current town hall was built a new headquarters was provided here used by the 5th (Hackney) Battalion of the Royal Berkshire Regiment in 1937 and its successors as a Territorial Army centre in 1953. The site is now council offices

Mare Street
271 Job Centre. This building has replaced others on the site, including an illegal car showroom, erected since the demolition of Ivy House.
271 Hackney Service Station. A garage appears to have opened on this site in 1923 and closed in the 1970s. It appears originally to have been car sales but later sold petrol for Esso.
271 Ivy House  Mothers’ Hospital and Training Institution  (Salvation Army Maternity Hospital). In 1889 the Salvation Army needed to expand their maternity services and rent the Ivy House for a rescue and maternity home.  Ivy House was a 4-storey building with an annexe used as a lodging house.  The maternity home included a Training School for Midwives and there was a lecture room and other facilities. In 1894 the rescue services moved and it became a dedicated maternity hospital for unmarried mothers.   In 1906 there were six wards but mo bathrooms moveable baths were provided. There was an isolation ward detached from the main buildings, Staff and trainees now had accommodation in adjacent buildings.  A District Midwife service was provided and the nurses combined this with evangelising the patients.  By 1912 the hospital included 2 private wards for married women but  Ivy House closed in 1913 by which time some 4,500 babies were delivered there.  The building was demolished shortly after the maternity hospital closed. The site is now a Job Centre
273-275 Council offices - current use as a parking shop and for the youth offending team
273-275 shoe factory for Eleazer Phillips, who, in 1948 , claimed to be Hackney's oldest shoemakers
273-275 YMCA. Hackney Y.M.C.A. was founded at a meeting in 1883. The organisation it leased premises until 1886 and then moved to 275 Mare Street, The building also included the Y.W.C.A. It closed in the Second World War
273 Barnardo home The Beehive. In 1889, Barnardo's opened a 'rescue and training home for older girls' here known as 'The Beehive'. It closed in 1927.
270-276 Hackney Picturehouse. This was the Methodist Central Mission between known as the Methodist Central Hall. Between 1997 and 2001 the building together with the old Central Library became the Ocean Music Venue which continued until c. 2005. In 2011 it reopened as the Hackney Picturehouse.
276-280 Central Hall.  Methodist Central Mission.  Built for the Methodist Central Mission in 1926-7 by Gunton & Gunton. It has a classical front and a copper-clad dome.
Central Library.  This was originally built on land acquired from the London County Council when Mare Street was widened. It dates from 1907by H.A. Crouch. It has since been replaced and the building was included in the Ocean Music Venue along with the Methodist Central Hall where it is the corner building.
277 Gas Light and Coke Company Offices.  Built 1931 by Walter Tapper and H. Austen Hall.  The showrooms fronted the street. The site is now Hackney Business Centre in a set of modern offices and shops
280 This was built in 1910 as the Women’s Social Work Headquarters for the Salvation Army. It is now used as council offices. A plaque says: ‘THIS STONE WAS LAID FOR THE GLORY OF GOD BY THE MAYOR OF HACKNEY T.E. YOUNG ESQ. B.A..F.R.A.S. OCTOBER 11TH 1910.''THIS STONE WAS LAID FOR THE GLORY OF GOD BY MRS BRAMWELL BOOTH OF THE SALVATION ARMY OCTOBER 11TH 1910
282 Baxter’s Court. This Wetherspoon's pub stands, more-or-less, on the site of an old alleyway, known as Baxter's Court, which dates from at least 1700.
289 Samuel Pepys Pub. This has been demolished.
290 The Hackney Pavilion cinema. It was designed by George Billings and Company and ran parallel to Mare Street with a decorated facade with a high-arched entrance. Inside was in an Edwardian Baroque style. It opened in 1914 and it was taken over by Provincial Cinematograph Theatres in 1928 and in February 1929 by Gaumont British Theatres and eventually Rank. Rank closed it in 1972 and it was demolished almost immediately. A Barclays Bank replaced it.
Town Hall. The original site of the earlier town hall was at the Junction with Amherst Road   This had been the old vestry hall and was itself on the site of the Church House dating from 1520, which had been the vicarage and used for church, parochial and educational purposes over the years. It was also on the site of the Mermaid Tavern which was demolished in 1844 although its Assembly Room was kept.   It was designed by Hammack and Lambert  replacing the engine house and watch house. It used the Dennett system of fire proofing. It was extended in 1895 but demolished in 1937.  Its site is now the forecourt of the current Town Hall.
Town Hall. This was built behind the existing Town Hall in an area called The Grove which appears to have been a paddock. It was designed by H. V Lanchester & T. A Lodge in 1934-7. It is Clad in Portland stone with a steps up to the centre and set back behind a formal garden with integral pillar lights.  The rear range houses an assembly hall. Inside are original Art Deco furnishings including an upper stair hall with pillar lights and a wood-panelled council chamber fitted out by Waring & Gillow. The foundation stone was laid by Tyssen Amhurst, Lord of the Manor. 
291 Hackney Empire Theatre of Varieties.  Designed by Frank Matcham and opened in 1901. An Edwardian suburban variety theatre it s in buff terracotta, with twin domes – now replicas of the originals installed in 1988.   Inside the foyer has marbled walls and much plasterwork: a curved circle and two tiers of cantilevered balconies. When it was built its electric lights, central heating and in-built projection box were state of the art. It was owned by Oswald Stoll attracted acts from all over the world including Chaplin and Stan Laurel - and Marie Lloyd, lived nearby. Later Louis Armstrong appeared and then household names from the radio and recording - Charlie Chester, Issy Bonn, Tony Hancock and Liberace. In 1956 it was sold to ATV and became the first commercial television studios in the country - Take Your Pick and Oh Boy! and Emergency Ward 10 were filmed here.  In 1963 it was bought by Mecca and converted it into a bingo hall with a wire system to send winning sheets to the stage. C.A.S.T. were a political theatre company led by Roland Muldoon which set up  the New Variety project and took over the Empire as a permanent base They Established the Hackney Empire Preservation Trust. The building was re-opened on its 85th birthday in 1986. By 2001 the Empire had raised £15m to fund renovation and work was completed in 2004. This included a new orchestra pit, backstage area and much else. The Marie Lloyd annexe houses a bar Stage 3 and the Harold Pinter space
293-295 Empire Mansions. Flats built as part of Hackney Empire.
300 Hackney Citizens Advice Centre. This is in an old Barclays Bank building.
315 Cock Tavern. This includes the Howling Hops Micro Brewery. There was a pub here in called the Cock as early as 1561.  The current pub is listed in Church Street in 1826, 1861 & 1866. It has clearly been rebuilt.
329 The Electric Picture Palace opened in 1909 in shop premises. It was still open in 1914 and operated by A.J. Gale. It was demolished when Graham Road was widened. A new building was built here in 2001.
331 Hackney Picture Palace, The Picture Palace was opened in 1910, and next to the Electric Picture Palace. It was closed during the Great War in 1917.  It is now shops.
339 betting shop. This was the Railway Tavern and retains a picture of a locomotive above the corner door. It was originally the Eight Bells in 1665 and was demolished in 1880 when the road junction and railway crossing was redeveloped and a replacement pub was built here called the Railway Tavern. It was rebuilt gain in 1955 to repair Second World War bomb damage. It closed in 2009.

Poulton Road
Local authority housing on the site of the railway coal depot.

Reading Road
This previously called The Grove and Grove Lane.
3 Central Library and Museum. Called Hackney Technology and Learning Centre it was designed by Hodder and Partners.
3 Energie Fitness Centre. Commercial gym in new buildings
Maurice Bishop House. Council offices. Bishop was a Grenadan politician
Florfield Depot. Hackney Council depot on the site of what was Florfield Road.
Great Eastern buildings. This was a railway office transferred to the council in 1965 and used for housing. Now demolished.

Richmond Road
Skirts the side of London Fields and continues with quite large c. 1840 villas.  .
Chapel. This was built on a site leased from St. Thomas’s Hospital in 1846 and the foundation stone was laid by Thomas Farmer.  It was Wesleyan Methodist chapel to replace a chapel in Pleasant Place. It was a brick building with a pedimented street front with pillars flanking the door. It closed in 1925 and was leased to Central Hackney synagogue which closed about 1935. Post Second World War it is marked on maps as a ruin, and the site is now housing.

Sylvester Path
1-11 Spurstowe’s Almshouses.  In 1666, Rev. Dr. William Spurstowe, Vicar of Hackney, built six almshouses here for six ancient widows from the parish of Hackney. This was later augmented by a bequest from his brother of eight acres of land. In 1819 the almshouses were rebuilt on the same site. The Almshouses were demolished in 1966 and replaced by new ones in Navarino Road. They were replaced on site with a warehouse
2 Old Ship Pub. Brick public house. The entrance has a, including with the date 1877.  There is also a stone carving of a ship. There is also a narrow entrance in Mare Street through a classical arch and down corridor. It was refurbished in 1997 with a contemporary interior.
4 with late c18 front, older behind,
13 early 18th but altered.

Sylvester Road
Sylvester House.   Arts and crafts flats. Built 1910.

Wilton Way
76 White Horse Pub. Demolished
83 Royal Oak.  This was a Watney’s Brewery pub, established by 1872. It was acquired by Belhaven in 1990 and closed soon afterwards, being converted to flats
Christopher Addison House flats and housing office.  Built by the Borough Architect's Department, brick-faced, with a curved stainless-steel roof.
Public conveniences attached to Hackney Town Hall. Built in 1934 -7 by Lanchester & Lodge in Portland stone cladding. Inside the ladies has 4 cubicles with Original cisterns and a Cleaner’s store. The gents has with 12 1930s urinals and 5 cubicles with a Cleaner's store

Sources
British History online. Hackney. Web site
CAMRA . Real Beer in London
Cinema Treasures. Web site
Clarke. Glimpses of Ancient Hackney and Stoke Newington
Clunn. The Face of London
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford
Grace’s Guide. Web site
London Borough of Hackney. Web site
London Encyclopaedia
London Railway Record
Lost Hospitals of London. Web site
Lost Pubs Project. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry.  London North
Pub History. Web sire
Robinson.  Lost Hackney
Robins. North London Railway
Sinclair. Ghost Milk
Watson. Gentlemen in the Building Line
Watson. Hackney and Stoke Newington Past

Great Eastern Railway to Chingford. Hackney

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Great Eastern Railway to Chingford
The Line running north from London Fields curves North West to Hackney Downs Station, then curves north east and north

Post to the south Hackney Central
Post to the north Hackney Downs


Amhurst Road
90 Pembury Tavern. This pub was built in 1866 - with an address of Medina Terrace, Dalston Lane. In the 1990s it closed and re-opened in 2006. This very handsome building is now owned by Individual Pubs, with a tie in to Milton Brewery.  They take bitcoins.
Apsland and Marcon Estates Community hall
Lower Clapton Congregational Church, Hall and School. This was a new church built in 1864 in Kentish rag stone. Replaced by shops and flats after the church closed in 1951

Bodney Road
1 Bodney Road Joinery.  In the 1930s this was a branch office for the British Union of Fascists.
2 this site was bought for a fire station in 1912.  The building has now been converted to flats. At the rear is a Caretakers lodge or wardens house.  In the Second World War this was the American Ambulance Station
58 Palestine House site of the Operative Jewish Converts' Institution.  Demolished and now under part of the housing estate.

Brett Road
Brett Manor.  A small block of maisonettes by Edward Mills built in 1946 by Manor Charitable Trustees to provide affordable housing for ex-servicemen and older members of the Eton Manor Boys' Club and their war widows. This was the first reinforced concrete, box frame building to be completed in London and it was designed in conjunction with Ove Arup and Partners. The building has nine flats – eight maisonettes and a roof penthouse with roof garden. Built on the site of Manor Assembly Rooms, later a cinema and a club
Temple Works.  Offices and flats on what was a construction firm site
Brett Road Mission. In the 1950s this became a Government Office.

Clarence Mews
40 studio space and house, designed by architect Ed Frith of Moving Architecture. A double height glazed wall provides natural light and there is a private courtyard garden. The site was the garden of a Georgian house until the 1960s, but was used most recently as a mechanic’s yard.  The house includes square dance studio and on the ground floor a design studio and family living spaces.
Clarence Mews Mixed Developments. This incorporates flats, a house, workshops and studios. There is a secure front entrance overlooking the street, while the rear elevation faces onto private gardens.
48 19th brick warehouse standing near the corner with Clarence Place. This is now housing

Clarence Place
1a the Episcopalian Church of Archangel Michael. In 1975, Beatrice Butler started a mission in her home. From 1987 Beatrice encouraged her son Matthew to be came the leader.When her brother in law, Bishop Austin McDowell, visited from St Vincent and the Grenadines, he ordained Matthew and Beatrice and Matthew was later consecrated as Bishop. In 2001 The Episcopalian Church of Archangel Michael diocese was established.

Clarence Road
This was originally called Back Lane
78 Duke of Clarence Pub. First recorded in 1851 this pub closed during the 1990s and is now flats.
51a Hackney Church of England Grammar school. This school was functioning by 1829 and had connection with King's College, London.  The building was on the west side of the road and had been designed by William MacIntosh Brookes. In 1888s its debts were cleared and it became known as King's College or Hackney Collegiate School until 1895. It was then used as a mineral water factory and beer bottling plant. The buildings were demolished in 1903. The site is now part of the Pembury Estate


Dalston Lane
A busy route connecting Dalston to central Hackney, with scattered remnants of c18 and earlier C19 terraces and villas.  An industrial area developed in the c19.
236 Academy Apartments. This is in the buildings of what was Hackney Community College.  The college dates back to 1790 when an institution for 30 boys opened in Shacklewell, which moved in 1803 to Dalston Lane and were joined by a girls department in 1810. By 1819 it was known as the Hackney School of Industry and financed through donations and the sale of sermons. A new building on the corner with Amhurst Road was erected by James Edmeston in 1837. This was later acquired by the North-East London Institute. Which was a school of music, science, and art based at 236 and 238 Dalston Lane. This was taken over in 1897 as a central site for Hackney Institute becoming its northern branch and as such transferred to the London County Council in 1909 and amalgamated with other relevant institutions in the area. The buildings were enlarged by the London County Council in 1925 and the building dates from this time with with restrained detail of an Arts and Crafts kind. In 1928 it was the London County Council's Hackney Technical Institute and in 1947 Hackney technical college. In due course it became administered by the Inner London Education Authority.  In 1974 after further amalgamations it became part of Hackney College. The administrative headquarters were moved away from here in 1974. . When the Inner London Education Authority was abolished it was run by, by Hackney Council, when it was again renamed.  It later became an independent institution, mainly funded through public funds. For a few years it was known as The Community College but then reverted to Hackney Community College.  Since then this site has been sold off for housing
Hackney Downs Station.  The station lies between Clapton and London Fields and was built in 1872 by the Great Eastern Railway. It was enlarged as early as 1876 when though lines though the station were opened.  The station was originally opened as Downs Junction Station and the original entrance was on the south side of Dalston Lane under the bridge. . The ticket hall was rebuilt in the early 1980s along with changes to the roofs on the platforms. The island platforms wooden roof was replaced with steel sheeting on the existing frames whilst the side platforms were left unaltered other than the removal of their 'dog-tooth' fascia boards. Until Hackney Central's closure in 1944, a passenger connection linked the two stations and a special building called the Exchange Building was staffed by Great Eastern but sold tickets for both lines.   A new entrance building was installed in 1980 and designed by British Rail architect Sandy Boal. The station is currently operated by Greater Anglia.
Signal Box. This was named Hackney Downs North junction renamed Hackney Downs junction in 1935 and close din 1960.
Signal Box. This was installed in 1960 when the line was electrified but closed in the early 2000s when signalling on the line was centralised.

Gould Terrace
This was previously called Kenmure Terrace

Institute Place
3 Five Points Brewing Co, small independent brewer based in railway arches

Kenmure Road
Previously known as Coldbath Lane and adjacent to Hackney Brook.
Manor Assembly Rooms. These were licenced from 1849 and lay behind Tyssen's Manor House in Mare Street. They could be reached by a covered way from Mare Street and were later used by Hackney Literary and Scientific Institution. In 1877 they included a concert hall and a skating rink. They were demolished by 1894 and were by the Manor Feature Film Theatre
18 The Manor Feature Film Theatre opened in 1909 in what had been the Manor Assembly Rooms. It operated until at least 1915. The site is now the Brett Manor flats.

Mare Street
Called Church Street between Dalston Lane and Amhurst Road . It is also called The Narrowway.
Hackney Brook crossed the road a few yards south of  Bohemia Place
347-357 the site of the current Marks and Spencer was Hackney’s leading department store Matthew Rose and Sons
359-361 McDonald’s was once the National Penny Bank. It was previously the Three Cranes Inn
387 known as the Manor House this was built in 1845 for the manor steward, J.R.W. Tyssen. It is in plain yellow brick, with Shops on the ground floor. Site of the New Mermaid Theatre  1773
418 Crown Pub.  Said to have been on the site of Templars House, a brick built house from the 17th, which became tenements.  It had a projecting centre bay with columns and broken pediments once capped by domes suggesting that it was built new in the late 16th. . The Templar's name came from their  estate in Hackney, later Kingshold Manor . The house was demolished in 1825.  It was then the Blue Posts Pub, which was used by the vestry as a meeting place to conduct parish business and from where the stagecoach ran to Holborn via Dalston Lane.  It then became Bob’s Hall and then a stonemason’s yard. . A pub called the Crown was here by 1856. In 2002, it was called the Wishing well and in 2013 a branch of Tommy Flynn's
354 Old Town Hall.  The vestry had met in Church House but by the end of the 18th this was no longer usable and was replaced by this building. This is described in its pediment as ‘the old Town Hall of Hackney’. It is a house of 1802 house, converted to use as Town Hall. It is now a betting shop having previously been a bank.
356 St John’s Rectory.  In the late 17th The Vicarage was north of the churchyard. in 1705, when no vicar had lived there for more than 60 years,  a new vicar was licensed to replace the buildings with a brick residence, set back farther from the road. As the Rectory, it was refronted and extended to the design of James Spiller in 1828-9 and survived, as. 356 Mare Street, in 1952. It was demolished and a smaller house was built on the site in 1956.
354 Mermaid Fabrics. The Mermaid Tavern was here in 1856 and the premises are now in retail use. In 1895 this was the headquarters of the Clapton Orient Football Club, predecessors of Leyton Orient Football Clubs. 
The original Mermaid Inn was on the other side (west) of Mare Street and associated with the Assembly Rooms to its rear.   It closed and was demolished in 1845. It had been present by 1636 and is where Samuel Pepys came to play shuffleboard and eat cherries.  In the 18th it was used for local court proceedings and had extensive pleasure gardens – used for some early balloon ascents.

Pembury Road
Pembury Estate. London County Council housing built in 1938.

Sources
British History Online. Hackney. Web site
Cinema Treasures. Web site
Clarke. Glimpses of Ancient Hackney and Stoke Newington,
Clunn. The Face of London
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford
East London Record
The Episcopalian Church of Archangel Michael. Web site
Field. London Place Names,
GLC. Home Sweet Home
Hackney  Society Newsletter
London Borough of Hackney. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry.  London North
Robinson, Lost Hackney
Summerson. Georgian London
Walford.  Highgate and Hampstead to the Lea,
Watson. Hackney and Stoke Newington Past

Great Eastern Railway to Clapton. Hackney Downs

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Great Eastern Railway to Chingford
The Great Eastern line to Chingford running north from Hackney Downs station and having diverged from the line to Enfield continues northwards

Post to the south Hackney


Clarence Road
185 Cricketers Pub. This is now a wine bar called Verden. This was a Watney’s house dating from the mid 19th. In the early 20th it was the HQ of the Cricketers Cricket Club.  In the 1990s it was called Shamps but reverted to the Cricketers in 2001.  In 2008, the Clapton Pond Neighbourhood Action Group raised concerns about the licence and it was closed following a police raid in 2009.

Cricketfield Road
New Testament Church of God. This was originally the Clapton Presbyterian Chapel. It was built by the Presbyterian Church in 1876 that moved here from an iron church in Shrubland Road. It is built of Kentish ragstone with tracery on the windows. The Presbyterians moved in 1935, and it became the Lower Clapton Congregational Church. It has been the New Testament Church of God since 1964.
Downs Park Road
75 Stormont House Industrial School for Blind Boys. This was a residential school for blind boys 1904 - 1911
Stormont House Red Cross Hospital. In 1915 the British Red Cross Society rented the Stormont House School for Little Boys and it was converted into a military hospital. It had 42 beds for enlisted servicemen and was an auxiliary to the City of London Military Hospital in Lower Clapton.  Patients had river trips, drives into the countryside and outings. After the Battle of Delville Wood many South African casualties were admitted. It closed in 1919. 
Stormont House Open Air School. A special day school for children with tuberculosis.  The school was in the garden behind the main building.  It continued until the outbreak of the Second World War when the pupils were evacuated to Norfolk. It appears the site was heavily bombed, so the School did not reopen after the war.
Stormont House School. This dates from the 1960s and was built on the site of Stormont House.  This is a Community Special School for children with special educational needs. A new building has recently been erected on the existing site
Grocers Company School. This was opened in 1876 as grammar school by the Grocers' Company of London on site a bought from the Tyssen Estate.  The school was built in Gothic style 1875-6 by Theophilus Allen.  It was fee paying buy was later offered to the London County Council and renamed Hackney Downs. The playground had been part of Downs themselves.
Hackney Downs School. The Grocers’ Company school was managed by the London County Council from 1907. It was damaged by fire in 1963 and the original school was demolished. A new building intended as a grammar school was opened but there was further building for a comprehensive intake from 1969. The new building was in London County Council style exposed concrete and brick ranges and arranged around the site of what had been the main building. A Gothic lodge and diapered brick boundary wall remained from Grocers school. The school closed in the 1990s.
Mossbourne Community Academy. This opened in 2004 on the site of the former Hackney Downs School.  He site had been purchased by Sir Clive Bourne who founded the school as one of the first 'City Academies' in England. Bourne commissioned the Richard Rogers Partnership to design the new school buildings,

Downs Road
Downsview School. Built in 1969 by the Inner London Education Authority in concrete blockwork.  Cheery mural on the street wall called ‘We are Hackney’ which was undertaken by a group of students from Clapton Girls’ Technology School called Tick4change.  Downsview is a school for children with learning difficulties. It left this site in 2013
75 The Downs Hotel. This pub was built in 1863 to serve visitors to the new Hackney Downs park and closed in 2007. It is now flats. There was once a plaque on the building to commemorate The Pickwick Bicycle Club the oldest surviving cycling club in the world which was founded here in 1870.  Downs Football Club later to become Clapton FC had their HQ here in the 1870s.  It was a Whitbread Brewery pub in the early 1900s and later Ind Coope Taylor Walker.
Queens Road Station. This station was planned by the Great Eastern Railway as an intermediate stop between Hackney Downs and Clapton Stations and to stand in the gap between two tunnels. The name was taken from Queensdown Road which lies opposite the intended site. Although much of the station was built it was never completed and never opened. The platforms were not removed until 1965.
Signal Box. This was intended for Queens Road Station and stood to the east of the line immediately north of Downs Road. It closed in 1935.
Downs Road Methodist Church. The old church had been demolished and h site developed into a new church, with apartments built directly above. Entrance to the church is via the front of the building with access to the flats managed by a housing association located to the rear of the block. The previous church was built in 1870 by Charles Bell with a flat rag stone street front.   The church had originated in Lower Clapton Road in 1865 which closed in 1934. The congregation to a moved to this site which had been built as a Sunday School and lecture hall which was then remodelled as the church. It was damaged in Second World War bombing and not reopened until 1949. It has now been rebuilt in 2013.
109 Clapton Business Centre. This was the building of Runham Brown Bros, building contractors. Herbert Runham Brown was a leading member of left wing circles in Hackney in the first half of the 20th century and a founder of organizations to support conscious objectors during the Great War.

Hackney Downs
This was Hackney Lammas land, on a local high point and surrounded by fields until the 19th. It was called ‘Downe’ 1550 and had been the home of William atte Doune in 1302. There was horse-racing here in the 18th as well as cricket, football and rugby. By the mid 19th building development was replacing the fields. a petition raised by local people in the 1860s to enclose and conserve 180 acres of land in the borough for public use which included The Downs. The Metropolitan Board of Works acquired the Downs from the Lord of the Manor, Mr Tyssen Amherst, under the Metropolitan Commons Supplemental Act 1872. commoners rights were extinguished by an Act of Parliament in 1884. The new park was laid out with radiating paths and plane, lime and ash trees were planted.  There was a bandstand in the middle of the area and it is thought this eventually went for scrap in the Second World War. After the Second World War prefabs were built along the southern edge of the park. .  It was managed by the London County Council and by Hackney Council from 1965. in January 2010 new tennis courts, a multi-use games area, a new play area and various sports pitches, community room and ranger's office were installed. A new meadow has been planted with the help of Hackney Downs User Group and local volunteers as part of the 'Mad About Meadows' hackney Downs won a Green Flag Award in 2010.
The Pavilion. The old ranger’s office was located in the centre of the park and was demolished in 2010. A new pavilion is located nearer to Downs Park Road and provides changing rooms and a referee’s room. It houses the Area Park Manager’s office, a community room and public toilets. It is clad in wood and had solar panels on its green sedum roof.
Toilet block. This was built in the 1930’s and is an eccentric example of a park pavilion building combining toilets with an open shelter and performance space It has a concave rear elevation which links into the play area.
Play and sports areas. The play area was renewed in 2010 and old fixed metal equipment, and fencing was removed. The swings and the yellow corkscrew slide were kept plus a new wooden climbing structure.  There are basketball courts and a multi use games area. The tennis courts have recently been extended from three courts to five. Hackney City Tennis Club was formed in 2001. The bowling green has not been used for over ten years although the bowling pavilion is used as staff accommodation. Two grass football pitches are marked out as are an athletics track and rounder pitches. There is an artificial cricket wicket.
Community Orchard. This was planted in with the Hackney Downs User Group and the Tree Musketeers and has local heritage varieties of pear and apple with a three olive trees.
Great Eastern Railway runs in a tunnel near the eastern side of the park. Queens Road or Hackney Downs Tunnel 445 yards long.
Hackney Brook. The railway marks the line of the brook alongside the Downs. It was diverted underground in the 19th.

Lower Clapton Road
Clapton Ponds. This is now two small garden enclosures divided by Newick Road.   Clapton Pond South. This has a bridged pond probably dug in the 17th or earlier. From 1707/9 it was a water supply reservoir the with water being brought here via wooden conduits from a waterworks at Jeremy's Ferry. plots in High Road aligned with the almshouse chapel held the U shaped pipes of the East London Waterworks. After a period of neglect the pond was restored as a reservoir in 1760 and continued to supply water to the area until 1833 when the Hackney's water supply was re-routed making it redundant as a reservoir. Hackney District Board took it over in 1898 for a public garden. It was re-landscaped in 1977-79 keeping the bridge and trees and replanting shrubs.
Bishop Woods’ Almshouses. These were built in 1665 under the will of Thomas Wood, the Bishop of Lichfield who came from Hackney. The almshouses provided for 10 widows over 60 years old and Wood also provided for a twice-weekly chaplain.. The six almshouses were restored in 1888 and again in 1930; they were requisitioned in the Second World War and re-opened in 1948. The buildings are in a semi circle around a courtyard behind a brick wall and railings. The single storey cottages contain some 17th brickwork but most of the fabric today is from the late 19th.  From the early 20th the charity has been administered by Dr.Spurstowe’s Charity. The charity now finds that the cost of renovation is too great and is looking to sell the cottages and the site and rebuild elsewhere. Chapel. a small Gothic chapel was added to the almshouses during restoration. It seats 10 people and may be Britain's smallest chapel
162 Pond House. A villa of 1800, with semi- circular Doric porch, a basement and tripartite ground-floor windows.  Gate piers, decorated with a Greek key pattern. Two storey three bay house substantial chimney stacks. The entrance is below a semi-circular porch supported.  The rear visible from Mildenhall Road, is built from brown brick, with a large semi-circular bay. There is an inappropriate rear extension and two modern garages facing Mildenhall Road.  There are perimeter walls with stables and inside is an elegant curved staircase. It was built for Benjamin Walsh, a stockbroker, soon after 1800 and it is said that in the early 19th it was the home of the Chair of East London Water Works, Samuel Preston. From the 1880s until 1904 it was a school and then a clothing factory. From 1939 to 2001 it was occupied an ex servicemen’s club, Hackney Volunteers. It is now into flats.
158-160 a pair of early 19th houses form the remaining part of what was  once St James’ Terrace. The Terrace was built about 1825 as four properties, but could be a re-facing of a late 18th group. It was partially demolished in the 1870s as part of the building of Mildenhall Road.
Methodist Chapel.  This was a Wesleyan chapel which stood on the west side of the road a block north of the corner with Downs Road. It was in ragstone with a tall spire. It closed in 1934 and was replaced by a church in the Sunday School in Downs Road to the rear, and was later demolished.
153 The Mothers' Hospital of the Salvation Army. In 1889 the Salvation Army opened a rescue and maternity home in Mare Street but by the beginning of the 20th the accommodation was inadequate and the Salvation Army bought an acre site here to build a maternity hospital for unmarried mothers. The foundation stone was laid in 1912 by Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll. The Hospital's consisted of six semi-detached houses built in 1824. They were linked by two arches leading to the ward buildings which were in the gardens of the houses. The central house had a sign saying 'The Salvation Army: The Mothers' Hospital'  Each ward block ha a delivery room, three wards, a kitchen and bathroom and a portrait of General Booth and his wife. Between the buildings there were gardens, with trees, shrubs and flowerbeds. One bungalow was for unmarried mothers, another for poor married women, another for special cases and the other for Jewish mothers. During the Great War the hospital cared for large numbers of widowed pregnant women who were subsequently destitute. After the war all mothers, married or not, were admitted. In 1934 an out-patients department was opened and in 1937 isolation block. During the Second World War, the hospital was evacuated to Derbyshire but some patients stayed in London. An air-raid shelter was built and the walls of the wards were strengthened with steel girders and blast walls erected. Patients were kept active so they could get to the shelters and this turned out to be good for them. Patients always spent the night in the shelter with their babies.  In 1940 the Hospital received a direct hit and two of the ward blocks destroyed. The Hospital became part of the NHS in 1948.  Salvation Army members were still on the staff, and this relationship continued.  All services moved to a new unit at the newly opened Homerton Hospital in 1986 and the buildings were demolished and replaced by a housing complex - Mothers' Square. The white archway leading through to Mothers' Square remains. A plaque confirms an architectural award for Mothers' Square, and another shows its opening by Prince Charles.
179 British Asylum for Deaf and Dumb Females. This was in an early 18th house probably built for James Coram, a timber merchant. He sold it to Markham Eeles, a china merchant, who substantially  rebuilt it and added entrance gates. The Asylum moved here in 1864. It had been established in 1851 when following an incident the plight of deaf and dumb women came to the attention of a Mr. and Mrs. Sutton and so they got together a committee of ladies and gentlemen, a secretary was appointed, and the asylum was opened. It was bought by the Council in 1932 who demolished it. The asylum appears to have survived in other premises into the 1980s.
Byland House. This stood on the west side of Clapton Ponds. It served as a vicarage for the second and third incumbents of St James’ Church. It was sold to the Council in 1932 and demolished for the Powell Estate.
Powell Estate. This replaced the Deaf and Dumb Asylum and other houses. It was replaced itself in the 1970s
211 The Fountain. This pub has been on the site since 1814. It closed in 2006 and is now housing.
144-146 The British United Shoe Machinery Company Ltd ., which moved its warehouse and servicing depot from Bethnal Green Road to Hackney in 1956. They were a very large manufacturing company – said to be the world’s largest supplier of footwear manufacturing equipment and based in Leicester
Temple Works. In the 1950s this was Curtis Wipers, making adjustable windscreen wipers.

Maitland Place
Refers to Maitland House, a mansion which stood nearby

Mothers’ Square
Built in 1987-90 on the site of the Mothers Hospital.  It provides housing plus sheltered flats, day hospital and nursing home.  A central pergola distracts from the parked cars.

Nolan Way
Seaton Point. 22 storey block.  It is the last of what were six tower blocks built on the Nightingale Estate. Nightingale Estate was built in 1968 next to Hackney Downs. Seaton Point had a chimney installed alongside it. During 1998-1999, Seaton Point, which had been saved from demolition, was refurbished and painted white.

Queensdown Road
Was once called Lovers Lane
35 Star Pub. This was the Three Sisters with a painting over the corner door of the sisters.  The address was at one time Sisters Place.
Open Doors. The Downs Baptist Church. William Landells was among the first founders of the London Baptist Union. as the third of its annual church-building projects, he initiated the building of the Downs Chapel together with six Clapton men.The foundation stone of the Chapel was laid in 1868. Notable contributors to the costs were the prosperous men who formed the initial Committee: sums Morton M. Glover was the architect. he chose to utilise a radical, new construction material – cast iron to support the main roof of the Chapel- in the building.  The chapel was successful and prosperous supporting a Band of Hope, temperance organisations and much else and it also supported missions in many parts of the world and there is a memorial plaque to them.  A membeiol to those killed in the Great War is in the main enrance. In the Second World War the manse was requisitioned and in 1942 the building was bombed. The church has since worked with local communities, as they change, and provided space and support as well as work with those in need.The church has a front with Romanesque wheel window flanked by towers ending with decorative iron cresting.  On Downs Road are round-arched windows with patterned iron glazing and this continues onto the Sunday School next door. Inside are galleries with iron balustrades and columns

Rowhill Road
St Andrew's Mansions.  Tall half-timbered and tile-hung mansion flats, the whole street is the same. They are by A. Bedbow & W Andrews of Wood Green.

Tilia Road
Light industrial and trading area.

Sources
British History Online. Hackney. Web site
Clarke. Glimpses of Ancient Hackney and Stoke Newington,
Clunn. The Face of London
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford
East London Record
Field. London Place Names,
GLC. Home Sweet Home
Hackney  Society Newsletter
London Borough of Hackney. Web site
London Gardens Online. Web site
Lost Hospitals of London. Web site
Lost Pubs Project. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry.  London North
Robinson, Lost Hackney
Skyscraper News. Web site
Walford.  Highgate and Hampstead to the Lea,
Watson. Hackney and Stoke Newington Past

Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Chingford. Upper Clapton

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Great Eastern Railway to Chingford. The line running north from Hackney Downs station swings north eastwards to Clapton Station and beyond

Post to the south Hackney Downs
Post to the north Springfield
Post to the east Lea Bridge


Benthal Road
Benthal Primary School. The site of the school was a brick field in 1868 and we can guess that this is where the majority of bricks were made for the houses in the area. The school opened in 1876 as Rendalsham Road School but the name was changed to Benthal Road School in 1903. During the Second World War the school was hit by a high explosive bomb in 1940 and had to be closed. It was rebuilt in 1949 very quickly and each class was lit by a large central roof light. In 1966 a new infant school was built which was later used as the junior school and the buildings are linked by a corridor. Benthal was the first school to be designed by Paul Maas designed buildings and archways to be like caves or tents and makes up is a low cluster with classrooms of deliberately varied shapes, and a playground on different levels.  The junior and infants schools were amalgamated in 2006.
Island Mural. This is on the west side of the road on the corner with Evering Road.

Brooke Road
Previously called World’s End. The street name recalls Brooke House which stood in Upper Clapton Road at the end of Brooke Road and which was demolished after war damage.
Hunsdon Estate. This Hackney estate was built in the mid-1960s in the grounds of what had been Brooke House.
Clapton Sorting office. This was built in 1892 by the Royal Mail’s then job architect.

Casmir Road
Beecholme Estate. The estate dates from the late 1940s. It appears to be designed to face onto North Millfields. It was designed by Frederick Gibberd, working with Borough Engineer, G.L.Downing.  The site may be part of the site of Beecholme House, which may have been the home of Maj. John André who was executed in the American War of Independence in 1780.

Cazenove Road
The road was named after a house called ‘The Cazenoves’ that once stood in Upper Clapton Road.
124 Nelson Mandela House. This was originally called Morley House and built in 1938. It was renamed Nelson Mandela House in 1984, It is a long five-storey range by Joseph and the planning of the individual flats was generous at the time. There is a plaque on the building about the renaming and a quotation from Mandela.
122 Chasidey Gur (Avreichium) Beth Hamedrash.  This synagogue dates from 2005 and is Ashkenazi Orthodox associated with the `Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations. This was one of the first seven houses built in the street before 1868
120 one of the first seven houses built in the street before 1868
118 Kol Yehuda Synagogue. The name is also given as Yotzei Teimon Beis Hamedrash as a synagogue associated with the Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations in  2005. It is more recently listed as Bais Pinchas Serench
116 College and Synagogue at the rear
112 Talmud Torah Education. School for 120 pupils with staff from the local Orthodox Jewish community. In the 1940s this was Rosener Synagogue which seems to have become Chabad Synagogue from 1948. This was an Ashkenazi Orthodox synagogue associated with the Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations.  In 1962 it was home to a Polish ritual slaughterman.
88 Satmar Trust School
84-86 Satmar Beth Hamedrash Yetev Lev synagogue managed by The Trustees of the Congregation of the Yetev Lev.  It is an Ashkenazi Orthodox synagogue associated with the Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations.  Mesifta Synagogue was registered here from 1960 and Beth Hamedrash Yetiv Lev registered here by 1962. It was also Chassidim Synagogue until about 1948.
111 Yetev Lev (Satmar) School for Boys. Independent Secondary School. Beth Israel synagogue was registered here 1942-7.
Jubilee Primary School. Based in the square to the north in Filey Avenue
79-83 Beis Rochel Satmar Girls School. Independent School.

Charnwood Street
This was once called Caroline Street. It was built on Conduit Field and The LCC declared housing here damp and unhealthy in the 1920s, bought the site and built the current flats in 1936-7
2 Duke of York.  19th pub named after the then commander of the British Army. It was also known as Pudlocks. Demolished in 2003 and the site is now housing.

Comberton Road
10 Comberton Children’s Centre

Ferron Road
Baden Powell Primary School. Opened 1970

Fountaine Road
This was originally Foulden Road
1a Health Centre

Ickborough Road.
Ickborough School. This was opened in 1970 for children with severe learning difficulties. The original building had been acquired from Hackney Council’s Health Department and built by the London County Council in the early 1960s.  It had been used as a training centre by the Borough and replaced a sports area. For the school a replacement prototype for disabled children was designed by Foster Associates in 1972.  It was the result of a research project undertaken by what was then known as the Spastics Society. In order to test out the ideas of this research this prototype was built. It is a long, single-storey steel-framed building with a protruding covered roof deck. It resembles an industrial shed and is made of corrugated steel. There s a central service core running the length of the building, creating a barrier between the public and private areas. It is set back behind trees and grass.  However the school is now moving from this site.

Kenninghall Road
St Scholastica. The Parish of Clapton was founded in 1862. The church was built in 1962 It was designed by J.E. Sterret & B.D. Kaye in pale grey brick with white windows. The front entrance has circular chapels on either side. The church originated with Fathers of Charity (Rosminians) from Kingsland at St. Scholastica's Retreat on part of a site given by Elizabeth Harrison in 1862.  It was intended the church would form one side of a garden.   However it was later decided that a school. chapel would be built instead of a church plus a presbytery for a parish priest.  In 1887 a temporary church was registered in the north east corner of the garden.  In the 1960s this permanent church was built next to the new school following the demolition of the Retreat and was eventually consecrated in 1987. 
St. Scholastica Retreat. This was founded by brother and sister William and Elizabeth  Harrison from the estate of their brother  Robert who had died in 1852 and his widow,Charlotte Scholastica. It was for 40 poor Catholics aged over 60.and with a professional or wholesale background and had lived for ten years in England. They each had a self-contained home in a block around a garden which had been blessed by Cardinal Wiseman. The buildings were by E. W. Pugin and occupied from 1863 and ministered to spiritually by Fathers of Charity. It was demolished in 1972, but continues as a home for aged gentlefolk in Princes Risborough
St. Scholastica Roman Catholic.Primary School. This opened in 1868 as Clapton Roman Catholic School in a building which was also the chapel for the Retreat.  A new building was provided in 1879 and received a parliamentary grant by 1890.  It became voluntary aided by 1951 and Called St. Scholastica from 1972.
Gooch House. 17-storey tower block built for Hackney Council by Harry Moncrieff in 1955-  the first of many. It is concrete-framed with projecting balconies.
Nightingale Estate. Built by the Greater London Council to replace housing in roads north of Hackney Downs, between 1967 and 1972.  It was later seen as a bleak concrete expanse with six point blocks of up to 21 storeys plus linked slabs framing them. These blocks were called Seaton, Embley, Farnell, Rachel, Rathbone, and Southerland Points.  Five of them have since been demolished. During the 1990's the flats fell into disrepair and the Hackney Council decided it get rid of them.  Farnell Point was the first to be felled by controlled explosion in 1998 but at the same time Seaton Point, which still remains, was refurbished and painted white. Embley and Southerland were demolished next in December 2000 with Christmas trees painted on the banners. The last of flats to go were Rathbone and Rachel in 2003.
45 Al Falah Primary School. Al-Falah is an Islamic faith school opened in 2001 as a school for boys only and moved here in 2004. In 2005 it extended its to cater for girls’ also and has expanded successfully
BSix Brooke House Sixth Form College was opened on the site of the of Brooke House school in 2002. Itself built on the site of Brooke House. It was set up by the then Secretary of State for Education, and was part of a plan to build eleven new sixth form colleges in London. BSix offers courses at all levels and across a wide range of subjects.  Hackney education authority, The Learning Trust, introduced a programme to create City Academies in the borough, all with sixth forms and other schools followed. The college has however been seen as making good progress. In 2009 it became Representative Organisation of the Year by the Learning and Skills Improvement Service (LSIS) for its work on student voice and has since won other awards.

Lea Bridge Road
Lea Bridge Roundabout. This area used to be the centre of Clapton.  It was a crossroads where a fountain surmounted by a statue stood in the centre. The statue has disappeared, but the drinking fountain was moved to the corner of Rectory and Amhurst Road in 1908 then to next to the Public Library in Homerton High Street where it remains. In 1974 the roundabout was built by way of a grant of £834,800 from the Department of the Environment to the Greater London Council.  The roundabout had an underpass which proved dangerous and the subways were closed in the 1990s and traffic lights reinstalled. The plans for dual carriageways off the roundabout were never implemented.  The centre has now been adapted into a bus stand to replace the now disused subway network and this was originally used for the bendy buses on route 38 which terminated at Clapton Pond and which was opened in November 2006.  This includes a rest area for the bus drivers. There have also been some Landscaping improvements. A semi-circle of pear trees was planted on the stand to screen vehicles and new grass banks and verges added.
2 Hi Metals. In the 1950s and 1960s this site was an aluminium stockholder.
2a Madina Mosque. The mosque was set up in 1984 by people from a Guajarati background in what had been a warehouse. This is an adaptation of 1987 by Hackney Environmental Action Resource and opened in 1991.  It is in red brick with standard Islamic features - paired ogee-headed windows, domes and a minaret.


Lower Clapton Road
Clapton House was to the north of the pond opposite St. James’ Church and built around  1680.  It was the home of Bishop Thomas Wood (who endowed the nearby almshouses) and then it  was home to  Sir William Chapman of the South Sea Company.  Israel Levin Salomons, a silk merchant, had it  between 1779 and 1781, calling  it Leozhards and spent lavishly on a building which in 1799 formed a 'chapel or private synagogue' .  It was later owned by members of the Powell family. In 1858 it was used leased by the St. John’s Foundation School for Clergy Sons.   It was demolished in 1881 and Thistlethwaite Road built on the site.
St. John's School for the sons of the Clergy, was established first in St. John's Wood in 1852, and then moved to Clapton from 1858 to 1872, and later moved to Leatherhead. While at Clapton the head was Rev, Edward Connerford Hawkins,  his wife Jane Grahame was an  aunt of Kenneth Grahame, author of Wind in the Willows and their son, born in Clapton, was Anthony Hope, author of the Prisoner of Zenda.,
St. James.  The church is opposite Clapton House the Revd. T. B. Powell gave a cottage and land called the strawberry garden as a site for it in 1840 . It was built in 1840 by E. C. Hakewill in stock brick and stone with a polygonal turret and passage to the porch. The Vestries were added in 1902 by W.D. Caroe as well as the organ case, cross and candlesticks.  In 1978 the nave became a centre for handicapped children. It has also been used by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church
The Clapton Cinematograph Theatre on Lower Clapton Road was originally built in 1896 to be used as an assembly/function room for the pub next door. It had an ornate facade to match that of the pub and elaborately decorated plaster decorations on the beams of the barrel vaulted ceiling of the auditorium.  14 years later it was converted into a cinema Designed by George Duckworth called the Clapton Cinematograph and later as the Kenninghall Cinema. It was and converted for sound pictures in 1929. In the late 1930s, it was taken over by Odeon and the frontage was modified. It closed in 1979  and re-opened in 1983 as a nightclub called “Dougie’s”.  It later re-opened as the Palace Pavilion nightclub and became the focus for a number of stabbings and shootings. In 2011 the local Ethiopian Orthodox St Mary of Zion Church – which is currently housed in the St James’ Anglican church bought the building
217a   ABC cinema.  This opened as The Ritz Cinema in 1939. It was built by Associated British Cinemas and designed by their house architect William R. Glen in typical Art Deco style. In 1962 its name was changed to ABC and it closed in 1973. The building was quickly demolished and in 1994 a block of flats was built there.
6 The Clapton Hart Pub. Built as the White Hart Hotel in 1722, it was rebuilt in the 1830s after it was burnt down and again in 1890 perhaps as the result of a gas explosion. It was then a Reid’s house and called the White Hart. by the 1980s it was a Bass Charrington house and by 1983 the pub was trading as Schnapps, It has also been called Stagecoach Inn, and had several identities as a nightclub up to 2001 developing a bad reputation.  It reopened as Chimes - a late-night bar and music venue and the former pub part of the building became unused and derelict before it closed in 2008. It reopened in 2012 as the Clapton Hart Public House

Mount Pleasant Lane
St.Matthew. The church opened in 1866 in an Iron Church and the foundation stone of a new church was laid the following year, the architect of which was Francis Dollman. This church was declared redundant in 1977 having been badly damaged by fire and the Church Hall next door was converted into a church. In 1972 it became part of a group ministry with other local churches.
Patchwork Farm. Food growing site behind the church
86 Sheltered housing for Newlon Housing Trust.  Built on part of a church site. By Anthony Richardson & Partners.  This is in concrete block work and grey aluminium,
Muston Road
Rigby, Battcock Brush factory. This company, originally based in Bethnal Green, made a wide range of brushes and related items.
Ablex Pyjamas Factory. This was here in the 1930s
Frenchs Case factory in the road 1920s- 1940s. They made luggage of all kinds

Narford Road
Narford Road took a direct hit from a VI Flying Bomb during the Second World War and the Northwold Road end was largely destroyed, being replaced during the  1950s and 1970s by low blocks of Local Authority flats.


Northwold Road
This was once called Dow’s or Kate’s Lane
22-24 St Michael and All Angels. Church built in 1885 on the corner with Fountaine Road. It is in red brick and designed by J.E.K. Cutts. There is also a bell set into the top of the main front wall
Vicarage to the north dates from 1885 and is in brick to match the church
64 Royal Sovereign Pub. Dates from before 1871
Northwold Primary School. There appears to have been a girls' industrial school here in the 1890s. Northwold Road Board School was  opened in 1902 and became separate secondary modern and primary schools by 1949. The secondary school had closed by 1955.  The primary school is now applying for academy status.
Tower works. This was initially Bernard Brock’s piano factory on the site of Bridgeford Close. Brock made upright pianos but is said to have invented the ‘baby’ grand. The factory made about 400 pianos most after Brock’s death.  Tower Works later became a furniture factory remaining untold at least the 1950s.
Amherst works. Greaves and Thomas furniture factory. This lay between Gelderson and Narford Roads and is now the site of modern housing. Greaves & Thomas were the  inventors of the Put-U-Up settee-bed and were on site from 1911 until 1965.
161 Sam and Annie Cohen Wellbeing Centre. Day Centre for disabled people and many others. With a sparkly design over the door.
Clapton Library.  Designed by Edwin Cooper in 1913. The most domestic of three Hackney libraries designed by the distinguished him. It was intended to build a tower, but this did not happen.  The library was refurbished in 2012

Powell Road
St. James National School. This opened by 1846 for girls with land settled in trust by the Powell family in. 1853. It had a parliamentary. grant by 1870.  The nearby boys' school probably opened before 1863, and a new infant school was built next to the girls’ school. It closed as a day school in 1876, following an inspector's report, (but reopened by 1880. It Closed after 1938

Prout Road
The Alf Partridge Community Hall

Rendelsham Road
90 London Tavern. Named for a road opposite which was called London Lane but which was lost following the building of the Nightingale Estate.

Rossendale Street
Previously named Conduit Street and built on Conduit field.  The LCC declared housing here damp and unhealthy in the 1920s, bought the site and built the current flats in 1936-7
16 United Pentecostal Church. The church has been on this site since the 1970s
Second World War bunker.  Built in 1938 a rectangular semi-basement under concrete over 6ft thick. The original equipment inside includes an electric generator powered by a twin bicycle frame.  It is hidden from the road by some converted civil defence garages and forms the basement of a Second World War gas decontamination and cleansing station. In 1988 there were plans to restore the bunker and there was a public open day but since then its condition has deteriorated.

Rossington Street
30 This was the Hope and Anchor pub. It closed in 1993 and the premises are now flats and offices

Stellman Close
44-56 Growing Communities. Food growing site

Thistlethwaite Road
19  plaque to writer Harold Pinter who grew up here.
25 plaque to the site of the first synagogue in the present-day London Borough of Hackney, built 1779-80 in the grounds of Clapton House.

Upper Clapton Road 
18 Old King’s Head. This was the oldest pub in Upper Clapton and featured an Imperial Stout mirror. Closed and apparently flats.
Brooke House. This was a courtyard house of medieval origin and a Dower House for the Queen’s of England.  The earliest recorded house on the site was in 1409.  The home of William Worley, Dean of St.Paul’s in 1479, it was rebuilt in 1560 by Lord Hunsdon. It became known as Brooke House when it was owned by the Greville family.  During the 16th century the house was held by amongst others, Thomas Cromwell and Henry VIII.  In 1536 it was the scene of a reconciliation between Henry VIII and his daughter Mary.  Much still was left of this original house in the 1890s – medieval remains in the cellar, stones by the entrance showing the date of 1573 and marble remains of the hall pavement and much more. Later in the 16th it was the home of Lady Margaret Lennox.
Brooke House. Private asylum. In 1758 William Clarke, leased and converted Brooke House into a private lunatic asylum.  When Clarke died in 1777, he left the asylum to his two brothers - John and the Revd Charles Clarke.  In 1781 the lease was bought by Dr John Monro who had been a friend of William Clarke.  Dr Monro, came from a long line of doctors who specialised in mental disorders and fFrom 1728 to 1853 family members were the principal physicians at Bethlehem Hospital.. Under the 1774 the Madhouses Act a licence for Brooke House was granted to Dr John Monro.   One of Monro's  sons, Thomas took over the licence for Brooke House in 1790. The patients came from the middle and upper classes but their treatment did not differ from patients at Bethlem, except that they were not restrained by chains. In 1820 Dr Thomas Monro and purchased the freehold of Brooke House. During the Second World War  the patients were evacuated and the asylum closed.  In 1940 the north courtyard and its buildings were destroyed by a high explosive bomb.  The asylum did not reopen after the war. In 1944 the London County Council bought the house and estate.  Further bomb damage ensued. Brooke House was demolished in 1954
Brooke House School - was built on the site in 1960. This was built as a secondary school in 1958-60 by Armstrong & MacManus.  It was had two curtain-walled slabs, the taller one with curved staircase drums and then reclad in the 1980s.  It took secondary boys previously pupils at Joseph Priestley and Mount Pleasant schools. It amalgamated with Upton House School to form Homerton House School in 1982.
Hackney College. Brooke House School was extensively altered and became the administrative head quarters of Hackney College in 1990. It has subsequently become Bsix Sixth Form Centre with an address in Kenninghall Road.
Milestone. It is said that the 3rd milestone from Shoreditch stood outside Brook House
The Mount. The Mount was a grand castellated house standing in grounds in the area which is now Mount Pleasant Road.
Mount Works.  This was the factory where Alfred Pridge made Sphinx Ink. Pridge moved into the manufacture of inks in the late 19th. The firm had a branch in Paris, and an emphasis on his export trade. They made blue- black and jet-black non-corroding writing and copying inks, school ink, indestructible marking ink for linen and other fabrics. Ink was also sold in pellet form – just add to water.
Mount Works. Puckridge and Nephew, Ltd. This firm made goldbeaters skins here in the 1890s. They went out of business in 1951
Lea Bridge Tram Depot.  This was the North Metropolitan Tramways horse tram shed opened in 1873, with it and associated stables.  It closed in 1907.  The building retains many original features, granite setts in the yard, tramlines running through the ground floor of the central tram shed building, cast iron colonnades, and stable flooring on the first floor where the horses were originally housed. From 1872 to 1907 trams took commuters to and from the City and West End. One of the horse-trams, which operated from here, is currently displayed in the London Transport Museum in Covent Garden.
Clapton Station. Opened in 1872 by the Great Eastern Company it lies between Tottenham Hale and Hackney Downs and also St. James Street Stations.  Stairways descend to platforms in a cutting.  It was remodelled in 1982 with a new office and bridge done with GLC money and not changing many Great Eastern Railway Company features
85a Congregational Church now United Reform. Services in Upper Clapton began as early as 1812 in a house opposite Brooke House. This was followed by a building on the west side of the road registered in 1813.  It is thought this was opposite Mount Pleasant field and on the site of the Conduit field .It closed in 1850. Another building was erected on an enlarged site by T. Emmet in 1851 with nave, aisles, corner pinnacles and with an assembly hall at rear for Sunday schools. This was damaged in Second World War bombing and services were held in the hall from 1950. A new chapel was built in 1988 by W. B. Attenbrow.
Crooked Billet. The pub was present at least by the early 18th and rebuilt with a tea garden and covered bowling alley after 1840. It was rebuilt again `in the 1950s in brown brick and pitched roofs and an Arts and Craft style. It has a very large rear garden.


Sources
Benthal Primary School. Web site
British History Online. Hackney
Bsix College. Wikipedia. Website
Cinema Treasures, Web site
Clarke. Glimpses of Ancient Hackney and Stoke Newington
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford
Grace’s Guide. Web site
Hackney  Society Newsletter
Ickborough School. Web site
JewishGen. Web site
London Borough of Hackney. Web site
Lost Hospitals of London. Web site
Lost Pubs. Web site
Mosque Directory. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry.  London North
Summerson. Georgian London
St. Scholastica. Web site
St. Scholastica’s Retreat. Web site
St. Scholastica Primary School. Web site
The Clapton Hart. Web site

Great Eastern Railway Liverpool Street to Chingford. Walthamstow

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The Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Chingford
The rail line running north from Walthamstow Central Station continues to run north westwards

Post to the south Walthamstow Hoe Street
Post to the east Walthamstow

Atlee Terrace
A road named after a Labour Prime Minister – rarely found.

Aubrey Road
This road was previously called Cut-throat Lane. It is now said to be part of ‘Poets Corner’ with road names all after famous poets.  It is basically a back road to houses in Howard Road, which it predates. It has a ‘little free library’ outside one of the houses.
4a The Sclerine Crystal Company. This is a company making parts for crystal wireless sets in 1925
Badlis Road
Built by Warner Estates in 1900 and named after an Essex farm owned by the family

Bedford Road
2-4 Walthamstow Sri Katpaga Vinayagar Temple. This was Foresters Hall. The elephant-headed figure on the front of the Temple is Ganesha regarded as the remover of obstacles, the patron of education, knowledge and wisdom in both science and the fine arts.

Bishop’s Close
The area now built up was the site of the gardens of the house called The Chestnuts now in the centre of the road. It may have been built as a boys' school in 1820
Chestnuts. This house was built in the early 19th.  It was apparently built as a pair of houses perhaps by the Monoux school headmaster as home for himself plus accommodation for boarders

Cairo Road
Church Hill Baptist church. This is a church which is part of a modern block of flats. Church Hill Baptist church, also called Cairo Road church, was formed though a union of Zion, Maynard Road, and Commercial Street church. This was effected when the Particular Baptists of commercial Street, Wapping, sold their premises and in 1911 invited Zion to join them in building a new church here. The new church was opened as Commercial Street Memorial church. The current building of flats and church is called Kevan House after a previous minister.

Chingford Road
31 a double fronted building used as a dentist. On the gable are terracotta heads with oak and thistle motifs

Church Hill
Flats with a pattern of angled balconies and decorative wall panels. This appears to be an extension to the Central Parade and clock tower in Hoe Street built in 1958-64.  The site replaced shops and Hitchman's Dairy Depot which were wiped out by a V2 in 1944
1 Ross Wyld Hall. Ross Wyld was a Walthamstow Councillor during the Second World War. A hall was incorporated in the new development on the site which had had the rocket attack and named after him.  It is currently in use by a day nursery.
6-10 Churchill Business Centre. This was built to compliment the Central Parade opposite in the early 1960s and was used by the Inland Revenue.  It has leaf designs on the facade of the upper storeys.
Methodist Church. This began in a as a church at Prospect Hill in 1872.  In 1898 a new church was opened on Church Hill.  In 1941 its manse was demolished by bombing. In 1944 the church itself was destroyed by bombing.  The site was later sold for offices and is now under the business centre.
A mission was built on the south side of the road by a Mrs. Carter of the Limes, Shernhall Street, before 1882 and later taken over by Trinity Congregational Church.  In 1925 it was passed to the London City Mission and they rebuilt it in 1951.  It closed in 1970.
12 House dating from 1892.  This has housed a series of government and local government bodies – currently Waltham Forest Music Service which provides support to schools for tuition and loan of instruments.   There are also the offices of Barnardos adoption and fostering service, and Waltham Forest Children’s Rights undertaken with Barnardos. In the past the building has housed the National Assistance Board among other bodies.
27 Royal Mail Sorting Office. Built in 1965 by the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works
29 Energy House. This was built as the local authority's electricity showrooms in 1937 by T.F.Cunningham, Borough Engineer and Surveyor.  It was then called “Electricity House” and on nationalisation passed to the London Electricity Board.  It is a plain building in a grand manner and now used as offices. Drill hall.  This was in a house called Walthamstow Lodge. It was the Head Quarters of the 7th battalion Essex Territorials. Dating from at least the 1890s having moved from what is now the Vestry Museum.  The drill hall closed in the 1950s and a war memorial which had been outside it commemorating the dead is now at Whipps Cross. 
Church Hill House. Built in 1794 this was on the north side of Church Hill.  The house was bought by Mr. Thomas Vigne in 1830 followed by other wealthy families. In 1890 became the home of the Walthamstow High School for Girls. In 1918 it became the home of the local branch of the Y.M.C.A. set up as a memorial to the dead of the Great War. It provided gymnastics, football, harriers, swimming and other clubs, as well as concerts and lectures in a large hut which was specially built. Its status as a war memorial was displayed in gilt lettering along the top of the building. Church House was demolished in 1933 and the YMCA is now elsewhere in the borough.
Walthamstow School for Girls.  Built 1911-13 by C.J. Dawson with a brick English Baroque front. The girls wear green uniforms and thus it is known as the ‘green school’.  The school began as a private school in 1890 with a committee of subscribers. It but moved to Church Hill House a few months after its start.  The school was taken over by the county council in 1911, and in 1913 moved to new buildings on the old vicarage glebe. It was enlarged in 1918, 1928–9, and 1962 and recently refurbished.
The Greek Theatre is in the gardens of The Girls' High School. It was built in the 1920s by unemployed local labour and in 1925 featured Sybil Thorndike in the role of Medea. It consists of a circular arena with steps up to a stage on one side and a pillared portico on the other.
50 Church of the Nazarene. This was Moreia Church which began in the area in 1901, when Welsh residents met began to meet and used various buildings in the area including in the late 1920s the Y.M.C.A. hall on Church Hill until it was sold in 1932.  D. A. Davies bought Church Hill House, demolished it, and converted the stable in 1933 into the Moreia church.  In 1958 a new church was built in Leytonstone and the Moreia church was taken over by the Church of the Nazarene.
Monoux Almshouses. A row of cottages with a higher building in the centre originating in 1527 but later rebuilt. They were founded by local benefactor, George Monoux, City merchant and Lord Mayor in 1544. There were fourteen houses plus a Grammar School for Boys. The long timber framed range was intended as residences for a schoolmaster, parish clerk and alms priest. It was planned as six single-room dwellings with a schoolroom above. Other upper rooms were to be available for local events. In 1782 Walthamstow Parish took over the charities and the building was thereafter maintained. The range with a classical entrance now appears to be the earliest part, but it is a reconstruction after war damage, done in 1955 by Braddell & Laurence; the rendered part was rebuilt in c. 1730.  The school moved elsewhere in 1819.  The almshouses have been managed since 1957 are now managed by the Walthamstow and Chingford Almshouse Charity which is based in the buildings. The surrounding garden has lawns and borders although in the 19th residents were responsible for their own gardens with a privy at the end of the plot. The boundary with the churchyard is now poorly defined but the gardens have mown grass while the graveyard is left unmown for wildlife. There are also planted commemorative trees and benches. A plaque on the building describes their history and shows a bearded man holding shovel in one hand and a shepherd's crook in the other and has a dog at his feet. A woman has a goose at her feet.
Parsonage of St Mary's church.  This dates from 1903 but is the successor to several others.  It is a substantial Edwardian property now part of the school.
115 Fairmount. 19th house built as the home of Francis Wragg in 1870s. Would have had amazing views when built

Church Lane
St Mary’s Church. This was once the centre of the village. It is a 12th church on a Saxon site and is likely to have been a substantial building by the 13th.  It was founded in the early 12th by Ralph de Toni, Lord of Walthamstow’s Toni Manor. The 15th tower is of the late medieval Thames Valley type, with a 15th carved roundel with lamb and flag.  The tower was rebuilt in 1535 with funding from George Monoux. In the 18th galleries were built for an enlarged congregation and the current windows were inserted. Much of the church was increased in height at the same time. The church itself is covered by rendering and yellow brick refacing done in 1817-18 by Charles Bacon. In 1876, Georgian box pews and ceilings were removed.  There are two 16th chapels built for Sir George Monoux and Robert Thorne.  Oak panelling was installed as a Great War memorial. The chancel extension and vestry date from 1938 and choir stalls were given by Sir William Mallinson in 1939 as a memorial to his father.  There was serious damage during the Second World War when, in 1940 the south aisle roof was destroyed and a gallery was subsequently demolished to provide timber for the repair. In 1944 a bomb damaged the church tower. . There s a brass to Sir George Monoux, of 1543 and his wife with two small kneeling figures and some other brasses and monuments. In 1995 extensive refurbishment took place, which included reflooring and creating a larger entrance area. Some oak beams discovered during the work would be refurbished and left exposed.
Churchyard. Railed and crowded - rails were removed in 1942 to provide scrap for the war effort but replaced in 1955. There are some 1300 visible monuments with probably 26,000 burials and there are four listed tombs. It is divided into four railed areas with public access to only two but it is bisected by paths. There are the war graves of three dead in the Great War and nine of the Second World War.  There are some interesting tombs - for example that of the sugar merchants Dobree has carvings of sugar lumps. There are two mass graves, one of them was for victims of the Black Death in the 14h and the other for those of The Great Plague of 1665
2-8 The Ancient House. This 15th house was built on the site of the manor house of Toni on Berry Field. It was divided up in the 18th and restored 1934 having been used as a bicycle shop and a tea room. It is a complete timber-framed hall house of the 15th with crown-post roof, and jettied and gabled wings. The three-bay wing fates from the 16th.  In 1934 the work was done by C.J. Brewin with advice from SPAB; the work done by Fullers the builders in 1934 as a memorial to W G Fuller after his death. Weatherboarding was removed from the exterior, to reveal the medieval timber frame, which was strengthened by steel ties. More repairs were done in 2001-2 by Butler & Hegarty. Beside the later addition bow window a section of the old wattle and daub is shown behind glass. The pavement in front of the building has been cut away and replaced by glass to show the original ground level which has risen over six centuries. It is now used as housing.
Welcome Centre. St Mary's Infants School. This was originally held in a barn in 1824 by the vicar. In 1828 a school was built in the churchyard and was a preparatory school for poor children, who went on to the National school. By 1882 the school was known as the Central Infants School. It became a voluntary controlled school in 1951. The building of 1828 has a front of yellow brick. In 1928 the building was restored and later extended. Now in use as a community centre.
National Spiritualist church. Frugal buildings for St Mary's National Boys' school, with plaque dated 1819. St. Mary's National school was built in 1819 to replace the girls Blue school, which since 1782 had been run by the vestry along with the Monoux school foundations. The new school took children several local schools. It had teachers' houses attached, and was enlarged in 1825 and subsequently. In 1866 the boys were transferred to a new building while the girls remained here, and changed round in 1904. The school closed in 1906 and the building was sold in 1920.
Diamond Jubilee Meadow. Green area next to the ancient house – planted out for the Diamond Jubilee.
Pillar Box. Penfold style pillar box, octagonal and probably from 1865.

Church Passage
This was a main road in the middle ages as the extension Church Lane to what is now St Marys Road.
House which is 2.5s metres wide on the outside. The interior is less.

East Avenue
12 International Muslim Movement. Cultural Centre. This is in what seems to have been part of a clothing factory in St. Mary Road.

Folkestone Road
Potters House Christian Centre.  This began when a missionary couple came to London in the 1980s from Australia. Folkestone Road hall previously belong to the Brethren and may have originated in missions held at the town hall in 1884. The hall was enlarged in 1887 and a new hall opened in 1889. It was rebuilt in 1963.

Forest Road
Lloyd Park  (the majority of the park is in the square to the north, - this square only covers the area of the gallery southwards.
Lloyd Park is named after newspaper publisher Edward Lloyd, whose son Frank gave the estate to the council in 1898. It had been previously known as Winns, from a family who once lived there.  It was opened by Sam Woods MP, in 1900.
William Morris Gallery. The gallery is devoted to the life and legacy of William Morris: designer, craftsman, and socialist. This large house was called the Water House, from the square moat in the grounds to the north. The house is probably dates from 1750 with a remodeled front. It is shown on a map of 1758 and a brick dated 1740 has been found in an upper wall. William Morris’s family lived here from 1847 followed by publisher, Edward Lloyd. It was then owned by the Council and between 1911-1943 it was called Lloyd Park Mansion and was used for a children’s clinic. Morris had died in 1896 and proposals for a museum were made in 1900 and definite plans were made in 1934. It was opened by Prime Minister Clement Attlee in 1950. In 2011 the Gallery had a major redevelopment and now includes a tea room.
The parts of the park nearest the house. When the area became a public park the grounds immediately surrounding the Water House were caned and land to the east was built over. A bowling green was laid out north-west of the house, used by the Walthamstow Ladies Bowls Club. A small 'scented garden for the visually impaired' was located nearby.  Behind the house balustraded terraces were laid out by the Council in 1899, with municipal-style bedding and coniferous trees and beyond that were a modern wooden aviary, since removed. There is a Judas tree at the eastern side of the house, and at the back are some golden cypresses the largest of that variety in Britain. To commemorate the centenary of the park a time capsule was buried in the lawn outside the Gallery in 2000.
434 Lloyd Park Methodist Church Central Hall was built in 1914 following use of an iron church, Lloyd Park Hall, in 1903.  The new Central Hall had with shops for letting plus an institute added in 1923. It was Bombed in the Second World War and closed although services were held in the institute because of debt.  It was eventually sold to the Salvation Army
434 Salvation Army. The Walthamstow Citadel originated in a tent mission. A Citadel, with shops below was designed by W. Gilbee Scott and built in 1891–2 on the site of Ball's boxing booths. In 1958 the Army bought the former Lloyd Park Methodist church, and it was registered as the Citadel in 1961.  This now forms a block in Forest Road with shops on the grand floor and a shop for the Army itself at one end.
590 Brookscroft. House from the mid 18th 1760 in brick. The house was originally built between 1554 and 1568 and belonged to the Bonnell family from 1686 until the mid 18th, when it was rebuilt.  It was the home of one of the numerous sons of Robert Wigram the shipbuilder.  It is now divided into flats but was previously used as a welfare centre.
617 Bell Pub. This provides a focal point for the area, and the licence dates from at least 1860. It is a decorative 19th pub by Lewcock & Collcott with stucco, faience & polished granite decoration. It replaced an earlier beer house of the same name.
642 YMCA building. Complex built in 1969 designed by Kenneth Lindy. They provide homeless accommodation for young people, sports facilities and other services.
644 Guardian House. The Walthamstow Press Ltd. was formed in 1923 to print the Walthamstow Guardian, founded in 1876. It was initially based in a print works in the High Street empty because the printer had died. In 1935 it moved to Guardian House, where a new foundry and rotary plant were installed. The site is now Hallingbury Court flats.
656 Hookways built a factory in 1899 and moved to Hoe Street from Aldersgate Street.  They made collars, braces, and umbrellas and by 1849 made poplin shirts.  By 1949 making better class poplin shirts
Chestnut Farm. This became the site of the civic centre. The farm was latterly owned by Hitchmans Dairy and used for grazing. It was previously known as Clay Hall.
Civic Centre.  An art deco group with the Town Hall, Assembly Hall built 1937-43 and Courts built 1972-3. A competition to build the centre was won in 1932 by P.D. Hepworth with this Swedish influenced design and on a scale larger than the government buildings of many nation states.  Only two of the intended buildings were begun and the work was limited by wartime restrictions.
Town Hall.  This was built in 1941 by P. Hepworth. Only the carcasses of offices and hall block had been finished by 1939 and they were completed under wartime conditions. It is in a landscaped setting, behind a formal forecourt with circular fountain which was renewed in 1999.  The offices are in the main block with a copper faced clock tower – itself simpler than intended with fibreglass uplighters painted to imitate metal. Sculpted figures on the outside of the council chamber are by John F. Kavanagh - the head of Fellowship modelled on William Morris and they also represent Motherhood, Work, Recreation and Education. Panels In the committee rooms are of locally made plywood and in the council chamber wartime economy led to the reuse of Victorian furnishings from the old town hall in Orford Road. The centre itself was used by the ARP during the war and this fortified basement later became a Cold War shelter.
War Memorial in front of the town hall is a mourning figure in granite standing beside a structure. In 1922 this was originally sited in Lloyd Park and moved here in 1961. The nose is broken off the statue. Later inscriptions commemorate the Second World War and subsequent conflicts. There is an inscription ‘OUR GLORIOUS DEAD “LEST WE FORGET” 1914-1918 1939-1945' and ' IN MEMORY OF THE FALLEN OF WALTHAMSTOW 1945 TO THE PRESENT DAY'
Assembly Hall. This is also by P. Hepworth opened in 1943 in the same Swedish influence design. Inside is a full-height foyer with a high star-shaped window. The hall also has large windows, a stage.  Outside are sculptures of Comedy and Tragedy by Irish sculptor John Francis Kavanagh
Court House. Built 1972-3 by the Greater London Council’s Special Works Department under Geoffrey E. Horsfall. It is in reinforced concrete faced with Portland stone. This was the first scheme to carry out the 1969 recommendations for new Magistrates Courts in London.  There are five informal, flexibly planned courts on the first floor, with lighting through the roof and a Juvenile court on the ground floor. The various court entrances and car parks are tucked away as Hepworth had envisaged
Beacon in front of the Magistrate's Court. This gas-burning structure was set up to celebrate the new "millennium" on December 31st 1999.
707 Waltham Forest College.  This was built as South West Essex Technical College and School of Art in 1938 by John Stuart, Essex County Architect and it replaced Walthamstow and Leyton Colleges of Art and two trade schools. It later became North East London Polytechnic and then the University of East London.  It is next to the Civic Centre, and equally grand with a long brick building with a portico and a pediment with carvings, and some flat reliefs said to be by Eric Gill or by Bradford. During the Second World War it was used to provide technical training for military personnel; by the RAF in 1940, by the army in 1941 and by the navy in 1942 – when it was reclassified as a ship called HMS Shrapnel 
Plough. In front of the college. The area was once a series of clearings in Epping Forest which were farmed.
Gillards Way
Gillard & Co. Ltd., pickle factory built in 1931.  From 1892 they were also at a site in the High street - the Chestnuts which they renamed the Vintry Works. They also made pies and sausages here as well as chutney, sauces and condiments.

Greenleaf Road
Ruarch City Church. Founded in Brixton in 1992. This building was St Luke’s church and hall. It was built in 1901-02 by Bottle and Olley and the chancel was extended in 1923. The church originated in 1900–1 as a mission of St. Mary's and a parish was formed in 1903. It is in brown and red brick with a small tower.
4 Greenleaf Road Baptist Church. This began in 1902 in a tent mission sponsored on Church Hill. A group then met in Hoe Street until 1903 when Forest Road Board School was hired. A church was formed in 1905 and a school-chapel opened and registered in 1906 as the Central Baptist Hall. The Tabernacle was destroyed by bombing in 1944, but services continued in a hall. The rebuilt Tabernacle, a contemporary compact building, opened in 1949.
William Morris Community Centre. This was opened in 1987. This council owned building is currently run by the William Morris Community Centre Users Association.

Hatherley Mews
Hatherley Mews Offices. Business area with 19th buildings complemented by a new office block.

Hawthorne Road
1 Aladura International Church.  A Nigerian inspired church dating from 1970. The building was a Methodist Mission Hall originating in 1880. A church was built in 1882 with financial aid from John Hitchman. It had closed by 1917, and was bought in 1924 by St. Luke's church as a parish hall. In 1964 the building was bought by the borough council for demolition, but continued in use as a store

High Street
The road was originally called Marsh Street
Central Library. Built in 1907 by V K Dunford and funded by Andrew Carnegie. The upper room was planned as a public hall with a stage and is reached by a carved timber staircase restored after fire damage in 1982.  The building was to the front of a house to which a reading room was added in 1894, probably by Lewis Angell and this survives. Extensions have been built to the rear and include a new single storey children library on and a reception/entrance foyer with a lift to the first floor
Public Hall & Baths. These were built in 1900 designed by architect William Dunfield and could be used as a public hall in winter. They included a swimming pool and slipper in bath. Demolished in 1968
George Monoux School. This was next to the baths and opened in 1889. This grammar school was originally founded in 1527 by Sir George Monoux., and was reorganised in 1884.  It moved from here to Chingford in 1927.
182 Carlton Cinema.  This was on the corner with Colebrook Road. It was opened on 1913. It had a white stone front with an open balcony. It was renovated in 1959, and closed in 1964. The front part of the building was demolished and the auditorium turned into a supermarket. It was demolished in 1986, and the site has been re-developed.
195-197 Palace Theatre. This was on the north side of the road east of Erskine Road. It opened in 1903 and was operated, designed and built by the same company as other Palace theatre’s in London.  There were towers on each end of its red brick facade. There was a stage and eight dressing rooms. It was a music hall and variety theatre which also screened films. They also staged plays. In later years there were circuses, annual pantomimes and even nude shows. In 1952 it was taken over by Countess de la Marr, and became a playhouse but closed in 1954. The building was eventually left abandoned and became derelict. It was demolished in 1960, and shops and flats called Palace Parade were built on the site.
Congregational Church.  Marsh Street Church is said to have originated in 1672, when a house was licensed for Presbyterian meetings and a meeting-house was built in 1695 on the north side of the road. This was later pulled down but the site was conveyed to the congregation and a new meeting-house for Presbyterian worship was built in 1739.  In 1786 evangelical members seceded to form a New Meeting. The Old Meeting survived to the 1830s and the chapel still existed in 1839 but it had been pulled down by 1861. The New Meeting opened in 1787 on a site on the south side of the road part of which became a burial ground. In 1868 the Charity Commissioners agreed that the site of the Old Meeting should be transferred to the New Meeting trustees to build a larger church and a new church, on the Old Meeting site, opened in 1871 in stone to the design of John Tarring & Son. Conway Hall was added in 1899. As a result of bomb damage in 1944 the steeple became unsafe and was taken down in 1954 and the church itself closed in 1965.

Hoe Street
1 The Empire Cinemaopened in 1913. It was built for the Good Brothers, local builders merchants, who operated other local cinemas, all of which were taken over by Hamilton Cinemas Ltd. in 1933 and closed two months later. The Empire Cinema was taken over by Amusements (Leyton) Ltd. and re-opened in 1933 but by 1937 it was operated by Clavering & Rose. In 1961 it was re-named Cameo Cinema and Closed in 1963. It became a bingo club, and showed Bollywood films. It was taken over by Classic Cinemas re-opened as a Tatler Cinema Club in 1970, screening sex films to ‘members only’ and this closed in 1981. It was converted into an amusement arcade, and then the Hurricane Room, a snooker club. Now said to have been taken over by a religious organisation.
5-7 Kingdom Hall. Fiesta Co-operative hall originally Salvation Army. Jehovah Witness from 1963 Jehovah's Witnesses bought the Fiesta Co-operative hall (originally a Salvation Army hall) in Hoe Street in 1962 and registered it as Kingdom hall in 1963; they were still worshipping there in 1970
9-11 The Hoe Street Working Mens' Club
15 Knitwell Works. Red brick factory building owned by H.E.Hughsley. The office suite faces Hoe Street with a workshop/warehouse to the rear. Hughsley was also based in Oatlands Rise and St.Mary Road and made children’s knitted outerwear. They went out of business in 1984.
17 Walthamstow Trades Hall. The entrance to this is in Tower Hamlets Road.
55 Ye Olde Rose and Crown. Landmark late 19th pub with a corner turret. This includes a small theatre.
186 Victoria Hall. This opened in 1887. It was used for dances and concerts. After 1896, it was used as a live theatre and later re-named King’s Theatre.  From 1907 it was again called Victoria Hall, and showed films. It was changed again in 1921 and this time re-opened as the Victoria Picture Theatre. In 1930, it was purchased by Sydney Bernstein, and demolished.
186 The Granada Theatre was the second Granada Theatre to be opened and replaced the Victoria Hall in 1930. It was designed by Cecil Masey with a restaurant, and shops. Inside it was designed by Theodore Komisarjevsky. There was a stage and a 12Ranks Christie organ, with two 3Manual consoles. In the 1950’s and 1960’s there were Pantomimes, and pop concerts. In 1973, the Granada Theatre was tripled. In 1989, it was taken over by the Cannon Group and re-named but by 1995, the Virgin Group had taken over. ABC it took over in 1996, and it was re-named ABC. And then they were taken over by Odeon Theatres Ltd. who closed it – but said no future user could screen English language films. . The cinema was purchased by another operator, and it re-named EMD Cinema, screening Bollywood films. It closed in 2003.  It had been sold to the United Church of the Kingdom of God based in Brazil but they were refused planning consent and a long train of offers and public Central Parade built in 1958 and finished in 1964. It consists of flats, shops, hall and clock tower.  There is a wavy canopy of concrete over shop fronts and flats above. The Clock Tower has by mosaic decoration with coats of arms. This was designed by F.G.Southgate, the then Borough Engineer and Architect.  It was built on the site of shops and a dairy which suffered a hit from a V1.
enquiries ensued. The cinema is still open as a pub.
264 The Goose. Previously called The Goose and Granite. Late 19th pub originally the Tower Hotel
Jewel Road
1a Quaker Meeting Rooms. There has been a meeting of the Religious Society of Friends in Walthamstow since At the start of the 20th they the Quakers ran an adult education centre at the Bedford Institute in Greenleaf Road. They moved to this building which had been a 19th print works in 1998.


Orford Road
Connaught Hospital.  In the late 19th a Mr. and Mrs. Tudor opened a 'Cottage for Sick Children' in a private house, in larger premises in 1880 it was called the Leyton, Walthamstow and Wanstead Hospital.   In 1894 the hospital was given Holmcroft in Orford Road and it was renamed the Children's and General Hospital for Leyton, Leytonstone, Walthamstow and Wanstead.  It was subsequently enlarged in and a War Memorial Ward was added in 1927.  In 1928 it was renamed the Connaught Hospital after the Duchess of Connaught who was a patron. Another house in Orford Road,   Comely Bank, became a clinic in 1930 and in 1959, the old Walthamstow Town Hall, became the main entrance to the hospital.  The Hospital closed in 1977.  Most of the buildings have been demolished and housing built on the site.
9 Nags Head.  Cat friendly pub dating to 1859s. The pub was originally on the corner with Church Lane but was demolished and replaced.
Old Coach House. It was built for by Francis Wragg who ran a stagecoach service into London

Prospect Hill
16 site of St.Columba’s Presbyterian Church of England. This church originated as a Methodist church in 1872. In 1898 the Methodists moved elsewhere and the church was taken over by the Presbyterians. They built a new church here 1906 but it was bombed in 1941. It was rebuilt again in 1957 but closed in 1968 and demolished in 1971. There are now flats on the site called St.Columba’s House.


Saint Mary Road
1 factory building used by Threekay Knitwear who made outerwear. They went out of business in 1993. The building is now flats.

The Drive
Emmanuel Community School. This is a ‘free’ school with a Christian ethos which moved onto the site of St Mary's Primary School when that school moved to Brooke Road in 2012. The school building was By TFP Architects in 1970-2. It has paired classrooms around a central hall.

Tower Hamlets Road
2 Brown Jug off-licence. This is now converted into a house.
H. C. Jones & Sons (Walthamstow) Ltd., were sheet metalworkers here before 1901. By 1957 the firm were specialising in dustbins. They moved away in the early 1960s.

Vestry Road
Vestry Road Play Park. Pathway with mosaic stepping stones.  The park was once part of Church Common part of which was taken for a cutting for the railway.
Borough Museum. Vestry House – this is also called the old Armoury or the Workhouse, and more recently the Borough Museum.  In 1730 Walthamstow Parish built a simple eight roomed house on Buryfield, part of the Church Common as a Workhouse and for Vestry meetings. It was subsequently enlarged including a brewhouse in the 1740s. The dormitories were on the upper floor with workshops behind.  On the date plaque, carved by Samuel Chandler of Wanstead, is 'if any should not work neither should he eat’. At the side of the original front is an 18th extension which was built as the vestry room. It later became the armoury of the Walthamstow Volunteers and from 1892 used by the Walthamstow Literary and Scientific Institute museum.  It was also used as a private house. It became a museum in 1931. In 2001 David Gibson Architects, added a community room overlooking a formal garden. Various exhibits outside the building include a Corinthian column. A notice on the side of building describes the watch house which was built in 1765 and was also known as 'The Cage' in which miscreants would he held until they could appear before the magistrate. This stood alongside and was demolished in 1912
Fire Engine House. This is opposite the Museum and housed the local fire engine. This was a water pump which had to be pushed around by the firemen, but used horses after 1863.
Squires Almshouses. These were built in 1795, and are single storey brick buildings. They were built in 1795 by Mary Squires for six ‘decayed’ widows of Walthamstow tradesmen who were members of the established church. A plaque says “ Thefe houfes are ERECTED and ENDOWED For EVER By Mrs Mary Squires for the Ufe of Six Decayed Tradefmans Widows of this Parifh and no other.Ano. Domi. 1795.
Mosque and Sakina Trust. Islamic Centre.  This is in the former Post Office Sorting Office built in  1903, with a terracotta frieze and central pediment. It was converted in 1995 by Sayyid Nakhavi.

Vinegar Alley
Said to be the site of two plaque pits

Walthamstow Town Square
This is an area of cleared and derelict sites where a new public space has been laid out since 2010. The Town Square is marked out by a rectangle of paving slabs and a double row of pre-existing plane trees lie along two sides of the square. There is new lighting through high level masts and other environmental improvements. The High Street forms the northern boundary and to the west is the blank brick façade of the Selbourne Walk Shopping Centre. To the east are building in everyday use a bank, the post office and the library. South of the Square is a green space, the Town Gardens. This is adjacent to the bus terminal and to the shopping centre building which has an entrance to the Gardens. The railway/tube station entrances directly opposite the Gardens.

Westbury Road
Job Centre
Unichem depot, closed 2001


Sources
Aladura International Church. Web site
British Listed Buildings. Web site
CABE. Web site
Church of the Nazarene. Web site
Cinema Theatres Association Newsletter
Clunn. The Face of London
Dodds. London Then
East London Old and New
English Heritage. Web site
Field. London Place Names
Grace’s Guide. Web site
Lambert. London Night and Day,
Law. Walthamstow Village
London Borough of Waltham Forest. Walthamstow Village. Conservation Area
London Borough of Waltham Forest. Vestiges
London Borough of Waltham Forest. Web site
London Encyclopedia
London Gardens Online. Web site
Lost Hospitals of London.
Nags Head. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry. Essex
Ruach Church. Web site
Victoria County History. Walthamstow
Walford. Village London
Walthamstow and Chingford Almshouse Charity. Web site
Walthamstow Girls School. Web site.
Walthamstow’s Free Art. Web site
Walthamstow Memories. Web site

Great Eastern Rail Line to Chingford. Walthamstow Wood Street

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Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Chingford
The railway running from Walthamstow Central turns north westwards and through Wood Street Station to run north.

Post to the west Walthamstow
Post to the north Walthamstow

Barrett Road
Joseph Barratt was a member of Walthamstow School Board and the road was named after him in 1906
Joseph Barrett Junior and Infants School. This opened on what was then apparently called Warwick Road in 1905. In 1946 it was reorganized as a secondary modern school, later renamed Warwick and was enlarged in the 1950s. Warwick School appears to have closed in 2003 and the buildings remodeled as part of Woodside Primary School. It is a school board type building by H. Pross.
Manual Instruction Centre building, one of four built at elementary schools in the borough before 1906.

Bisterne Avenue
Bisterne Avenue Park. Park around which the avenue itself appears to have been laid out. It has had tennis courts and a bowling green since opening and there are now other sports facilities.  It is also seen as an area of nature interest.  It has recently been refurbished using artificial grass.
98 Forest Lodge Care Home and/or Independent Hospital.
20b flats by Wickham Associates. A small block of six welfare flats.  The scheme provides decent accommodation with walk-up stairs with two offset blocks of flats, one on each floor.
Brandon Road
Allen Pamphllion House. This is named for the founder of the business now based in Old Station Yard, Wood Street, Pamphilon & Sons founded in 1875.

Brooke Road
St Mary’s Church of England Primary School. The school began in 1824 when the vicar, William Wilson, set up a church school in a barn. In 1828 a new school building was erected built in the church yard. Wilson’s, brother Joseph Wilson's ran a school at Spitalfields on the principles of Robert Owen and William Wilson worked in the same way. He became an advocate of infant education and the school won a good reputation.  He stressed the value of 'instruction by amusement' and having an affectionate regard for the children. Poor children went from there to St. Mary's National school. The building of 1828 still stands and is in use by the church. In 1928 it was restored and later extended.  The school became Voluntary Aided in 1951.  In 2011 the school moved to Brooke Road, to a site which had been Warwick Girls School, and has since federated with St Saviour’s School,
Forest Road Warwick Secondary School for Girls. This had been the Joseph Barratt School based in Barratt Road. It was extended to include a girls' school on this site in the 1950s.

Browning Close
New housing on the site of the railway coal yard

Corbett Road
8 Faizan e Islam Sufi – Bareilvi mosque

Forest Rise
Peterhouse Centre. This site was originally the Vicarage of St. Peter’s Church. It was built on an enclosure from Epping Forest through a grant of waste from the Manor Court in 1857. Money for the Vicarage was given by Edward Warner – who also acquired rights over the church. The new vicarage was replaced a century later.
Salters Buildings. Sir John Salter's built houses in 1726 following a grant of waste from Epping Forest.  They included a house called Forest Hall which was demolished in 1935, plus two others.

Forest Road
Thorpe Combe House.  This is now a mental health unit but was previously a Maternity hospital was opened here by the council who bought the house in 1919 but Even though it was at the forefront of many developments in midwifery, it lacked other specialists on site.  It closed in 1973. The house was   Formerly called North Bank it is at the corner with Forest Road and was one of three houses built here on what was Catchers Field by a speculator. It has three full storeys, and was apparently built as a speculation in 1762, with two other adjacent houses adjacent plots, and let to Richard Manby, a City bookseller.  It was later the home of Octavius Wigram – one of the older children of the family of Robert Wigram.  Inside is an 18th staircase with twisted and turned balusters within an apsed end. Later 18th additions and outbuildings were removed when the house was used as a maternity hospital and the original house is dwarfed by extensions built during the 1930s.  When the maternity hospital closed The NHS sought to demolish the building, but it was spared by funding from various historical organisations and it is now used by the North East London Mental Health Trust.
Millennium Clock Tower at the junction with Wood Street.

Greenway Avenue
48a Walthamstow Cricket, Tennis and Squash Club. Walthamstow Cricket and Lawn Tennis Club was founded in 1862.

Havant Road
St.Gabriel. Built 1884-5 by J.T. Bressey as a Sunday school and mission room. It had begun as a mission of St. Mary's and in 1884 the mission room was built on land given by Sir F. W. J. FitzWygram but a permanent church was never built for lack of funds. A long brick shed, a little cupola at the end, and some terracotta decoration.
Church hall. This was built in 1980 and operates as a family centre for the area.

Marlowe Road
Marlowe Road Estate. System built estate constructed in the 1960s
Marlowe Road Recreation Ground and Playground with multi-sport area and garden areas
Northwood Tower Block. 21 storey block built in 1969 designed by HTA Architects Ltd. This was refurbished by Hunt Thompson in 1990-2 as St Patrick’s Court in a postmodern manner. – Its concrete panel walls were covered by patterned brickwork and some roof features changed.

Prospect Hill
At the corner with Shernhall Street is a grass patch, legally part of Epping Forest. There are no trees but there is a flagpole and some flowers.
Shernhall Street,
Shernhall means ‘filth stream’ or ‘muddy stream’. The stream itself was at the south end of the road.
Shern Hall. King John is said to have visited Shern Hall in 1213. This lay on the east side of the road near the bend and was known as Toni Hall in the 18th  The Toni Manor House had previously been on the site of the Ancient House in Walthamstow Village, and this house replaced it. It dated from the 17th and by 19th was brick and stuccoed. Dr. Wiseman was the tenant from 1849. After a fire in 1879 it was restored, but demolished in 1896. A stone capital said to come from the house remains in Lloyd Park.
Ravenswood Industrial Estate. Wild Card Brewery. This began in Nottingham where Andrew and William met and the desire to take their beers to market took hold. They began work in 2013. 
Unigate Milk Depot  alongside the railway.  Demolished.
90 Premier Plating. Based in London Premier Plating Works began in 1934 founded by Reg Smith, the father of the current director, Reg Smith.
Shern Lodge. The estate extended the whole length of what is now Vallentin Road. This was a boarding school from 1770 until 1795. A later private school was there in 1830.  The house was later owned by James Vallentin who got a clause in the 1867 Great Eastern Railway Act requiring the company to purchase the house and grounds.
47 Lord Brooke, a lavish pub built in 1900, Old English style with half-timbered gables. Now closed.
34 The Holy Family Catholic School and Sixth Form. The College is based on two sites - Walthamstow House site at 1 Shernhall Street and Wiseman House here, gaunt institutional premises built in 1875 for St John's Industrial Schools.
28 Shales and Co.  Ice cream factory. This closed in 1959 having been bombed in the Second World War. The company came from Southend.
St. Nicholas' Roman Catholic industrial school. This was founded in 1855 by Cardinal Wiseman, in a house on the corner with of Church Lane. It moved in 1868.
St. John's home industrial school. By 1870 this had taken over the buildings of St. Nicholas Industrial School and it was rebuilt in 1873. It closed in 1928, and in 1930 became a hostel for boys called Wiseman House. The building was sold in 1937. In 1938 the site was used for St. George's Roman Catholic senior school
St. George's Roman Catholic Secondary Modern School which began in 1921. In 1938 Wiseman House was opened as St. George's senior school for boys and girls.  After the Second World War the managers acquired the premises next door of the old Shernhall Street special school. It was enlarged in 1963
Margaret Brearley School for the educationally subnormal was originally in Marsh Street schools. A special centre opened here for girls in 1906 and for boys in 1909. The school moved in 1940
Shernhall Street British School. This was connected with Wood Street Congregational chapel but by 1868 it was getting an annual government grant. In 1872 a new building was erected in Shernhall Street. In 1880 it was transferred to the school board which enlarged it but it had closed by 1906 and the building used as a special school.
Walthamstow House. This is now part of Holy Family Technology College. The original house was built in 1762 as one of three big houses. It has had many enlargements and extensions. A major extension dates from when it was St Mary's Convent and orphanage. Early enlargements, including a rear wing, were to accommodate the very large family of twenty three children of Sir Robert Wigram, shipowner, director of the East India Company and M.P in the late 18th. His son Sir Robert Fitzwigram lived here and nearby, until 1843 while other sons lived in other grand houses at Thorpe Combe and Brookscroft. Inside, the original entrance hall is a cupboard, and the front door leads into a square room with reliefs of musical instruments around a sunburst in the ceiling. There is a staircase with fluted balusters and a room runs the depth of the house, with a curved end. The house has been used by a succession of Roman Catholic schools. By the entrance gates are bollards in the shape of cannons a reminder of Wigram’s East Indiamen. In 1843 the house was leased to a Dr Greig for a school with close links to the East India Company. It later became a private house, then St.Mary's Convent, and since then a succession of schools. 22
St Mary’s Roman Catholic Convent & Orphanage.  This was founded by Cardinal Manning in 1867 when he took on the lease of a house which had been used as a private school. From 1865-67 it was run by Dominican Nuns, then by Sisters of Mercy. The Roman Catholic Church bought the site in 1885 and the home continued until the 1980.   Today, the site of Our Lady & St George School
St. Mary's Roman Catholic junior and infants school, opened in 1931 in the grounds of the orphanage. It has now become part of Our Lady and St. George.
Upper School of Our Lady and St George's Catholic Primary School. This is a new school which has been formed from the amalgamation of: St Helen’s Catholic Nursery and Infants School and St Mary’s Catholic Junior School.  The school is on two sites, The Upper Site is based at the northern end of Shernhall Street

Stocksfield Road
Stocksfield Estateon the site of ‘Stocks Field”
Meridian. At the eastern end Set into the pavement is a marker to show the position of the Greenwich Meridian.
Higher Life Christian Centre. Double Edge Church. Brandon Road Railway mission. Founded about 1883 in an iron hall built beside the railway in 1886. The hall was bombed in the Second World War, but rebuilt, and prefabricated hall erected in 1949.  This is now a brick building and appears to have moved from its original site

Summit Road
Shern Hall Street Station. This opened in and 1870 as the first terminus for this branch line. It was built by the Great Eastern Railway with an earth platform on the Westside of Shernhall Street as stock emerged from Nags Head Tunnel to the west. The entrance was on the north side of Summit Road. In 1873 it was close and replaced by Wood Street and the line was extended to Chingford

Upper Walthamstow Road
Meridian. Near 6 in front of some lock-up garages Set into the pavement is a marker to show the position of the Greenwich meridian.
.
Vallentin Road
Named for James Vallentin whose Shern Lodge was on the site of this road and which was purchased by Great Eastern Railway Company for the Railway.
96 Gods Own Junkyard. Neon signage art gallery
Alpha Steps Nursery and ‘Preparatory School’. This is in a Church Building  of what began in 1807 as Wood Street Church registered in Wood Street for Independent worship and was probably 'Methodist' in 1810. A series of other buildings followed on various sites in the area. In 1854 a church, known as Wood Street Union, was built in Vallentin Road. In 1860 a gallery was added and the building extended. In 1880 it affiliated to both the Congregational Union and the Baptist Association and in 1930 it became Wood Street Congregational church. In 1940 the church was wrecked by bombing and it was demolished in 1952 and the current building opened in 1956.

Waverly Avenue
70 Set into the pavement is a marker to show the position of the Greenwich meridian.

Wood Street
This was once a hamlet to the east of Walthamstow, shown as Wood Street on the Ordnance Survey map of 1805.
280 Beuleigh Court flats. These are on the site of Aneroid Works. Short & Mason Ltd. had moved to Walthamstow from Hatton Garden in 1910. They supplied scientific instruments for the Scott and for the Shackleton polar expeditions and for Everest climbers. They moved to Wood Street in 1958, and left Walthamstow in 1969 following a merger. The site had previously been used by Precision Film Studios owned by the Gobbett Brothers.
Clock House. The house replaced Wat Webbe’s cottage and probably older buildings.  In the late 17th Arthur Bayley converted this into a garden with stables which has a large clock on it. From then on the house has had a series of wealthy inhaibtants.  It was refronted in the 18th when a central pediment was added. The grounds, were, laid out after 1713 by Sir Jacob Jacobsen including a drive on Dog Kennel Field. But the grounds are now all built on for housing.   The Salvation Army used the house as a rescue centre and in the Second World War it was used by the Civil Defence Heavy Rescue Unit. It has been owned by the council since 1938 and is now converted into flats. Some chimney pieces are now in the Vestry House Museum.   On one side of the house is set an old keystone thought to come from an earlier building.
245 The Cunard Film Co. Ltd. built a studio here in 1913-14. They ceased work in 1915. The studio was taken over by The Broadwest Film Co. who went bankrupt in 1924 and the studio was taken over by British Filmcraft Ltd. in 1926. The studio was still in use in 1931 by Metropolitan Films Ltd., and in 1932 by Audible Filmcraft Ltd., but after 1933 it was a factory. It burned down in 1959.
A. E. Bangham and Co. They began with works in grove Road and later in Borwick Avenue. They paper hats and novelties but the premises were damaged by bombing in the Second World War but were rebuilt in 1945.  Later they moved to the old motion picture studio in Wood Street. A new factory was built on the site when the studio burned down in 1959
245 TSP Youth Project. Tumble in the Jungle for the younger ones. Soul Project for the older ones. Family activities.
247 Pure Muscles Gym. Highly decorated building
Wood Street churchoriginated in 1894 when two groups meeting in Hoe Street under J. Hamilton and T. A. Tucker united. The combined congregation moved to the old Independent church in Wood Street in 1895. This was occupied until 1907, when the present brick church, with steep roof and broad entrance porch flanked by round windows, was built farther down Wood Street.
220 Arla Foods Depot. As Parker Dairies. This was previously a co-op milk depot.
216-218 Cavalry Church of God in Christ Tabernacle. This seems to be the Wood Street Baptist Church which originated in 1894 when two congregations combined and moved to the old Independent church in 1895. In 1907, a new church was built in Wood Street
209 Christ Chapel International Voice of Faith Ministries. Church building in what was Stevens’s furniture factory.
205a 14th Walthamstow Scout Group headquarters
199-201 The Arcadia Electric Theatre opened in 1912. The screen was set mid-way across the auditorium so some Patrons who paid less could watch the film back-to-front which was difficult with the title pages. It was always a silent cinema and closed in 1924. It later became a factory making clothes until 2000.It has since been demolished and the site is now housing and shops.
185-187 Pig and Whistle. Pub in a shop front conversion. Originally a Greenalls house.
173 Wood Street Supermarket. This was the Plough Inn which was built in 1875 to replace the Harrow which had been the Plough & Harrow in 1785 but was demolished in 1873 for the station. It was originally a Huggins Brewery house and later a Watneys' pub and still later a free house. It was also briefly called Hectors. . It closed in 2010. 
176 Mural about local trade on the side wall of Vallentin Street, this was a commissioned work called ‘The Quest for Bronze Tanning’ by Verity-Jane Keefe
171 Travis Perkins, builders merchants. This appears to be on the site of the Wood Street Locomotive Depot.
Locomotive depot and carriage sidings north of the station on the down side. This had an engine shed from the 1890s. It was a sub shed for Stratford depot and its locomotives carried that logo. It was however big enough to have a staff of over 50. A coal stage was taken out of use and replaced by sidings in 1934.  The shed was renewed at least twice in its lifetime but closed as steam was phased out in 1960.  The land was sold for redevelopment in 1986
Wood Street Station. This was opened in 1873 and lies between Highams Park and Walthamstow Central.  It was built by the Great Eastern Railway and opened when the line from Lea Bridge was extended to Chingford and it replaced the short lived Shernhall Street Station.  People had to run across the fields go catch the trains. It was originally a yellow brick building with stairs to a street level-booking hall. In 1974 it was rebuilt with a simple glazed booking hall with space-frame roof.
Goods Yard. A coal and goods depot was built in 1893 on the up side to the south. It closed in 1968
128 Flower Pot. This was originally built by the Walthamstow based Essex Brewery in 1863. Later Wenlock Brewery and Bass. Several brewery mirrors are displayed, including one from the Wenlock Brewery.
111-113 Set into the pavement is a marker to show the position of the Greenwich meridian 112 Dukes Head Inn. The first reference to it is in 1765 but has been rebuilt. They brewed their own beer in the 18th.   Buses used to turn round here and the cobbled turning circle remains. The Walthamstow Philanthropic Society was founded there, and the pub ran a soup kitchen for a while, and at other times allowed the use of their hot water for laundry work.
102a The Wood Street Picture Palace opened in 1912 entered via a long narrow passage from Wood Street, with the auditorium lying parallel to the street behind shops. It was operated by the Penny Picture Theatre Co. By. Before 1914 it had been named the Crown Picture Theatre. It had several other independent operators over the years and got proper cinema seats rather than wooden benches. In 1947 it was the Crown Cinema and then the New Crown Cinema before closing in 1950. It re-opened in 1953 as the Rio Cinema, but closed in 1955. It is now the Wood Street Market
84-86 White Swan pub. This began as a beer shop in the 1830s and was then a weather boarded building. Opened with terracotta decoration, since over painted. Closed 2004 and converted into a bookmakers.  It was a Watney’s house but had previously been with other breweries, including the City of London Brewery.
76- 78 Second Nature.  Wholefoods shop. This is in what was an 18th butcher’s shop, timber-framed and weather boarded. There is also a slaughter house from the 1790s. Shop front had an overhanging canopy with timber post supports where there are iron hooks for hanging meat. On the roof is "C Jones Family Butchers Estd 1750".
Woodside Academy. Woodside junior mixed and infants’ school was opened as Wood Street Board School in 1899 and a junior department opened in 1901. The Walthamstow School Board, established in 1880, had built thirteen schools by 1903 when elementary schools came under the Urban District Council. This is a good example of the one-storey earlier type built by WA. Longmore, surveyor to the Board . It has three buildings with steep roofs, one retaining a cupola.  The school was reorganized for juniors and infants in 1945. It has now given itself academy status.
Library. Built in 1939 but opened only in 1950, by E G. Southgate, Borough Architect.  It is a stone building, in a Moderne style, with a curved corner.
Mural. Alongside the library. Wood Street Talk by Vic Lee
Woodside Park Avenue
A gated road which follows the line of the formal avenue which originally was a feature of Clock House. a pond at the end remains from more elaborate water features.

Wyatts Lane
Grass patch. At the corner with Shernhall Street is a grass patch, legally part of Epping Forest. There are no trees but there is a lamppost

Sources
Bowyer, Curtis & Ellingham. Some old Walthamstow Houses
Cinema Theatres Association. Newsletter
Connor & Halford.  Forgotten Stations of Greater London
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford
Law and Barry. The Forest in Walthamstow and Chingford
London Borough of Waltham Forest. Web site
Lost Hospitals of London. Web site
Lost Pubs Project. Web site.
NoMow. Web site
Pevsner & Cherry. Essex

Pond. The Chingford Line
St. Mary’s Primary School. Web site
Victoria County History. Essex
Walford. Village London.
Waltham Forest Oral History Workshop. Web site
Walthamstow Memories. Web site

Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Chingford. Walthamstow

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Great Eastern Line to Chingford
The line to Chingford continues northwards from Wood Street Station.

Post to the south Walthamstow Wood Street
Post to the north Hale End

Beacontree Avenue
The road ran parallel to the old pre-1970s North Circular Road.  The raised grass sward along the east side of the road is in fact the old North Circular which lies under the grass.  In places the concrete road surface shows through. There are steps at the corner with Pentire Road by an electricity substation which demonstrate the difference in levels between the old road and the new motorway standard road above.  From here a subway – hidden from the road – goes under the North Circular to join to forest paths. It has a railed off footway and a disused vehicle road.
Bellevue Road
Named for Belle Vue House or Cooke's Folly which stood near the junction with Beacontree Avenue. It was built around 1803 in what was then called Hale Brinks Woods for Charles Cooke, to the design of Edward Gyfford. It was a Regency villa with a semi-circular portico on the west front. It was demolished in 1937
Brookscroft Road
Spruce Hill Church. This originated in 1893 as a mission and a church was built in 1900.  This appears to have been Congregational. The church was temporarily closed in 1942 but reopened in 1943. It closed permanently in 1946. The building was sold in 1952 and may have been in other use before it was demolished. The site is now housing.
194 Louise House. Employment support for disability.
Clifford Road
Ensign Works. This was an extension of the main Fulbourne Road Wallis Gilbert designed works making cameras and associated products. The Walthamstow Business Centre is now on the site of most of the works, including Prestige House and is a business and trading area
Micanite and Insulator works in Empire House. Now demolished for the business centre. They began as Mica Insulator Co. Ltd. in 1901 at Stansted Mountfitchet. They built a factory in 1907 and were associated with Associated Electrical Industries Ltd. and English Electric Co. Ltd. From 1939 British Tego Gluefilm Ltd., was in production here. In 1958 the company became a part of the A.E.I. group.

Forest Road
This was once called Haggar Lane.
Haggar Farm. This was a dairy farm near the junction with Fulbourne Road.
There was a beer shop at the east side of this junction which closed in 1882. It became a house called ‘Meadow Lodge’
Claystreet house

Fulbourne Road
363 Living Flames Baptist Church. Highams Park Tabernacle. Built as a mission by T. A. Tucker originally in Station Parade. When the present church was built in 1910.  It has a red brick front, and leafy capitals.
Forest Works. Recently demolished buildings by Wallis Gilbert & Partners as one of their earliest works in the 1920s.  This was the works of Barnet Ensign Ross Ltd., who made cameras and other photographic apparatus. They began in 1908, when Spratt Bros. of Hackney a branch of Houghtons Ltd., which dated to 1834 but who had a licence for daguerreotypes, established the Ensign Works here in the 1900s. In 1908 it was the biggest British camera factory became known as Houghton-Butcher Manufacturing Co. Ltd., Ensign Ltd., and the merged with Elliott & Sons Ltd. of Barnet, as Barnet Ensign Ltd.  In 1939 it introduced the Ensign Ful-Vue box camera, one of the most popular cameras of its time in the UK in 1948 they merged again with Ross Ltd. as Barnet Ensign Ross Ltd. After the Second World War they abandoned the Ensign Commando rangefinder camera but continued with Ensign Selfix and Ensign Autorange folding cameras and new models the Ensign Ranger or the Snapper.  In 1946 at a new version of the Ensign Ful-Vue was released. In 1954 they moved to Clapham and the building was acquired in by Fuller Electric as their West Works. It had a staggered front with brick bands between long windows. West Works was eventually put up for sale and taken over by Spring Steel Productions, long established at adjacent Victoria Works. They have now left and the building has been demolished.
ASEA (Great Britain) Ltd. and Fuller Electric Ltd. Made electric motors and transformers. They originated from 1905, when the Fuller-Wenstrom Electrical Manufacturing Co., which assembled Swedish made electric motors manufactured in Sweden, moved to Walthamstow. In 1906 they became Fuller Electrical and Manufacturing Co., and in 1910 formed, Allmänna Svenska Electric Co. Ltd (ASEA) . They moved here in 1915, and made transformers from 1919. The factory was bombed in 1944. In 1955 the empty Barnet Ensign Ross building across the road was bought as their West Works. In 1957 Fuller Electric was acquired by Brush which then merged with Hawker Siddeley.
Hawker Siddeley Power Transformers Ltd.  John Leslie Fuller had founded the Company in 1898 and a work was established in Blackhorse Lane. In 1915 a new factory was built on six acres of ground here by the Fuller-Wenstrom Electrical Manufacturing Co Ltd. As well as electric motors they made transformers and o 1926, a three-storey high transformer assembly hall plus machine shops was built to. In 1953-54 a c75ft-high transformer assembly hall was built with upper and lower gantry beams this was designed by Elliott Cox & Partners and erected by W J Cearns Ltd. Following its acquisition by FKI Energy Technology, this extensive works closed in May 2003. 
Cedar Wood House. This is the three-storey office building for ASEA, by Wallis Gilbert. It is ‘given grandeur’ by a formal stone frontispiece on the end wall. It is now Waltham Forest Housing Department offices. 

Guildford Road
Forest Community Centre. Drama, music, etc.

Hale End Road
Hale End Open Air Schools. In 1919 Walthamstow Urban District Council opened the Brookfield Orthopaedic Hospital and School for Crippled Children at Brookfield House.  In 1936 it moved to Wingfield House, in Hale End Road and called Hale End Open Air School.  In 1957 it was renamed Wingfield House School and the open air treatments had been much diluted and in 1964 it moved back to Brookfield.  Wingfield House then became the Frederick Bremmer Secondary School but in 1972 Whitefield School replaced it. The original mansion was demolished and replaced
Thorpe Hall Farm– a house here was a manor house in the 16th and earlier, and later used as a farm. The school is now on the site.
133 Thorpe Hall Infants School. Opened in 1933 by the local authority.

Macdonald Road
Aneroid Works. Short and Mason was established in 1845 in Hatton Garden, and produced precision measuring instruments including barometers, anemometers, and compasses. In 1904 they patented a barograph, called the Cyclo-stormograph. They moved to Macdonald Road in 1910 specialising in storm forecasting equipment and later supplying the aircraft industry. In 1958 the business moved to

Wood Street.
Whitefield Schools and Centre. The buildings date from 2010.  This is a provider of Special Education with an international reputation. Whitefield became a teaching school in 2012 and in 2014, became part of the Whitefield Academy Trust, sponsoring Joseph Clarke School for children with visual impairment There are three ‘schools’ within Whitefield: Margaret Brearley for all-age pupils with complex needs; Peter Turner Primary School for primary age with communication difficulties; and Niels Chapman Secondary School for older pupils with communication difficulties, or hearing loss. In 1903, Forest Road Centre for Defective Girls was opened and High Street Centre for Defective Boys. Later they amalgamated as Shernhall Street Special Schools. After the Second World was, following bombing, the school moved to the site of the Open Air School on Hale End Road but later moved to Pretoria Avenue. As the school grew it was renamed Whitefield School and moved to the present site in 1972. In 1994 it was the first special school to become Grant Maintained, and became a Foundation Special School in 1999. In April 2014, Whitefield Schools and Centre joined with Joseph Clarke School to become Whitefield Academy Trust

North Circular Road
This was built as far as Crooked Billet in 1927 and then along Wadham Road on a line opened in 1930 and then parallel to Becontree Avenue to Forest Road and the edge of Epping Forest. It was 1970 rebuilt on the present line & the old section passed over. The North Circular is at a higher at the point where they merged then gradually comes down to a level at the junction of Forest road. There are steps from Beacontree Avenue at this point.
Slip from Wadham Road – this is a length of the original North Circular before the rebuilding, although this piece had lost the decorative concrete barriers still in place to stretches to the west. A subway remains.

Railway Terrace
Footpath along the railway
1 BSB Blind manufacturer

Siddeley Road
Frederick Bremmer Secondary School. The school opened here in September 2008, replacing Warwick School for Boys and Aveling Park School. The school is named after local car inventor Frederick Bremer and largely covers the site of the Hawker Siddley transformer works.
Corporation Depot. There was a siding off the railway

Victoria Road
30 Victoria Works. Spring Steel Productions. Goss family firm making springs and precision castings. They later moved into West Works


Sources
British History Online. Web site
Frederic Bremmer School. Web sit
Grace’s Guide. Web site
Lost Hospitals of London. Web site
SABRE Roads A406. Web site
Skinner. Form and Fancy
Victoria County History. Essex
Whitefield School. Web site.

Great Eastern Railway Line from Liverpool Street to Chingford. Chingford Hatch

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Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Chingford
The railway runs northwards from Highams Park Station

Post to the south Hale End
Post to the west Highams Park
Post to the noth Pimps Hall


Avril Way
Names for Averil, the wife of the builder. Built in the 1960s

Bailey Close
Built on what appears to have been the leisure centre car park

Balliol Avenue
The road dates from the 1930s and the name relates to a 13th Chingford manorial family 

Hatch Lane
A road which is medieval or earlier and which went to a gate into Epping Forest. A Tiny eastern section is cut off by the railway
71 Prince of Wales. The pub dated from at least the 1860s. It was rebuilt at some time shortly after 1938 and closed in 2008
Methodist chapel. In 1862 a small Wesleyan church was built but in 1936 the site of was compulsorily acquired by the London County Council for a slum clearance scheme

Hickman Avenue
Rolls Park Sports Centre. The Rolls was a big house in what is now Larkshall Road at Inks Green. 

Inks Green
This was also called Inks Green Road, from Inks Green Farm which was on the corner with Larkshall Road. ‘Inks’ is thought to be a corruption of Hicks.
Silverthorne Bowling Club

Larks Hall Crescent Estate
Laid out by Crow, 1933-6, with terraces and semi-detached houses for owner-occupiers of modest means.

Larkshall Road
The road has had a variety of names and most recently has alternatively been called Hale End Road.  It was once Green Lane and later Jack's or Inks Green Lane going to Jack's farm at Hale End. The section near the junction with Hatch Lane was also known as Lark’s Lane.
The Rolls was a gentleman’s residence, home of the Ainslie family.  The estate name of ‘The Rolls’ dated to at least the 16th and was at Inks Green on the west side of the road south of Ropers Avenue
St Anne’s Church. This was previously an iron mission church provided by members of the Ainslie family from Rolls in memory of a sister, Anne.  The land, given by the Ainslies, at the junction with Hatch Lane was alongside Jessup’s wheelwright’s yard.   Later, a legacy from the family provided for another iron building and after the Second World War a new church was built in 1953 by Tooley & Foster Red brick wlth a llttle brick pattern
MOT test centre on the site of Jessop’s Wheelwrights yard.
205 Larkshall Pub. A timber-framed building that prior to the 1980s was Larks Hall Farm.  It was also known as Larks Old Farm.  It is thought to be a timber framed 17th building with 19th additions. and on an original lobby-entrance plan with central chimney and the addition of a genteel wing with  new entrance, added in 1890 by Arthur Crow, who had married into the Young family, the landowners. The older part now has the first-floor ceiling opened up.  It was converted to a pub in 1982.
252 Whitehall Tennis Club
Ropers Field.  This was a cricket ground home of the Highams Park Cricket Club. Many cricket stars had played there and this drew considerable local opposition.
Inks Green Farm. The site of the cricket ground had been a small farm near the junction of Roper’s Avenue and Larkshall Road south of Oakdale Gardens.  It was also called Ropers Farm. The farm building was demolished in the 1960’s and was replaced by the Larkswood Club. The Club has now been demolished and the site is now housing.

Larkswood Park
Larkswood Park includes part of the ancient woodland of Larks Wood, and has fine oak and hornbeam trees. Larkswood was owned in the 1920s by Charles Roper, a dairy farmer. The Park was created by Chingford Borough Council in 1936,

Merriam Close
The Merriam family were owners of British Xylonite – the factory site is adjacent.
Nasebury Court Hospital. Mental Health Services

New Road
The road was once Southfield Lane and the new name appears to date from the mid 19th following road realignments. Suffield Hatch. The area west of the crossroads is known as Suffield Hatch –probably a corruption of ‘Southfield’.
Chingford Harvester. Big chain pub.
Leisure Centre. This is the site of Larks Farm where, in 1936, Larkswood Pool was built – said to be the largest pool in England. Designed for racing and water polo, it was considered one of the finest open-air pools in the country and was opened by Sir Kingsley Wood, Minister of Health. Sold off it became the FantaSeas Water Park and then Chingford Hydro it closed in 1987. In 2001 rebuilt as the Leisure Centre and run by Greenwich Leisure Ltd.

Ropers Avenue
Ropers Field Estate. This is between Larkswood, and the ‘Rolls’ site. Early in 1944, Chingford the Council   identified Ropers Field for housing. The Estate was a low density development of semi-detached houses designed by, Reginald W Lone with the Borough Engineer and Surveyor S J Hellier. It was built by the Anglo-Scottish Construction Co Ltd using Prisoners of War from the camp on Chingford plain for building works and based on Garden City designs and principles.


Sources
Chingford As It Was
East London History Society. Newsletter
Hayward. Street Names of Chingford
London Borough of Waltham Forest. Web site
London Gardens Online. Web site
Ray. Chingford Past

Great Eastern Railway Line from Liverpool Street to Chingford. Pimps Hall.

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Great Eastern Railway Line from Liverpool Street to Chingford
The railway line continues northwards, veering north east

Post to the south Chingford Hatch
Post to the east Friday Hill

Four Wents
This was a green at the point where four roads met – a state which changed when the railway was built in 1873. Two of these were – as now – Whitehall Road and Friday Hill. They were joined by Pimp Hall Lane, now a track going to the recycling centre but then the road from Hale End, and Kings Road, although on earlier maps this passes to the north of the green, whereas now it is to the south.
Goldsborough Crescent
A house called Goldsborough stood here in the 17th associated with a John Goldsborough
Gunners Grove
The road is built on a wood with this name
Kings Road
This was known as Bull Lane until 1901 when the name was changed probably for the coronation of Edward VII
Kings Road Recycling Centre
TS Acorn Sea Cadets
Larkshall Road
The road has had a variety of names – Larkshall seems to be derived from Larks Hill Wood and Larks Farm named from 14th Thomas Laverk. But there have been other named – notably Hale End Road, Chingford Lane and Rolls Lane among them.  The northern stretch of road from Simmons Lane dates from the mid-19th and the building of the railway.  Originally the road from Hale End veered north east to reach the crossroads at Four Wents – and some of this road survives as Pimp Hall Lane. This was called St Martin’s Lane, or The Avenue. The replacement road ran west of the railway and is now known as Larkshall Road although it was originally Station Road and then Old Station Road.
Chingford Old Station. This opened in 1878 as an extension of the line from Shern Hall Street Station, and may at first have been called Chingford Green. It closed in 1878 when the line was extended northwards.  The station building was a long low structure which ran south from what was then Bull Lane and is said to have remained in place until 1953.  There was a single earth platform
Goods Yard. This extended south from the station between the railway line and what is now Larkshall Road. At the southern end were coal siding and a coal yard. This closed in 1965.   The site is now housing but to the south the area between the current rail line and the road, part of which would have been coal yard, has some light industry, builders yards and related sites.
66 Scout Hut. 40th Chingford Scouts
86 Kingdom Hall
Chingford Horticultural Society. Two halls where shows are held and there is a produce shop.
Walthamstow Isolation Hospital/ Chingford Hospital. In the late 19th the population of Walthamstow greatly increased the need for a municipal isolation hospital became urgent so.  Larkswood Lodge, was bought by the Walthamstow Urban District Council. It opened as the Walthamstow Sanatorium in 1901. There were all the usual facilities including a small gas works. There was also an engine-house with two 28 BHP Westinghouse gas engines to generate electricity . Patients arrived by horse-drawn ambulances.  The Hospital was enlarged in 1905 and  a pavilion for TB added in 1914.  In 1938 Leyton Council bought a half-share in the Hospital. In the Second World War a First Aid post and Gas Cleansing Section was set up and the hospital was bombed in 1940 and 1941. In 1946 it was renamed the Walthamstow Infectious Diseases Hospital and Sanatorium and in 1948 joined the NHS. By 1953 it had become a general hospital although no surgery was performed here and it was renamed Chingford Hospital. By 1970 Chingford Hospital had was a busy acute general hospital.  Throughout the 1980s there was debate about the future of the Hospital. The in-patients closed in 1991 but the Out-Patients Department continued until 1996, when the Hospital finally closed. One of the buildings survives as the Silverthorn Medical Centre and most of the rest was demolished.  The site also houses the Ainslie Rehabilitation Unit and Highams Court, continuing care of the elderly.    A garden was created on the remainder of the site in 2001. The remainder of the site has been built up with housing by Housing Associations. The 1899 cornerstone and plaque for the isolation hospital are mounted on the front of the Ainslie Rehabilitation Unit.
Longshaw Road
Longshaw Primary School. Opened in 1949 this is an example of the new type of primary developed by Essex County Council for the New London County Council estates. It was originally made up of a series of standard units; intended to be steel-framed, but shortage of materials led to the use of pre-cast reinforced concrete
Organ Lane
Also called Blind Lane, or just The Lane
Pimps Hall Lane
This roadway, leading to Pimp Hall from Kings Road through the recycling centre is the remaining part of the road coming from Hale End before the railway was built. Named from Pimps Hall marked and in the16th called ‘Pympis’ or ‘Pympes manor’. Reynold Pympe was lord of the manor in 1500.
Pimps Hall. It was once known as the manor of Gowers and Buckerells, as well after the manor of Pimps, after different tenants. Where n 1538 it was owned by Sir George Monoux. The timber-framed Hall was probably built at the end of the 16th  and used as a working farm until 1934 when it was bought by Chingford Council and became allotments, a council-run nursery, and a park, 
Pimps Hall Park. This was laid out in 1934 as a recreation ground.
Pimps Hall Nature Reserve. This was the area of the nursery where the old Hall and outbuildings were.The house was demolished in 1939, although the dovecote survives. The sites of the Hall and Barn have been marked out on the ground in gravel. A few mature trees survive including yew, oak and willow. It was winner of the Wild Flower and Environment Trophy in 1997
Pimp Hall Dovecote, now within a small nature park. This is all that remains from a cluster of timber-framed buildings, bought by the District Council in 1934. It is a square building, of the 16th timber-framed on a brick base with 5 tiers of nesting holes catering for some 250 nests.
Barn. This was 17th, timber framed with weatherboarding but it was destroyed in a gale of 1990

Simons Lane
This was once an access road to Friday Hill House

Sources
Chingford As It Was,
Chingford Horticultural Society. Web site
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford
Field. Place names of London,
Hayward. The Streets of Waltham Forest
Law and Barry. The Forest in Walthamstow and Chingford
London Encyclopaedia 
London Gardens Online. Web site
Lost Hospitals of London. Web site.
Neale. Chingford in History
Pevsner and Cherry. Essex
Pond. The Chingford Line
Ray Chingford Past
Victoria County History. Essex,

Great Eastern Railway Line from Liverpool Street to Chingford. Chingford

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Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Chingford
The line running northwards from Highams Park Station turns north eastwards

Post to the south Pimp's Hall
Post to the east Chingford
Post to the north Stewardstonebury
Post to the west Low Hall

Arabia Close
Called after Lawrence of Arabia, who lived for a while at Pole Hill

Balgonie Road
Balgonie was the name of nurseries which were once on this site. Balgonie itself is a town in Fife.
Blandford Crescent
The northern and western loop of the road has on the north side an iron retaining wall – which is presumably to keep Hawkwood from slipping onto the houses.
The Cottage. The road is on the site of this house. It was built in the early 1930s. There was a summer house at the top of the garden next to the cottage which remains in the forest. The house was demolished in the early 1960s.the grounds extended right up to the forest and the road shapes of Hawkesmouth and Blandford Crescent are said to have long existed
Enterprise House. Polish born architect, J. Spiwak, wanted to design something which would be a fitting memorial to his parents who died in Warsaw in 1944. He decided on housing for retired professional and business people in a hotel-type complex. The site was purchased in 1964 and The House was opened in 1969. The grouds were laid out as gardens by gardener/residents and these remain as private areas adjacent to the house
Buxton Road
The Buxton family were active in preserving Epping Forest ad some members were later verderers.
Housing here was begun around 1890 laid out on the edge of the Forest by Edmond Egan of Loughton for Jabez Balfour's Liberator Building Society.  Building work ceased when this collapsed in 1892 and Balfour went to gaol. The south side of this road had already been built by this time.  Houses were however abandoned and left unfinished, and it was five years before work restarted.
United Reformed Church Congregational Church.  In the 1800s members of Abney Park Congregational Church moved to Chingford and wanted to set up a church here. The project was partly funded by James Spicer of Woodford Green and a site was site was acquired. The Church initially met from late 1888 in upper rooms of a shop until Spicer Hall was completed. The present Church building was opened in 1910 and the halls in 1923. The church was known as Chingford Congregational Church until 1972 when it came part of the United Reformed Church.
Spicer Hall. Designed by Rowland Plumbe and built as the first church here in 1890.  It was sold and converted to housing in 2003-4. It is in orange brick with stone dressings and a timber-topped tower.
Church. Designed and built in 1910 by J.D. Mould.  It is in duller red brick. The plan is a smaller version of that adopted by some major late 19 Congregational churches. Inside are large carved beams with boldly lettered texts. There is a stained glass window in memory of the funder, James Spicer.

Cambridge Road
Chingford Church of England Junior School. This is part of a federation with the infant school. It was built in 1975

Connaught Avenue
The Duke of Connaught was the first Ranger of Epping Forest for over sixty years.
Epping Glade
Hawkswood Nursery. Where T.E.Lawrence planted fruit trees as Arabian Orchard. The Nursery was owned by the local council and is now part of Organiclea’s market garden
Green Walk
Park Farm. This was on the north side of the road
2 The Rectory
Mornington Hall. Red brick single story hall, this was built in 1924 to use as a private school. A schoolhouse was built next door in 1930.  It was a British restaurant in the Second World War and then a public hall. It is used by Chingford Amateur Dramatic and operatic society.
Carbis Cottage. Weather boarded cottage with central entrance and end stack. Probably 17th.
Hawkwood Crescent
115 Organiclea.  This organisation began in 2001, on an acre of once-derelict allotment land situated on the edge of Epping Forest. A forest garden was planted with apple trees, Worcester berries and blackcurrant bushes. Structures included a pond, a willow dome and vegetables were planted using organic and permaculture principles. Surplus produce was sold on market stalls and through North Leyton Surestart. In 2007 Waltham Forest Council closed its plant nursery, sited just round the corner from Organiclea’s allotment site, and, following lease negotiations; in 2009 the Hawkwood steering group planted the first seedlings in the glasshouses. The group reminds us of the vegetable growing traditions of the Lea Valley.

King’s Head Hill
2b King's Head, at the crown of the hill simple two-storey pub but enlarged behind and many alterations which are made to look old.  The earliest evidence of the pub is in 1782. Between 1805 and 1840 the Manorial Courts were held here. The 18th Century origins of the building are still recognisable
3-7 part-weather boarded cottages, early 19th.
Lock up. This was for local officers to hold prisoners until they could be taken to Waltham Abbey. It was demolished in 1888 and it was on the site of the current war memorial
Police Station. This originated in 1886 as a small stable built fir the opposite the village lock up. This was intended to be for the use of the visiting police inspector and a rest point for the mounted patrol from Waltham Abbey. A police station replaced it in 1888 next to the "Kings Head" public house/
Police Station. The 1888 police station was demolished and a new station built. This large brick and concrete building was opened in early 1977 as a new sub-divisional station. The majority of police tasks in the area were focussed here and Major crime investigation was transferred here from Walthamstow and Waltham Abbey. The lone CID typist was also transferred to Chingford.
War memorial. This is on the site of the pound and lock up. This was erected in 1921 to commemorate the 242 local men who were killed in the Great War as the result of a public subscription. It was designed by WA Lewis in granite and it stands in a paved area within a garden. The inscription says ‘IN GRATEFUL REMEMBRANCE OF THE MEN OF CHINGFORD WHO DIED IN THE SERVICE OF THEIR COUNTRY IN THE GREAT WAR 1914-1918 “WE ARE THE DEAD.....  TO YOU FROM FAILING HANDS  WE THROW THE TORCH  BE YOURS TO HOLD IT HIGH” ', and also: ‘AND OF THOSE WHO LOST THEIR LIVES 1939 – 1945’.and ‘IN MEMORY OF THE FALLEN OF CHINGFORD  1945 TO PRESENT DAY, LEST WE FORGET’.
King’s Road
The name of the road was changed for the coronation of Edward VIII, previously Bull Lane, also called Station Street.
Chingford (C.E.) Infants SchoolThis was built on a field given by the then Rector in 1856 and built at his expense as a single room. It was managed by the church until a management committee was se up in 1873. It was never a National School. The national school dated from 1865 and was built by the parish surveyor, Walter Stair. Originally a single room with doorway in the centre, it was enlarged with a gabled wing in 1887, by another in 1911 and subsequently. Behind is a teacher's house. Much of the school was burnt down in 1925 and rebuilt by Essex County Council, however it remained a church school.
2 Tiny building with a plaque which says: “Former Chingford Fire station. Locally Listed building. The original home of the Chingford voluntary fire brigade, erected in 1899 by Chingford Urban District Council for the sum of £300. It remained in use until replaced by a new fire station in the Ridgeway in the late 1920’s”.
Baptist church. The church has been here since 1929 and was extended in 1953.  It was set up as the Chingford branch of The Particular Baptist church of Commercial Street, Whitechapel, which had moved to Walthamstow.
18 Chingford United Services Club
Our Lady of Grace and St Teresa of Avila Roman Catholic church which was established here in 1914 when Mass was celebrated in a private house and in an outbuilding of the Royal Forest Hotel. A hall was originally built in 1919. The nave of the church was built in 1930-1, using second hand bricks in the foundations from the original railway bridge over Kings Road which was then being demolished. The rest was completed in 1939 and the tower built in 1956. The new brick church has details in an Arts and Crafts tradition. There is an oak porch with carving by Donald Potter, a Chingford resident and pupil of Eric Gill.  Inside are windows by Veronica Whall from 1939. It was reordered in, 2002 by Richard Hurley & Associates of Dublin. An inscription commemorates G. W.Martyn a Catholic convert who built the church. 
Laundry Road
The southern half of Carbis Close is marked as Laundry Road on older maps and two sites are marked as Laundries.  It is said that one laundry building remained in the late 1970s in other use.
Nevin Drive
Nevin was the first name of the Chair of the Urban District Council
Chingford Foundation School. This was Chingford County High School which was a co-educational, selective grammar school originally opened in 1938, in temporary premises in Yardley Lane by Essex County Council. In 1939 the school was evacuated to the west of England. The school moved to the current buildings in 1941 and it was later extended. In 1968 it became comprehensive as Chingford Senior High School and in 1986 took only the under 16s and was called Chingford School. In 1993 it became grant maintained and thus a new Sixth Form Centre was opened in 1997. In 2000 it became a Foundation School. In 2007 a new sports hall and staff room were built and has since became an ‘academy’.

Pole Hill
It is noted as Pole Hill on the Ordnance Survey map of 1904, and reflects the name of the old manor of Chingford which was ‘Poules’ in 1498 – that  is 'Paul's’ because the estate it once belonged to the Dean and Chapter of St Paul's. Pole Hill is 300 feet above sea level and lies exactly on the Greenwich Meridian. It consists of London Clay capped by Claygate Beds.
Brickworks. This lay south of the obelisk and  was established in the mid-19th and exposing Claygate Beds, It was brickworks was extensive, consisting of six kilns, an engine house, a 100 foot long drying house, and outbuildings. . The brickworks had closed by 1930 
Brickworks. In 1914 a second brickworks opened slightly further down the hill, on Park Hill. The pit here yielded septarian nodules from the London Clay with numerous 50 million year old fossils - over 25 species of marine molluscs were found here. The brickworks had closed by 1930 and the land is now by housing. The fossils are in the Essex Field Club’s collection
Obelisk.  This carries a plaque which says “This pillar was erected in 1824 under the direction of the Reverend John Pond, MA, Astronomer Royal. It was placed on the Greenwich Meridian and its purpose was to indicate the direction of true north from the transit telescope of the Royal Observatory. The Greenwich Meridian was changed in 1850 and adopted by international agreement in 1884 as the line of zero longitude passes 19 feet to the east of this pillar”. It is said you can see the laser beam from Greenwich observatory from this point.  It also has a plaque recording the residence in the area of T.E.Lawrence.
Trig point obelisk. There is a smaller concrete obelisk, which marks the true modern position of the Greenwich Meridian and which is an Ordnance Survey trig point
Anti Aircraft Gun. The gun was set up here in the Great War because The Forest ridge provided clear views to the east, south and west, the gun and its associated barrack block was sited on the top of the hill. Despite the limited number of air raids, the loud sound of the gun became a feature in the area. After the war T.E.Lawrence was given space at one end of the barrack block.  The gun was removed at the end of the war and the barrack block nearly 10 years later. It is said that it was used by teachers as a scout camp and that also Gothic furniture was made there.  All that remains today are some concrete foundations hidden amongst dense vegetation
Hut. T.E. Lawrence. Lawrence had a friend named Vyvyan Richards who he had met at university who later taught at Bancroft's School. He and Lawrence camped on Pole Hill with Scouts over ten years. When Lawrence left the Army in 1919 he bought 18 acres on the hill. Here he built a hut and a small swimming pool there, and the idea was to set up a printing press– but this never happened.  The structures were pulled down in 1930 by Chingford Urban District Council when it purchased the land.  The hut was re-erected the hut in the grounds of The Warren which is now the City Corporation depot, where it remains
Ring of seven trees at the top planted by Lawrence
Pretoria Road
Drill Hall. This was built for the Chingford Rifle Club in 1938
Air Training Corps 27F Chingford Squadron. Air Defence Cadet Corps.
Air Commodore J.A Chamier set up the Air Defence Cadet Corps In 1938. The first 50 squadrons were founder squadrons and could put the letter F after the squadron number. Chingford squadron was the 27th   and was formed by the Air League of the British Empire in 1938. The squadron continues successfully today

Station Road
North Chingford Methodist Church. In 1898 the Wanstead and Woodford Wesleyan Circuit wanted to build a church here but in 1905 the Clapton Circuit, erected an iron building. A church, designed by George Baines & Son, was built in 1927. It is a single space with a curved pews and large, light windows.
St Marys Roman Catholic Primary School. This is a one-form entry Catholic Primary School. The main school building dates from 1934

St.Egbert’s Way
St. Egbert’s College. This was founded by a Belgian religious order who came to England as refugees at the outbreak of the Great War. It was in the Ridgeway, Chingford from 1920 and run by the Brothers of Mercy. It closed in 1971.
The Green
Chingford Green. Chingford was once a hamlet in the Forest.  .
2 Bull and Crown.  This is now closed and is a restaurant. Built in 1899, with lots of terracotta by Taylor Walker to cater for Forest visitors. It was originally intended to be the railway hotel. It is on the site of an earlier pub of the same name.  In the past it was called Black Bull, then Bull, then Bull’s Head, then Crown and  More recently  has been known as the Slug and Lettuce, then Molly K’s, and then The Bull on the Green
Kilgreanea/The Lodge. This is Chingford Lodge, now subdivided. Between 1798 and 1806 William Mellish kept staghounds here in a quadrangle of kennels said to have been among the most complete in the country. This house is a survival from this original establishment and was known
Chingford Almshouses. In 1859 four almshouses were erected by public subscription and a fifth house was added, again by public subscription, in Jubilee Year of 1887. Bequests in 1901 provided money for repairs and an annual stipend for the residents. Later the Charity Commission consolidated them and others into the Chingford Almshouse Charity. In 1957 they were sold and the almshouses built elsewhere.
Green Farm.  This was on the is site of what is now the Assembly Hall
St.Peter & St.Paul. In 1840 the old parish church of All Saints was in such a bad state of repair that the then Rector and lord of the manor, Rev Robert Boothby Heathcote, decided to build a new church on Chingford Green. This was designed by Lewis Vulliamy, and it was built at the rector’s own expense. It is in brick and flint in a Gothic style and dominates the Green. In 1903 Sir Arthur Blomfield designed an extended chancel and nave aisles. A 12th font from the Old Church is here as is the 17th parish chest and 18th pulpit. The organ was built by Norman and Beard and installed in 1913. Three bells were brought from the Old Church, but were returned in 1930 and six new bells installed here. The St. Elizabeth Chapel was built in 1937.  The East Window was designed by Clayton and Bell in 1913.There are two memorials to the Boothby Heathcote family. The church was bombed in 1940 and memorial windows were later installed.
Chingford Assembly Hall and Library. Built by Tooley & Foster in 1959 as a plain two-storey block. There is a mosaic mural of roundels with local allusions, by Wallscapes installed in 2000. It was built on the site of a previous smithy.

The Ridgeway
36 Ridgeway Evangelical Church in Ridgeway Hall
34 Chingford Fire Station. Built by Essex County Fire Brigade in 1956 and transferred to the London Fire Brigade in 1965
Town Hall and Municipal Buildings. Built as Chingford Town Hall, 1929 by Frederick Nash and H. T. Banner in red brick. Extension from 1959 by Tooley & Foster, brick-faced, with ranges round a rear quadrangle with fountain. If originally housed a council chamber on the first floor but was latterly used as housing. And the offices became the Engineering department in there. Now all flogged off for housing and partly demolished. Town Hall itself to be done up and kept.

Woodberry Way
This is built on the line of the tree lined drive that led to Sunnyside. The house which stood behind the Kings Head Pub was demolished in 1955
73 cottage built in the 19th was the gatekeeper's lodge to 'Sunnyside'   

Woodland Road
82 Christian Science Church.. Built in 1933

Sources
Barry. Water supply in Chingford,
British History Online. Walthamstow
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Chingford As It Was,
Chingford Church of England Junior School. Web site
Chingford Foundation School. Web site
Chingford Green Conservation Area. Leaflet
Connor. Liverpool Street to Chingford
Corporation of the City of London. Epping Forest. Web site
East London Old and New
English Heritage. Web site
Enterprise House Garden. Web site
Essex Field Club. Web site
Field. Place names of London,
Greenwich Meridian, leaflet
Hayward. The Streets of Waltham Forest
Law and Barry. The Forest in Walthamstow and Chingford
London Encyclopaedia 
London Gardens Online. Web site
Neale. Chingford in History
Old Egbertians, Web site
Peelers Progress. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry. Essex
Pond. The Chingford Line
Ray Chingford Past
Rider. Chingford Fire Brigade
Ridgeway Church. Web site
St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Primary School. Web site
St.Peter and St.Paul. Web site.
Victoria County History. Essex,
Walford.Village London,

London and Greenwich Railway. Bermondsey

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The Greenwich Railway runs south eastwards from London Bridge Station

Post to the west Neckinger
Post to the south The Blue

Banyard Road
Pickle factory. Present in the early 20th and behind the houses on the west side.
Baptist Church Sunday School 

Ben Smith Way
Ventilation/escape shaft from the Jubilee Line below with a connection to the running tunnels and the west end of platform tunnels at Bermondsey Station. It has a wavy concrete form.


Bermondsey Wall East
Until the early 1950s Bermondsey Wall East continued and became Bermondsey Wall West.  It was also known as Rotherhithe Street. The building out of Chambers Wharf essentially led to a break in the two roads, although the route along the wall continued it became subsidiary to Chambers Road.
The ‘wall’ element of the name relates to the river wall along which the road goes. The embankment here is probably 11th undertaken by monks at Bermondsey Abbey who were the landowners.
11 Golden Fleece Pub, since demolished.
14 Admiral Tyrell Pub. Demolished
17 J. Scott, Mathematical and Nautical Instrument Maker shop here mid 19th
Fountain Dock - now Fountain Square
Owst and Peacock. Wood truss and hoop manufacturer. They were roughly on the site of Providence Square going through to Jacob Street
94 Old Justice Pub. Built in 1934 as a nearly riverside pub. Herringbone brickwork and half timbering.   This is now a Korean restaurant.
26 Three Mariners Pub. 1870s
33 Bennett's Lower Wharf. This was formerly Darnell's Ltd grain warehouse and mill. This was a granary, served by lighters, and later used as a general storehouse, then disused. 94 (11 previous numbering)  In the Second World War it was taken over by J.J.Prior, aggregates. The site was later taken over by Chambers Wharf, then Hays Wharf. Darnells passed the granary on to Bennetts Haulage in the 1930s
40 Bunch of Grapes Pub. Demolished
Fountain’s Stairs Wharf.   This site was also owned by Darnells and later Begbie and Young. The Granary building was occupied by Caledonian Wharfage in the 1930s.
Fountain Stairs. A free landing and watermen’s’ plying place. On the foreshore were two gridirons for barge repairs, the earlier made of 18th ship's timbers.  Here in the 19th were James Porter, Sail Maker and Ships’ Chandler, and in 1823 G.French, Rope Makers. Maps show Fountain Stairs Wharf and Fountain Hole Barge stairs - a ‘hole’ is a mooring place in the River.  A causeway extended from the stairs into the river.
Powell’s Wharf. This wharf was on both sides of the road and was where Caledonian Wharfage handled sugar and confectionary. Two granaries were on the site – one built by Young and Raymond and the other by Begbie and Young, contractors. It was a four storey brick warehouse using hydraulic equipment.
Farrand's Wharf. This included a large 19th warehouse. Operated by Young and Raymond as a granary. It linked across the street to other buildings via a catwalk. The wharf handled bagged flour and foodstuffs. Latterly this as Gardiner and Tidy
Cherry Garden Wharf. Also operated by Gardiner and Tidy but with very limited facilities.
Cherry Garden. This is the site of a 17th pleasure garden. Visited by Pepys in 1864 and is said to have remained until 1846
Cherry Garden Pier.  During the 17th centuries, the pier was the landing place for the nearby gardens. It is said to be the site from where Turner painted 'The Fighting Temeraire’. It is now owned by the Port of London Authority. Here, ships wanting to go through Tower Bridge had to raise signal pennants and blow whistles and River Pilots were also based here.  Fire floats were moored here and passenger steamers stopped. It is now the base for the river boat company, City Cruises and is a floating pier with a pontoon footbridge
114 Ship and Pilot Pub. This was on the south side of the road on the corner with Marigold Street and has been demolished
Cherry Garden Open Space. This small park has trees, paths and a riverside walk. It is a broad riverside promenade with cherry trees created 1988-9 for the LDDC by RMJM.  Statues - Dr Salter's Daydream. This was a three-figure group with Dr Salter on a public bench looking at his dead daughter Joyce, and her pet cat on the wall. It was commissioned by the London Docklands Development Corporation and is by Diane Gorvin's. The statue of Dr.Salter was stolen by metal thieves, and the others removed for safety.
Appollinaris Wharf. The buildings of the wharf were both inland and riverside. This is also Lucas and Spencer wharf. Appollinaris mineral water was imported here from Germany.  The wharf buildings dated from 1870 and replaced a guano works, a granary and the ‘Lion and Castle’ Pub.  It was later taken over by Chambers Wharf and demolished in the 1970s.
87 Corbett's Wharf. This wharf plus a warehouse was leased to A. H. & E. Foster, who specialised in cereals, flowers, seeds and bulbs. It dates from c1860-70 and its name was shown on a stone cornice to the river. The building was previously joined to other warehouses on the south side of the street by a gantry. It closed in 1972 and its warehouse was converted into housing in the 1980s.  It has converted to housing with plain balconies added and the ground floor opened and the cast-iron columns exposed. There is also a modern roof extension, and the area underneath has been filled in with parking areas.
National Wharf. This belonged to the National Wharves and Warehousing Company. It handled general merchandise. The National Terrace Housing Development now stands here
National Terrace was constructed in the 1990s as a terrace of ten, 3 storey houses in a mock Georgian style
130-134 Angel Wharf. A plaque saying ‘Corbett’s Wharf which was built J.H. & E. Foster 1934’. However this was the inland warehouse used with Apollinaris Wharf.  The building is in brick with timber flaps to door openings. Balconies were added when the building was converted to housing in the 1990s to residential. Windows are a ‘mock’ warehouse style.
Platform Wharf. This was a 1930s bonded tobacco warehouse demolished in the late 1970s. Along with neighbouring Platform Sufferance Wharf it was managed by the Customs Fund which was an organisation set up in 1816 to provide pensions to the widows of customs officers. In the course of demolition the manor house was found.
Edward VII’s moated Manor House. Probably the manor house for that part of Rotherhithe which had not been granted to Bermondsey Abbey. It was originally in the hands of the Clare family but seems to have passed into royal control around the reign of Edward III. Henry IV is said to have lived here in 1412 while recovering from leprosy.  The site is said to have later been used as the site of a pottery, and eventually the bonded warehouse called Platform Wharf.
5-16 King Edward III’s Mews two-storey paired cottages of modern, stock brick with slate roofs and single slate-roofed porches over the paired doors. These front onto a path around the displayed area of the Monument and are within the monument. To the rear of these properties, fronting onto the mews yard Nos. 1-4 King Edward III’s Mews are of a similar character.
Platform Sufferance Wharf. This was a tobacco handling wharf managed along with Platform Wharf
101 Angel Pub.  The Royal Humane Society was set up here in 1900 because this is where people drowned.  Built in 1850 but this is on 15th site, served by the monks of the Priory at a guest house called The Salutation. A trapdoor in the kitchen is said to have been used by smugglers.  Recently Extensive structural work has been necessary to prevent the building slipping into the river.  It has oak beams, low ceilings and pillars and a view of the River. Upstairs restaurant is dark wood panelling, lanterns, and a ship's figurehead.  It used to be a Truman’s House but is now Samuel Smiths’. The River frontage has a weatherboard gallery on wooden posts
Braithwaite and Dean Wharf. This was next to the Angel Pub and undertook barge building and repairs
Pace Wharf. Barge building yard
Redriff Stairs. The principal stairs in Rotherhithe but they are no longer here
Boziers Mill. The Mill is shown on the 1790s Horwood Plan lying on the riverside east of West Street. It was at the end of the mill stream which ran from the area known as Seven Islands and now covered by Southwark Park. A Bozier family were known to be Rotherhithe residents in this period.  This is presumably the Surrey Mill mentioned by other writers as being managed by a James Robert Mangles In 1843 and milling flour used for Ships' biscuits.
Kings Stairs. The Kings Stairs were the landing stage for the royal manor house The King in question was Edward III who had a house nearby. The current stairs are against the west side of 1 Fulford Street and are now in concrete, raised in height as part of the river defences. Archaeological remains of earlier stairs may survive below
King's Stairs Gardens. This became a Southwark public open space in the 1980s on reclaimed building land. The park has lawns and steeply undulating hillocks with fine views over the river, and scattered trees include London plane.
Jubilee Stone. This monument was unveiled by the Earl and Countess of Wessex in 2002 to commemorate the Golden Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II. It replaced an earlier stone which had been installed for the Silver Jubilee in 1977.
Dover Castle. A Hoare pub at King’s Stairs
Pocock's Barge Yard – next to King’s Stairs.  Barge repair business.


Bermondsey Wall West
Mill Stairs. These were under Reeds Wharf. Traditional watermen’s plying place.
Downing’s Roads. Tower Bridge Moorings. Since the 19th, the moorings have accommodated a variety of vessels...since the 1980s the moorings have been owned by Nicholas Lacey. There are garden barges, converted from lighters, forming  the infrastructure of the moorings with their roofs act as gardens with walkways .At the outskirts is ArtsArk, a floating platform, which is a stage for arts events. The moorings also support services like marine repairs and fuel. The Roads also provide temporary mooring spaces. Downing had been barge owners.
1 Reeds Wharf. Brick, expressionist style riverside house by CZWG.   'B' Warehouse. In the 19th this was a granary once operated by H. Reed, here since the 18th and mainly handled grain from North America. It is now converted to studios, and housing. The building is slightly convex to the street, 5 storeys. There is an archway giving access to the site of Mill Stairs and the wharf lay over the stairs. After the Second World War this was operated by Wheat Sheaf Mills Ltd. Handling wheat and barley by barge and lorry.
Uveco Wharf. The mill was operated by Spillers who handled grain and made dog biscuits, poultry food etc. Uveco were based in St.Helens, Lancashire.  Closed in 1983
21 St Saviour's House. The building has a white rendered wall, a large door with a classical pediment, and a circular window above it.
Providence Tower. This will be a 44-storey residential block due for completion in 2015. The developer is Ballymore, and the flats are being sold in Hong Kong and Singapore,
24-30 Penhyrn Wharf. Pulp Mills 1918
25 Springells Wharf.  There is now housing on the site. It was used by Dudin and Sons, Wharfingers, in the 1870s. It was later used by Southwell, confectioners, with a factory in Jacob Street for the import of fruit.
25-27 River View Heights on what was Adlard’s Wharf. Flats developed by Albany Group with a communal river fronted terrace. Adlard's were slaters and tilers.
29 Tempus Wharf. Housing converted from a five storey brick warehouse with small wooden granary with central loading door and wagon entrance. On the river front wads a wall-mounted lattice-jibbed crane. Timber floors and posts inside built c 1870.  There is a dolphin in the river which served the wharf.
Deverell's Wharf. This was a 19th warehouse which was originally a granary owned by Swayne and Bovill.
Reed’s Lower Wharf. The wharf was operated by H.T.Reed and was on the site of an earlier boat builder.
Murrell's Wharf. In the 1890s corn and forage factors.
Seabourne Coal Wharf. This was a 19th wharf handling coal from the Tyne. In the 1930s this wharf was handling animal bones for glue manufacture. It had been rebuilt in the 1890s by Adams
28 Flockton Gallery. This is in a 19th workshop.
33 London Grist Mills. This was a converted grist mill of 1866, disused in 1997. This had been operated by London Grist Mills who had been on the site since 1800. In the 1850s it was Grove’s Granary. It had full-height loading doors, hooded to the river and open timber staircases.
37 Luna Building. This was constructed by architect Glen Howells and developer Berkeley Homes. It is modernist with glass-fronted balconies over a riverside terrace.
East Lane Wharf. This was the refuse wharf for Bermondsey Borough Council tipping rubbish into barges.  It had previously been a Fore and Aft Dry Dock
East Lane Stairs. The steps are pre 1746 and are on Roque. Also called Sterling Wharf Stairs
Glendenning Wharf. In the 1870s this site was used by Glendenning who were wharfingers


Bevington Street
The road is named for members of the Bermondsey leather merchant family.  The road appears to have had previous names, Princes Road and then Vienna Road. It appears to follow the line of a rope walk – there were several such walks parallel to each other in the late 18th and early 19th.


Cathay Street
In the mid 19th this was called Love Lane followed by Lucas Street
Cathay House. This dates from the early 1960s but has since been modernised, The Bermondsey Borough Arms are displayed over the door. The Lion and Crosier refer to Bermondsey Abbey (for Bermondsey Vestry), and the crown and battle-axe are for St. Olaf, King of Norway attacked the Danes at Southwark (for St.Olave  Vestry) and the ship represents the shipping industry (for Rotherhithe Vestry).


Chambers Street
This was once called Cloyne Row and did not exist at all before the 1920s. The expansion of Chambers Wharf and its buildings led to change.  Before the early 1950s Chambers Street was a subsidiary street but it became the main road linking the two sections of Bermondsey Wall
Chambers Wharf.  Chambers Wharf was operated by Chambers Wharf and Cold Stores Ltd. On the site of what had previously been Montreal and Sunderland Wharves. Chambers was a bulky cold store from the 1930s with some decorative brickwork on the south side. Much of the wharf was rebuilt after war damage. It had berthing accommodation for three vessels at once. There was a regular service of general cargo vessels three times a week from Amsterdam. They handled perishable goods as a speciality having three and a half million cuft of covered storage space, of which one and half million cuft was refrigerated which was largest sub zero storage in the country. This has now all been demolished
A dolphin associated with the wharf survives.
Wharf .This is a concrete wharf running along the length of the riverside area and it is a multi period structure from 20th. The jetty was built after the Second World War with a travelling crane, which was later extended along the shoreline. A concrete hard surface extends over the jetty.
Sunderland Wharf. These were on the riverside in Bermondsey Wall West and preceded Chambers Wharves on the site it was occupied by T.Addis and Sons, wharfingers.
Montreal Granaries – these were on the riverside in Bermondsey Wall West and preceded Chambers Wharves on the site. It was occupied by John Dudin & Sons. Watermen and lightermen


Cherry Garden Street
The road once extended south across Jamaica Road running between Drummond Street and Southwark Park Road as far as what was then Fenner Street, now an estate road north of Lockwood House.
Fire Station. This was a commanding building with a tower and pinnacle on the north western street corner. It was built by the London County Council and was one of the Metropolitan Fire Brigade River stations with no land based engines stationed there. Fireboat Delta was there followed by Gamma III. The station maintained a wheeled escape and a hose cart, with two hook ladders. It remained open until 1948 when the river service was reviewed and it was closed.
Housing - red brick terraces and blocks of flats named after Collingwood, Cornwallis, Calder and Barham and blocks called Nelson, Hamilton and Hardy designed by RMM
50 The Cherry Tree Pub. This was demolished.


Clements Road
New Place Boiler House. This is a gas-powered district heating station serving a nearby council housing estate, and rated at about 38 GWh/year
Bermondsey Business Centre - The Biscuit factory. This is the remains of Peek Frean’s biscuit factory.  Mr Peek was a tea merchant in the City of London and George Hender Frean was a West Country miller and ships' biscuit maker who had married into the Peek family.  Peek's financed a biscuit factory for his sons to be managed by Frean in Mill Street, Bermondsey in 1857 and they became the pioneers of the modern biscuit. In 1866 they bought a site in Drummond Road and a new factory in Mill Street 1857.  They invented the Marie in 1875; Chocolate in 1869; Gold Puff in 1909; shortcake in 1912; Pat-a-cake in 1907 and the Bourbon in 1910. Cheeselets and Twiglets were introduced in the 1930s.They made Mrs. Peeks Xmas puddings. Flour was milled in-house; dough mixing was done by machines the size of a small room. There was a pattern shop for wooden patterns for the metal biscuit moulds. Broken biscuits were sold loose through the Employee Sales Outlet. The factory closed in 1989 and became the Tower Bridge Business Complex. The company provided medical, dental and optical services to their staff and founded sports and cultural clubs. They made the Queen’s six feet tall wedding cake. There is now a blue plaque on the site – but the great smell of biscuits has gone from the area.
Rope Walk. Before the extension of the biscuit factory to the south, a rope walk extended from this road southwards. It appears to have been roughly on the site of Entrance G of the Biscuit Works.


Dickens Estate
The estate was built in the 1920s by The London County Council which had condemned the area around Wolseley Street and George Row as unfit.
Wade House. A flat in the house was used in the 1950s as a base for a social/neighbourhood worker in a scheme set up between the London County Council and Tome and Talents. The worker's was to 'encourage a community spirit amongst the tenants’
Club Room. The centre was opened in 1951. It had a hall and a laundry. The laundry has since become a bar.


Dockley Street
Viaduct and tunnel. The street passes under the railway viaduct approaching London Bridge Station, currently eleven lines.  The viaduct was built and widened at different times beginning with the most northerly, The London and Greenwich from the 1830s and added to from the south from then.  On the line here and directly above the road are the ruined remains of Spa Road Station. This was the first powered railway station opened in London by the London and Greenwich Railway in 1836. It finally closed in 1915 – but station announcers at London Bridge still refer to it when incoming trains are held back there.  The length of the tunnel here is partly due to running lines fanning out to go round the station ruins, as if it were still in operation.
Dockley Road Industrial Estate. On the site of industries including the tin plate works.
B.Noakes & Co. Tin Plate works 1890s -1920s. Making specialist cans and casks


Drummond Road
121 City Hope Church. This had been Vineyard Community Church but was renamed in 2004. Vineyard dated from 1985 when Drummond Road Baptist Church joined Bermondsey Christian Fellowship – A union of three Bermondsey churches.  Drummond Road Baptist Church itself had been opened by Charles Spurgeon in 1865 and indeed he preached the first sermon here.
59 Prince Alfred Pub. This dated from the 1860s and has been demolished
Scott Lidgett School. This was opened in the 1960s as a secondary school Named after John Scott Lidgett, prominent Methodist and London politician. The school was designed for the Inner London Education Authority: architect Sir Hubert Bennett, project architect Eric Classey. It was built as pleasant concrete and red-brick buildings with generous provision for non-academic activities, in response to the Newsome Report of 1963. It was based on a grid of linked pavilions with covered ways in between.  It included a swimming pool, a youth centre open in the evenings. The school not only had an indoor theatre but also a hollowed, open air theatre. It had the best football team in London and once won the English Schools FA Cup. The school closed and the buildings became part of Southwark College in 1991.
Southwark College. This moved into the Scott Lidgett School site as the college Surrey Docks Campus. It merged with Lewisham College in 2012 to become LeSoCo following a poor Ofsted report. The campus is now closed.
Playground. This has a mural around the perimeter wall.


Dunlop Place
Previously Amelia Row
Glue Works. At the south end of the street was the entry to the glue and size works with a weighbridge and gate. This had originally been owned by Proctor and Bevington and dated from 1884. It was taken over by B. Young & Co Ltd whose main factory was in Grange Road. In 1926 the Company became part of British Glue & Chemical, and the works closed in 1981 and in 1982 the land was sold for redevelopment. They had stopped making glue on site by 1900 and concentrated on gelatine manufacture, Spa Gelatine being a leading brand.


East Lane
East Lane once ran all the way north to Bermondsey Wall.
East Lane School. The site of this London Council Council infant’s school was to the north of the current line of East Lane and it is now under St Michaels Roman Catholic School.
Peabody Dwellings. This was an early Peabody estate, austere blocks, built of concrete. They were demolished after the Second World War.


Emba Street
Part of Bermondsey Garden Suburb built in 1928 by the Metropolitan Borough of Bermondsey and inspired by Dr.Salter.  They are now known as 'Salter Cottages'. They were designed by Culpin and Borthers

Farncombe Street
Duffield Sluice.  This is an old drainage outlet on the Lock Stream which was built for the local Commissioner of Sewers. It is a wedge shaped building on a former drainage ad now used as offices. There is a plaque inscribed: Sewers Surrey and Kent, Duffield Sluice, 1822. The land surrounding the building was probably the sewer plant and is now housing.
Bermondsey Settlement, This provided a varied curriculum of both evening tuition and lectures. Staff did much to alleviate the conditions found in the poorer areas. It was founded by Methodists Rev. J. Scott Lidgett and Dr. Moulton. Scott Lidgett first launched plans for a Settlement in 1889 in Cambridge and Bermondsey was chosen for the Settlement because the area suited his purposes. Large firms in Bermondsey gave him a chilly reception but, Colonel Samuel Bevington encouraged him. The foundation stone was laid by Joseph Savory and The Settlement building was opened for educational work the following year by Sir John Lubbock, as chairman of the London County Council. The Settlement was to bring educated workers to the neighbourhood. The Settlement was demolished in 1969.


Fountain Green Square
Fountain Dock – the square is built on the area of this dock. Here was built in 1654 the first warship under the Commonwealth - The Taunton with 48 guns. In the 1870s a west dock is shown adjacent to the gridiron.  The dock was occupied by Smith and Co in 1790, Westlake's in 1830, Williams and Sons in 1850. Mills and Knight, steam engine boiler makers, were here from the 1890’s - 1935. It had a dry-dock, a sawpit and a tidal gridiron. In 1955 it was in use by J.J.Prior. The site is now new housing


Frean Street
Spa Road Station. This opened in 1836 of the London and Greenwich Railway as a temporary station adjoining Rouel Road.  It closed on 1838 and was resited and reopened in 1867 on a slightly different site and it closed in 1915. The original station was the first to open in London in a race beat Euston.  Passengers had to climb a scaffolding staircase to a line with no visible platform and the only booking arrangements were a man in a top hat. Trains only stopped here if requested.   The office was lit by large window looking out into Frean Street. Relics of the 1860s station remain at ground level and are now part of a trading estate.


Fulford Street
41 This – the ‘leaning tower’ - is the final reminder of the once enclosed character of the river frontage and the warehouses there. Braithwaite and Dean lighterage had this premises in the 1980s until they were dissolved in the early 1990s.  Here or in nearby premises In 1937 Jessica Mitford and her husband Piers Romilly lived here when the house belonged to Roger Roughton. Later Princess Margaret and Anthony Armstrong Jones also used premises here or nearby. It is also said to have been a pub called the Jolly Watermen.
Day Nursery. This was on the west side of the road and initially run by Met Borough of Bermondsey probably in the Second World War. It closed in 1958


George Row
Neckinger – the river Neckinger is said to follow the line of the road and runs underground causing subsidence and damp nuisance. Until the early 19th it ran down the east side of the road as an open stream and as part of the millstream complex here
Bridge House. This was at the north end of the road showing the wealth locally in the 18th. It was built in 1706 with curved 17th style gables and a shell hood. A large detached house it was divided into tenements and demolished in the 1950s.
Nickleby House. Plaque to Tommy Steele’s childhood home.
St.Joseph's Roman Catholic Primary school. In 1838 Catherine MacAulay of the Irish Sisters of Mercy was asked to set up a convent in Bermondsey. Originally they opened a school in the convent grounds and this lasted into the 1900s. By 1912 the number of pupils meant that a new premises was needed. The site was by Hickman's Folly and had been used as a tannery. The school was built by the brother of one of the nuns and they nuns paid for it themselves. In 1939 the school was evacuated and the Bermondsey building became an Emergency School. After the war it became an all age mixed Roman Catholic school.  In 1949 it became a primary School.
19 George Pub. Now demolished.
Anchor and Hope pub. Present in the 1880s and now demolished
43 Old Margate Town Pub. Demolished.
67  W.A.Crips.  They were engineering smiths and welders, who also made chains by hand. The premises date from 1864. On closure in 1980 much equipment was removed for preservation. Inside there was extensive use of line shafting and belt drives which were originally powered by a gas engine. From its foundation the firm made iron fittings, and particularly chains, for barges and lighters, but soon expanded its scope to include iron and steel bridge building, warehouse fitting and mill furnishing; providing a comprehensive service to the riverside industries
72 White Hart pub. Present in the 1880s and now demolished. It was used by charity Time and Talents in the 1900s
Dockhead Club. This was on the corner of with Abbey Street and opened in 1931.  It had a hall, club rooms, library, chapel, roof playground and bedsits. They provided youth activities.
Hall. This is on the site of a large, purpose-built girls' club which had been set-up and run by Time and Talents. The club was damaged by bombing during the Second World War


Hickman’s Folly
This was a cul de sac which ran parallel and south of Wolseley Street and said to have been built on the site of a tannery. At one time it ran from Dockhead to George Row where it crossed the open Neckinger by a bridge.
13 Mr. Vale, glass blower's factory 1880s.
23 London City Mission Hall.
25 Thomas Sutton, chemicals and dyes, orchil and cudbear 1880s
Redman and Nicols.  Tin plate works 1880s


Jacob Street
East of Mill Street is Jacob's Island. It was first built around 1700. It was an infamous slum and the site of Bill Sykes's death in Dickens's ‘Oliver Twist’. It was surrounded by polluted millstreams and was once surrounded by a ditch, six or eight feet deep and 20 feet wide when the tide was in. It included Halfpenny Alley, Gutteridge Court, Providence Row, and Turners Court.
Wooden Hoop factory. This was on the north side of the road.
9 Spillers factory where ships biscuits, and later dog food were made. Built 1905 and demolished in 1995. It included an early concrete structure on the Hennebique system.  The architect William T. Walker was a friend of Hennebique's and his UK licensee. The only remaining of the works is the mid-19th front block of the stave yard. The site is now Providence Square
Jacob Street Studios. This was built in 1984 on the site of the Spillers dog biscuit factory. Used for the TV Series London’s burning. Replaced by Providence Square. At one point it was London’s largest film studio.
Jacobs Island transformer house for London Electricity Supply Co.  This building has now been converted to flats.
Charles Southwell, confectionary factory. They made jams, jellies, candied fruit, etc and imported oranges to use in medical products. Other fruit imported and used for jams etc.
Monument Iron Works, 1890s
Three Tuns Pub.  This pub appears on old prints from the mid-19th. Long gone
1 The Stave Porter. This was on the corner with Mill Street and probably remained there until the 1930s.


Jamaica Road
This is now the A200 and is apparently named from the Jamaica Tavern which once stood near on the corner of Cherry Garden Road at the eastern end of what was then Jamaica Row. .  The easternmost section of the road here was once called Union Road as far as the Southwark Park Road Junction. The road has also been straightened between St. James Road and Abbey Street leaving the original line of the road to the south as Old Jamaica Road a further realignment ran across the end of Parker’s Row.
Christ Church. This church was on the corner of Neckinger Road with what was then Parkers Row and is now part of Jamaica Road.  It was built in 1848 designed by W Bennett Hayes. It was in brick with a belfry. It was declared redundant in 1956 and demolished in 1966. The organ is now in St Nicholas, Southfleet
96 Gregorian Pub. The previous address was St James Place, Lower Road. It is believed the pub was here by 1550. It was re-built in mock-Tudor style shortly after the Second World War
Denday's Turnpike, This was at the corner of what is now St, James Road and was abolished in 1826.
Bermondsey Station.  Opened in 1999 it lies Between London Bridge and Canada Water Stations on the Jubilee Line. It was a new station and lies alongside a small side turning called Major Road. It was designed by Ian Ritchie Architects who extensively used natural light. There is a cut-and-cover section supported by latticed concrete beams allowing light down to the platform level. The escalators are lined by flat concrete and a high ceiling to give a feeling of spaciousness. The bored section is encased with metal. Bermondsey station has platform edge doors for passenger safety and comfort.
119 Jamaica Cinema. The Bermondsey Cinematograph Theatre opened in 1913, and was commonly called ‘The Stork’ due to its closeness to Stork’s Road. In 1929 it was operated by L. Posner & H. Pearl and it had closed by 1935. The building became a whiskey warehouse for William Teacher & Co. In 1975, as a celebration if its history they re-opened it for 3-nights, screening films
150 The Clarence pub. This has now been demolished
175 -177 congregational church between these two numbers. In the mid 17th James Janeway moved to Salisbury Place. He identified nearby the Jamaica Barn and opened it as a meeting house. For this he was persecuted and although the new church was successful the barn was pulled down. Another building was at once erected and eventually Janeway got a licence for freedom of worship.  By the late 18th the church began to decline and the Rev. John Townsend, and the church, which had been Presbyterian, was reorganised on Congregational lines. In the mid 19th a new church was built with a large Sunday school. The church is not there now.
191 Admiral Hawke pub. This was on the corner of Salisbury Street and has now been demolished
Harold’s school.   This school stood on the corner with Drummond Road in the 19th and appears to have been run by the Congregational Education Board.
Christ Church. This was a simple Gothic church on the corner of Cathay Street built in 1838-9 by Lewis Vulliamy on land given by Field Marshal Sir William Gomm who was buried there in 1875. It was declared redundant in 1964, was used as storage for the Diocese until 1974, and was demolished in 1979.  The Bosco centre is now on the site
Christ Church Gate into the park
243 Boatman.  Pub named after the family which ran it.  It was previously called the Royal George with an address of 24 Union Road.
Jamaica House. This Jacobean style house with a balcony going right round the first floor was here at the south end of Cherry Garden Road until the mid-19th and seems to have been connected to the Cherry Garden Pleasure Garden.  Said to have a connection with Oliver Cromwell.
210 Queen Charlotte Pub corner Southwark Park Road
210a Milllpond Tenants and Residents Hall
252 Scout House. Owned by Southwark District Scouts which has 15 Scout Groups based throughout the District.
281 Bosco Centre . This centre runs education courses and a nursery as well as other youth activities. The centre is run by Salesian sisters as part of the Italian Don Bosco organisation. It is. At the edge of King's Stairs Gardens. It has modern brick buildings, which stand in a railed property and heavily wooded with mature trees to the margins linking these to the Gardens. The main brick house fronting onto Jamaica Road was originally the Vicarage for the, now demolished, Christ Church. At the back is a small, modern private chapel built of brick in a ‘warehouse’ style with segmental-arched window heads.
Methodist chapel. A Primitive Methodist church opened on Jamaica Road in 1856. This was in the area which is now Southwark Park’s Jamaica Road frontage
Bomb shelters. Built into the large grassed area adjacent to Jamaica Road in between the Southwark park entrances were three large wedge-shaped brick structures, each about 10ft. high. These were the entrances to the bomb shelters built during World War II. Demolished, but the shelters themselves still exist.


Janeway Street
Named for James Janeway, 17th cleric who founded a local church
Houses which were built as Bermondsey Garden Suburb in 1928 by the Metropolitan Borough of Bermondsey under Alfred Salter
Riverside Primary School. Built in 1874 by M.P. Manning of Gale & Manning. It was one of the first schools designed for the School Board for London. It is on a very cramped site and thus there is a ground floor playground opening to an arcade.


John Felton Road
John Felton was a Roman Catholic who was executed in the 16th. He was a wealthy man who lived at Bermondsey Abbey.
Archaeology in this area found Roman pottery and some pits.


John Rolls Way
John Rolls was a justice and a prominent member of a Bermondsey family in the 18th


Keetons Road
Keetons Road once ran south as far as the Peek Frean’s entrance south of Clements Road.
Keetons Road School. This primary school was bombed with 400 casualties while being used as a reception centre in 1940.  It was a three decker London School Board building.  After the war the site was used for the Scott Lidgett School, latterly Southwark College. Compass Free School is now on the site.
Compass School Free School on part of the Scott Lidgett School site and part of Southwark College. Opened in 2013
Housing designed by Neylan & Ungless in 1981with low terraces around courtyards


Llewellyn Street
The street is roughly on the line of one of a series of 18th rope walks. It is also in the area of an 18th large rectangular fish pond stretching roughly from the site of Chambers Wharf to the current Jamaica Road.  It was originally called New Church Road.
St.Michael's Roman Catholic school. This is now an ‘academy’.


Marigold Street
16 The Ship pub, also called The Ship in Distress. This has been demolished.
Stephen the Yeoman's Mission and Ragged School. This had been founded in 1859 and was based in Marigold Place off the east side of the street. As well as the Ragged School they had a Maternity Society and sick nurse, and gave weekly People's Entertainments. Rebuilt in 1885


Marine Street
Marine Street was realigned as part of the Spa Road development project
Spa Road Station. Under the railway arch the two iron doors gave access to the ticket office of the 1842-1867 station and the platform
49 Britannia Pub. Demolished
Downside Fisher Youth Club. The club was in premises here until 1914.


Old Jamaica Road
2. The Drill Hall was opened in 1876 and used by the Queens Royal West Surrey Regiment Third Volunteer Battalion. The building is now redundant and in use for housing having latterly been used by the Territorial Army. The main standing building dates from the 1950
War Memorial. A Memorial to those Officers and Soldiers of the 22nd Bn. The London Regiment (Queen’s) who died in The Great War. It was erected about 1921 in the old Drill Hall yard. After the Second World War a plaque was added to commemorate those of the 6th (Bermondsey) Bn. the Queen’s Royal Regiment who had died. In 1953, when the Drill Hall was extended, the Memorial was incorporated into the outside wall of the new building. In front of the Memorial are two stone flower boxes, on which are Memorial Plaques to two Officers, Colonel J G Bevington, TD and Colonel C H Nice, TD, DL.
St. James Church of England Primary School. As a church school it was a national school in the 1870s.  The school is in relatively modern buildings and was previously on a different site on the corner now between Spa and Thurland Roads, south and west of the church. It was bombed in 1940. It has recently amalgamated with Alma School.
Bermondsey Gospel Mission with an illuminated "God is Love" sign stood at the comer with Abbey Street. It had been founded in 1864 by Walter Ryall and at first called the London Street Mission. Latterly it was used as a base for young missionaries. It was closed by the trustees in 1967 and taken over by London City Mission. Later demolished the current Building is flats for retired and young missionaries associated with the London City Mission.
9 Liliput Hall Pub. The building is now flats having closed in 2000
19 Salmon Youth Centre was Cambridge University Mission Settlement building on the corner of Marine Street dating from 1910. The Mission was founded in 1907 as a medical mission plus a boys' mission club and residential settlement. Rev. Harold Salmon was the first head. A building on Jamaica Road was bought in 1907; and new halls added in 1910. In 1922 the name changed to the Cambridge University Mission Settlement. It reopened after the Second World War in 1947/8.  The buildings were significantly rebuilt during the 1950s.The mission building became the Salmon Youth Centre and was demolished in 2004/5 for the Bermondsey Spa project, which included a sports hall, drama space, chapel, and some housing
72 Rising Sun Pub. Mahogany bar with framed mirrors. The pub has now closed.


Paradise Street
In the 18th Paradise Street ran from Mill Pond Bridge, roughly at the junction of today’s West Street, to the area of around current Kings Stairs Gardens where it turned south.
23 a plain brick house built in 1814 which was used as a police station from 1838.  An iron lamp holder remains. A new Police Station was built in Lower Road in 1965 leaving this empty
33 Queens Head pub. This has now been demolished having been closed in 1973.
36 Red Lion pub. This was demolished. It was a two storied building which stood at the junction with Cathay Street on a site still unoccupied. It opened in 1792, closed in the 1950's and demolished in the early 1960's
67-69 Barley Mow pub. This has now gone
72 St.Peter and the Guardian Angels. Built in 1902 by F. W Tasker as a Roman Catholic Church.  It is a simple, barn like brick building. At the east end is a presbytery with an attic and basement.
Six Bells Pub. This was in the street from 1757 until 1869
Hall. This has been extended to the west and it is a surviving part the St. Joseph’s Catholic School.
Pynfolds Estate. Said to be on the site of the Rose & Rummer pub 1757 until 1869. A mission hall was later built here and then in 1953 the Pynfolds Estate was built.


Priter Road
Priter was Chair of St. Olave's Vestry Board of Works.
Spa Road Station. The third station. The remains of the station which can be seen from the trading estate entrance in this road date from 1900. In 1867 the station was resited east of the earlier site with an entrance accessed from this road via what is now Priter Road. The station was renamed Spa Road & Bermondsey in 1877. The station was again reconfigured when the South Eastern and Chatham Railway was formed in 1899 from the South Eastern Railway and London, Chatham and Dover Railways. In 1915, the station was closed. In 1986, British Rail, the Southwark Environment Trust and the London Borough of Southwark restored the station frontage and installed two commemorative plaques. The railway arches and surrounding land became an industrial estate and housing block. A South Eastern Railway 'right of way notice' from 1936 is said to have remained here.

Prospect Street
Prospect Street lies south of Jamaica Road and consists of blocks of local authority housing.  Before redevelopment it crossed Jamaica Road to the north and reached as far as Paradise Street. It appears to follow the line of the Mill Stream which once ran from the area of Southwark Park to the River.


Providence Square
Providence Square.  This is on the site of the Spillers Dog Food Factory which fronted onto Jacob Street. It consists of 3 6-storey residential blocks arranged around fenced private gardens.  The narrow carriageway with reconstituted stone flags and granite kerbs shows some of the previous scale of the site.


Rouel Road
The land Rouel Road was built on was part of the Rolls Estate. The road itself was built in 1860
Rouel Tavern. Built in 1869 and now demolished
Tanneries. There two large tanneries one of them on the east side of Rouel Road opposite the congregational church and the other on the corner with Spa Road on the site which was later Pearce Duff.
Lipton preservative's factory built on the site of an earlier tannery. They produced jam and preservatives from 1894. .  Thomas Lipton was a flamboyant   Scot who aimed to undercut others with cheaper products.  He had come from a poor background and built up a chain of grocery stores, and was best known for tea. He began to make jam to supply his stores, cutting out the middleman and using fruit from his own sources, and buying fruit farms for that purpose. He is credited with revolutionising the trade in and sale of many foods. The factory was closed after a fire in the 1960s.
Congregational Church built in the 1860s, which included a school room built in 1871 and associated with the Christian Brethren. From about 1908 the church began to have problems and was eventually managed by Dulwich Emmanuel Church. The Congregational Church gave the building up in 1917 handing over to the London Union. The YMCA had the building from 1929 using it along with the Boys’ Brigade. Between 1931-34 it became known as the Beulah Mission Church and in the late 1930s a synagogue
Rouel Road Synagogue. This was Bermondsey and Rotherhithe Synagogue until 1935. Set up in 1911 it had previously been in Union Road. They used an Ashkenazi Orthodox Ritual and were Independent until about 1935, when they became affiliated with the Federation of Synagogues.  They closed about 1970 after which the building was demolished
93-95 Pearce & Duffs. A drysalters company founded in 1847 originating in a private house. The owners were Elizabeth Jane Duff (granddaughter of William Pearce), Daniel Duff and David Duff Jnr. The factory was on the corner with Spa Road and is said to have previously been a pub from which green tiled walls remained.  It is also said that large windows remained as ventilation from previous use as a tannery. They are known for their various powdered goods – blancmange, custard powder and so on but early on they also made black lead and were described as black lead grinders. Their principle products were effectively grocery chemicals - baking powder and similar goods.  They also made gelatine based products implying a connection with the local tannery trade. The firm did as much as possible in house and to this end had a packing and cardboard manufacture department.
Rouel Road Estate. Built in the 1970-5 with barrier a block along the railway line.  Miniature upper gardens by Maurice Pickering


Scott Lidgett Crescent,
Named after Methodist Dr. J. Scott Lidgett who founded the Bermondsey Settlement in Farncombe Street. The road is part of Bermondsey Garden Suburb built in 1928 by the Metropolitan Borough of Bermondsey under Salter
Prince of Wales Pub. Closed.

Slippers Place
This development lies adjacent to the line of the millstream


Southwark Park
This square covers only the north western section of the park
The site of the park is shown on pre-19th maps as having a series of water bodies which fed the mill stream which flowed south to a Thames side mill  - marked as Boziers Mill on the 1790s Horwood Plan,. These water bodies were known as the mill pond.  It is said to have been a Tudor ballast pit enclosed by a bank and filled with tidal water. Eventually collection of sediment formed islands and the channels around them were used and managed with a flushing arrangement to work the riverside mill according to the tides. There was a whole complex of these waterways and islands and thus the name ‘Seven Islands’ was given to the area. There were fish in these ponds and the area became a fishery and leisure area.  There appears to have been a pub here called The Swan which replaced a building called Island House Tea Gardens from where boats could be hired. This was burned down in 1799 and The Swan replaced it but later had a bad reputation.
In 1856 Rotherhithe Vestry asked the Metropolitan Board of Works to establish a public park here and this was agreed in 1863 with Royal Assent in 1864. Land used for market gardens was bought from Sir William Gomm and other land added. The original lay out was by the Board’s superintendent architect, Mr Vulliamy, and design by Alexander McKenzie. The Park opened in 1869.
Bandstand.  By 1885 a bandstand was needed. Eventually one of a pair bought from the Royal Horticultural Society at South Kensington by the London County Council in 1899 was installed. Previously there had been a number of temporary arrangements and in 1883 the Metropolitan Board of Works had agreed to erect a bandstand here. The original space can be seen in the line of curved paths and in the placing of the plane trees. The bandstand was removed during the Second World War but a tarmaced area retains the shape. The current bandstand is a replica of that from South Kensington.
Carriage Drive. The site is divided from west to east by a carriage drive which links Southwark Park Road to Gomm Road on the east and it was originally intended that a drive should encircle the whole park. Blocks of land were left for buildings but this idea was abandoned and so the perimeter carriage drive was reduced in width but the stretch from Jamaica Gate retained the original width. It is separated from the park by iron railings. To the north are low mounds made from spoil removed during the construction of the nearby Rotherhithe Tunnel.
Bowling Green. A path runs from the carriage drive, to the Bowling Green which is set within an oval space, surrounded by a hawthorn hedge. A pavilion was provide in 1906 but was later destroyed and has been replaced. The bowling club was established in 1913.
Drinking fountain. This was built by public subscription in 1884 and dedicated to the life and labours of Jabez West, a member of the Temperance Society.
The eastern perimeter path, is lined with plane trees and from Paradise Gate follows the park boundary to link with the path north of the bowling green
The western perimeter path from Jamaica Gate runs south along the route of a redundant carriageway. A path leads to the rose garden to the south.


Southwark Park Road
Southwark Park Primary School. This local school is in a London Board School building by E.R. Robson of 1873 with extensions of 1899. The school is currently being refurbished and the children are in a building elsewhere.
Jamaica Gate. This was originally the main entrance to Southwark Park and it stands opposite what was the Southwark Park Tavern. Originally this gateway, unlike the others, had ornate iron construction, with two large gas lamps above scrolled iron pillars.  This has been removed.
St.Crispin. This church was built in 1959 by T. F. Fore and replaced a church of 1879-80 by G. Robinson which was destroyed in Second World War bombing. Inside is a mural by Hans Feibusch and the ceiling is painted with sky and clouds.  The single bell dates from 1838 and thus predates the earlier church. There is also a hall and rooms. The church was made redundant on in 1999. It is currently in use as a nursery
395 Southwark Park Tavern. It had French Impressionist prints and original hand pumps but this pub is now closed and in other use.
418 Stanley Arms Pub. This pub dates from the 1866s and is still open. It is said that a pub called the Joiners Arms preceded it on the site
440 Crown. This pub is closed but the building remains.
495 Jamaica Tavern. This pub has now been demolished.


Spa Road,
The Peck stream joined Earl Sluice in this area.
Spa Road and Neckinger Estate Tenants and Residents Hall
112 Crown Pub. This has been demolished.
Spa Road Station.  This station now disused has been on three slightly different sites on the railway viaduct. The first station dated from 1836 opened when the London and Greenwich Railway built the four-mile viaduct from London Bridge to Greenwich. The London and Greenwich wanted to open the first London Station.  The line was partially opened as sections were completed and the first stretch opened was from Spa Road to Deptford in February 1836 with hourly trains. The station was very basic on a narrow space on a two-track viaduct with no buildings of any sort. The platforms were accessed via wooden staircases on the outside of the viaduct; and on the south side was a wooden hut where someone could issue tickets. Passengers were supposed to board from track level having ascended a staircase. Once London Bridge Station had opened in December 1836 use of Spa Road dropped and in 1838 it was closed until 1842. The second station was accessed from Marine Street. The third station was accessed from Priter Road and remains can be seen there.
Railway Bridge.  This is an original on the London and Greenwich Railway and it is 53023' skew and carried the only gradient on the London Bridge side of the railway and this was marked by a distance post. Under the bridge are the original cast iron columns remain. The bridge was designed by George Landman in 1833 and a Brick semicircular arch is carried on 14 cast-iron Doric columns from the Dudley Foundry which separate the carriageway from narrower arched footways on either side. The whole now incorporated in a much larger railway bridge. This railway bridge was the first to be built in London, and the oldest that remains operational.  It has been greatly widened on the west side by the addition of numerous lines.
Bermondsey Spa. The road is named for this 18th which stood where the junction with Rouel Road now is.  In 1765 Thomas Keyse bought a pub called the Waterman’s Arms and turned it into a then fashionable spa. He turned local fields into gardens and for thirty years ran it as an entertainment establishment including an art gallery of his own paintings.  The water was a bit murky and the area was full of tanneries.
Salvation Army Men's Hostel. Built c1912 to provide accommodation for single men at reasonable cost in clean and comfortable conditions. It was used by the Government during the Great War sheltering Belgian refugees, and reopened by the Salvation Army in 1925. The boiler house chimney was part of a depot for collecting    and sorting salvage which opened in 1899.  150 men were employed here on paper and rag sorting.  General Booth opened an extension to the Elevator. The complex included a box factory and a hostel for homeless men.  In 1971 the Spa Road Complex was established and brought together the hostel, the family service centre, the laundry, and the rehabilitation workshop. The Spa Road Elevator was demolished in 2003
Bolanachi Empire Chocolate Company.  This was on the corner with Rouel Road and a new block on the site is named for this works which closed in 1899. Bolanachi was a Turk working with chocolate bean growers and with a business originally based in Whitechapel.   The works produced a chocolate paste which could be used to make drinks or as a flavouring. Coffee was also made here.
London Cotton Mills. This was the north west side of the railway bridge and made surgical wadding in the 1870s
126 Spa Tavern. This pub has been demolished


St. James Road
This was at one time Blue Anchor Road
Railway Bridge. The central part of the bridge has two arches; some of the bridge formed by a steel span, and as part of the original London and Greenwich railway would originally have been carried on brick arches. When the railway opened in 1836 a ticket office was provided here and purchasers were allowed to walk along the line side ‘boulevard’ to Spa Road station.
72 St.James Tavern. This dates from the 1860s.


Stalham Street
This development lies adjacent to the site of the millstream


Storks Road
The road once extended from Jamaica Road southwards to curve east at the railway to Drummond Road.
66 Duffy and Co. In the 1880s made " Acme " wood flooring


Thurland Road
St.James. Built in 1827-9 by James Savage. The grandest church in Bermondsey, and the most expensive of the Commissioners' churches. A committee had been set up in 1821 made up of tanners and builders. In order to supplement income a crypt was built for which fees could be charged on burials and many seats were not free. The spire is copied from Wren's St Stephen's, Walbrook and James Savage, the architect, modelled the church on Greek Temples with galleries round three sides and the organ in the west.  10 bells were cast by Mears of Whitechapel, from French cannon from Waterloo. A four-faced striking clock, was put in the tower and the organ, built by J.C. Bishop.  The interior was altered in 1965 with the end and aisles divided off. The arched chancel has a painting of the Ascension of Christ by John Wood, 1844. Two pews were reserved for railway employees in 1836. It is now an evangelical church.
Slide in the playground in the former churchyard was a covered slide with a half-timbered tower, given to 'the little children of Bermondsey' in 1921.It appears to have now gone.
4 St. James vicarage. A new building on the site of Christ Church Vicarage.
School. The original St, James National School dating from the 1870s and which are now in a post-Second World War building nearby.
Fire Engine house. This stood in a corner of the churchyard until the London County Council fire station was built.


Union Road
This was the previous name of the eastern end of Jamaica Road

West Lane
Boundary of the ancient parishes of Bermondsey and Rotherhithe.
23 Two Brewers Pub. This is closed and is now flats.
South London Branch of the National Sailors' and Firemen's Union.  This was on the corner of Cherry Garden Place
War Memorial. Dedicated to the men of Bermondsey and Rotherhithe who died in the Great War. It was lately financed by Peak Frean's and unveiled in 1921. It is a granite column with a capital set on an octagonal base, with a ball and flame detail at the top. The inscriptions are on arches on the square base. Above is a bronze coat of arms of the former Metropolitan Borough of Bermondsey and Rotherhithe. Subsequent additions were ‘IN REMEMBRANCE OF  ALL THOSE CIVILIANS AND  MEMBERS OF THE CIVIL  DEFENCES AND FIRE BRIGADE  SERVICES WHO LOST THEIR  LIVES IN THIS COMMUNITY  1939-1945 and: WHEN YOU GO HOME  TELL THEM OF US AND SAY  FOR YOUR TOMORROW  WE GAVE OUR TODAY.  AT THE GOING DOWN OF THE SUN, AND IN THE MORNING WE WILL REMEMBER THEM.
War memorial 3rd Volunteer Bn. The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment). This is a Memorial to those of the Borough, who gave their lives in the South African Wars of 1899 to 1902. It is believed that this Memorial was originally in the vestibule of the Bermondsey Town Hall in 1903 and was unveiled by General Sir Redvers Buller because Lord Roberts was unable to attend,
Mill pond. The road lay alongside the mill stream running to the site of Southwark Park and Seven Islands.  Smaller mill pond lay south of the junction with Paradise Street.

Wilson Grove
This is part of the Garden City by Bermondsey Borough Council.  Built 1924-1928 by the Metropolitan Borough of Bermondsey. Designed by Culpin & Bowers.

Wolseley Street
This was once called London Street and it was renamed Wolseley Street - after Field Marshall Sir Garnet Wolseley – the original of Gilbert and Sullivan's 'modern major-general.
Jacobs’s Biscuits. An extension of 1907 was marked 'W.R- Jacob & Co. Ltd.' Note the factory doorways marked 'Workers’ and 'Office ‘Building with an extension of 1907 with 'W.R.Jacob' written on it. Also doorways 'Workers' and 'Officers' . These buildings seem to have gone.   Jacobs were an Irish company who began as makers of ships biscuits. They expanded with a large factory in Liverpool and later became part of United Biscuits. A building survives in Dockhead (outside of this square)..
33 Ship Aground. Pub with a  window with Bill Sykes and dog in it
8 Dockhead Fire Station


Sources
Aldous. London Villages 
Beasley. Southwark Remembered
Beasley. Southwark Revisited
Bennett. The First  Railway in London
Bird. Geography of the Port of London
British Glues and Chemicals. Web site
British Listed Buildings., Web site
British Rail and the Mercury Group. Present Connection.
Cherry & Pevsner. London South
Cinema Treasures. Web site
Clunn. The Face of London
Codrington. London South of the Thames, 
Dockland, 
Docklands History Survey. 
Ellmers and Werner.  London’s Lost Riverscape
English Heritage. Web site
Exploring Social Action. Web site
GLIAS Walk and Newsletter
Humphery. Bermondsey and Rotherhithe Remembered
Ideal Homes. Web site 
Jewish Gen. Web site
London Archaeologist
London Borough of Southwark. Web site
London Docklands Guide, 
London Encyclopaedia
Lost Pubs Project. Web site
Mills. George Landmann
Nature Conservation in Southwark, Ecology Handbook 
PMSA. Web site
Port Cities. Web site
Pub History. Web site
Riverside Primary School. Web site
Rouel Road. Wikipedia Web site
Rouel Road Church. Web site.
Southwark Lost Places of Worship. Web site.
Spa Road Station. Wikipedia. Web site
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Tower Bridge Moorings. Web site
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Walford. Village London. 

London and Greenwich Railway - Deptford

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London to Greenwich Railway
The railway went south eastwards through this area

Post to the north Deptford
Post to the west Cold Blow
Post to the south New Cross
Post to the east Deptford Creek


Achilles Street
The Achilles Street Estate was built in the early 1950s on a site previous bombed and use for prefabs.
Austin House. Five storey block of flats from the early 1950s
Fenton House. Five storey block of flats from the early 1950s
Azalea House. Three storey block of flats from the early 1950s.
Adolphus Street
V2 rocket attack January 1945 in heavy snow fall and made worse by the remains of domestic fires which set more alight. Twenty people died and 47 seriously injured. In the street, a dazed man walked up and down with a dead infant in his arms, asking where he should place it.
Amersham Grove
Hall.  Plaque saying ‘Museum’. This was once a private museum of curios collected by a J.T.Taylor, a merchant navy captain, and opened in 1890
38 a red brick double fronted house, probably built in the 1865with big stone balls on the forecourt walls
Railway Mission. This dated from the 1890s and was behind the houses in the right angled bend of the road


Amersham Vale
Royal Naval Place Allotments
5 PDSA Petaid Hospital. The Philippa and George Adams Centre
15 Mulberry Centre. Centre for people with learning disabilities, and also provides Challenging Needs Service. The building has been remodelled by Mode 1 Architects.
Waldron Health Centre. Walk-in medical centre built for the Lewisham Primary Care Trust in 2006-2010. The Project Architect was Craig Linnell of Henley, Halebrown and Rorrison
Walpole Road Underpass to Fordham Park. This goes under the station and in 2010 was refurbished ad designed with overblown flower designs by artist Heather Burrell
48 Admiral Napier pub. This pub has been demolished
78 Hilary House. Municipal dispensary for the treatment of consumption opened in 1912
Old Police Station. Building of 1912 with bowed windows and wrought iron railings.  Now a museum and art gallery. This is a do-it-yourself art centre with 42 artists' studios, a gallery, independent project spaces, a radio station, band rehearsal space and pop-up cocktail bar. This was started by Anthony Gross in 2009 with the idea of an exhibition as a social centre.
114 Deptford Police Station.
New Cross Station. Opened in 1850 it lies between St.John’s and London Bridge stations on South East Trains and is the terminus of East London Railway from Surrey Quays. It opened as New Cross & Naval School Station on the North Kent Line in 1850, and was one of the original stations on the North Kent Line. It was renamed New Cross in 1854. By 1870 many lines passed through New Cross: the North Kent via Woolwich and Lewisham (opened 1849); the Dartford Loop via Sidcup (opened 1866); the Mid-Kent via Ladywell and Catford (opened 1857); and the Tonbridge Line via Orpington and Sevenoaks (opened 1868). The four tracks were served by six platform faces, arranged as two islands and two side platforms. The platform for the East London Railway to Wapping, on the eastern side of the station was opened 1884 and trains were run by the Metropolitan & District Railway from St.Mary’s to New Cross. Platforms were linked by an enclosed glazed footbridge, which led to a single-storey brick building. The works for the East London line involved a line to the east which meant demolition of seventeen houses. A turntable and loop were added along with a siding with a water tower and coal staith. New offices were also built. The East London line was electrified in 1913, which meant the turntable and loop were removed and the platform face was segregated from the rest with railings. An electric timetable began on the lines to Chislehurst and to Dartford in 1926. Since 1923, the station had been know as ‘’New Cross’’. In 1954 standard concrete bracket lampposts were erected on all platforms and in 1968, physical connections between British Rail and the East London Line were removed. Resignalling led to changes in platform layouts and a new island platform a wooden station was built adjacent to the East London Line. The station then had platforms designated by letters, rather than numbers. A temporary footbridge and a subway were built.  The old station building was demolished.  Piles of granite blocks over ordered in 1839 were still there in 1970. The down platform retains some ornate iron columns of the original station. More recent changes have taken place to allow extensions to the East London Line.
Signal Bx. At first there was a cabin at the northern end of the up island platform.  When the East London Line was added in 1876, a larger SER-designed signal box was provided to the north of this on the side of the embankment. This was abolished following electrification

Angus Street.
Moonshot Centre. This was constructed in 1981 in the wake of the New Cross fire and as a result local people lobbied for a building as a base for local the African and Caribbean communities. The building is owned by the local authority and was formerly known as the Pagnell Street Youth and Community Centre. This had begun as the Moonshot Club in St John's Hall, Lewisham in about 1971 founded by Sybil Phoenix. This building burnt down in the late 1970s and Pagnell Street Centre Charitable Trust leased a property on Fordham Park in 1979. The Inner London Education Authority), the Sports Council and the London Borough of Lewisham funded and were closely involved. The centre quickly became a focal point for the local black community. In 1981 and Sybil Phoenix helped organise the Black Peoples' Day of Action after the New Cross Fire. The club closed down in 1999 but was later re-opened as the Moonshot Club.  In 1999 a consortium oversaw the refurbishment of the building and a glass Atrium was added

Archer Square
Site of Archer Tower. This was a block in Sanford Street.

Arklowe Road
Stone’s Works. From 1881 to 1969 the industrial estate was Stone’s engineering works. J. Stone & Co had been founded by Josiah Stone in a workshop in Deptford in 1831, moving in 1842 to railway arches where he made hand pumps and manual fire engines. The firm moved to Arklow Road in 1881 to make propellers, watertight ships doors, steam pumps, electric lighting systems for railways axle-driven lighting system, and later air conditioning for trains and other engineering products. There was a Fastener Division, a Boiler Division, a Rail Division, and a Laundry Division. The propeller foundry moved to Charlton in 1916 where it remains. In 1950 the Deptford works made rail and road transport products, nails, rivets and washers. In 1959 the firm became Stone Platt Industries, and in 1963 Stone Manganese Marine. The Deptford factory closed in 1969.
Stone's Office block. A classical building of 1916, with an extra floor added in 1928
Olivet Deptford Baptist Church. A church built in 1980, with steeply sloping roof and elongated squared windows.  The church was founded in 1863 by the famous preacher Charles Haddon Spurgeon, who saw the great need for young people to be taught at a Sunday School. He persuaded business men put sufficient money together for a church and Sunday school and made sure that the facilities for the Sunday school were built before the church itself.  The area around the church was bombed and later a Compulsory Purchase Order was put upon the church.  After much negotiation the present site was agreed upon and the new Olivet Deptford Baptist Church was built and opened in December 1980.         
28 SAFA House. The building has most recently been used as a Caribbean social centre and youth club. It was built as a coffee tavern and social centre and but it may have been the Welcome Institute which operated as an educational and sports centre and also as a canteen for Stones workers.

Auburn Close
Modern housing estate on old industrial land
Cormacks Nursery. The close is said to be the site of this nursery which stood alongside the Croydon Canal in the 1830s. It also appears to be on a railway site shown on 1890s maps as ‘New Cross Low Level’ on the east side of New Cross Gate Station.  This was the East London Railway’s first station at New Cross. This station closed in 1886, and District trains ran thereafter to the adjacent London Brighton and South Coast Railway which is now known as New Cross Gate.

Averton Street
Clyde Child Care Centre.  This is on the site of John Evelyn School which was built in the 1870's and opened in 1875. the original name of the school was Duke Street school – Duke Street ran parallel to Evelyn Street and later became Alverton Street and the school also changed its name also to Alverton Street School in 1919, and then to John Evelyn School in 1930.  Much of the area was bombed or later demolished for the Evelyn Estate. In 1972 an Infants School was built next to the School and was called John Evelyn Infants School. Later the Primary and Infants schools combined into one, and by 1979 some of the main school was allocated to South East London College. But the ground floor and playground were still used.  In 1980 the ground floor became the North Lewisham Secondary Schools Support Unit and the upper floors were while Ravensbourne Adult Education Institute. Infants building closed in 1986 and then became Clyde Street Day Care School for nursery age children. The main school was demolished in 1994.

Batavia Road
This was originally the eastern part of Five Bells Lane.  Developments at the station, possibly those at the time of the mid 1840s atmospheric era, saw the end of the lane as a through route.  It continues to the west as Hatcham Park Road.
Croydon Canal. A humped bridge crossed the canal on the line of the lane.
Railway. The railway removed the hump bridge and replaced it with a tunnel under the line. With a width of 6' and height of 7’

Berwick Street
Site of Berwick Tower which was based in Sanford Street

Blackhorse Road
The road – named for a local pub – ran alongside the Surrey Canal and was home to a variety of canal side industries and as such appears in lists of London wharves alongside large Thameside sites.
Trading Estate. Modern units with offices and light industry at the south western end of the road, historically a tar works site. Units are also housed in railway arches,
Wellington Oil Wharves. This was at the far western end of the road on the site which is now the trading estate. Latterly this was the Anglo-Pennsylvanian Oil Co, dealers in fats and greases which they recycled and had a refinery in Uddingston Lanarkshire.

Childeric Road
Childeric Primary School. This was a London County Council school dating from before 1900 and used as a ‘Demonstration school” by Goldsmiths College and the University of London Day Training College. The smaller building by the entrance was of 1892; the other towered over the area and dated from 1899.  New school buildings were erected in 2008.

Childers Street
This was previously called James Street,
Stone’s Engineering Works. Range of workshops from, 1903-07. Light machine shop built 1907. Metallurgical laboratory 1913. Storeys were added to make the building higher in 1925 because of increased demand for railway lighting systems. They also made cars here. This is now artists’ studios.
SR Communications. This was a printing firm which once occupied part of the old Stone's Works. Now gone. Building converted to flats.
81 Lord Palmerston.  The pub probably dates from the 1880s
73-79 British Legion Building. Pride of Deptford. This dated from the late 1970s and is now demolished and the site is now flats.

Chipley Street
Druid Tower was a 23 storey block Constructed in the early 1970s, it contained 92 flats. Demolished in estate reordering after 1995.

Clifton Rise
Tollgate – the junction is the site of the tollgate on New Cross Road – and so the road was once called Turnpike Hill. The southern end of the road now runs inside Fordham Park.
72 Dew Drop Inn. This pub dates from the 1860s.  This pub is now flats
10a BWA Muslim Centre this is a mosque and a Bangaladeshi Welfare Centre.
Public conveniences. These stood at the junction with New Cross Road and were an example of 19th ornamentation with a lot of ironwork. The lamp post and ventilation pipe to the toilets remains as a street feature designed by Alexander 'Greek' Thomson from Walter Macfarlane & Co's Saracen Foundry in Glasgow. It dates from 1897.

Clyde Street
33 Lewisham Indo Chinese Community Centre. The school began after many Indo Chinese refugees came to the area in the late 1970s. A new school building was achieved in 1988 and pupils undertake 5 hours of classes every week. The school includes the Little Rainbows Day Nursery.
Clyde Street Nursery School. A tree now grows on the site of this demolished school.
Clyde Street School.  This London School Board School dated from pre-1907. At the start of the Second World War children from the school were evacuated to the country and it became an ARP post with a gas decontamination centre on the first floor.  In 1940 it was bombed and six wardens killed. The school was destroyed and the remains used for storage. 
Grinling Gibbons Infants School. The school was built in   1951 on the site f the bombed Clyde Street School. It is currently in a federation with Lucas Vale School.
Alfred Morris Day Centre. This site is now flats
Old Town Library, This opened in 1931. It later became the Old Town Community, Arts & Youth Centre. It was built and partly serviced by Greenwich Borough Council. It was closed and scheduled for disposal in the 1990s. This is no longer there.
Baths. Designed by Kenneth Cross and his father, Alfred, who were known for designing municipal baths. They opened in 1928, and contained slipper baths, vapour bath, foam bath and public laundry. They were used until 1988 and then closed. The building is no longer there
Park

Cottesbrook Street
Living Flames Baptist Church

Croydon Canal
The line of the Croydon Canal would have been approximately along the down line platform of New Cross Gate Station.

Desmond Street 
St. Michael’s Church of England and United Reform Community Centre. This was set up in  1972 and aims are to provide affordable quality childcare and to support the welfare, social and economic needs of children and families.  The church replaced one bombed out in 1941 in Knoyle Street.
Orpheus Tower was a 14 storey block Constructed in the early 1970s with 56 flats.  It was demolished in estate reordering in 1995.

Douglas Way
Part of this wholly pedestrianised road is a pathway in the Margaret Macmillan Park

Edward Street,
This was once called Loving Edward Lane
Deptford Green School. The new school won an award as the best educational building in the UK in 2013.  It was originally built as the Clifton Hill School in 1873, the school was renamed Clifton Rise School in 1937, and Christopher Marlowe School in 1951. The Upper School in Amersham Vale was built in the 1970s and then the original school was renamed the Deptford Green School Annexe, and was later referred to as the “Lower School”.
Edward Street School.  The school dated from 1889 and was what we today would describe as special needs
Celestial Church of Christ. This was St. Mark’s Anglican Church built in 1883 by A H Newman. It was originally a chapel of ease to St Paul's. It closed in 1955, and was leased to Stones as a warehouse 1955-1969 and later used as a youth and community centre 1971-1987. It was formally declared redundant 1998 and sold to the Celestial Church of Christ.
63 West Kent Yeoman Pub. Demolished
Boulevard. When the London and Greenwich Railway was first built a walkway known as the boulevard ran the length of the line. Some of this remains here along the south side of the line with rounded coping stones on the wall
St. Paul's Schools. These stood east of the London and Greenwich rail bridge in the 1860s.

Evelyn Street
Evelyn Street, was also known as Deptford Road or Lower Road, and was laid out as a turnpike road by the New Cross Turnpike Trust in 1718.
Tollhouse for the turnpike was built at the junction with Prince Street. This was built in the early 18th and demolished in 1865. It was known as the Gibraltar toll house.
Evelyn Street Estate. This was built in the late 1950s on a bombed housing site replaced by prefabs. There are seven blocks of flats and some shops. The six storey blocks are Mulberry House, Laurel House, Ashford House, Wardalls House and Magnolia House. A five storey block is Linden House.
Howard House is a 6 storey slab block built in the mid 1960s on the site of a bombed factory with 42 deck-access flats
299 John Evelyn Pub. This is now a bookies
309 Gibraltar Pub. This pub has now been demolished
321 Globe. This was present by 1840 and had closed in 1998.  It is now a bookies. It is possible that this pub is that referred to by Samuel Pepys in the 17th to but this may be to a different pub. A pub called the Globe was on this site by 1735. This was demolished in 1840 for road improvements and replaced by the current building.
393 Telegraph Pub. This has now been demolished.

Exeter Way
Pagnall Street Night Shelter. This is run by St. Mungos.
Folkestone Gardens
An open space laid out after the war on the site of bombed flats. The site is landscaped and has walkways, woodland areas and a large pond on the north-western side with an island and a large willow. Some of the pond plants were taken surplus from the restoration of the pond at the Hare and Billet on Blackheath. Other trees include Lombardy poplars.  The northern part of the park was originally Blackhorse Pond which had been used in the construction of the Surrey Canal and which had been drained by the railway.
Seven housing blocks built by the South Eastern Railway were previously here. They were flats built to rehouse people whose homes were demolished when London Bridge Station was extended in 1901. The flats had three floors with a drying ground on roof and a   wide asphalted yard between the blocks
The site suffered South East London's second worst bombing raid in 1945. The rocket fell between two blocks of flats destroying both blocks, together with houses in Trundleys Road. Residents died in their beds in more than twenty different flats and altogether, 52 people were killed, 64 seriously injured and 70 treated for lesser injuries. Most of the casualties were Southern Railway employees or their dependents. The scene attracted a stream of VIPs.

Fordham Park
Fordham Park. A large area cleared in the 1970s. The area was developed with terraced housing from the 1850s on what had previously been farmland. This housing was demolished in the early 1970s, and the Park - named after the last Mayor of Deptford -was opened in 1975. It was redesigned in 2010

Goodwood Road
This is an extension of what was North Road running northwards into land otherwise used for railway sidings. North Road also led to the first New Cross station of the East London Line, which now appears to be covered by Auburn Close.
Bond House. ASC studios. Warehouse built in the 1960s now used by arts organizations
40 New Cross Health Centre. New Cross Gate dialysis unit. This is on the site of Blundell House.
Letts Son & Co. Printing works. John Letts, a bookbinder and printer based in the City of London published ‘Letts's diary or bills owed book and almanack’ which were developed by his son Thomas. His factories at North Road printed interest tables, specialist clerical and medical diaries, calendars, parliamentary registers, ledgers, and logbooks.
Aspinall’s Enamels and Paints Factory. This factory appears to have started manufacturing “Enamels, Blacks and Stains” in 1885. The factory was rebuilt after a fire in the 1890s and became Halstead’s Distemper Works. The company filed for bankruptcy in 1934
W.A.Halstead’s distember works remained on the site until at least the late 1950s
Metropolitan Coal Cooperative Association. There were extensive coal yards connected to the East London Railway the east of what is now Goodwood Road
Rapesco House. Rapesco, now based near Sevenoaks, make office fastening products. They opened in 1957 and for a while this block was known as The Stapling Centre.  It is now occupied by a number of business units,
Vent pipe
23 M. Holleran Engineering Co. no longer there and site is derelict

Gosterwood Street 
111 Gosterwood Tavern. This pub is now flats.
Etta Community Hall. This is occupied by Lewisham Somali Community Organisation

Grand Surrey Canal
A short section of the canal is on this square at its junction with Trundleys Road and the London and Greenwich Railway Line.
Kingfisher Square
This place does not seem to be shown on street atlases and it appears to relate to a large green open space between Clyde, Staunton and Abinger Street which appears to be otherwise nameless.
Evelyn Community Centre
Bunnyhop Day Nursery
8 RCCG Overcomers Assembly

Knoyle Street
Knoyle Street once stretched westwards through the tunnel under the railway as the road now known as the eastern section of Cold Blow Lane.
St Michaels Mission Church. The church was on the corner with Sandford Street.  It was a chapel of ease to St. James's, Hatcham, and was a small brick building. It was destroyed by bombing in 1941 and rebuilt in 1957. It was then demolished to make way f or a large estate and rebuilt in Desmond Street. A memorial to the dead of the Great War was in the original but its whereabouts are no longer know
Bomb factory for Stones in Second World War
St Michael’s House. This was on the corner of Woodpecker Road.  A war memorial tablet was placed on the wall by the Mazawattee Tea Company in memory of the men of the district who fell in the Great War.

Liardet Grove
Houses in the original road were demolished and the site is now part of the Woodpecker Estate. Booth said that the original houses belonged to the Railway Company and were occupied by their workers. 

Ludwick Mews
New Testament Church of God. This was built in 1894 as a Sunday School and Mission.  It has recently been extended and now includes a school. It was once called New Cross Congregational Church. The congregational church was listed as being in Ludwick Road (now Mews) but the current building is on the junction with that and Bawtree Road and the New Testament gives the address as Bawtree.


Margaret Macmillan Park
Margaret McMillan Park.  Linear Park stretching westwards, all around. In the park is Bridge and Banks, a landscape sculpture with a stone bridge, by John Maine 1991.  It is named for the Deptford based pioneer of nursery education

Milton Court Road
Milton Court Estate. A local authority estate of the late 1960s
1-24 9 storey block built in the mid-1960s with 24 flats
25-56 9 storey block built in the mid-1960s with 32 flats

New Cross Road
277 - 281 three plaques to the V2 attack of 1944.  One says ‘In memory of the 168 people who died and those injured in the V2 rocket attack that landed here 25th November 1944. London Borough of Lewisham’.  In all 168 people were killed and 121 were seriously injured here.  Some bodies were never found – including those of babies. It was the 251st Rocket to be successfully launched and one of the worst civilian disasters of the Second World War. The Co-Op Store next door also collapsed, an army lorry was overturned and destroyed, and a double decker bus was spun round, there were people in the bus queue, people in other vehicles.  It was lunch time; people were in the canteen and in the cafe. The debris stretched from the Town Hall to New Cross Gate station and it took 3 days to retrieve all the bodies. There was only one survivor.  There is another plaque put up by the Deptford History Group. ‘Remembering Woolworths, 168 people killer in Britain's worst V2 attack, 25th November 1944. Deptford History Group 1994’. The other plaque is painted over - Beneath an illustration of a magpie it says ‘In memory of the 168 people who lost their lives here during WW2 on the 25th of November 1944. One for sorrow’.
288 Hope Cottage, a brick building of 1842, with a porch supported by solid pillars. It is in use by Goldsmiths College.
Deptford Town Hall. This is now part of Goldsmith’s College. It was built in 1903-7 to a competition winning design of H. V Lanchester, J.A Stewart & E. A. Rickards. The stone front has four statues of naval heroes and a sculpture of a naval battle. There is a clock turret with a spire surmounted by a ship weathervane. Inside it is logical and straightforward with a staircase serving the ground floor offices and the first floor council chamber and committee rooms. The marble stairway has a wrought iron balustrade with crossed anchors, tridents and chains.  There is a stone facade two figures of dolphin-tailed Tritons decorated with a ship's prow and other marine carvings.
316 New Cross House. This used to be the, Goldsmiths Tavern. Claims to be hundreds of years old and there are references from the 1820s. Art Deco lettering at the top of the corner gable.
323 New Cross Inn. Pub built around 1890 with a line of golden winged caryatids along both sides. It is on the site of an 18th pub and a pub with this name has been on the site since 1700.
322 Marquis of Granby. The road junction takes its name from this pub. There has been a pub here since c1760, but this was built in. Around this area was the original village centre of New Cross.
Property mark, the Arms of the Corporation of the City of London.
New Cross Turnpike, administered by the New Cross Turnpike Trust with the gate at the top of Clifton Rise.
325 Venue Night Club. This opened in 1925 as the New Cross Super Cinema. It was designed for pictures and variety, with a stage and three dressing rooms. There was also a Palais de Danse and a cafe. It was renamed the New Cross Kinema in 1927 and taken over by Denman/Gaumont in 1928 with a rising Wurlitzer organ installed the following year. It was re-named the Kinema in 1948 and in 1950 it was re-named Gaumont. It was closed by the Rank Organisation in 1960. The auditorium was demolished and an office block replaced it. The facade and front section were used by International Stores and then a furniture shop with the Venue above. Now the Venue use the whole building.
337 Midland Bank. Built in 1905, with four columns between classical entrances.
338/350 Harvey Terrace, built in 1851. The date of 1834 shown is incorrect.
339/345 this terrace is built 1827.
Rail bridge was rebuilt in the early 1970s following realignment of New Cross station following resignalling at London Bridge
388 Amersham Arms pub. References to it from the 1850s. Painted on the outside was an advert for lunches at 1/- and music room called ‘The Gig’. This is a big music and cabaret venue and many many famous names have started here.
455 in the middle of a terrace of shops the entrance of Bunnet & Co. Ltd., roller blind manufacturers. Their extensive engineering works were behind in Glenville Grove, making steam engines, roller shutters and cranes between 1820 and1914... They were set up by Joseph Bunnett in 1836
Fragment of an old iron gas lamp stands on the pavement. 
405 The shop displayed a tobacco roll over the door. Thus was probably from the 1870s. Demolished
407 The Walpole. Pub with 19th wall tiles and gas lamps. It dates from around 1855. Demolished
411 Amersham Hall. This hall became the Conservative Club Hall until 1888. Demolished
460 Royal Albert Pub. This has also been called the Paradise Bar. It dates from about 1850. It has a’ Tudor’ granite pilasters, and curved bow windows to the front and the side. There is a stage inside.
466-468, Zion Baptist Chapel. This is a classical brick building from 1876. It is in a railed off courtyard with lamp-holder. A chapel was originally opened here site in 1846 and a new chapel was added in front in 1857, the original chapel became the Sunday school and is now the church hall. Inside the chapel is a gallery all round fronted with carved decorative iron railings.
470 Iyengar Yoga Institute. This was the New Cross Building Society. The inscription 'established 1866' refers to the Building Society which was founded here in a previous building in 1866 but moved away in 1975. It was used by Millwall Football Club from 1980, by the Seventh Adventist Mission from 1986, and the yoga institute from 1994.
480 Crown Cinema. This was a shop conversion which opened in 1910 with seats on long wooden benches. It was closed when its licence expired in 1914. It became a shop again, then a post office. It is now demolished with an extension to Addy and Stanhope School on the site.
439 In 1980 this was the site of an unexplained fire which killed many young people at a party
Pagnall Street
V2 attack 1944. The warhead exploded between houses in Pagnell Street, Railway Grove, and Angus Street, killing eight and injured 57.  Forty houses were ruined. When darkness fell, volunteers manned a mobile floodlight presented to Deptford by the U.S.Navy.

Railway Lines
London and Greenwich Railway. The London and Greenwich Railway dates from 1836 and is the earliest railway in London. It is carried on a viaduct through this area.
London and Greenwich Railway Viaduct. When the London and Greenwich Railway was being built, in 1835, two demonstration houses were opened in railway arches west of Deptford Station to show how they arches could be used.  They appeared to be small but comfortable, like caves. They had plastered fronts facing out onto to the south boulevard. They were lit by gas and had gas stoves and cooker - but the roofs leaked
North East Kent Junction. In 1849 the South Eastern Maine Line was extended, via here to a junction with the London and Greenwich Railway and from then on could access London Bridge Station. The Southern Eastern Line had to climb to join the London and Greenwich Viaduct... There are arches, with quality brickwork, under both lines. A number of roads pass under the viaduct – Gosterwood Street’s tunnel entrance to Fordham Park passes closest under the junction.
South Eastern Main Line. The main line of the South Eastern Railway dates from 1836, and reached
Ashford in 1842. Their original locomotive works was at New Cross moving to Ashford in 1845. In the 1869s they built a line to Sevenoaks and Tunbridge. Trains go through New Cross Station on diverge further down the line to a number of destinations, including the North Kent Line, the Mid Kent line and the Dartford Loop.
East London Line. This line which has crossed the River at Rotherhithe accesses both New Cross and New Cross Gate Stations. The basic line was built in 1869 by the East London Railway Company, which reused Marc Brunel’s Thames Tunnel to run train services between north London, principally Liverpool Street, to south London destinations. The line became part of the London Transport Underground service in 1933 as part of the Metropolitan Line. In 1966 the connection to Liverpool Street was cut and trains ran mainly from Whitechapel. . In 2007 it closed for redevelopment and reopened as part of the Overground in 2010 and in 2012 linked to other lines to create an orbital railway around London.
East London Line – in 1869 the line opened between New Cross Gate and Wapping as part of the London, Brighton & South Coast Railway
East London Line. In 1880 A spur was opened to New Cross South Eastern Railway station
New Cross East London Line Depot this stood south of New Cross station and served the East London Line up until its closure by London Underground, It was replaced with a modern depot for the London Overground at New Cross Gate.
London to Croydon Railway. This opened in 1839 and in 1846 became part of the London Brighton and South Coast Railway.  This part of the line was built on the bed of the Croydon Canal southwards from New Cross. Northwards it was to join the London and Greenwich Railway at Corbetts Lane.  This was built in 1836.  Much of the canal’s route needed to be straightened and the levels around New Cross were also difficult, and a 1 in 80 gradient was selected but was eased when it became a trunk route.  In due course this became the Kline known as the Brighton Main Line which goes through New Cross Gate Station.
Atmospheric Railway. The London and Croydon Railway began its line in 1835. Congestion 9of the 1 in 100 ascent from New Cross became a problem. it was proposed to lay a third track on the east side of the existing double track main line, and all the local trains in both directions would use it and it would use atmospheric power.
Engine shed for the London and Croydon railway at New Cross
New Cross Gate Station. The station buildings on New Cross Road are on the adjacent square to the south.  Two lines run into the station – The East London Line from Surrey Quays Station, and several lines from London Bridge Station.
Croydon Canal at New Cross Gate Station – the line of the Croydon Canal would have been approximately along the down line platform.
New Cross Gate. Signal Box associated with the Low Level station lay to the east of what is now Auburn Close. It controlled the East London Junction [GE] to East London Junction [LBSCR  An Odeon style signal box with a Westinghouse Brake & Signal Co. Ltd. Style 'L' Power Lever Frame was commissioned in 1950. It continued in use for 25 years until taken over by the London Bridge signaling centre NX Panel in 1975.

Rolt Street
This was once called Coney Hall Lane. Rolt was a Deptford shipbuilder. The twists and turns in the road result from diversions when the canal was built

Sanford Street
Sanford Street runs parallel to the East London Railway Line, appearing on maps only in the 20th.  From Knoyle Street southwards it runs on land once in use as railway sidings connected to New Cross Gate Station on the eastern part of the complex used by the East London Railway.  The road in its present form dates from the redevelopment of the area into the Woodpecker Estate in the 1960s
Archer Tower. This was a 14 storey block built in the early 1970s. It was the northernmost tower on the estate and had 56 flats.

Sayes Court Street.
The road leads to Sayes Court Gardens, a nice open space with gardens in the square to the north. Sayes Court, of course, having been John Evelyn’s home here in the 17th

Southerngate Way
On the site of rail sidings

Stanley Street
Haberdashers Aske. Hatcham College. Mornington Site. This is what was Stanley Street School which appears to date from at least the late 1870s and built by the School Board for London

Staunton Street
Kingfisher Medical Centre

Trundley’s Road
This follows the line of what was Trundleys Lane which covered the northern, and main, part of a route from New Cross to Rotherhithe.
Necker Bridge. Built around 1806 this took what was  then Trundleys Lane over the Surrey Canal. This was a road bridge dating from the construction of the canal.
The London and Greenwich Railway. The Railway bridge here crosses Trundleys Road (in the square to the north) and also bridges the canal built here in 1835. It was the first bridge on the line to be completed and the arches stand at 43o41' skew. The two wider arches took the railway over the canal and have now been filled to ground level, and are used for industrial purposes. The bridge was widened by wrought iron girder spans alongside the old arches in 1901. A parapet has also been taken off the top of the bridge. At the base of the bridge can be seen the remains of what were huge semi circular abutments – and which can clearly be seen on contemporary prints of the bridge over the working canal.
Engineering works. This stood on the west side in the 1960s on a site now occupied by a trading estate


Woodpecker Road
Pedestrianised, follows the route of an old lane as it cir through the estate.
Spanish Steps pub. The pub was also called the Phoenix and is now closed.
The Woodpecker Estate this is a 1960s housing estate on a site which was previously terraces but which was completely cleared during the 1960s. It has more recently been completely rebuilt.
Naseby Tower. This was a 23 storey block built in the early 1970s, with 82 flats. Now demolished
Hawke Tower. This is a 23 storey block built in the early 1970s, now it is as the only tower block on the estate and a local landmark. It has 92 flats
Pegasus Tower. This was a 14 storey block built in the early 1970s, it was the southernmost block of the estate had 56 flats
Hercules Tower. This was a 14 storey block built in the early 1970s with 56 flats.
Berwick Tower. This was a 14 storey block built in the early 1970s with 56 flats

Wootton Road
9 Lord Clyde Pub. Home to Maloney's Fight Factory, boxing club. Closed but putting up a fight to reopen


Sources
Bennett. London’s First Railway
Booth. The Streets of London
BrockleySE4. Web site
Bygone Kent
Caroline’s Miscellany. Web site
Cinema Treasures, Night Club
Closed Pubs. Web site
Clunn. The Face of London
Deptford Dame. Web site
East London Line. Clive’s Underground Lines.
East London Line. Wikipedia Web site
Field.  Place names of London
Forbidden Fruits. Web site
GLIAS Newsletter 
GLIAS- walk
John Evelyn School. Dedication site. Web site
Kent Rail. Web site
Lewisham Indo Chinese Community Centre. Web site
Lewisham Local History Society. Newsletter
Lewisham Local History Society. Transactions,
Lewisham Local History Society. Byway leaflets
London Borough of Lewisham. Web site
London and Croydon Railway. Wikipedia Web site
New Cross Station. Wikipedia Web site
New Cross Gate Station. Wikipedia Web site
Pevsner and Cherry. South London
Port of London Magazine
Pub History. Web site.
Remnants of the Croydon Canal. Web site.
Retracing Canals to Croydon and Camberwell.
South Eastern Railway. Wikipedia Web site
Spurgeon. Deptford and Lewisham,
Steele. Turning the Tide
Thames Basin Archaeology of Industry Group. Report
Thomas Letts. Wikipedia Web site
Thomas. London’s First Railway, the London and Greenwich
Transpontine. Web site
UK Housing Wiki. Web site
Up the Creek
Waldron Health Centre. Web site
Woolworths Museum. Lest We Forget New Cross. Web site

Great Eastern Railway to Shenfield. Brentwood

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The Great Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street to Shenfield runs westward from Harold Wood Station, into Brentwood Station, and beyond

Post to the west Brentwood
Post to the east Shenfield Common

Alexandra Road
Engine Shed. This was in the space at the eastern end of the road used as the station car park. The shed closed in 1949. It had three roads and was opened in 1872.

Coptfold Road
This was once called Love Lane
Coptford House. Private flats in what were council offices. This was built in the 1970s and used by Essex County Council's social services.  This is on the site of what was a school.
The National Schools moved here in 1869 having originally been founded in the 1830s. They were set back from the road and intended for the children of the labouring poor.  Here, they received annual government grants from 1871 and had endowments from John Cotton and John Offin. It was soon very overcrowded. The schools were enlarged in 1883 and in 1893 by selling some of the assets of the charitable endowments. It was taken over by Essex County Council in 1902.In 1936 the schools were reorganized for juniors and infants. The school eventually moved to new buildings in Shenfield in 1968. Coptfold House was built on the site.
Church House. This was on the corner with New Road and was part of the site later taken over by Coptfold House.
Queens Inn. This stood on the west corner with New Road
Clever Clogs Nursery School. This was built as a Police Station in 1844 and closed in 1937. It was then used the Brentwood branch of Essex County Library. It is now a children’s nursery school.
Becket House. This tower block was built as offices but has been remodelled as flats

Cornsland
The Priory. House originating in a 16th hall with many alterations. This has a pegged timber frame with 19th extension. It survives mostly in its original condition
Crown Street
5 19th building white painted and rendered, with original slate roof, sashes and shop window. Once a motorbike dealership
Brentwood Gas Light Co. this was established at the south end of the road in 1836 but moved in 1858 nearer to the railway to allow for easier coal deliveries.
Breakthrough Church. Evangelical church.
Cottages. These are in a backland space, between this street and South Street. There is a plaque saying ‘Crown Street 1854’.

Eastfield Road
Brescia House. This is a building was part of the Ursuline Convent. It has more recently been used as offices but was originally constructed to provide additional bedroom accommodations for The Sisters.
St Thomas Church Hall. From the 1950s this was used by the Banyard School of Dancing but it was sold and demolished in 1986.  There are now flats on the site.

Fairfield Road
Job Centre and other offices in Fairfield House
Brentwood Boxing Academy. This is an old tyre depot now used as a gym for young boxers
Hart Street
Was originally known as Back Lane. The medieval town lay between this road and the High Street
Market – this was sited at the east end of the street at the junction with High Street and Crown Street.  It had been granted to the Abbott of St.Osyth in 1227 as the owner of Costed Manor. It was sited on the highest ground in the town and was a focus for the whole area. It was regulated by the manor court, which appointed aleconners, leathersealers, and inspectors of meat and fish. It was held weekly, plus an annual fair day until 1790.
Great Stompfords Farmhouse.  This is a 16th building which was divided into three cottages in the 1960s and then demolished for the Hart Street car park in 1970.
Fire Station. This opened as a fire station in 1903 and was there until 1948. Now a barber.  It was put into its present condition in 2004 and given a traditional style shop front. A new wrought iron arch at the side leads to a cobbled footpath where outbuildings have been turned into shops
27 Gardener’s Arms.  Probably the old building for the workhouse opened in 1745 and Extended in 1805 for 60 people, with a workroom.  In 1836 it was closed and the paupers were sent to the Union Workhouse at Billericay.  It has been a pub since at least the 1880s.
39 a timber-framed building from the early 16th was found before it was demolished. It was a long wall jetty house with a plan thought  to reflect cramped urban conditions
Malthouse. This was on the south side in the 18th.
The Square. Block of new flats on the corner with Kings Road. They are over an underground car park. At the corner is a five storey tower with a pyramidal roof

High Street
This is part of the Roman road from London to Colchester but there was no Roman settlement here.  
Horse trough and drinking fountain. It has the date of 1910 and names 'George & John Larkin' who were local philanthropists.
The local Cage and Pound were at the east end of the street in the 16th and 17th
Plane tree with seats beneath it
Public lavatories, partially underground and enclosed by a brick wall with low railings designed to make them unobtrusive and screened by shrub planting.
10 Kentucky Fried Chicken. The former White Horse public house which was licensed from the 1820s. This has a brick ground floor with two doors and suspended lanterns above.
12 now the Halifax Building Society, the 18th building was called The Mansion House and in the 20th the home of a local doctor. There are wrought iron railings to the ground floor
16 site of Davey’s Dairy. In the yard at the back were crates of different grades of milk, already bottled. With a retail shop in front
25 Halfords is a late 20th remodelling of a three-storey stock brick building which has been clad in lead.
The Ship, later the Yorkshire Grey, was on the north side of the street. It was in business until 1960 and Demolished 1961.  It had a bowling green and a bowls club attached.
26-28 The Arcade. This was converted in 1954 when it was turned into sixteen units at the rear of Ripley’s garage which had originally been built in 1924.
30 The Post Office. This was originally built in the 1890s and rebuilt 1939-41. The Post Office itself is now in the W.H.Smith building.
Millennium Clock, This is on spindly legs to which an advertising panel is fixed.
35 Thomas Cook. Shop front with a symmetrically designed brick first floor with Crittall windows. A 20th refronting of an older building. A carriage arch leads to Culyers Yard, probably a stable
39-41 Monsoon. The upper floors are decorated with an abstract 1950s style pattern.
42. This was formerly Burtons and there is a foundation stone laid in 1939 by Austin Stephen Burton. The building is in the usual Art Deco style of Burtons.  This was the site of the Chequers Inn. Before the railway came this was a stop for coaches and had been a pub from 1769 or earlier but closed in 1937. It was a timber-framed 16th building.
Chapel of St. Thomas. This was built in 1221 by the Abbot of St.Osyth on the main route from Ongar to Canterbury with an eye to the pilgrim trade in a town which had been promoted and built by the Abbey. It was a Chapel of Ease to the church at South Weald. Until the middle of the 18th it was still used for divine service. It was sold for demolition when the new church was built became the Boys National School in 1836. Most of it was demolished when the school moved.  In 1900 it was fenced in on the street side by Christopher John Hume Tower, J.P.    It is built of flint rubble with some Kentish Ragstone and Reigate stone. All that survives is part of the nave, and a stump of the tower, which unusually was located inside the nave. The footprint of the chapel is marked out with lines of rounded flints. The railings were erected in 1902 when restoration work was carried out.
National School. In 1836 St. Thomas's chapel was converted into a National school. From 1839 it was maintained by the Rev. William Tower master of Brentwood school. In 1869 new schools were opened in Love Lane, later called Coptfold Road.
Bay Tree Centre. Shopping precinct built in 1975 as Chapel Centre to the south of the ruined chapel. This is now called the Bay Tree Centre and it stands on the site of the Odeon Cinema.
The Odeon was built on the site of the chapel and the ruins of the chapel gardens were kept as a decorative feature in front of the cinema. It was Built for Oscar Deutsch’s Odeon Theatres Ltd. chain, and opened in 1938. The facade was plain with cream tiles and three large windows which let light into the circle foyer. In the auditorium Art Deco bands on the walls contained hidden lighting. It closed in 1974 and was taken over by Brentwood Council under a compulsory purchase order and demolished immediately. A twin-screen cinema was incorporated into the new shopping centre called Focus 1 & 2 and opened in 1974. In 1984 they became part of the Classic Cinemas chain and then taken over by the Cannon Group and re-named Cannon Cinemas, and later still re-named ABC.  In the late-1990’s they were taken over by Odeon Theatres and because Asbestos was found in the building it was closed in 2000.
Crown. This was a coaching inn, which was to the west of the chapel. It included a post office in 1790s. It closed in 1818 and the premises were used as a lecture room. It is thought to have existed in the 16th and may have existed as early as the 14th. In 1797 they had 3 post chaises and 13 post horses. The buildings had been demolished by 1927.
43-45 Marks and Spencer store originally built for Woolworths in 1969. It was built on the site of a mansion called The Red House. Which was demolished pre-Second World War
44, Pepperell House. One of only three Georgian buildings. It may incorporate a late medieval building.
49 site of an old house known as Franks. Demolished in the early 1950s
51 Boots is on site of the Sainsbury’s store of 1967 which was itself on the site of the Palace Cinema. It is a long three-storey building faced in prefabricated concrete panels. The Palace cinema, High Street, existed by 1914, and was owned by Dorrin and Partners. It was reopened after rebuilding in 1934, and was finally closed in 1968
57-59 Sainsbury’s in the 1920s.
60-64 a group of surviving late medieval buildings. 62 This seems to have originally been a 1400 hall with 60 and 64 being crossings together forming an H-plan house.
63-65 one of the few surviving late medieval buildings here. Rebuilt in 1973,
67 Lion and Lamb, now a shop, is an old inn refurbished between the wars with a façade of handmade red bricks.
The George, later George and Dragon, was on the eastern corner with Crown Street. It existed in 1407 and closed in 1906. The building was demolished in 1970 and was a timber framed, probably 15th structure.
82 Slug and Lettuce
86 O’Neills
89 brick façade rebuilt in the 20th. It has an old weatherboarded attic extension.
91 HSBC, a former Midland Bank branch erected in 1921, grand classical presence on the frontage,
93 White Hart. This is now called the Sugar Hut, The Georgian brickwork façade was replaced in the 20th. It has a coaching yard but dates to the late 15th.  It May be the site of an even earlier inn and 13th pottery has been found in the courtyard. It was the most important of the Brentwood coaching inns and it had an excise office in it in 1793; petty sessions were also heard there. There were Shove halfpenny championships here in the 1790s. There is a galleried rear range of about 1500.
93-95 site of the Assize House which was built in 1579 on the site later used for the Town Hall. It was used Quarter Sessions and Crown Assizes. It was a timber framed building with decorated barge boards but by 1830 it was being used as shops. The Town Hall was built in here 1864, on the site of the Assize House. It was held on lease by a limited company – the Town Hall Company which had built it. It was demolished in 1963.
94 Co-op Funeral Care may be an older building given a brick façade and sash windows in the 19th.
101 is a recent development which has recreated the look of a late medieval building with two gables facing the street. At the ground floor, there is a traditional style shop front.
102 unsuspected remains of a significant timber-framed building were found here. The timber frame only survived at first floor; its style was unusual, and suggests that it belonged to a tradition current in south Essex and the London area.
Bell Inn. This closed in 1951 and was demolished in 1970. It stood on the south side somewhere near 104. It was recorded from 1454, when its sign was repainted.
108-114 a row of older buildings, some of which are amongst the oldest in the town. They are all timber-framed
109 is a wide two-storey 19th building, with a carriage arch with its original surround is a striking feature of the building
110 is a two bay 16th-century cross-wing with a crown post roof, possibly once jettied and housing a medieval shop.
111 site of Brentford’s first supermarket. A Tesco was opened in here in 1955.
120, Bennetts Funeral Directors, possibly an earlier building remodelled. Its appearance is enhanced by a high standard of maintenance
123 Swan Hotel.  This former hotel has some Edwardian features, including dark wood panelling and leaded windows. It was rebuilt in 1935 in handmade brick
125-127b, the Litten Tree, wooden shop front within polished granite pilasters inherited from a previous use
129-129a Prezzo, has a traditional shop front set in an impressive early 19th brick façade, behind the rear there is a weather boarded outbuilding and a yard with skips.
141 Sir Charles Napier was on the corner with Weald Road and s another well detailed public house. It was built of handmade brick, with false half timbering on the first floor. Demolished
Brewery. This was owned by Thomas Hill, and later John Hill & Co. They had premises in the High Street in 1863 and later in Warley Road. It was bought up by Ind Coope in 1900.
The Marquis of Granby. This was on north side of the street, east of Weald Road. It had closed by 1829.
Heritage Column sculpture by Gary Thrussell located here in 2004. The Heritage Column was erected in April 2004. It was designed by sculptor and blacksmith Gary Thrussell and traces the history of Brentwood from its origins to modern times. It was inspired by John Fryer’s book ‘Brentwood - A Concise Pictorial History’

Ingrave Road
Cathedral of St Mary and St Helen. Roman Catholic Cathedral was dedicated in 1991. The architect Quinlan Terry was commissioned to build the church in the Classical style and Work began in 1989. It was decided to retain part of the Gothic revival church of 1861. The cathedral is lit by brass English Classical chandeliers one of which came from a church in Epping.  The Bishop’s chair was made in Pisa, and has steps of Portland stone and there is a great deal more in the church.
Church of St. Helen.  This was opened in 1837, with the aid of money from Lord Petre and Joseph S. Lescher. The original church became a school in 1861, when a larger church was built next door
Church of the Sacred Heart and St. Helen, was given by Lord Petre. In 1917, when the diocese of Brentwood was formed, the church became a cathedral. It was a ragstone building in Gothic style. It was enlarged in 1974, by John Newton, to provide for both parish and diocesan use. Meeting halls were provided on the north and west
St. Helen's Roman Catholic school. A school had been started in 1848 which in 1861 took over and enlarged the former St. Helen's chapel. It had a government grant from 1872. Eventually in the 1960s the school was transferred to new buildings elsewhere.
38 Regency House is the former bishop’s residence, now used as offices
Clergy House, in white brick
Office buildings, built in 1982 by Lawrence King and used by the Catholic Church
Convent building of 1873. There was also an orphanage here in the 19th. 
Song School. A 19th brick building originally a chapel,
Brentwood School. This is a private fee paying school, albeit with an old foundation as a local grammar school. In 1557 Sir Antony Browne bought Weald Hall, some of which remains, as a site for the school and a charter was granted by the Crown. Old Big School was built in 1568. It first operated as a boarding school from 1765, however the school was close to collapse in the early 19th but recovered and from the 1850s flourished and in the 1870s began an emphasis on sport. A chapel was built in 1868. A ‘Preparatory’ School opened in 1892. In the early 20th new buildings and sports facilities, including a swimming pool, were built – continued with a (War) Memorial Hall, the Bean Library, squash courts, gymnasium and a rifle range. Other buildings were bought or added. In the 1970s girls began to be admitted, at first only to the sixth form and many expensive facilities followed – running tracks, science centres, design centres, et al. Many pupils now do not board and there are five day houses and two boarding houses, and for girls and one for boys. The School buildings are in a range of architectural styles, mostly in red brick and oversized. The older school buildings are set back behind grass and trees.
Barnards is a Georgian house which has been part of the School since the early 20th century.
Old School House, a building dated 1773, with a bay added in 1864.
Big Old School, This is a 16th brick building with an upper floor dormitory added in 1855. It forms a long range parallel to the road
School chapel. This dates from 1868
Main school building. Built 1910 by Frederic Chancellor in a Tudor style with a central gatehouse tower
17 lodge in red brick
Otway House, built in 1878 this was originally the vicarage to for the parish church, but bought by the school, and extended. It has a boundary wall with distinctive brickwork
Martyr’s Elm. An elm tree stood here and was said to mark the spot where William Hunter was burnt at the stake in 1555. The remains of the 400 year old elm were removed in 1952. In 1936 an oak tree was planted here to mark the accession of King George VI, and stands near the spot where the elm was.
Wilson’s Corner. This is the corner building at the junction with Shenfield Road. It is the site of Wilson’s department store, a three storey shop with a clock tower which burnt down in 1909. It was rebuilt but closed in 1978.  The building is in use by a variety of shops.
Council Offices and Town Hall. This includes a clock from the demolished town hall building in the High Street. The current complex was built in 1957 and extended in 1984. A clock from Warley Barracks was mounted in the wall.
Mellon House. This was Hambro House and is a large office block in red brick
Artichoke Inn. This is now a Toby Carvery

King Edward Road
Brentwood Sea Cadets Hall
1 Kingsgate. Office block built in 1985 on the site of the Parade Cinema

Kings Road
Was previously known as Warley Lane.
Brentwood Station. This lies between Harold Wood and Shenfield Stations on the Great Eastern Railway. It was opened by the Eastern Counties Railway when they extended here in 1840 from Romford.   From 1882 it was called Brentwood and Warley which reflected the growing catchment area. The tracks through the station were increased to four in 1934 when the station was also rebuilt. Following nationalisation it was electrified in 1949. It has been known as simply Brentwood since 1969.
Goods Yard. This lay to the west of the station and reached as far as the gas works, to which there were sidings. At the western end there were also cattle sidings and pens. Other customers for the goods yard included Thomas Moy and the London Co-op.  There was a considerable incline, Brentford Bank, as the line neared and entered the goods yard and ultimately the station.  The goods yard closed in 1970.
Signal Box. During the widening of the lines in 1934 a four storey signal box was provided close to the goods yard. In the Second World War it was strengthened with a brick base. The box closed in 1971 but the brick base remains.
Railway Hotel. Owned by brewer John Hill in 19th. This was to the north of the station and may have been near the junction with Queen’s Road.
171 Highway House. Office block
Burial Ground. This dates from 1755 when Non-conformists built their New Meeting chapel having left the Old Meeting in Weald Road. The Kings Road chapel was demolished in 1847 when the congregation moved to the chapel in New Road.
161 Murphy’s Sports Bar
19 print works building. Used most recently by the Westbury Press
Mission Hall. This was in the area now covered by buildings at the rear of the Bennett’s funeral business.
Fielders Brewery was on the corner of Primrose Hill. They had two deep wells here for water and had opened, probably, in the 1850s. It was taken over in 1923 and mainly demolished.
Baptist Chapel.  This originated in 1885 and an iron hall was built in King's Road in 1886 and called Brentwood Tabernacle. In 1910 this was sold and in 1912–32, a church was built on a different site in King's Road. It was damaged by bombing in 1940, and rebuilt.
Winter Brothers brick and tile business. This was active here in 19th and the firm also operated as monumental masons. A brick kiln lay to the east in 19th in the area now covered by Chase Road.

New Road
Congregational Chapel.  This is now the United Reform Church. It is a church and church hall, built in 1847 with the hall added in 1982. It is in brick, with a stuccoed front.
Court House. This was built for the County Court in 1848 and is now a private health facility.
Brentwood Library. This Essex County Council library was opened by the Princess Royal in 1991.
Brentwood Technical School. This was opened here in 1910 by Essex County Council as a cookery and handicraft centre. It closed in 1936


Ongar Road
A Volunteer drill hall, built in Ongar Road in 1886, was sold by the Territorial Army in 1970.  The site now forms an entrance to the Sainsbury’s supermarket. The hall was the base for the 414 Battery of the 104th (Essex Yeomanry Regiment) Royal Horse Artillery, Territorial Army. A plaque in the Town Hall records their Second World War service in Palestine and how they eventually became the 14th Royal Horse Artillery
City Coach Company. This had its entrance from Ongar Road and the site became eventually the Thermos Factory. The Company had devolved from a number of companies which the City Motor Omnibus Co Ltd in the 1920s and which included many services between Kentish Town and Southend. The Company also built a Head Office and depot at Brentwood in 1938 having acquired a number of operators in that area during 1936.  They operated local services as well as and longer distance route from Southend to Wood Green and Kentish Town. The Company closed following post nationalisation in 1953.
Thermos. The thermos flask was invented in 1892 by James Dewar. The Thermos Company originated in 1904 in Tottenham and expanse rapidly with a number of units, one of which in 1938 moved to a factory in Leyton. In 1961 the Leyton factory was closed and the production based there moved to Brentwood. It is said that they occupied the buildings of the City Coach Company. They sold the site to Salisbury’s in 1996 and moved to Thetford.
17 Eclipse night club in what was The Castle pub, which closed in 2007

Primrose Hill
The Brentwood Spiritualist Church. This was founded in 1942 and members were told clairvoyantly that they would have a permanent Church, that it would be situated on a hill, in a garden, nestling under a large tree. In 1945 they rented some old army huts here and in 1955 they bought the property. There have been subsequent improvements completed in 2005.
28 Brewery Tap. 19th public house. It was once a single storey wing of a large building of Fielder’s brewery, and has since been modified.
Brentwood Methodist church. A church was built in 1845 in Primrose Hill. In 1880 it was purchased by the Brethren. It was later used by the Full Gospel church which originated in 1928. In 1957 the church took over the Brethren's chapel

Queens Road
Telephone exchange. This was set up by the post office in 1899 and built in 1932. Closed in 1973.
Glad Tidings Hall. The Assemblies of God registered the Hall, Queen's and in 1957 moved to the former Brethren's chapel in Primrose Hill.
Montpelier House. Taken over in 1912 to provide a new County High School. It had been built in 1879 to provide a girl’s boarding school by Kate Bryan.
The Convent of Mercy. This was founded in 1872 by sisters from St. Joseph's convent, Chelsea came to teach in local schools. Helen Tasker, Countess Tasker of Middleton Hall, Shenfield, built a small convent in Queen's Road. The sisters also had a boys' orphanage, endowed by the countess, and later a girls' orphanage. They continued until 1950. In 1974 the convent moved away.
The Ursuline Convent was founded in 1900, when sisters from Upton, came to Brentwood to open a high school for girls.
Ursuline Convent High School. Set up in a house called Matlock in 1900.  They later moved to a house called Fairview.  The school became comprehensive in 1979 but has recently become an academy.
Steam corn mill. This lay back from the road east of Rose Valley and is said to have been owned by a John Emery and to have had a beam engine.
Rose Mount. This was a mansion on the south side of Queens Road east of Rose Valley. It was later called “Five Wells”. It was demolished before 1960.
88 Spread Eagle. The pub probably dates from the 1860s.

Rose Valley
Brick field in the 19th
Industrial School set up by London School Board as Prospect House in 1874 – the first school of its type run by the London School Board. The building was then taken over by Joseph Hibbard, auctioneers. Following work done at the school by Rosemary Davenport Hill it was renamed The Davenport Hill School for Boys and moved to Byfleet and then Margate
Brentwood High School for Boys.  Private school run from the mid 19th. Settled on this site in the 1880s.
Air Training Corps 1483 (Brentwood) Squadron.  The Squadron was officially formed on the 28th of June 1941 and the headquarters were opened on the 20th of May 1989 by Vice Lord Lieutenant of Essex, Captain R. P. Laurie.

Seven Arches Road
Brentford County School for Girls. In 1876 a private school for girls was opened in Queen's Road, Brentwood.  In the early 20th this was taken over by Essex County Council and reopened as Brentwood County High School. In 1927 the school moved to Shenfield Common and it was later extended, it became a mixed comprehensive school in 1978. New specialist buildings have been added.

Shenfield Road
Monument. This was  erected by public subscription in 1861 to the memory of William Hunter a Protestant martyr and native of Brentwood, who, in 1555, aged nineteen, was burnt to death near here by order of Bishop Bonner for denying the doctrine of transubstantiation.
Mitre House. It dates from the 15th century and is H-plan with a hall between two cross-wings, though its actual age is disguised. Now a boarding house for Brentwood School.


St James Road
Housing. On the site of what was a malthouse for the Hill Brewery
Trading Estate, on the site of a previous Council yard. 

St Thomas Road
Church of St. Thomas. The church was built in 1883 to replace a smaller church of 1835. It had become Brentwood’s parish church in 1873.  The original church was east of the chapel of St. Osyth, and built on the site of a nursery garden. There were structural problems and was therefore rebuilt in 1882-3. It is in flint and pebble with stone dressings and has a tower and spire added in 1886 with a clock and eight bells.

The Chase
A windmill stood here in the 19th

The Parade
Parade Cinema. This belonged to Dorrin and Partners and opened in 1921. It closed after damage by bombing in 1941. It was later used as a warehouse by a Southend motor parts supplier. In the 1960s it became a discotheque called Bubbles, and was then demolished.

Weald Road
Old Meeting. In 1707 there was a Presbyterian congregation here and within ten years there was a permanent meeting-house here. The old meeting closed 1800 and had between Weald Lane and Tower Hill, approached by a passage from Weald Lane.
Bardeswell Social Club. This was the labour club and the close is on the site of sports facilities.
Western Road
First council houses built by Brentwood Urban District Council in 1902.


Wharf road
Bowling green
Tennis court


Sources
Brennand. Ilford to Shenfield
Brentwood Cathedral. Web site
Brentwood School. Web site
Cinema Treasures. Web site
Closed Pubs Project. Web site
British History. Online. Brentwood.
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Essex Chronicle. Web site
Essex Journal
Grace’s Guide. Web site
James.  Chemical Industry in Essex
London Transport Museum. Web site
Peaty. Brewery Railways
Pub History. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry. Essex
Ward. Brentwood

London and Greenwich Railway and extension Greenwich

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Railway
The original London to Greenwich Railway terminated here.  The line continued with an extension to Maze Hill Station In 1878 which completed a through line from Greenwich to the North Kent Line

Post to the west Deptford CreekPost to the south Blackheath


Bardsley Lane
This was previously known as Lamb Lane and was the main road from Greenwich to the Creek until 1909.  Bardsley was an early 20th vicar of Greenwich. The majority of the lane consists of the backs of premises in Creek Road and some conversions to light industry and the motor trade.
20 Coroners Court. Built for the Metropolitan Borough in 1902 and now converted to housing.
22 Weights and Measures Office
. Built for the Metropolitan Borough and now converted to housing
24a Mortuary. Built for the Metropolitan Borough and now converted to housing and offices
Walls. 18th red brick walls to the recreation ground.
Housing at the west end of the street was cleared in the 1940s, together with some in Creek Road. This has left a long tongue of grassed over land for which plans for housing have long been extant.  Local groups have however named this site ‘Greenwich Green’ and have campaigned for its retention as amenity space.
Billingsgate Street
This road ran from Greenwich Churchyard to Billingsgate Dock on the riverside. It was cleared before 1950 and is now under Cutty Sark Gardens.
Billingsgate Dock.  There are some early medieval associations with Billingsgate in the City of London.  This was the main dock in medieval Greenwich and important to the large Greenwich fishing fleet. It is first noted in 1449.  It was enlarged in 1850. It is the traditional landing place for the Greenwich Ferry from the Isle of Dogs and it has been suggested that this was the destination of Watling Street.  Greenwich ‘peter boats’ fished in the river and larger vessels went to the North Sea.  The fleet moved to Hull and Grimsby in the 1850s when rail transport became available.
W.G.Allen & Sons. This was a lighterage company 1850-1906
Baker Bros. They were barge breakers in the early 20th taken over Juett and Kane, barge repairers. They became part of Orient Lighterage in 1925. Orient’s address was Wood Wharf
Hugero. Book Boat moored here in 1975.
D. & E. Noakes. This forage contractor – handling hay and straw was in a weather boarded riverside house. The Noakesoscope projector was also developed by family members.
6 Sugar Loaf beer house. Demolished
Dark Entry or Sugar House Lane ran beside the pub to Brewhouse Lane.
Brand Street
On the line of what was Gang Lane. The area belonged to Morden College and  Brand was Lady Morden's maiden name. These are their estate houses built in the 1830s by George Smith for Morden College. This now has consent for conversion to flats.
1 Morden Arms. 19th stucco-trimmed pub.
Greenwich Park Railway. The line ran between Brand and Prior Streets and is a narrow tree covered strip between the street and some lock-up garages.


Brewhouse Lane
This lane ran parallel to the River between Church Street and Billingsgate. It is now part of Cutty Sark Gardens – the, now removed, Gypsy Moth had been here. Greenwich Foot Tunnel would have stood originally on its corner with Church Street. The name may relate to a brew house owned by a Captain Barratt in 1695
Huntley’s. William and Robert Huntley had a business here in the 19th as coal merchants and ship owners. A double rail based delivery system ran onto the wharf from first floor level on the landside buildings. A different brother ran a yard at Wood Wharf.
9 Fubb's Yacht. 19th pub since demolished. Fubbs Yacht itself was built by Phineas Pett at Greenwich in 1682 as a Royal Yacht for King Charles II.  It was called ‘Fubbs’, after one of Charles’s girl friends.

Burney Street
Named for Dr. Burney. This was Fanny Burney’s brother Charles, who founded a school there in the 1790s. In 1830 Burney Street was made up from the site of the house and its garden.
County Court Building. This stood slightly to the east of the current police station building from 1850. It was destroyed by a V1 rocket attack in 1944 in the Second World War.
Police Station. Built post war, following the destruction of the previous police station. This is roughly on the site of part of the Greenwich Park Railway line.  The station closed in 2014 but remains in police use.
Maribor. Post War local authority flats named after a Slovenian City with which Greenwich is twinned.  When built the Burney Street Welfare Centre was on the ground floor.
Burney Street Garden. This garden was created with money raised by local people and it opened in 1981-2. It stands roughly on the site of the abandoned Greenwich Park Line and a siding ran from the station to the road junction here. An oak tree planted by the Duke of Edinburgh has died. A red granite obelisk records the creation of the garden and there is a plaque to Doug Mullins whose dairy was on the corner with Gloucester Place.
Poet's Corner. Named for poet C Day Lewis who lived nearby. It is a small shrubbery. 
W.R. Nicholls & Sons, Burney Street Plant Depot. This was a yard dealing in all types of plant, including locomotives from time to time.
Greenwich Park Line.  Passed under a wide bridge carrying Burney Street close to the corner with Royal Hill.  Some parts of this bridge remain. The line passed   the signal box on the down side and tracks then began to widen for the approach to the station.  The area between Burney Street and Greenwich High Road, now a car park, was taken up with the station and rail track.
Station Master’s House.
Signal Box. This stood very near the corner with Royal Hill


Churchfields
This was once named as part of Straitsmouth.
1 The Earl Grey. Pub now closed and used as housing. The name ‘Earl Grey’ appears on a large panel above the door


Circus Street
Opposite the fenced-in lorry yard on the old track bed, one of the most obvious reminders of the abandoned section of the Greenwich Park Line can be seen.
Zero. Meeting Hall.  This is a house converted from a 19th meeting room of the Exclusive Brethren until the 1960's.  It was partly promoted by George Raven who was secretary to the Royal Naval College.   It was later used as a warehouse.
12 ‘Royal Circus Tea Warehouse’ inscribed round the downstairs window and very difficult to see
Turpins Yard. Yard behind Royal Hill shops at the south east end of the street. Previously yard for builders W.J.Turpin and now converted to housing.

College Approach
This is part of Joseph Kay's improvement scheme for the Royal Hospital, landowners. It consists of a long stucco frontage from around 1830.  The road was previously called Clarence Street – William VI had been Duke of Clarence.  It is said to stand on the site of the Observant Friars building and had been known as Stocks Lane or Rood Lane.
The Franciscan Friary of the Observant Friars was established here in 1485 adjacent to the palace and was the first Observant House   England. Elizabeth was christened there.  Suppressed by the Pope in 1534 and it was refounded as a Franciscan Conventual house until closed in 1538. Re-established in 1555; they were expelled in 1559. The buildings were demolished in the 17th.
Service areas for the palace.  North and west of the Friary Church was a forge and horse-mill for the Armoury. Other workshops necessary for a large court - including a book bindery, painters' studio and metal working shop - were probably also here.
Gateway into Greenwich Market.  Built as part of the Kaye development of 1831. The centre rests on a wide, open carriageway. On 1st floor is an inscription "GREENWICH MARKET, ERECTED MDCCCXXXI."“A false balance is an abomination to the Lord but a just weight is his delight.
7 Admiral Hardy pub. Dates to 1840 and is part of the terrace along College Approach
7a Inc Bar. Pub, another one of Greenwich Inc’s

Creek Road
The road dates from the construction of a bridge over the Ravensbourne in 1804 -1809 and was initially called Bridge Street.
176 Twin bow-fronted shop front which is stored in the Museum of London. It is dated 1810-20.
210 The Gate Clock. A Wetherspoon’s pub which opened in 2002. Name comes from the clock fixed to the gate of the Greenwich Observatory, in 1851.
258-260 Beehive Pub. This was present by 1826 and remained in use as a pub until at least 1938. It is now a book shop.
Magic Garden. This is a wildlife garden on the corner of Welland Street, paths for disabled, pond and hollow. It belongs to St. Peter and St.Alfege School.
Mural ‘Wind of Peace’ this was by Greenwich Mural workshop and painted in the mid-1970s. It "Depicts local people rising up to defend Greenwich in a spiral of all races destroying the missiles that threaten London. This was on the west facing wall of the shops demolished for the Docklands Light Railway.
St.Peter's Church. The church was built on 1866 on land previously used for Greenwich Fair. It was by S.S.Teulon who lived locally. The church was bombed in 1941 and subsequently demolished.
Nags Head Brewery. Esther Place. Founded in 1826, it belonged to James Lovibond of Frome by 1831. He moved to Greenwich High Road in 1865
St.Alfege with St.Peter School. The original school by S S Teulon for the Rev. George Blisset was called St Peter's School and was joined to St Peter's Church, now demolished... The main school building dates from 1860. In 1951 the parish of St Alfege and St Peter were formerly united. The school changed its name from St Peter's School to St Alfege with St Peter's Church of England Primary School in 1972
302 Up the Creek. This is shown on the 1867 OS map as St Peter's Infant School and it later became St. Peter’s Hall. It is also said to have been a Baptist chapel. It was then taken over by the late Malcolm Hardee as a Comedy Club.
A Baptist chapel was built in Bridge Street in 1827. This continued under various ministers but another faction founded a church in London Road. In 1861 it was bought by Benjamin Davies who appears to have soon moved elsewhere.  It is not shown on the 1867 OS map.
300 Lord Hood. Subject of a number of campaigns to keep it open. It dates from the 1840s and has probably been rebuilt.
West Greenwich Ragged Schools and Working Lads institute

Crooms Hill Grove
There is a stone by the entrance dating the street to 1838.

Crooms Hill,
This ancient road runs from Greenwich centre Up to the Roman Road and then on to Lee and Eltham. It winds up the west wall of Greenwich Park, and may be the oldest known road in London, The Celtic and Saxon origin of its name  - 'crom' and 'crum', meaning crooked. At one time the southern end was called Heathgate Lane and it has been speculated that there may have been a gate onto the Heath here.
Park Wall. The original high wall, built for James I, was taken down and replaced with railings in the 19th by local subscription.
1 Rose and Crown. Has a display of theatrical mementos.  Rebuilt, possibly to the designs of Frank Matcham, in 1888. It is now ‘Ye Olde’.
Greenwich Theatre. This originated in a music hall which was an extension of 1855 of the Rose and Crown Pub next door. In 1871 it was renamed 'Crowder's Music Hall and Temple of Varieties' having been re-constructed by architect W.R. Hough. In 1879 it was the Royal Borough Theatre of Varieties and later the Greenwich Hippodrome.  It was reconstructed again in 1885 by architect J.G. Buckle.  It was rebuilt in 1898 and then became the Parthenon Theatre of Varieties. In 1924 it was converted into a cinema. In 1949 it was closed and a local campaign was formed resulting in its re-opening in 1969 as the Greenwich Theatre. Works were designed by architect Brian Meeking and a new main entrance in Crooks Hill was provided and the auditorium was rebuilt as a stadium plan theatre with an open thrust stage. There was also a multi-storey exhibition-space-cum-foyer with boldly exposed concrete and an art gallery upstairs. There were bricks with donors’ names on them – since painted over. Parts of the exterior walls are earlier and it is said that sometimes the inscription "Parthenon Palace of Varieties" can be seen. There have been various funding crises since and has worked with other theatres and theatre groups to remain open by Mark Cottle, a lawyer who lived in Crooms Hill in the mid 17th, as an investment
3-11 a terrace of ‘five fair tenements’ were built here to produce £6 a year to bring up ‘poor town-borne children of East Greenwich’.  The present buildings may from the early 18th.
6 home of C.Day Lewis. He was Poet Laureate from 1968 until his death in 1972 and was the father of actor Daniel Day Lewis
12 Fan Museum. This opened in 1991 and has more than 4,000 predominantly antique fans from around the world, dating from the 11th century to the present day
13 Hillside. The house is said to have been constructed illegally in Charles 11's reign on royal property and it is said to incorporate a late 17th cottage. It was probably begun for Sir William Hooker and occupied until 1746 by John James, architect who had a number of local projects. It was also owned by members of the Teulon family. It is a large irregular house built into hillside rising to Greenwich Park. The outside is rendered and it looks 19th – and there is a 19th wing, Converted to flats in the early 20th. 
15 Park Hall. Said to have been built illegally in Charles 11's reign on royal property. John James bought the land in 1716 and intended to live here, but never did. Sir James Thornhill, is said to have lived here while he working on the Painted Hall. It was converted to flats in 1932
26 Dated from 1791 and rebuilt when Gloucester Circus was built and the word ‘CIRCUS’ is on the chimney. There is a Blue Plaque to Benjamin Waugh founder of NSPCC who apparently didn't live there.
32 this is said to have an early 18th core with later wings.  The windows and general outline appear to be identical to those on the strip drawing of about 1705.
52 The Grange. The house on this site was once called "Paternoster Croft" and later "Grove House".  The house now looks 17th but probably has a much older core – 18inch timbers inside have been shown to be 12th.The house is mentioned in a schedule of Ghent Abbey in 1281, and was restored in 1268. Edmund Chapman, chief joiner to Elizabeth leased it from 1561-1568, and it was then the home of the Lanier family of musicians. In 1665 it was bought by Sir William Hooker, Sherriff and future Lord Mayor whose alterations managed to conceal its origins. However the early 18th strip drawings show a different looking house and it is now thought that it was rebuilt in 1786 reusing old timbers.
Gazebo. A summer-house built in 1672 and tall enough to see over the park wall. It was designed by Robert Hooke for Sir William Hooker. It was restored in 1967. It is brick with a pyramidal roof, and can be clearly seen on the early 18th strip drawings. There is a plaque to Hooker on the wall.
64 Stobcross Lodge. This has been dated to 1820 but it is now thought to be the building shown in the early 18th strip drawing.
66 Heathgate House. This built in 1625 and the home of the Mason family. It was at some time known as the Presbytery and has belonged to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Southwark since the 1870s.  It is clearly the building shown in the early 18th strip drawings.
Our Lady Star of the Sea. Roman Catholic church built in 1848 by W. W. Wardell.  The money was raised by priest who had been saved from drowning during the launching of a ship near Greenwich. It replaced an older chapel.  The decoration of the chancel and chapel of St Joseph is by Augustus Pugin and a Sacred Heart Chapel by Edward Pugin.
68 Presbytery House. Red-brick house belongs to the Roman Catholic Church next door and built by a Dr Mason in the 1630's. There is a mounting block outside. It is clearly the building shown in the early 18th strip drawings.
70-72 Ursuline Convent. This was two buildings which were linked in 1950 and no 70 has been rebuilt since. 72 was St.Mary's Lodge built in 1814
St Anne's School. Built in 1854 and now part of S.Ursula's School
St. Ursula’s School. The main block was a house called Hyde Cliff built in 1909. The convent was founded from Duderstadt Germany but the sisters were expelled from their convent by Bismarck wanted state control. The sisters leased 70 Crooms Hill which had been a boys' orphanage and opened their school with 25 pupils. In 1886 they bought St Mary's Lodge, adjoining. Many sisters wanted to return to Germany and because French Catholic Schools were under pressure they were asked to take over the school. They bought Hyde Cliff, a mansion with a large garden. St Ursula's was recognised as a small private school in 1904 and in 1920 admitted scholarship pupils so by 1935 it was a grammar school. In the Second World War the school was evacuated to Hastings and then to Brecon. Meanwhile the Greenwich buildings were bombed and involved in a V1 attack. In 1977 the school became a comprehensive. The Sixth Form were accommodated in nearby Heathgate and Stobcross, and these houses are now used for the sisters’ accommodation.
Manor House. On the top of the hill and built in 1695 for Sir Robert Robinson, Lieutenant-Governor of Greenwich Hospital. Steps with curved, wrought iron railings to the door
The White House. This is said to have been, constructed illegally in Charles 11's reign on royal property.   Its original date is 1694, but has a mid 18th exterior with a full-height bow window which was probably built for Sir Harcourt Masters around 1745. The Meridian line shown as an arrow across the front door step.  There are 18th garden walls to Greenwich Park. .

Cutty Sark Gardens,
This landscaped area was built in 1953 to make a setting for the Cutty Sark. It has been relandscaped on a number of occasions in an attempt to make it less concrete. It covers the area of a number of demolished roads – Billingsgate Street and the area of the old Greenwich fishing fleet and associated industries.
Garden Stairs. These are alongside Billingsgate Dock and were at the end of Billingsgate Lane. They were the terminus for ferries from the Isle of Dogs.
Greenwich Foot Tunnel. Built by the London County Council, and opened as a free river crossing in 1902. It lies at a depth of between 44 and 66 feet. The original lifts were installed in 1903 and have been replaced in 2014. The engineer was Sir Alexander Binnie
Cutty Sark. Square rigged sailing ship of 963 tons built in Scotland in 1869 by Scott and Linton of Dumbarton for John Willis. It is thus a sailing ship built well within the age of steam ships for economic reasons. It is a composite ship of teak planking and wrought iron frames, designed for the tea, wool and opium trades. It is claimed to have been the fasted sailing ship on some routes. It was sold to a Portuguese company in 1895 as the 'Ferreira' and then bought by Captain Dowman in 1922.  It was used as a training ship at Greenhithe 1938-54 and then brought to Greenwich and put in a dry dock. A vast amount of money has been spent in making the ship viable and a tourist attraction, despite a severe fire. The lower area is now encased in glass.
Gypsy Moth. This is the boat in which Sir Francis Chichester became the first man to circumnavigate the world single-handed. Sir Francis was knighted in 1967 in the College grounds by the Queen, who used the identical sword with which the Elizabeth knighted Sir Francis Drake. The boat is now elsewhere.
Ship Hotel. Thus was next to Greenwich Pier and where the Cutty Sark now sits. It was designed by Philip Hardwick and built 1853-1858.  It is one of the Greenwich pubs where ministerial whitebait dinners were held. A large single storey snooker hall was attached and demolished in 1908l. It was destroyed in three separate bomb attacks in 1940 and 1941.
Ship Dock. This was alongside the pier to the east and was the principal dock in the town.   A fish market was in this area.
Greenwich Pier.
This is a busy pier handling many river boat services. It was built following an Act of Parliament by the Greenwich Pier Company in 1836. It was acquired by London County Council for their steamboat service in 1905. In 1954 the upstream end was dismantled to allow the Cutty Sark into its dock. So various parts of the pier were built at various dates. It has been rebuilt again in 2010 and has become the site of a number of lurid chain restaurants. The 19th shelter was removed and rebuilt in Barbados.

Durnford Street
This pedestrian passage is one of the entrances to the market.
1 early 20th stable called the Banana Warehouse

Eastney Street
This was previously East Street.
35 Little Crown Pub. Demolished.
Feathers Place
This was East Lane and once an important through road between the Park and the river. Building in Trafalgar Road closed it as a through route and this southern end was renamed in the 1960s
19 Fortune of War Pub, This closed in 1902
14 Roan School for Boys. The school was founded by John Roan in whose Will of 1643, was a bequest for the founding of a school for 'poor town-bred children of Greenwich'. The school moved to various sites and in 1877 a school for 300 boys was opened here and moved to Maze Hill in 1928.  The building then became Workshops for the Blind of Kent opened in 1929 in premises which were formerly the Roan School for Boys. This became their basket making department. It later became offices and a refinery for Vigzol Oil Refiners, makers of lubricating oil. They were taken over by Amoco in 1965. It is now a store and workshop for the National Maritime Museum.
Clark’s Buildings. This was a square of housing on the east side of the street and provided access to the Catholic Chapel in what was then Park Place. It appears to have been demolished with the building of the railway line in 1872 and may have been later replaced by the Roan School Building.
8 Clark’s Buildings. This was a Roman Catholic school opened in 1823. It was eventually moved to Pelton Road, where it remains.
1a Mission Hall. This was used in the late 20th as a project for people with mental problems and provided a workshop with an organic garden. It has now been replaced with housing.
Railway wall and rail bridge. In 1878 this cut-and-cover tunnel link between Greenwich and Maze Hill Stations was opened, completing a through line from the Greenwich to the North Kent Line
Fisher Lane
One of the old lanes now under Cutty Sark Gardens.
Five Foot Walk
This became a public walkway in 1731 when the embankment was built as part of Wren's plans for the Royal Naval Hospital.
Greenwich Beach. This was popular in the 1930s when Kentish sand was spread on the foreshore to make a beach.  The idea seems to have come from Bromley and Bow MP, George Lansbury,
Bellot Memorial. This is a 35ft Obelisk of red Aberdeen Granite designed by Philip Hardwick in 1855. Ltnt Bellot embarked from Greenwich in 1851 on an expedition involved in the search for Sir John Franklin. He died while helping two crew members adrift on an ice floe.
Obelisk. This is a memorial to the dead in the New Zealand War, 1861-63. It is on a plinth with a rope twist round base and a chain round the top.
Water Gate. This gate replaced a more modest 18th one in the 1850s. The coat of arms of the Royal Hospital for Seamen is set in the middle, with a crest made up of four anchors with a central crown and a rope around the edge. Above the gate is gilded naval crown and there are tridents on the piers.
Gloucester Circus
This late 18th townscape was never finished and only one side has a posh crescent overlooking a garden.  It was begun by Michael Searles around 1791. The area was badly damaged in the Second World War.
The railed semi-circular central garden was for the private use of freeholders and residents of Gloucester Circus and it was owned by the freeholders. The garden remains private and residents pay a surcharge as part of the rates. It has some large plane trees, grass and perimeter shrubs.
Greenwich Church Street
This was the main street of medieval Greenwich. From the Church it forks to the east leading to the river and to Garden Stairs. Many buildings are 17th and 28th with modern shop fronts. Buildings on the east side are mainly from the ‘improvement scheme’ of the 1830s by Joseph Kay for the Royal Hospital.
St.Alfege Church. The church has a medieval foundation and commemorates the martyrdom of Archbishop Alfege by the Danes in 1012. A church was probably built here soon after. The current building is 18th. The parishioners petitioned for a new church when the roof collapsed in 1710, and it was re-built with money from the Fifty New Churches Act of 1711.  It was thus the first Commissioners' Church and a Royal pew was a condition. The body of the building, by Hawksmoor, dates from 1711-14 and the plan is his. The old tower was recased and a steeple added in 1730 by John James, rebuilt in 1813. There was woodwork by Grinling Gibbons but this was destroyed in Second World War bombing.  The church was restored in 1953 by Sir Albert Richardson. The monochrome wall painting by Thornhill was repainted by Glyn Jones.  The stained glass is by Francis Spear, 1953. Thomas Tallis was the organist here and there are tablets to him, and others – Woolfe, Angerstein.
Fountain Court. This area has recently been the site of a market – it consists of a slip of land alongside the railway.
2 Nat West Bank. Built as the London Country and Westminster Bank Ltd. The building also included offices for the Roan School Foundation. It was designed by Thomas Dinwiddy.
3 This building is shown on the early 18th strip drawings of Greenwich. It was once the Eight Bells Pub and is now a bookmakers.
5 In the 19th this was the Court of Requests, dealing with small debts. By 1834 had moved to Nevada Street.
7-9 site of the half timbered house of Thomas Hack the 18th Greenwich miser.
9 in the early 20th this was a telephone call office.
11-21 can be identified on the early 18th strip drawings
27-31 site of Greenwich Fun Palace. Which was operating in 1912 and 1913.
35 The Empire Electric Theatre was operating by 1910 and continued until at least 1915.
45 This was Goddards Eel and Pie shop and may be shown on the early 18th strip drawings.
48 Spanish Galleon. Shepherd Neame pub designed and built by Joseph Kay in 1834.
Cutty Sark Station. This stands between Island Gardens and Greenwich Stations on the Docklands Light Railway. It was named from the ship to the north of the station. It is the first station south of the Thames and on the Lewisham Extension. It opened in late 1999. There is a need for increased capacity but its island platforms cannot be altered and it is already running trains longer than the platforms. The construction of the station involved the destruction of many old shops and houses and the erection of new shops in pastiche.
53 Dover Castle Pub. Demolished
59/61 Bosun's Yard small craft Market. Now gone. This was under the block rebuilt as a result of the Docklands Light Railway. One building on this site had been called Prescott Place from 1898, and the other ‘Stanton’s Charity from 1896.  They were on the site of the Unicorn Pub donated by William Stanton to the poor of Greenwich in 1610.
60 Gipsy Moth. Previously called The Wheatsheaf it was dedicated to Sir Francis Chichester in 1974 and opened by his widow.
67 British Queen Pub. Demolished
71 Ship and Sailor. Demolished Pub.
89/91 Dodd’s wharf.  Bricks and general hauliers. Long gone. Coneybeare Engineers were also here and were owned by Dodds. They made water tanks, sewer pipes etc which were mainly exported to Crown Colonies.


Greenwich High Road
This is the main medieval road from Deptford Bridge into Greenwich.  It was known as London Street until the 20th.
209 White Hart Pub. This was on the corner with Stockwell Street.
Blind Workshops. These were set up by F. Major General Bainbrigge for the blind of Kent and provide training and employment for local blind men. There was a shop and workshops which made household goods such as brooms, baskets, rugs and mattresses. It was administered by a committee until 1958 when it was taken over by the London County Council. Masonry from the workshop stands in the car park backing onto Burney Street referring to James Nasmyth who funded the building in 1892.  The workshop moved to Peckham in 1972.  This housed the Workshops for the Blind - which were established in 1877. The building was demolished but parts of the stonework are displayed in the car par nearby.
291 Mitre pub. The pub claims to have first opened in the 1700s as a coffee shop. Following a fire it re-opened in 1827,
281 Trevor Dannatt's building for the now defunct Greenwich Building Society extensions of 1975-6 neatly enfolding a 19th building. Now in other use. The building is said to have once been the Three Tuns pub
275-277 Stone House, block of shops and offices.
217-219 The Lost Hour Pub. This was previously called The Auctioneer. Before that it was Thomas Moore’s auction house.
46-50 Shopping precinct. This post war development which provides parking in front of shops is on the site of a line of older shops built in the front gardens of houses
180 Greenwich Picture House. This opened in 1989 the Greenwich Cinema. In 2005 it re-opened as a five screen cinema under the management of City Screen Picture houses. It has now been further changed.
173 Prince Arthur Pub. Demolished.
Antiques market. This market dates from the 1970s and is based in car parks created by the empty space left from the Greenwich Park Line, demolished houses and shops and rebuilding.
Serica Court, sheltered housing
69 Public baths. These were on the corner of Royal Hill and opened n 1851.  There were zinc baths and wash tubs made of slate, and each cubicle had a looking glass, a seat, and pegs to hang up clothes. There was also a public laundry with wringing machines, drying chambers, and ironing boards. They closed in 1928.
Meridian House.  Greenwich Town Hall was built for the Metropolitan Borough of Greenwich in 1938-9 to house municipal offices, a civic suite and public hall and sold off by the London Borough of Greenwich in the 1970s. It was an early work by Clifford Culpin, altered by the Rolfejudd Practice when the administrative section was converted to private offices. The public halls remain. The interior was altered in 1972-4, when floors were inserted in the council chamber area. Culpin adopted a modern style through the direct inspiration of William Dudok. A corner entrance has a canopy carrying a Zodiac mosaic, part of a lost decorative scheme by W.D.Suddaby and Charles E Fryer. The tower has a viewing window directed principally towards the Thames and the clock faces were intended to be seen across the borough picked out with blue faience and enamel dials, and illuminated. Along Royal Hill the first floor Civic suite, wasraised over a car park on four cylindrical reinforced concrete columns. The public halls are to the rear, with a minor hall under the main assembly hall.
Theatre. This was the Theatre Royal’ which was acquired by William Morton in 1884 from Sefton Parry and opened as The New Prince of Wales Theatre. It was later called Morton’s Theatre, thereafter, or Morton’s Model Theatre and operated as a temperance house. It was sold to Arthur Carlton in 1900 .It later became the Cinema De Luxe. It was demolished in 1937 to make way for the New Town Hall
West Greenwich Library this is a Carnegie library, of 1905-7 by H. W. Willis & J. Anderson. Symmetrical front under cupola and a domed reading room
The Portland. Public house. This is long gone.
A drinking fountain and horse trough stood at the junction with Greenwich South Street. The lamp on the drinking fountain was left to the people of Greenwich by Sir David Salomons, the first Jewish MP.  The horse trough was from the Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association
142 Methodist Church.  The church on this site was built in 1876 rebuilt in 1906 and was then lost in Second World War bombing in 1940.  The current building is a replacement built in the 1953 but later closed and converted to offices.  It is currently a private college.  As a church a clock on the front always ran backwards to show how little time we all had.
Queen Elizabeth's College. This is on the corner with Greenwich South Street and was founded in 1576 by historian William Lambard, as homes for the poor and elderly of Greenwich. The current almshouses were rebuilt in 1817 as 40 one-bedroom cottages, by Jesse Gibson, surveyor to The Drapers' Company. In 1967 Lambard House was built to provide 28 more flats, There is a garden and the cottages are on three sides of a quadrangle with a chapel at the centre. It is owned by The Drapers' Company, and managed by Hanover Housing Association.
Bexley Place. Housing built in 1815
189 St Christopher's Inn and hostel. This was the Prince of Orange pub built as part of the station rebuilding in the 1860s – although the original pub predated this.  The Greenwich Studio Theatre was upstairs. The theatre was closed and it became a backpackers hostel and for a while called Belushi’s Bar.
Greenwich Station. The original station.  The plan was to build a station by the Prince of Orange in 1838. This had wooden steps, an inclined plane, turnstiles, and ran in on arches. Charles Fox was the architect and Baker were the contractors. Inside a staircase led to waiting rooms and 20 steps through a colonnade into the main road. Downstairs was a large hall, booking offices, 2 first class waiting rooms in the south front and others at the back. There were arches for Wheatley's bus and fly service to Woolwich and Blackheath – he was thrown out when he started a bus service to London. The courtyard was fenced with stone sleepers.
Greenwich Station. This is between Cutty Sark and Deptford Bridge on the Docklands Light Railway. Between Maze Hill and Deptford on South Eastern Railway Originally Opened December 1840 by the London & Greenwich Railway. The London and Greenwich’s 1838 station was moved here in 1840. It was again rebuilt in 1875 with an extension to Charlton and this involved the demolition of  43 arches of the viaduct from Norman Road the line went down to the station then down again into the new tunnel. George Smith’s original terminus was re-erected in 1878 closer to the road.  The station included the early use of telegraph using Railway Electric Signals Co equipment with cables laid along the viaduct in wooden troughs. In 1926 the line was electrified and in 1999 the DLR station was added

Greenwich Market
The market was once by the West Gate of the Royal Hospital. It was later moved to its current position a roof was re-erected over it. The Commissioners of Greenwich Hospital were empowered by Parliament passed an act that enabled the Hospital to regulate and manage it. In 1908 the timber roof was replaced by the current steel trussed and glazed roof and the slaughterhouses were also closed. It later became an early morning fruit and vegetable market only but in the 1985s an arts and crafts market opened and from 1987 the shops around the markets periphery were let to new tenants
Music Hall. In 1845 the licensee of the Admiral Hardy pub was given permission to convert the large room over the newly built arch on College Approach into a small theatre with a tiered balcony at one end. The inscription on the arch still reads: “A false balance is an abomination to the Lord but a just weight is his delight”. This became the Royal Clarence Music hall until 1891. It was then an Engineering workshop and then in 1964 a TV studio.  
Coach and Horses Pub. Another one of acquired by Greenwich Inc. An old building with modern ground floor. Covered outside seating in the market.

Greenwich Park
This is the oldest of London's royal parks and it is on a high escarpment overlooking Greenwich reach. The area was acquired by the Duke of Gloucester for Bella Court and enclosed by Royal licence in 1433. James I walled it and extensive tree-planting took place throughout the 1660's. Charles II had the lake built. A formal landscape was laid down in 1662 by Versailles designer Andre le Notre for Charles II. The park was opened to the public in the 18th and Greenwich fair was held around the park until the mid 19th.
Tumuli - on the hill south of the Observatory building. A group of seventeen small tumuli, all circular on plan. It has been said that they are thought to be early Bronze Age barrows re-used by the Saxons in the 6th century for burial.
Duke Humphrey’s Tower. In 1427, Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester inherited the land. He was the brother of King Henry V and later Regent to King Henry VI. He enclosed the Park in 1433 and built a tower, the site of which is now the Greenwich Observatory
Flamsteed House – The Old Royal Observatory stands on the hill at the top of the park. It was built as a navigational aid by Christopher Wren in 1676 or Charles II. – using unused bricks from Tilbury Fort and was financed by the sale of gunpowder. The first Astronomer Royal was John Flamsteed who was succeeded by Edmund Halley. Airy in the 18th established the Prime Meridian. Pollution led the Observatory to move to Herstmonceaux and the building was damaged in the Second World War. As a museum it houses Britain's largest refracting telescope and a collection of timepieces and instruments.  This is the oldest part of the Royal Observatory designed by Sir Christopher Wren and built in 1675. The buildings in the centre house the meridian instruments, notably the Airy Transit Circle which marks the Greenwich meridian. The large dome on the right contains a Grubb 28" refractor from 1894 and is the largest telescope of this type in the UK.  The tall windows of the Octagon Room allowed observations to be made with the long focus refractors and quadrants that were fashionable in the 17th century.
Flamsteed’s Well. A deep shaft was used in the later 17th for making observations. The site of this shaft was excavated in the 1960s and a circle of bricks erected to show where it was.
The Time Ball on the east turret was erected by John Pond, the 6th Astronomer Royal in 1833. It was put there so that could set their chronometers by it.  It rises at 12.58 pm and falls at 13.00 every day.  The ball still rises and drops daily at 13:00 GMT precisely.
Shepherd Gate clock. This 24 hour clock was built by Charles Shepherd to show standard Greenwich Mean Time and set in the wall of the observatory to the right of the entrance. From what I can remember.
Imperial Measurements. Below the clock is a bronze plaque with the public standard of British imperial measurement
The South Building. The Physical Observatory. This was added by the 8th Astronomer Royal, Sir William H. M. Christie and completed in 1899. Above the windows are stone plaques engraved with the names of the previous Astronomers Royal and instrument makers. The dome once contained the Thompson 26" photographic refractor of 1897 and 30" reflector fitted on the same mounting. Both these telescopes are now housed at Herstmonceux. Until 2004 it housed a small planetarium.
The Meridian Building, This is the modern name for a range of rooms and spaces on the south side of the Observatory Courtyard. The majority of the Observatory’s most important telescopes were housed here, numerous extensions and alterations have been made ad in the mid 1960s when the building was converted into a museum building.
Great Equatorial Building. This was erected as a separate building in 1858 to house the 12½-inch Merz Refractor. It now houses the 28-inch telescope.
The Lassell Dome. In 1883 daughters of William Lassell offered the Astronomer Royal their father’s two-foot reflecting telescope. A single story brick building of 30-foot diameter was erected.  The dome by T. Cooke and Sons made of papier mâché on an iron framework was completed the following year
The Altazimuth Pavilion. Built in 1894 and designed by William Christie to house the new Altazimuth Instrument proposed by Christie in 1892.
The Garden House/Stables/Plant Room  - facilities buildings, some parts dating back to Flamsteed in the 17th.
The Meridian. In 1884 an international conference in Washington decided that Greenwich Mean Time' based on the line passing through the centre of Airy's transit circle, would be the world standard.  The imaginary line from Greenwich to two poles would be 0 degrees longitude,
Bradley's New Observatory. This dated from 1749. Bradley was Astronomer Royal from 1742 and he installed new equipment. His Observatory was at the west end of the present Meridian Building. It now houses the Observatory shop
Peter Harrison Planetarium. Opened 1007
Park Conduit.   Conduits were built to collect surface water and supply it to the Palace.  Brick-lined passages below the park follow the contours. The floors are brick and the bottom courses of have gaps which allow surface water to drain into a lead-lined channel. The tunnel system was explored in 1961 and was found to be of a much greater extent than originally thought. The brickwork appeared to be no earlier than Tudor in date. There are four known entrances in the park. The water system was increased during the 17th and 18th centuries, but ceased to be used as water supply in 1891. It now part of park's drainage system
Standard Conduit House. This stands just off Crooms Hill in a railed enclosure. It is rectangular in brick and attributed to Nicholas Hawksmoor. A stone plaque above the entrance says `Greenwich Hospital Standard Reservoir’. It is said that a reservoir underneath has an outlet down to the hospital.
Henry Moore statue. It is called 'Standing Figure. Knife Edge’. It is almost five metres tall and was sited in Greenwich Park by the sculptor in 1979 for his golden wedding. In 2007 it was moved to Kew and later Yorkshire but returned to Greenwich in September 2011 in time for the Olympics
Reservoir Kent Water Co. 1,250,000 gal. 158' above OD. They were built following an agreement with the Admiralty in 1846 to protect the Hospital from fire. It was covered in 1871.
Wolfe Statue. This is by Tait McKenzie. Wolfe lived and is buried in Greenwich. It was presented by the Canadian people and was unveiled in 1930 by the Marquis of Montcalm, a direct descendant of Wolfe's adversary. There are landmine scars on the base. 
St Mary's Lodge. Built 1807-8 for the Park Underkeeper in the style of a cottage orné, now used as a cafe. It was designed by John Nash.
Boating lake. Small lake on which boats can be hired. When elephants were in circuses locally they used to be taken there for a wash and wallow.
Sundial. Set in a 10 m wide stone circle this was to commemorate the Olympics. It was designed by Chris Daniel, chairman of the British Sundial Society, it is a double horizontal dial – a dial that shows not only the time, but also the direction of the Sun. It is not quite on the right bit of the Prime Meridian. There are other errors and the scheme has never been completed.
Allotments. In the Second World War the area between the bottom of the hill and the Queens House was used as allotments. Aerial photographs show marks of the amenity blocks and sheds for these.

Greenwich Park Street
Sorting office for the Post Office, built 1907 in red brick.  Currently in use as NHS offices.
Greenwich South Street
This was a medieval lane coming into Greenwich past the limekilns from the Roman Road, It was thus once called Limekilns Road
St.Mark's Church. Was originally a United Reformed Secession Presbyterian Church.  The original church was built in 1850 and was destroyed in bombing. It was replaced by a red brick church built in 1953.
St.Mark's Close. This is on the site of what was St. Mark’s Manse which was bombed and rebuilt in 1953. The Close was built in 1981 as sheltered housing. On the west wall of the flats bricks make up the shape of a lion. Below is set in tiles the words 'Saint Mark'
Haddo Street
This was known as Union Street until 1874 when it was changed by the Metropolitan Board of Works.
Horseferry Road.
1 The Retreat. This pub closed in 1935 and has now been demolished. Earlier known as The Steam Ferry and, before that, The Unicorn. It was called The Retreat from 1910
Wood Wharf apartments built in 2007 by Weybridge Construction. Replaced the barge yard, the ferry, the wharves and the rehearsal studios.
Hyde Vale,
John Hyde of the Turnpike Trust bought the land here and roads which were previously called Conduit Lane and also Sots Vale .
1 NHS Health and Well Being Centre which has now closed.
King George Street
69 Britannia Pub. This dated from the 1870s and is now closed and in use as housing.
The Hall. This was built in 1816 as a Methodist Chapel; the adjoining small hall dates from 1879.  In 1875 it was acquired by the 'open brethren', and the main building used as an assembly hall, whilst the smaller one for a school room.
Greenwich Park Centre. Adult education in what was Greenwich Park School. The narrow frontage onto this road has a plaque with the monogram for the School Board for London with the date 1898. This was the Higher Elementary School of 1904 by the School Board for London and designed for them by Bailey.


King William Walk
St.Mary's Gate to the park.
Site of St Mary's Church. This was built in 1824 and blocks of stone are markers for where it was. St.Mary’s was designed by George Basevi. It was demolished in 1936.
King William IV Statue. Moved here in 1935 from London Bridge where it was a traffic obstruction. It is on the site of St.Mary's Church. It is a large statue in Foggin Tor granite by Samuel Nixon.  William is in the uniform of Lord High Admiral and Garter sash and stands on a 25ft granite pillar designed by Richard Kelsly. It is now in the grounds of the Sammy Ofer Wing
Royal Hospital School. From 1720 about 15 boys were boarded in the Hospital originally pensioners' sons, but this was expanded.In 1758 the first Hospital school building was built on the pensioners' burying ground but run by nearby Weston's Academy.In 1782-84 a new school was built on the same site, with living accommodation for up to 200 boys, Half this building still exists as a rear wing of Devonport House.
Weston’s Academy. From 1712 Thomas Weston headed Weston’s Academy in Greenwich, which, in taking some pupils who were sons of pensioners at Greenwich Hospital, was one of the forerunners of Greenwich Hospital School. He wrote “A copy-book written for the use of the young-gentlemen at the Academy in Greenwich” in 1726. Mathematics were Weston’s specialty, as the basis to learning navigation. Before setting up his school, Weston had been an assistant to the Astronomer Royal, John Flamsteed.
66-68 Devonport House. Built in 1929 by Sir Edwin Cooper, This was built as a nurses' home. The rear wing is part of the Royal Hospital Boys' School by Newton of 1783. Devonport House is now a hotel, student accommodation and conference centre.
Pathological laboratory. Built 1926-9 by Sir Edwin Cooper in red brick.
Sculpture outside is by Francois Hameury called ‘The Throne of Earthly Kings’
Devonport House grounds. The site was once the cemetery for the Royal Hospital for Seamen. A small railed area which was refurbished by the University in 1999.  Until 1857 this was the graveyard of the Royal Hospital for Seamen. From 1749 onwards about 24,000 men and some women were buried here.
The Devonport Mausoleum was built in 1750, probably designed by Thomas Ripley, Royal Hospital Surveyor, and a plaque commemorates the first burial in the graveyard of Pensioner John Meriton in 1749. Inside is a monument of 1890 former headmasters of the Royal Hospital School, By 1842 the mausoleum contained over 80 coffins including Sir Thomas Hardy and Admiral Lord Hood and others
Pillar monument to Sir Thomas Boulden Thompson who died in 1828
Stone monument with a figure of Britannia, erected in 1898 to commemorate the 20,000 residents of the Hospital buried in the cemetery between 1749-1869.
1 Greenwich Park Tavern. This was previously the Duke of Gloucester. The previous building on the site was the Court of Requests 1835. This is just outside the main entrance to Greenwich Park and before Greenwich Inc renamed it it was like a country pub with forms and tables outside and bordered by trellis fencings.
11 early 18th building with a later upper bow window. Site of the Volunteer pub. The building was later used as offices by the Greater London Council and more recently by various government partnership bodies.  It is now flats.
16 King's Arms. Large pub which has clearly been rebuilt since first opened in 1826.
Toilets. Underground toilets from the 1920s with many original fittings and features
22 The Cricketers. This pub dates from 1840. It had a cricketing theme but was taken over by Greenwich Inc and called ‘The Powder Monkey’. It closed in 2005 and is now a fish and chip shop.
West Gate to what is now the University. Ornamental gates with globes on pillars - one globe is a celestial sphere, the other a terrestrial sphere. There is an ironwork arch between them. These were originally sited further to the east in the grounds. The West Lodge sits alongside them.
Discover Greenwich Centre. This is in what was the Engineering Laboratory and squash courts themselves on the site of the College Brewery demolished in 1875. It was later known as the Pepys building. It is an ornate single storeyed building of 1875-9 with medallions of Drake, Cook and Nelson. The exhibition of Greenwich history is owned and managed by the Greenwich Foundation.
Greenwich Tourist Information. This is in part of the Pepys Building alongside Discover Greenwich
Raleigh Statue. The bronze is by William McMillan, 1959 and has been moved here from the Ministry of Defence in Whitehall where it was dwarfed. He is in Elizabethan dress with a drawn sword. It originated in an attempt to emphasise Anglo American relations in the Cold War
Mews. The mews are alongside the Discover Greenwich complex and used as offices and teaching space
The Old Brewery. This is a cafe, bar and restaurant selling locally brewed Meantime beer. It is also in the Pepys Building alongside the Discover Greenwich Centre
Brewery, the inmates of the Royal Hospital had a daily beer ration which was piped direct to the wards from the brewery the remains of which lie under and alongside the current Old Brewery restaurant. Water was supplied from a still extant deep well.

Langdale Road
Built up in the 1860s on Drapers Company land.

Meridian Estate
London County Council Estate. Built from 1933.
Coltman House. This replaced Coltman Street which was terraced houses, built for river workers.
Rockfield House. This replaced Rockfield Road, which ran from Thames Street to the River
Page House. This replaced Page’s Avenue which ran from Thames Street to Billingsgate Street.

Nelson Road
First street of Joseph Kay improvement scheme of the 1830s for Greenwich Hospital Estates.
13 Burtons billiard hall, in the standard Burton frontage designs decorated with elephant’s head. This was altered in 1932.  This is now a Tex Mex restaurant. The shop has several signs of its existence as a Burton’s Men's Wear store.  There are mosaics at both entrances – in Nelson Road and in Church Street – advertising ‘Montague Burton, the Tailor of Taste’. There are also three inscriptions at ground level to the foundation of the store in 1932 by each of the Burton siblings – Barbara Jessie, Raymond Montague and Stanley Howard.
9 South Metropolitan Gas Showroom. This is now a ladies wear shop but there some relics of the showroom fittings remain

Nevada Street
This was once called Silver Street and the Route of the old main road. Traditionally the Deptford-Woolwich Road ran past this point along Silver Street and on beneath the Queen's House.
8-9 Spread Eagle Bookshop. The bookshop is no longer there. There is a plaque on the building ‘Dick Moy 1932 - 2004 Historian and Antiques Dealer who loved Greenwich. / He restored and worked from this 1780 Inn’
Spread Eagle Yard. A formal stucco inn facade of the earlier 19th with central coach-way,
Maltings. The maltings were established by Frederick John Corder and Alfred Conyers Haycraft towards the end of the 1800s. The partnership was dissolved in 1900 with Haycraft continuing the business until selling out to Hugh Baird and Sons in 1906 or 1907. Malt kilns were behind the Spread Eagle
Old Pearson Street,
It is named for the Pearson family who owned copperas works in this area in the 19th. Their grand house – Ravensbourne House – was in this area.

Old Woolwich Road
Old Man in the Moon. This is on the corner with Eastney Street. The building bears the date 1834 as well as the pub's name and has now been converted to flats.

Park Row
Was Back Lane and Caroline Street
East Gate to the University/Old Royal Naval College. Pair of single storey lodges in Red brick
Trafalgar Quarters. Built in 1813 by Venn for officers of the civil administration of the Hospital this is now accommodation for retired naval personnel. On the first floor frieze is the Seamen’s Hospital Arms in Coade Stone. It became servants quarters after the Hospital closed, and named Trafalgar Quarters by the Naval College.
25a Lodge to Trafalgar Quarters. This was built in 1813 but has been altered. It was originally single storied but is now two.

Park Vista
It is said that this was the original line of the Dover Road passed along what is the line of the colonnade from the Queens House until it was stopped up and moved north in the late 17th.
Meridian Line – this is marked by a line of studs across the road and by stones in the pavements.
Gate with bearded keystone leads to the Queens Orchard – previously called the Dwarf orchard. This opened in 2012 having been restored with heritage fruit trees, new gates, pathways and ponds. It is managed by The Royal Parks but walled off from the main park. There is a single metal decorative gate and there is a well found inside the entrance. The mulberry tree may have died. The Orchard was part of Greenwich Park from the 17th onwards, but was alienated in 1976 when Greenwich Hospital Estates sold it to Greenwich Council. It remained in their ownership managed as a wildlife garden until it was returned to The Royal Parks for a peppercorn.
13 Manor House.  A plain two-storey house from the early 18th with a gazebo on the roof;
15 Hamilton House. Late 18th three storey house. At one time this was the Royal Arsenal Co-operative Society Education Department. It then went into commercial use and is now a department of the University of Greenwich.
16-18 Park Place. Built in 1791. The Catholic chapel was essential in the back garden
St. Mary’s Chapel. In 1793 the Roman Catholic chapel of St. Mary and catered mainly for Irish born Catholic seamen at the Royal Hospital. It was accessed via Clark’s buildings in what was then East Street.
19 Plume of Feathers. The pub claims to have been built in 1691. It appears in the Greenwich Parish rate books in 1717 and licensing records show it was then called the Prince of Wales. By 1726 the name had changed to The Plume of Feathers, the insignia of the Prince of Wales. Pub has been owned by various breweries: the (Greenwich based) Beehive Brewery, the Hoare Brewery, Watney’s, Truman’s, Courage, and Scottish & Newcastle. The Meridian Line means it is the first pub in the eastern hemisphere.
33/36 The Chantry. Built of 1807 and the Admiral Commissioner of the Naval Asylum School’s house. It is an irregular building with some 16th brickwork which is the remains of outbuildings of Henry VIII's palace. On the building is a carved stone replica from 1975 of a wall plaque with the Tudor royal arms. There is also an empty circular medallion with wreaths. Incorporated into the building is Queen Elizabeth Conduit, which was a highly secure reservoir for the Tudor palace. Part of the building is the St.Alfege Vicarage
Maze Hill Congregational Church. This was founded in 1786. In 1903 it came under the Kent Association and County Missionary Society Metropolitan District but by 1957 membership had fallen to 15 and the church was sharing a minister with Rothbury Hall Church. In 1971 Maze Hill it united with the local Methodist Church.  A graveyard was attached to the chapel. This was the site of excavations in 1966 where graves were found which appeared to be older than the dates of the chapel. The site, on the corner with Park Street, is now housing.


Peyton Place
The Greenwich Park railway line would have crossed the entrance to this small road diagonally
Greenwich Gallery. Photographic art gallery. Part of Linear House used as offices and for a variety of arts organisations
The Old Joinery. Modern House
Hall. This hall was at the back of the Methodist Church in Greenwich High Road. Used as offices for charities and others

Prince of Orange Lane
Wheatley's Livery Stables. In the mid 19th this was the stables for Wheatley's who ran a horse drawn vehicle hire service and hauliers – clearly and handy site for the station.


Prior Street
The Greenwich Park line railway crossed the street at a diagonal at the east end. The site is now Prior Street Allotments.   The line ran through the allotments and then through the car park for the police station in Royal Hill. From the 1960's it was used as a lorry park and then a garden centre and then used for some form of horticultural training. From 1980 the London Borough of Greenwich allowed the Burney Street Project to use the site as allotments on an informal basis. In 1993 a developer wanted to build on the site. A campaign led to two new houses and the remaining plots being given the formal Allotment Act protection

Randall Place
James Wolfe School. Built by the London School Board in 1877 and designed by Edward Robson. This part of the school is for the younger children and has a specialism in deaf children. Above the entrance is a stone tablet with 'girls' surrounded by sprigs of bay and berries, bound with ribbon. Above the keystone is a plaque with 'Randall Place School’ and ‘1877’. There is a similar plaque for 'infants' enclosed in oak leaves

Riverside (Billingsgate to Horseferry Road)
This, as a cobbled riverside path, was known as Wood Wharf.
13 Orient Lighterage. The company operated 80 barges, the last two being built at Faversham in 1960. They mainly handled tea, unloaded at Tilbury and brought up river to bonded warehouses at Orient Wharf, on the north bank. They also handled newsprint from Convoys Wharf.  The Greenwich Yard closed in 1971 through containerisation.
15 Anglo Swedish Electric Welding Co. They were here from 1925 and had other premises at Dreadnought Wharf to the west. In the early 20th Mr.Kejllburg of Gothenburg developed a process for using electric welding rather than rivers. The company was a Syndicate formed to promote his process.
15 Predecessor companies in Anglo Swedish were Woods dealing in forage and fodder 1870-1921, Morris Timber 1922-1926, W.R.Crow timber importers 1926-1940
17 Sun Public House. This dated from 1820. Demolished in 1963 for the river walk but by then it was single storey only because of bomb damage.
24-26 Sun Coal Wharf. This was run by one of the Huntley Brothers. Barges and fishing boats later ran from the wharf.
19-55 these were cottages, slum cleared in the 1960s.
28-30 Wrightons. This was a lighterage company. They had 100 barges and eight tugs. They worked a lot in the meat trade, serving Borthwick's Cold Store at Deptford. They arranged the transport of London Bridge to America. They closed in 1972.
55 this became a music studio in 1972. Jules Holland is said to have started here along with Billy Jenkins, Kate Bush, Dire Straits and Squeeze –all local to the area. The studio was closed down by developers.
28-30 Horseferry.  A building here serviced the ferry from 1840 but closed after the Blackwall and Foot tunnels were opened.
Litchfield and Soundy Ltd.  They were on the old Horseferry site and maintained a fleet of 80 barges. They closed in 1965 because of containerisation.
Greenwich Steam Ferry. This had winding engines on both sides of the river. Built by Appleby Brothers Ltd of East Greenwich. Engineers are Dark and Standfield, of Westminster.


Roan Street
46 Grey Coat House.  The building was formerly the Roan School of 1808. There is a plaque over the door "Erected AD 1808 Grey Coat School. Founded 1677 MR JOHN ROAN By his will dated 16th March 1643 Devised certain estates the rents whereof were directed to be applied to the education and clothing of poor towns born children of the parish of Greenwich. This tablet was set in 1835." The tablet also includes names of Vicar and churchwardens.  The school was founded by John Roan 1600-1644. In 1640, Roan was appointed Yeoman of His Majesty's Harriers. During the Civil War he was arrested and as a prisoner of war. In his Will he left property to the founding of a school.  The Will named the Vicar, the Churchwardens and the Overseers of the Poor of Saint Alfege, Greenwich as the Trustees. They became the forerunners of the Roan Schools Foundation, who continue to manage the Roan Estate. The school began as the Grey Coat School or Roan's Charity school, and was opened for boys in 1677-1678. The first school building was surrendered to Greenwich Hospital in 1808 and a new school, paid for by the Hospital, was built here. In 1815 the National School of Industry was opened and became the forerunner of the Roan School for Girls. Later two branch schools were opened. As demand for accommodation grew, the boys' school moved to Maze Hill in 1928. The Roan Street building has been let out for various purposes and has been a factory. It is currently flats.
Saxonia Wire Works. Saxonia used the old Roan School building. They had been founded in the late 19th and were specialist manufacturers of all types of fexibles and cables. They were taken over by AEI in 1971.
52 Hit or Miss Pub. Demolished
76-78 Little Wonder Pub. Demolished.
92 Greycoat Boy Pub. He name clearly relates to the Roan School nearby. The building now appears to be offices


Romney Road
Romney Road called after the High Steward of the Manor. It bisects the area which was covered by the Tudor Palace and associated buildings.
Greenwich Palace. In the 14th and 15th Eltham Palace was used by royalty. The nearby manor of Greenwich was given by Henry V to Thomas Beaufort, Duke of Exeter and it then passed in 1426 to Humphrey Duke of Gloucester. He rebuilt the house walled it and supplied it with water by a new conduit from Stockwell. He called it 'Bellacourt'. In 1447 it passed to Margaret of Anjou, who called it Plaisance or Placentia. The Tudor monarchs liked it and rebuilding took place under Henry VII, and further improvements were made by Henry VIII. It was the birthplace of Henry VIII, who married Katherine of Aragon and Anne of Cleves here. In 1516 Mary was born here, in 1533 Elizabeth, and in 1522 the Emperor Charles V was received in state. Henry established Deptford and Woolwich Dock Yards and Trinity House through his association with the area. Inigo Jones built the Queen's House for James I’s wife, Anne of Denmark in 1613. The palace was badly treated during the Commonwealth and for a time it was a biscuit factory for Scottish troops. After the Restoration Charles II decided to erect a new palace and commissioned John Webb. The old buildings were pulled down leaving only the undercroft. The foundation stone of the new building was laid in 1664 but when William and Mary succeeded they decided against living there and Mary handed over the new building to be a Naval Hospital. In 1694 Wren prepared plans – similar but not the same as Webb's.  The completion of the scheme took over fifty years. The first pensioners arrived in 1705.  In 1763 separate infirmary was added which became Dreadnought Seamen's Hospital, was added. The hospital closed in 1869, and in 1873 the Royal Naval College moved in. Since they moved out the University have moved in.
Tilt Yard. This was on the site of a 7th Anglo-Saxon cemetery. It was built 1514-18 south of the palace, the first permanent example in the country, with two towers connected by a gallery. In 1527 a banqueting house and theatre were added.  Kennels were built in 1532 and in 1533 a cockpit and a mews. In c. 1534 a real tennis court was added. In the mid 17th a laboratory was established here which worked on pyrotechnics. It eventually moved to Woolwich and the site which became the Royal Arsenal.
Armoury. This was built in 1517 to the west of the King Charles Quarter. Here foreign armourers made suits of armour using metal from the Lewisham mill.
Romney Road is the replacement main road built because the original road went right under the centre of the Queens House. It goes right through the area which was the royal palace. Basically – the area to the south of the road consists of the National Maritime Museum and Devonport House (in King William Walk). North of the road are the buildings which were the Royal Hospital, which became the Royal Naval College, and is now partly the University of Greenwich, and partly Trinity College. This area is owned by the Greenwich Foundation which refers to it as the Old Royal Naval College
South of Romney Road
The Old road from Deptford to Woolwich was diverted in the 17th and called Heathgate Street. It was probably on the line of the Tudor tiltyard. The park fence was replaced by a wall and a gateway across the road served as entrance to the park and garden. The Queen's House perpetuates old arrangement of the grounds. During the Restoration the road was put north of the Queen's House and opened in 1695/7 while the old road was blocked with gates.
Railway. The railway extension to Maze Hill Station from Greenwich built in 1878 passes under the lawn south of Romney Road.
Colonnade. In 1807-16 Daniel Asher Alexander added wings and colonnades, so that the building could accommodate the naval school from Paddington founded in 1798 – and join the school for the children of pensioners which was already there
Statue of Admiral Sir Edward Pellew 1st Viscount Exmouth. By 'Patrick MacDowell 1846.' This was commissioned by Parliament in 1842. At was at one time in the Painted Hall
Statue of William Peel by William Theed, this is a copy of a statue in Saint Swithun's Church, Sandy. He was the third son of Prime Minister, Robert Peel and was one of the earliest winners of the VC in the Crimean War
Statue of Admiral James de Saumarez by 'John  Steell'
Statue of Admiral Sir William Sidney Smith
The Royal Hospital School. In 1821 the Hospital school and the Asylum were amalgamated. The 1780s Hospital School building became the children's infirmary. In 1892 the institution was renamed the Royal Hospital School. All boys were committed to enter sea service, specifically in the Navy. By the 1880s pupils were an asset to all branches of the Navy. More than 10,000 of the boys joined 1874- 1930 and five became admirals. In 1886 the school also took over the Boreman Foundation which had begun in 17rth Greenwich for the sons of local seamen, fishermen and watermen. Crowds would watch the boys marching to service at the College Chapel on Sundays preceded by the band led by the drum major. The first of three drill or 'block' ships, all called Fame, was built in front of the Queen's House in 1843. The school left for its new home in Holbrook, Suffolk in 1933. The boys marched away to go on Easter leave and returned to the new school in April/
Neptune Hall, This was added in 1874, by Colonel Clark of the Royal Engineers as a gymnasium and assembly hall for the school. Demolished.
National Maritime Museum. This is the main maritime museum in Britain and perhaps the largest in the world. It is a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. It was created by the National Maritime Act of 1934 under a Board of Trustees. King George VI formally opened it in 1937.It includes the Caird Library which is the world's largest maritime historical reference library
Sammy Ofer Wing. The Sammy Ofer Wing is the biggest development in the Museum’s history. The new wing includes a restaurant, a new library area and new galleries. Sammy Ofer was a billionaire Israeli businessman who, in 2008, donated £20 million the museum
Queen's House.  Underneath and through the centre is the route of old main road. The house is a square two-storeyed block which originally consisted of two parallel ranges connected only by a bridge astride what was the main road. Its architectural style was revolutionary for its date. The house was completed by Henrietta Maria and ready in 1637. The main room is the hall in the centre which is a perfect cube, with a gallery around the upper floor. The main twisty staircase has a balustrade with a tulip-like top. The house was refurbished after the Restoration by John Webb, and he added two more bridges in 1662 to make it a perfect square. In 1690 it became the residence of the Ranger of Greenwich Park and in the early 18th it was used by the Governor of the Naval Hospital In 1807-16 Daniel Asher Alexander added wings, colonnades, for the Royal Naval School. The school left in 1933 and then opened to the public as part of the National Maritime Museum in 1937.
The Royal Naval Asylum. This opened in Paddington in 1798 for the orphaned children of naval seamen. In 1806 George III granted the Asylum use of the Queen's House and gardens at Greenwich and, Parliament supported expansion financially. In 1807 the colonnades and flanking wings were begun. The upper floors of the new wings were dormitories, with teaching, dining and other space below.
North of Romney Road
Grand Square.  Around the square are 8 lamp standards in Portland stone carrying wrought iron lamp holders
King Charles Block. This block is on the riverside at the west side of the site.  The King Charles Court incorporates John Webb's single unfinished wing 1664-69 of Charles II's projected new palace of Greenwich. It is now in use by Trinity School of Music.
Trinity School of Music. In 1872   Bonavia Hunte established the Church Choral Society and College of Church Music later to become Trinity College of Music Mandeville Place in Marylebone. In 2001 the college moved to Greenwich in partnership with Laban School of Dance, and establishing the Jerwood Library of the Performing Arts, and the Mander and Mitchenson Theatre Collection.
Queen Anne Block.  This is the block at the east end fronting on to the river. Part of the block dates from 1701-7, but the rest remained a brick carcase until 1712 and its stone facade was inserted in 1725. The pavilions were added only in 1725-31. It is in use by the University of Greenwich and includes the Stephen Lawrence Gallery, for work by contemporary artists
Undercroft. This is the only remains of the original palace. It is in vaulted brick and stone built in 1604 beneath the Queen Anne Quarter.
University of Greenwich. The University has evolved from Woolwich Polytechnic having taken in some other colleges and institutions on the way.  The Polytechnic dated to 1890, when it was founded as the second polytechnic in Britain. In 1970, it became Thames Polytechnic. It had taken in, Dartford College, Avery Hill College, Garnett College , and some of Goldsmiths College and the City of London Colleges. In 1992 it was granted university status. The Greenwich Campus moved here when it was sold by the Royal Navy in 1990. The Business School, the School of Computing and Mathematical Sciences and the School of Humanities & Social Sciences are based here as well as the Greenwich Maritime Institute.
King William Block. This block is fronts Romney Road on the east end of the site. It was built in 1701-2, was ready internally by 1708. In the pediment is a sculpture of Neptune delivering Nelson’s body to Britannia, designed by Benjamin West, by West and Panzetta in 1810-12. It is in use by the University of Greenwich. This is where Jason the nuclear reactor was based.
Jason. This was a nuclear reactor installed by the Ministry of Defence. It was an Argonaut series 10 kW research reactor designed by the US Argonne National Laboratory, and was used for experimental and training purposes. It was operational from 1962 to 1996 but had previously been operated by the Hawker Siddeley Nuclear Power Corporation at Slough
Queen Mary Block.  This is the inland block at the west end. It was the last finished. It is in use by the University of Greenwich
Bowling Alley. Built in the 1860s this is in the restored Chalk Walk beneath the Queen Mary Quarter. It is now managed by the Foundation.
Chapel of St.Peter and St.Paul. This was severely damaged by fire in 1779 and reopened in 1789. It is thought that most of the detailed work was done by the Clerk of Works, William Newton. In the octagonal vestibule are statues of Faith, Hope, Charity, and Humility designed by Benjamin West in Coade stone. On the doorway is a frieze by John Bacon. At the end is an altar painting by West of St Paul and the Viper and also Coade stone angels by West.  The Oak and mahogany pulpit is derived from the monument to Lysicrates: The joiners were Lawrence and Arrow.
Painted Hall. This dramatic building is divided into a vestibule, a main hall, and an upper hall, each separated by steps and by fragments of cross walls. It is a very theatrical although the type of stone changes as the ceiling is reached. The central ceiling is by James Thornhill, 1708-12. It was cleaned in 1957-60, revealing what had been obscured by fifteen coats of varnish. The main part framed by an oval, shows William and Mary attended by the four cardinal virtues. And much much more.
Dreadnought Hospital. Originally the infirmary to the Royal Hospital. Built By James Stuart, 1763-4.  It is a utilitarian square block with an inner courtyard. The Seamen’s Hospital Society was founded in 1821 because the health of the sailors in the merchant service had been almost totally neglected. Originally called the Society for Distressed (Destitute) Seamen, in 1821 it became the Seamen’s Hospital Society. At first it ran a floating hospital ship anchored off Greenwich. Thousands of merchant seamen were cared for a succession of three ships. The second ship was called the Dreadnought and the name has been kept. In 1870 the Dreadnought began work in the former Greenwich Hospital Infirmary. In 1986, with changes in the NHS and the decline of the merchant fleet, the Dreadnought Hospital was closed and its work transferred to Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital where seafarers continue to receive priority medical treatment. The building is now the university library
Royal Naval Division Memorial Fountain also called the Gallipolli monument to those who died in the Great War. Designed by Lutyens in 1924 and originally on the wall of the Admiralty. It features a central obelisk above a fountain bowl
George II Statue. This is by J.M.Rysbrack and made from a block of marble found in a French ship and presented by Sir John Jennings who paid for it. The king is in Roman dress and the statue was set up in 1735. It is much weathered. 


Royal Hill
Medieval road, called Gang Lane.  It was later renamed after Robert Royal, the builder of a theatre in 1749.
Greenwich School of Management. This independent, for profit, college is in what was the office area of Meridian House – the old Metropolitan Borough of Greenwich’s Town Hall, and has an entrance in Royal Hill. The college dates from 1973 and awards degrees through the University of Plymouth
Borough Hall. The hall attached to the Greenwich Town Hall remained in the ownership of the Borough when the rest was sold. It fronts onto Royal Hall and is currently used by the Greenwich Dance Agency. A large art deco space Designed by Ewart Culpin & Son in 1939 with 'ocean liner' features inspired by Dutch & Scandinavian buildings.
Greenwich Park Line– near the Prior Street allotments is some railway wall, where the route ran parallel with Royal Hill.  This became a car park. Looking back towards Blackheath Hill some of the track bed was visible into the 1970s, marked by a BR Estate Surveyor ‘Open Storage to Be Let' sign.
6 Globe Pub, demolished
52/54 Richard I. 19th pub but says it dates from 1923.  Also called The Tolly, currently a Young’s pub.
56 Greenwich Union. This pub was previously the Fox and Hounds. In the past it has also been called McGowans. It is one of a couple of pubs associated with Meantime, Greenwich brewery.
59/59a stables of 61 Royal Hill done up to look like houses. These are actually situated in Royal Place
James Woolfe School. Royal Hill Campus for older primary children with a specialism in children with a hearing disability. This is in the Royal Hill frontage of what was Greenwich Park School.
70-72 The Prince of Greenwich. This pub was previously the Prince Albert.
St.Paul's Parochial Rooms, built 1872. This is now housing
89 The Hill. This was the Barley Mow pub. It closed in 2005 and is now a restaurant
101 Royal Hill Care Home
103 Good Intent pub. Demolished 1903


St Alfege Churchyard
Greenwich National Schools. This has an inscription on the front ‘GREENWICH NATIONAL SCHOOL OF EDUCATION AND INDUSTRY FOR GIRLS’. Former school building of 1814. This is used as the, Church Hall
St Alfege Park. This is part of the churchyard of St Alfege church. It is part of an additional area of land taken over in 1803 as an extension to the over crowed burial ground. It was itself closed as full in 1853. In 1889 management was passed to the Greenwich District Board of Works. The western area was laid out as a recreation ground with design by Fanny Wilkinson, landscape gardener of the MPGA. Many tombs and gravestones remain here. In the 1950s a ball park, a playground were installed there is also a modern toilet bloc. Since 2007 the park has been extended onto a timber yard to the north.

St Alfege Passage
Gated pedestrian walkway alongside the church and leading to Roan Street
5 old joinery works now housing

Stockwell Street
The road, at the base of the hill, is called Stockwell from the town well which stood there.
Greenwich Park Station site. This is now the site of the Ibis hotel.  The London Chatham and Dover railway had powers for this line in 1863 and built it as far as Blackheath Hill in 1871. The Greenwich station was opened in 1888 but by 1929 it was closed the line cut back to near Lewisham. The station had a side and an island platform built on a curve and a centre line so locomotives could be run-round for departure.  The main building, canopied, aced Stockwell Street, and was built of yellow brick, with segmental arches above doors and windows picked out in red.  Adjoining the booking hall was a buffet, and first and second class ladies' rooms, a two storey house was provided as a home for the Station Master.  Behind was a small awninged concourse, providing access to the platforms. The line was abandoned by an Act in 1929 and the line taken up.  The station building was let out. It became the Mayfield Temperance Billiard Club and later a saw mill and timber yard.
30 Hotel Ibis. This is on the site of the station and opened in 1988; Designed by BDP.
1-2 Spread Eagle Coaching Inn, which has been used as a restaurant with an associated junk and book shop. The site of the inn is considerably older than it now appears to be and stood on the old main road.  It was taken over by Greenwich Inc and closed suddenly in 2014.
John Humpheries House. The first local authority computer centre built 1963 for London On Line Local Authorities and their Leo 3. The Metropolitan Borough of Greenwich had been the lead authority but the new London Borough left the consortium in 1969.  John Humpheries was the Greenwich Borough Treasurer. Demolished in 2011
University of Greenwich. on the site of John Humpheries House. New university library, TV Studios and the School of Architecture & Construction by Architects Heneghan Peng. Opened 2014.
Greyhound Hotel. Demolished. This was a major hotel in 19th Greenwich, holding balls and it was where the masons met.

Straightsmouth
There has been considerable speculation about this road – if it is Roman, if it is an old main road, and what the name of the road derives from.
Gospel Hall. In 1902, the hall was an Iron Room, made of corrugated iron. In the Second World War a V2 destroyed it and several houses. In the 1950s the Iron Room was rebuilt, but this time out of asbestos concrete. In the 1980s, British Rail, who owned the land, wanted to redevelop. The planning permission said that the hall should be included. The Gospel Hall is now on the ground floor of a new building with flats above.
Zigzag footpath, arched brick footbridge on a footpath linking Straightsmouth and Greenwich High Road andprobably contemporary with the railway of 1878.
Druids Arms Pub. Long closed and demolished

Thames Street
62 Old Loyal Britons. Pub which for a while was a restaurant. Claimed to be an old fire station, but shown as housing on old maps.

Trafalgar Grove
Reade and Travers Houses Flats. These were owed by Greenwich Hospital Estates for their pensioners. Sold in the late 1990s and now being replaced with posh flats.

Trafalgar Road
Trafalgar Estate.. This was built by Gowan for the London County Council in 1965. It is a quadrangle of maisonettes with the upper balconies passing through projecting wings. It recalls the workers' housing of the early Modern Movement in Europe.
Hardy Cottages. Built by the London County Council in 1902. An unpretentious estate on an early slum-clearance site
Good Duke Humphery Coffee House. Thus stood on the corner with Park Row and was a Temperance Hotel. It was replaced by East Greenwich Police Station and demolished in 1905
Police Station. Built on the site of the coffee house in 1908 and was itself Demolished after a V1 hit in 1944
Widow Smith's Almshouses. These were on the north side of the road on the corner with East (now Eastney) Street. They were founded in 1865, and built of red brick with stone dressings and leaded windows. The site is now a car park and the almshouses are amalgamated with the Penn Almshouses in Greenwich South Street

Turnpin Lane
This narrow pedestrian lane links Church Street and King William Walk and travels through the market area. Called after a pivoted turnstile called a’turnpin’

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St.Ursula’s School. Web site
Summerson. Georgian London. 
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The Greenwich Meridian
The Greenwich Phantom. Web site
The Royal Observatory. Greenwich
Thomas, London’s First Railway, 
Up the Creek. Deptford into the Eighties. 
Walford. Village London
Watson & Gregory, In the Meantime
Wood Wharf. A life preserver for the working Thames

Railway London Bridge to Gravesend. Maze Hill

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The Greenwich Railway Extension continues to travel westwards

Post to the west Greenwich
Post to the south Blackheath Village


Blackheath
Andrew Gibb Memorial Shelter. Built in 1931 and restored 2000s.     The Drinking fountain is in an octagonal shelter with eight pillars, a roof and no walls. The fountain is a circular basin on a pedestal. There is a weathervane on top of the shelter. There is a clock with four faces which was a bequest by Andrew Gibb who was a locally based ship-repairer and local philanthropist from Glasgow and a Mayor of the Metropolitan Borough of Greenwich.
Vanbrugh Pits. These are old gravel workings and have been left showing what much of Blackheath originally looked like, and would return to without constant mowing and maintenance. Pebbles from the Blackheath beds can be seen here.

Combe Avenue,
Estates by Geoffrey Powell of Chamberlin, Powell & Bon, 1961-5 and taken over by Greenwich Borough Council before completion.
Creed Place 
This is the northern section of the road, at the foot of Maze Hill after Sir James Creed whose home was by the park wall.
Dinsdale Road
The junction with Vanbrugh Hill marks a pre-development cluster of cottages
1 Rose Cottage. This house was here by 1801 and may have been a lodge for the Westcombe Estate.  Its western end was demolished in 1935 following a series of traffic accidents.
3 Shamrock Cottage. Was originally part of Rose Cottage`

Foyle Road
Follows the line of the boundary of the farmyard and kitchen garden of Westcombe House.
Greenwich Park
The park was enclosed in 1433 from 200 acres of heath & furze and remains Crown land.
Roman Road. Watling Street is a major Roman route running from Dover, eventually to northern England.  Its route from Dover to Greenwich Park seems to be clear, as is another route down Blackheath Hill. Its route through and from Greenwich Park seems to be the subject of considerable speculation in the past. A line of what is possibly a medieval road extends across a scarp and runs east to west. This could be the road enclosed in 1433 and it is the possible route of a Roman Road between London and Rochester. It has also been suggested that a Roman Road went down Old Dover Road across the Park to meet the Ravensbourne mouth and the old fishing village in Greenwich.  It is also thought that the Later Danes used the area for an encampment at Greenwich when raiding Kent and the South of England in the first decade of the 11th.
Roman Remains. From 1902 a mound in the park has been the subject of investigation and discussion about Roman artefacts found there.  The site was initially described as a ‘villa’ but it is now thought, following detailed excavation, that this was a temple or similar structure with associated buildings. It appears to originate around 100 AD, to be rectangular with a forecourt, and later to have been replaced by more substantial square building. The site of the building is marked by a flat-topped mound. It was probably in continuous use from 100-400.
Park Walls.  In 1619 James I had the park walled in at a cost of over £2,000 for the two mile boundary. A substantial part of the original wall stands today. However, and inevitably, it is full of patching and reworking and the actual 17th parts are not easy to identify.  There is also some Second World War bomb damage. Railings around the park are all modern replicas
Wilderness. Until 1906 deer roamed free but in 1928 a man was killed in the park by a stag and since then they have been kept in The Wilderness enclosure in the south east corner of the park.  Greenwich is the oldest of London's deer parks and has been home to Red and Fallow Deer since it was enclosed. The Wilderness is also a sanctuary for other wildlife - especially beetles such as the stag beetle. The ancient trees and dead wood habitat are also important for fungi. There is also a pond which is in a hollow which was a gravel pit between 1840 and 1870. The hollow can be still be seen.
Chestnut trees. There are 52 ancient sweet chestnuts which are relics of the formal avenues planted for Charles II in the 1660s. Their decaying hearts provide habitats for specialised invertebrates and fungi. They may look old but have many more years of life. There are also eight ancient oaks, a sycamore and a cedar n the veteran tree stock. There are however nearly 4000 trees in the park – but most are between 50 and 100 years old.
Pavilion Café. This is an octagonal building built in 1906. It has a dove-cot with a weather vane of Nelson looking through his telescope.
Bandstand. This was erected in 1891 and is in Bandstand Field. Its metal was cast by the Coalbrookdale Company. Near the bandstand are remains of tennis courts, and also some medieval ridge and furrow.
Gravel Pit. A small gravel pit is cut into the escarpment near the Roman temple. There may be another nearby. A large gravel pit stands east of Queen Elizabeth's Oak.
Secret Garden Wildlife Centre. In 2002 this was created from a derelict bulb store with the support of the Friends of Greenwich Park. It has educational equipment and information, a classroom, kitchenette and toilets. The classroom is also a hide with one-way glass in the windows.
The Flower Garden. This is in a gated area with no dogs allowed. It is one of the horticultural show pieces of Greenwich Park. Magnificent Cedar trees and Tulip trees set in fine lawns with seasonal beds of spring and summer flowers and it has the nature of an Edwardian park Garden.
Vanbrugh Gate and Lodge. This lodge is used by staff as a rest room
Queen Elizabeth's oak. According to legend, King Henry VIII once danced around this oak tree with Anne Boleyn, and Queen Elizabeth I was said to have often taken refreshment in its shade. By the time of the Tudors, the ancient oak tree was already around 400 years old. The tree died sometime in the 19th but it was held upright by the ivy that had grown around. Eventually in 1991 a heavy rain storm brought it down. It is still there but now horizontal angle and covered in bugs and fungus, it is also, apparently, a sweet chestnut. Alongside it is a new oak, planted in its memory by The Duke of Edinburgh in 1992, along with a plaque.
Keeper’s Cottage. This was near Queen Elizabeth’s Oak and was at least 17th. It was demolished in 1853.
One Tree Hill.  This has been the point from which many paintings and drawings of the park have been taken.  It has had many trees on it in the past, and has had more since the ‘one tree’ name was given to it. A large quarry cut into the east side of One Tree Hill in Greenwich Park. It measured 60 metres north-west, and 40 metres southeast, and is identified as a gravel pit on a map of 1695. Nearby is a long concrete channel which was a trough where the deer could get water.
Conduit Head at the foot of steps to One Tree Hill.  It is mentioned in Travers 17th survey of Greenwich and is thus likely to have had a predecessor.  The current structure is thought to be 1708 and it is thought possible it was designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor.  It is unaltered except that the central arch was blocked when the conduit system went t o use. It formed the entrance to a conduit running north to south under One Tree Hill.
Christie Enclosure. In William Christie, the then astronomer royal, wanted to relocate part of the magnetic observatory away from the main observatory to a site east of Blackheath Avenue. The new site was required to be magnetically neutral, and was originally known as the Magnetic Enclosure. It was completed in 1898. In March 1914, a second building was completed to house a set of modern magnetic instruments consisting of a thickly-walled outer room containing an inner room, well insulated by a considerable air-space. It was known as the Magnetograph Building. The Magnetic Pavilion was demolished in 1932 and the Magnetograph Building became known as the Meteorological Recording Building. It was demolished in 1959 when the Enclosure was cleared of buildings and returned to the Park.
Children’s playground. This has swings, slides and so on, plus a sand pit and toilets for the children. There are also some wooden sheep carved for the Olympics. .
Rustic Drinking Fountain on Lovers Walk. It is said that in 1860 this was connected to underground conduits. It is a slightly odd construction and has been described, by those into that sort of thing, as the Motherstone Fountain.
Drinking fountain. A 19th drinking fountain which was near the bandstand has been removed recently for repairs.  There is another smaller ‘trumpet’ fountain installed for the Olympics.
Old Nursery and Storeyard. This is in the south-east corner and has a number of utilitarian buildings like workshops and glasshouses.
Blackheath Avenue. Designed as part of the 1662 plan. The iron seats are replicas of late 19th ones

Humber Road
Westcombe House seems to have been built in the early 18th on the south side of the road about halfway along. It eventually became the home of Lavinia Fenton, who eventually was legitimised as the Duchess of Bolton. By the mid-19th it was the home of shipping magnate and shipbuilder Thomas Brocklebank. It was demolished after his death in 1843.
Lemmon Road
Built on the site of the former goods yard for Maze Hill Station.
Maze Hill,
This road is on the line of an ancient track way and its site shows how Greenwich Park was fitted into the existing framework of Greenwich Roads.  A Street here is marked as ‘Moys Hill’ on Rocque's 1745 map and as ‘Maze’ or ‘Maize ‘Hill’ on Bacon's map of 1888. It may be named for Sir Algernon May who lived nearby until 1693 or after Robert May who lived there in 1683. 
Greenwich War Memorial. This was installed in the early 1920s and is built of Portland stone. The central panel bears the arms of the Metropolitan Borough of Greenwich and is inscribed "Borough of Greenwich in glorious and grateful memory of the men of this borough who gave their lives in the Great War. The number exceeds 1600 and their names are recorded in a roll of honour deposited in this memorial." The plinth is inscribed "Also in grateful remembrance of those residents of the Borough who gave their lives to the country during the War 1939-1945".
John Roan School. The school was founded by John Roan in whose Will of 1643, was a bequest for the founding of a school for 'poor town-bred children of Greenwich'. The school moved to various sites and eventually to Maze Hill in 1928.  The site had been part of John Vanbrugh’s 18th estate and was known as Mince Pie Field. The school is a neo-Georgian building by Percy B. Dannatt & Sir Banister Fletcher, (his most important building after the Gillette factory) with two-storeys in red brick. Above the main doorway is the Roan coat of arms and the motto, "Honore et Labore. There is also by a clock tower with a cupola and tall brick chimneys. There are also many extensions and outbuildings. The Entrance hall has a war memorial to old boys who lost their lives in the First World War and other plaques from former schools. The central hall has a stage. Herringbone woodblock floor green-glazed tiles behind the radiators and inscriptions on the wood panelling. The Former headmaster's office retains the school's original time-clock. Outside is a grand pair of entrance gates painted and gilded surmounted by the Roan coat of arms. In 2014 it has newly been refurbished and updated.
The area outside of Vanburgh Castle has been called Maze Hill Green and in the 18th it featured a well, and a conduit and a pub called the Duke of Ormond’s Head.
Vanbrugh Castle. There is a plaque to Sir John Vanbrugh on the house. Vanbrugh himself lived there 1717-26 while working as Surveyor to the Royal Hospital.  He designed the castle himself, and it used to be called the 'Bastille'. In 1718 Vanbrugh acquired twelve acres here on which he built houses for his family and this is the only survivor. It is close to the park and is visible from the Royal Hospital. The house was originally smaller than it is now but was probably extended after Vanbrugh's marriage in 1719. Over the years it has had many more demolitions and extensions and the much of what remains was not actually built by Vanbrugh. From the 1920s it was an R.A.F. school for orphaned children. In 1976 the freehold was bought by the Blackheath Preservation Trust and it is now let out as four flats with a conversion by Gordon Bowyer & Partners in 1979. The gateway is a replacement for the original which was removed for road widening in 1906. 
Air raid shelter in the garden of Vanbrugh Castle leads to tunnels which connect to the Cedars next door. In 1985 investigations led to door down a flight of steps in the back garden of the Castle leading to a substantial undercroft. Another flight of stairs went to the surface but was covered by a concrete slab, at the end bricks had been removed to reveal a chamber in the sand.   A grating in front of the Castle led to a large underground cistern, and to small bricked up arches. It was concluded that this was part of a very ancient drainage system.
119 site of Mayfield Lode. The Kentish Mercury started there, printed in outbuildings behind the George Inn. From 1861 it was a home for the Rescue Society for Females - marked as ‘female reformatory’ on maps.  It was demolished din 1906.
117 This house is on the site of a pub called the George built around 1750. It gave a lot of trouble – hooligans and overflowing cess pool – closed and demolished 1906.
Maze Hill House. Site of 58-109. The house dated from the early 18th. From the 1850s it was home to some of the Soames family, Greenwich soap manufacturers. Demolished in the early 1930s
58-109 This cul-de-sac would have been a striking modern development when first built soon after 1932. It was built by J.T.Wallace for Walford Houses.
115 there is said to be the entrance to a sand mine in the garden, and that cart wheel tracks in the front show that vehicles could be used to get in.
79 there is said to be the entrance to Maze Hill conduit hidden in the back of the garden.
32-40 Row of five houses which were originally built as the Infirmary for the Royal Naval Asylum when it was based in the Queen's House. They were designed by Daniel Asher Alexander, and built 1808-9 and 1810-12, with housing for the assistant surgeon at one end. The site had previously been the burial ground of Greenwich Hospital closed in 1749. After the Royal Naval Asylum merged with Greenwich Hospital School in 1821 the building was divided into housing for Hospital staff and later leased out for conversion into private houses
40 enlarged in 1864 probably by Philip Charles Hardwick. In the garden is the officers' mausoleum for the Royal Hospital, designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor, built in 1713-4. It was re-roofed and the arched openings were filled up in approximately 1820. It ceased to be used for internments and sealed in 1749
41 This was built in 1916 by the local authority as Greenwich Tuberculosis Dispendary and later became known as Greenwich Chest Clinic. It is now a private house.
14 East Greenwich Telephone Exchange. This backs onto the site of what was the Royal Mail sorting office in Greenwich Park Street.
Tom Smith Close
Maze Hill Station. This station was  opened in 1873 by the South Eastern Railway and for its first five years was the terminus on a line which went to the junction with the North Kent Line west of Charlton. In 1878 a cut-and-cover tunnel link between Greenwich and Maze Hill was opened and thus finally completed a through line from the London and Greenwich Railway to the North Kent Line.  The station had three platforms – with an island platform to the north, and a goods yard on either side of the line.  In 1926 the line here was electrified using the 750V DC third rail system. 1873.  In 1945 a V2 fell nearby injuring 19 people and damaging the booking hall and waiting room. On 1958 there was a collision between two trains at Maze Hill when a passenger train from Gravesend Central ran past the Up Home signal at danger and collided head-on with an empty steam passenger stock train which was being shunted from the Up Sidings towards the Down line. The collision took place at a speed 25 mph. Forty-three people were injured although none seriously. During the 1990s a pedestrian tunnel under the line was closed.  In 2002 the station was the scene of a fight between Charlton Athletic and Southampton football hooligans that became known as The Battle of Maze Hill. There has been an ongoing discussion on opening an entrance on the up side from Seren Park, flats built on the site of the previous nurses’ home. 
Restell Close
Three tower blocks were built here in the 1960s to supplement accommodation for hospital staff. They have been adapted and replaced by a development called Seren Park built in the early 2000s.

Tuskar Street
Hatcliffe Almshouses.  These are managed and funded by The Greenwich Charities of William Hatcliffe and the Misses Smith. This is a charity established around 1690 runs this Almshouse and also distributes grants to individuals and other organisations to help elderly people in the Greenwich area to remain in their own homes. Its income is derived The Hatcliffe Estate Charity which owns a portfolio of residential and commercial premises in East Greenwich.
Salvation Army. This hall is now private housing

Vanbrugh Fields
Vanbrugh Fields today constitutes a road running south from Vanbrugh Hill to join Maze Hill at Blackheath.   It appears that in 1718 John Vanbrugh leased and built on a plot of land to which this was the eastern border, with Maze Hill to the west – roughly the site of John Roan School and Highmore Road. Vanbrugh Castle, his own home, was on the north western corner of the site and on the rest of it he built four houses – all extraordinary and eccentric.  Had they been built a hundred years later we would describe them as ‘Gothic’.  He enclosed the area with a brick wall and built a gatehouse to the estate at the south end. 
Vanbrugh House – in what is now Westcombe Park Road
13-16 these are on the site of Vanbrugh’s White Tower, north – this was in white brick. It was demolished by 1908.
11-14 these are on the site of Vanbrugh’s Nunnery – also known as the Mince Pie House. It was single storey, white and rambling.  It was demolished in 1911.
8-10 these are on the site of Vanbrugh’s White Tower, south. This was also built in white brick.  It was later known as Vanbrugh Lodge or Vanbrugh Court. It was still occupied in 1908 but it is not there now
Gateway.  This consisted of two towers with a high rounded arch between them. Beside each gateway is a cottage, which may be older.  It was demolished around 1911.

Vanbrugh Hill
This was once called Love Lane or Conduit Lane. In 1932 a five foot high conduit was discovered on the west side, hence the name.
Maze Hill Woodlands. This was a sand and gravel pit known as Ballast Field and as Gravel Pit Field. In the 17th this was owned by Sir John Morden and probably supplying gravel as ballast for ships.
Maze Hill Woodlands. It is now sycamore woodland with holly, hawthorn, and exotic species on a very steep and dangerous slope; managed by the Blackheath Preservation Society and a local group as a small nature reserve. Access is very limited.
Woodlands. This house was built on part of the site of what later became the nurses' homes adjacent to the ballast pits. Demolished in 1927.
31 19th cottage which was the lodge for Woodlands House. It is now the entrance to Lasseter Close.
Nurses Home. This was built in 1927 by Pite Son and Fairweather for the Metropolitan Borough of Greenwich as housing for staff at what was then the Borough owned St. Alfege’s Hospital.  It was sold by NHS and is now private housing.
6 plaque to Sir Frank Dyson. Director of Greenwich Observatory from 1910 to 1933.

Vanbrugh Park
Drill Hall. This dated from the late 1850s early 1860s and was designed by Alfred Gilbert. Over the door was the Kentish Invicta. It was built for the 25th (Blackheath) Corps but was used by others. Inside was very grand with lots of ironwork painted red, blue and gold. When Hollyhedge House was built in the 1880s it fell out of use and became a scene painter’s work shop.  In the Second World War it was used as an ambulance station and it was burnt out in 1951. Parkside flats are now on the site.

Westcombe Park Road,
3 The Cedars.  This was built in 1867 on the site of the Red House. The Red House stood next to and east of Vanbrugh Castle and dated from around 1718. Eventually its name was changed to The Cedars and it became home to some of the soap making Soames. In 1846 a group of robbers were found in passages under the house. It was demolished after 1853 and the current house built.
John Roan School.  This was built as an annexe to the main school in 1981 by the Greater London Council by architects A. Webb and G. Denison. It has now been demolished and a new building erected in late 2014.
36-40 these are roughly on the site of Vanbrugh House. Vanbrugh House. This stood at what is now the northern end of Vanbrugh Fields near the eastern corner with Westcombe Park Road. It was built for Vanbrugh's younger brother. It became used as a school in the 1850s and was called Ivy House. It appears to have had two big round towers on both sides of a square central section. It was demolished before 1903.
Westcombe Manor House. This was on the north side of what is now Westcombe Park Road between Foyle Road and Vanbrugh Hill.   The old house was then demolished and a new one built to the north in the 1720s.
Westcombe Park.  In the early 18th a developer began to set up a small park running south from this house roughly between what are now Vanbrugh Hill, Beaconsfield Road, and the railway. The park continued to be used as a local amenity with specimen trees until developed in the late 19th.

Woodland Crescent
Maze Hill School. This was built as a specialist school for children with severe handicaps. It has been built in 1971 by the Inner London Education Authority, and was said to be architecturally distinguished.  It was closed in 2001 replaced by housing.  There was a previous school on the site
Woodlands Park Road
Maze Hill Pottery. This is in what was the ticket office for Maze Hill Station. Which went out of use in the 1970's. It was taken over by Lisa Hammond in 1994. At the back was built the first soda glaze trolley kiln in the UK. T s only a few miles from the site of the first known salt glaze kiln at Woolwich, and Erith, where Royal Doulton produced salt glaze ware until 1956. Two bricks from that site are in the top of the Maze Hill kiln's chimney as a memento.

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Blue Plaque Guide
Business Cavalcade of London
Chelsea Speleological Society. Newsletter
Clunn. The face of London
Egan. Kidbrooke
Friends of Greenwich Park. Web site
Glencross. The buildings of Greenwich
Greenwich Antiquarians Transactions.
Greenwich Park. Web site
LeGear.  Kent Underground,
London Borough of Greenwich. Web site
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Nature Conservation in Greenwich
Pastscape. Web site
Pevsner and Cherry. South London
Platts. History of Greenwich
Rhind. Blackheath Village and its Environs.
Rhind. The Heath
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Royal Parks. Web site
South East London Industrial Archaeology
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Spurgeon. Discover Greenwich and Charlton
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The Greenwich Phantom. Web site
Thorn. South London Old and New
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