Showing posts with label Bodysnatchers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bodysnatchers. Show all posts

Monday, December 01, 2025

'The Golden Boy of Pye Corner'

The golden statue of the Golden Boy of Pye Corner

"This boy is
in Memory Put up
for the late FIRE of
LONDON
Occasion'd by the
Sin of Gluttony
1666."

At the corner of Cock Lane and Giltspur Street you will find this unassuming golden statue. Once you have seen and understood the meaning of the statue, you will never look at it the same way again.

Back in 1666 it was close to this spot, on Pye Corner, that the Great Fire of 1666 was finally extinguished.

A newspaper cutting
A newspaper cutting.

At some point, possibly in the Victorian era, a fig leaf was added to the statue, due to complaints from passersby. This newspaper cutting tells some of the story.

But why a golden statue of a chubby boy?

An inscription, below the statue, reads as follows:

The boy at Pye Corner was
erected to commemorate 
the staying of the Great
Fire which, beginning at
Pudding Lane, was ascribed
to the sin of Gluttony
when not attributed to
the Papists, as on the
Monument. And the boy was
made prodigiously fat to
enforce the moral. He was
originally built into the
front of a public house
called 'The Fortune of War',
which used to occupy
this site and was pulled
down in 1910.

'The Fortune of War' was
the Chief House of Call, 
north of the river, for
Resurrectionists in body
snatching days. Years ago.
the landlord used to show
the room where, on benches
round the walls, the bodies
were placed, labelled
with the snatchers'
names, waiting till the
surgeons at Saint
Bartholomew's could run
round and appraise them.

So, this statue represents God punishing the sin of gluttony, as the fire started at Pudding Lane and ended at Pie Corner. 

Monday, September 23, 2024

Watch House, Rotherhithe

Watch House, Rotherhithe

This Watch House, on St Marychurch Street, was used by Watchmen in the 19th century. 

Constructed in 1821 it was built as a twin to the Old Rotherhithe Fire Engine House, just a bit further along Saint Marychurch Street.

It has a single floor, above ground, and a basement level, which contained a cell.

The Watchmen who were stationed here would patrol the local area in an effort to deter criminal activity. If a watchman found someone acting suspiciously they would be brought back to the Watch House, where they were kept in a cell until either being discharged or imprisoned.

This particular Watch House backs on to St Mary's Churchyard. One of the jobs watchmen were called upon to undertake was the protection of the dead. Bodysnatchers, or 'Resurrection Men' as they were known, who stole corpses for for medical research at Guy's Hospital, often visited graveyards in an attempt to find 'fresh' bodies.

The former burial ground is now St Mary's Churchyard Gardens, and the Watch House is now the Watchhouse Cafe. 

The building is Grade II listed.

Charlie Rouse
Charles 'Charlie' Rouse, circa 1850.

Being a Watchmen was originally an unpaid civic duty for the local townspeople. Eventually it would become a 'profession', with Watchmen receiving a small sum for their time.

Their local parish would set down the routes that were to be followed, which they would patrol from 21:00 to 06:00. 

They were known to call out the time and weather every hour, check for fires, ensure that the village folk had locked their doors, among other things. Occasionally, townsfolk would pay the Watchmen a small sum of money to act as a walking alarm clock, waking those that had paid at a specific time.

Watch House, Bethnal Green

There are still some similar Watch Houses in and around London. like the one above which is at St Matthew's Church Gardens, Bethnal Green.