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| Bow Creek & The River Lea (left) and Limehouse Cut (right). |
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| Bromley-by-Bow Gasworks Memorial Gardens. |
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| Looking north along Bow Creek. |
Come with me as I explore London's history, hidden gems and unusual places.
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| Bow Creek & The River Lea (left) and Limehouse Cut (right). |
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| Bromley-by-Bow Gasworks Memorial Gardens. |
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| Looking north along Bow Creek. |
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| York Square Gardens, the inspiration for Albert Square, Walford. |
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| The Queen's Head, the inspiration for The Queen Victoria pub in EastEnders. |
The next time you’re visiting Canary Wharf, take a moment to look beyond the towering glass and steel. You are standing in a place with a history that is as rich, complex, and sometimes brutal, as any in London: Welcome to the West India Docks.
Once the beating heart of a global trading empire, these docks tell a fascinating story of ambition, immense wealth, human cost, and ultimate transformation.
Before the West India Docks, the River Thames was a chaotic mess of ships, theft, and congestion. Enter the powerful West India merchants, who successfully lobbied for dedicated, secure docks. The result was the West India Dock Act of 1799, paving the way for a revolutionary development on the Isle of Dogs.
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| Andrew Baldwin's 'Cab Tree' above the Orchard Cafe. |
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| 'Aqua Gill' by Andrew Baldwin. |
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| Trinity Buoy Wharf Chain Store and Lighthouse. |
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| A Robin visits Andrew Baldwin's 'Man' sculpture. |
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| Part of the 'Longplayer Live' instrument. |
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| 'Longplayer' has been running since the year 2000. |
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| Singing Bowls. |
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| The original footbridge. |
St Katharine Docks, which was the only major project of Thomas Telford in London, opened in 1828. His idea was to use as much of the land as possible for warehouses and to limit quayside space, ensuring cargo was lifted directly into the warehouses.
Because of the way he designed the docks, narrow footpaths allowed workers to walk around the site. However, to get from one side of the dock to the other could take some time, so Thomas Rhodes, the resident engineer of Telford, designed this retractable bridge, between the Central Basin and the East Dock.
Constructed with iron castings and wrought iron forgings, by John Lloyd, the bridge was linked to rail-mounted cast iron counterweight boxes that allowed it to stretch across the dock. Using a rack and pinion system the bridge could be retracted into the masonry of the dock walls.
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| The housing for the bridge. |
The Hope and Orchard
Throughout the middle ages Orchard Place was green and rural, remaining that way into the late 18th century.
Orchard House and its orchard, which took up most of the eastern branch, was owned by Mr Wright from 1743-1766.
Goodluck Hope took up much of the northern branch of the peninsula and belonged to the Manor of Stepney. It had a cooperage, a fishery, grazing meadows and a good sized house, called Handlebury. It was also known as Hanbury or Handle Hall and was demolished in 1804.
In 1810 Robert Wigram, who was an East India merchant who had helped to set up the East India Dock Company, in 1803, bought Goodluck Hope, calling it the Wigram Estate.
In 1815 the East India Company bought Orchard House, as the new East India Docks were just next door.
The first industry on Bow Creek was a copperas works. Bow Creek was ideal for this work as London Clay was full of iron pyrites, from which copperas could be extracted. Copperas, an iron sulphate, was used as an ingredient in sulphuric acid, as a fixative for wool and, up until the 19th century, it made the black of ink.
By the late 18th century competition from the north had grown too strong for copperas works in the south. This, along with other factors, saw the last of the copperas works close, early in the 19th century.
Mapping History
Between 1700 and 1820 Orchard Place was transformed from a semi-rural backwater to a busy centre of national importance for trade and industry. So many businesses sprang up, went bust or grew and moved that the maps of 19th century Orchard Place are different every decade.
The Age of Iron and Steam
In 1810 an iron bridge was built to provide a road linking East India Docks and Canning Town, but had to be torn down, in 1887, after a collier barge crashed into it.
In 1840 a railway was opened to link Orchard Place with the City, with trains leaving from Fenchurch Street and arriving at Blackwall station. This would become the London and Blackwall Railway that not only transported goods, but people who were taking trips to the seaside via a paddle steamer. These steamers went to Gravesend and Rosherville Gardens, Northfleet.
In 1862 the Great Eastern Railway was formed, running services to East Anglia. It's locomotives were built at Stratford, while the engine sheds were just up river from Orchard Place.
In 1902 the Midlands manufacturers, Baldwins Limited, brought the Blackwall Galvanised Iron Company to Orchard Place, where they had workshops for much of the 20th century. One of the directors was Stanley Baldwin, who would go on to become Prime Minister.
The Thames Plate Glass Company
The Thames Plate Glass Company, founded in 1835, was the only plate glass factory in the South of England, and was famed for the size of glass it produced and for the finish. No other glass company could match the size of glass produced here. Nearly half of its employees were women, as their 'superior delicacy of touch' allowed for better grinding and polishing of the glass.
Its glass was used for lenses, mirrors, theatre scenery and the Bow Creek Lighthouse, which still stands, and in which Michael Faraday experimented.
In 1862 Henry Dircks and John Pepper used Thames Plate Glass to create a theatrical optical illusion that would go on to be called 'Dr Pepper's Ghost'. So popular was this illusion that the company sold out of Ghost glass.
Well known for embracing the latest technologies, the Thames Plate Glass Company was the first to use the glass rollers designed by Sir Henry Bessemer.
In 1874, following competition from the North, and abroad, the company closed.
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| A photo of both lighthouses, circa 1900s. |
Walking along Cloister's Walk, in St Katharine Docks, you will discover a plethora of bright panels fixed into the arches that separate Cloister's Walk from St Katharine's Way.
There are one hundred and thirty five of these panels, with nine panels per arch.
Some of the designs are repeated, but sometimes with a different colour. However, each tells a story.
Dale Devereux Barker RE was commissioned for this project by Taylor Woodrow Properties, back in 1998.
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| Headstones. |
Victoria Park Cemetery opened in 1845 and was the last of the eight private garden cemeteries to open.
The cemetery was unconsecrated and, when it opened, had two chapels, designed by the architect Arthur Ashpitel,
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| The great Gothic archway. |
The great Gothic archway, restored in 2017, still stands at one of the entrances emblazoned with 'VPC 1845'.
During its short existence over 300,000 bodies were interred here, with three-quarters of them being children.
Although well-managed initially, it was a poor financial venture and became insolvent in 1853, leading to its closure in 1876.
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| Headstones. |
Following its closure the monuments were cleared... But, the bodies were never removed.
This bridge is typical of many railway bridges in London, or the rest of the country for that matter. However, this bridge has a special place in London history and to find out more we must travel back to 1944.
On Tuesday June 13, 1944, at around 04:30, the first V-1 flying bomb, also known as 'buzz bomb' or 'doodlebug', to hit London, detonated on this railway bridge, which carries the London North Eastern Railway from Liverpool Street.
The blast severely damaged the bridge and demolished twelve houses and over fifty others were damaged, with much of the damage occurring on Antill Road, Belhaven Street and Burnside Street.
Six people lost their lives, while another forty-two were injured.
The bridge, being a vital transport route, was repaired and operational by 19:45 on June 14. This repaired bridge would stay in place until the entire bridge was replaced in 1948.
During the 1830s and 1840s eight private cemeteries were created in an attempt to solve the problem of overcrowding in Victorian London's churchyards.
This was brought about by a number of factors that included the rapidly increasing rates in birth and mortality and a migration of people from rural areas to the city, due, in part, to the Industrial Revolution.
In 1831 London suffered a cholera epidemic and public health became a major issue. It was believed that poisonous vapours from decomposing bodies was a factor in the outbreak of both cholera and typhoid.
As churchyards became full graves were dug at a depth of just 3 feet (1 metre) and, within a few months, were used again.
'Resurrection Men' were another problem. These Resurrectionists would raid cemeteries in order to snatch a body, which would then be sold to hospitals for medical students to dissect. These body snatchers would select a grave and then dig a hole at the head end. They then broke the coffin and, using a rope, dragged out the body, thus not having to do a full excavation. They were also careful not to take any jewellery or clothes, as this would result in more serious charges, punishable by transportation to the colonies. Bodies belonged to no one, so their removal was a far less serious charge.
Such was the proliferation of 'body snatching' that Watch Houses were built, besides graveyards, and were manned by armed watchmen.
In 1832 an Act was passed by Parliament that encouraged the construction of private cemeteries outside central London.
Between 1833 and 1845 eight garden cemeteries were established, four of which were consecrated by the Bishop of London, Charles James Blomfield.
According to census records London's population was one million, in 1801, but had doubled to two million by 1841. At this point London had a death rate of over 45,000 people a year, or 125 people a day.
In 1981 Hugh Meller, an architectural historian, dubbed the surviving group of cemeteries 'The Magnificent Seven', after the movie of the same name.
Each of these cemeteries is unique, making them all worthy of a visit.
The Olympic Bell, which Bradley Wiggins rung to signal the opening of the London 2012 Olympics, now hangs rather forlornly outside the London Stadium.
It is a monster of a bell that will, in all likelihood, hang hear for the rest of its days, never to be rung again. This seems to be a waste of a bell, to me, as a bell is designed and tuned to be rung.
Having never seen it up close I was shocked by the sheer size of it.
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| "Be not afeard; the isle is full of noises" - The Tempest |
On the north bank of the River Thames, just east of Tower Bridge, there is a wonderful fountain of a girl swimming with a dolphin.
It is a stunning sculpture that has stood on this spot since 1973 and is passed by millions of visitors, each year. Because of its location, beside Tower Bridge, it offers some great photo opportunities.
This bronze sculpture is the work of David Wynne, who, throughout his career, focussed much of his work on animals. His most famous piece is 'Guy the Gorilla' in Crystal Palace Park.
David Wynne studied zoology at Cambridge University, but this just led him to become a sculptor.
In order to get this statue correct, David swam with a dolphin for hours, feeling that this more practical approach would make the sculpture more realistic.
His approach worked, as this bronze sculpture seems to have caught a moment in time. The young girl, with her hair trailing behind her, is swimming down, while the dolphin rises to meet her,
Because this is a bronze sculpture, David Wynne had to use double cantilevers to ensure that the weight of the bronze could be held, thereby ensuring 'Girl with a dolphin' would continue to swim, for years to come.
'Girl with a dolphin' has a twin. On Cheyne way, Chelsea, there is a similar statue named 'Boy with a dolphin'. It depicts a boy, modelled on David's son, Roly, holding on to the dolphin's fin as they swim through the water.
This sculpture was unveiled in 1974..
Tragically, Roly took his own life in 1999, so his father dedicated the statue to Roly.
David Wynne died in 2014.
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| Looking along the Ornamental Canal towards The Shard. |
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| The old walls of the London Docks. |
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| Not navigable, but full of wildlife. |
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| The Tobacco Dock warehouses were built in 1812. |
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| Hydraulic ram. |
Historic places can be easily missed, even when walking the streets and roads of London.
It was while wandering along Westferry Road, on the Isle of Dogs, that I found what looked like a car park and an ordinary entranceway to the River Thames.
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| At first glance it looks like a simple slipway. |
What made me stop were the bollards at the top of the ramp. These weren't your typical car park bollards, but ones that I have seen countless times near docks and mooring sites. So, I decided to take a closer look.
Heading down the slipway I saw some obviously old machinery, to my left. On closer inspection I discovered that this was a hydraulic ram, once used for closing the long disappeared lock gates.
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| Hydraulic ram. |
The ramp itself was modern, although, as I approached the foreshore, a portion of the old ramp could be seen almost completely covered by sand, rubble and pieces of clay pipes that litter London's beaches.