Authors: Richard Guard
Vauxhall remained a fashionable venue, hosting the latest musicians and contemporary theatre, redesigning its gardens as taste and style demanded until the end of the 18th century when its
popularity faltered.
The opening of Nine Elms railway terminus in 1838 effectively ended the gardens rural seclusion. The very last night of opening was 25 July 1859, the land being sold off for building development
that was to devour rural south London over the next fifty years.
T
HE RIVER WAS THE SOURCE OF FRESH WATER FOR
the Romans when they founded the city. It rose in Finsbury, ran along the route of Curtain Road and Apollo
Street, through Bank and into the Thames at the site of today’s Cannon Street Station.
It was too narrow and shallow to be used for navigation, although excavation has revealed a Roman wooden dock where it entered the Thames. Its route to the river after passing
Bank is remembered in a nearby eponymous street name.
It was long suspected that the Romans built a temple here on its banks, and in 1889 a relief of the god Mithras was discovered – he is shown slaying a bull. At the same time a statue of a
reclining river god was also found, 20 feet deep. The area was devastated by Second World War bombing and further discoveries were made in 1954.
Records show that by the late 13th century the river was so filthy that city officials decreed it must be ‘made free from dung and other nuisances’. One hundred years later it was
again reported to be totally blocked by rubbish thrown in by residents who lived along its banks. When St Margarets Lothbury was rebuilt in 1440 much of the river was covered over on orders of the
Lord Mayor, Robert Lange, who paid for much of the work. By the time John Stow published his seminal
Survey of London
in 1598, the river had gone and Stow says ‘the course of Walbrook
is now hidden underground, and thereby hardly known’.
T
HE
T
HAMES WAS THE MAIN THOROUGHFARE
of London until the modern period of bridge building that started after the construction
of Westminster Bridge in 1750.
Unregulated and often chaotic, the state first attempted to control river traffic with an act of Parliament in 1514 aimed at fixing fares. A further act in 1555 drew up the
‘Rulers of all Watermen and Wherrymen working between Gravesend and Windsor’. This led to the formation of the Company of Watermen and Lightermen. Their livery hall, built in 1780, is
still open at St Mary’s Hill,
EC
4.
By 1600 it is estimated that there were 40,000 people earning a living transporting people and goods across the river. The Company ran a seven-year apprenticeship, something like the Knowledge
for today’s black cab drivers. Watermen were prone to disease, due to the river pollution, especially after the invention of the flush toilet, which turned the Thames effectively into an open
sewer. Boatmen faced two other great risks – violent crime, normally committed at night, and attempting to ‘shoot the bridge’.
The ancient London Bridge so restricted the flow of the river, due to the numerous waterwheels constructed between its nineteen piers, that the water rushed with awesome force between the
central navigable arch. The difference in height was over 5ft at high tide, and it is estimated that 30 people lost their lives in the furious waters every year.
Westminster
W
ITH OVER
1500
ROOMS STRETCHING ACROSS
23 acres from Northumberland Avenue to the current Houses of Parliament, this was once
one of the largest royal palaces in Europe.
The home of the British monarchy from as early as 1049, its heyday was during the reign of Henry
VIII
. His annexing of Cardinal Wolsey’s property
– along with his expansion of the palace (adding tennis courts, a bowling alley, a tilting yard used for jousting and a cockpit) – cemented its place at the heart of government, a
position the area has retained to this day. It was here that Henry
VIII
married both Anne Boleyn and Jane Seymour.
In 1622 James
I
had the Banqueting Hall built. It was designed by Inigo Jones, with a ceiling painted by Sir Paul Reubens. Ironically, it was outside this last major
Whitehall expansion that James
I
’s ill-starred son, Charles, was beheaded on 30 January 1649.
The Banqueting Hall was one of the few buildings to survive a fire in 1691 that destroyed much of the Palace’s magnificent medieval structure, as well as many fine works of art, including
Michelangelo’s sculpture of Cupid and Holbein’s portrait of Henry
VIII
. The great London diarist, John Evelyn, recorded the following day: ‘Whitehall
burnt! Nothing but walls and ruins left.’
I
T IS INCREDIBLE THAT SO MANY OF
S
IR
Christopher Wren’s churches were destroyed, many lost to Victorian
developments:
CHURCHES DEMOLISHED:
All Hallows, Bread Street; All Hallows the Great, Lombard Street; All Hallows, Lombard Street; St Antholin, Watling Street;
St Bartholomew, Exchange; St Benet Fink, Threadneedle Street;
St Benet, Gracechurch Street; St Christopher-le-Stocks, Threadneedle Street; St Dionis Backchurch, Fenchurch Street;
St Matthew, Friday Street; St Michael, Bassishaw;
St Michael, Crooked Lane; St Michael, Queenhithe;
St Michael, Wood Street; St Mildred, Poultry
CHURCHES LOST FOR OTHER REASONS:
St Mary Magdalene, Fish Street (gutted by fire 1886)
.
CHURCHES WHERE ONLY THE TOWER REMAINS:
St Alban, Wood Street (destroyed by bombing in 1940);
St Anne’s Church, Soho (demolished in 1953 after war damage)
St Dunstan in the East (destroyed by bombing in 1941)
St Mary Somerset, Thames Street (demolished in 1871)
St Olave, Old Jewry (demolished 1888–9)
CHURCHES DESTROYED BY WORLD WAR II BOMBING:
Christ Church, Newgate Street (only ruins remain);
The Cloisters, Pump Court, Middle Temple (1940–1);
St Augustine, Watling Street (1945); St Mildred, Bread Street (1941);
St Stephen, Coleman Street (1940);
St Swithin, Cannon Street, (1941)
Ackerman’s
ref1
Adam and Eve Tea Gardens
ref1
Agar Town, Kings Cross
ref1
Agar, William
ref1
Aldwych
ref1
Alhambra Theatre
ref1
Alleyn, Edward
ref1
Alsatia
ref1
Apollo Club
ref1
Archer, John
ref1
Aris, Thomas
ref1
Atmospheric Railway
ref1
Bach, J S
ref1
Bambridge, Thomas
ref1
Bank
ref1
Barbican
ref1
Barham, John
ref1
Bartholomew Fair
ref1
Baum, John
ref1
Baynard’s Castle
ref1
Bazelgette, Sir Joseph
ref1
bear and bull baiting
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
Bear Gardens, Clerkenwell
ref1
Belair Park
ref1
Belasyse, Thomas, 1st Earl of Fauconberg
ref1
Bell Tavern, Kilburn
ref1
Betterton, Thomas
ref1
Blackheath
ref1
Blessington, Countess of
ref1
Bon Marché
ref1
Bonaparte, Napoleon
ref1
Booth, Charles
ref1
Boswell, James
ref1
Boyle, Robert
ref1
Brandon, Richard
ref1
Bridewell Palace
ref1
Brummel, Beau
ref1
Brunner Mond chemical factory
ref1
Bullock, William
ref1
Bunhill Fields
ref1
Burford’s Panorama
ref1
Burton, Decimus
ref1
Byron, Lord
ref1
Camden
ref1
Carlisle House
ref1
Carlyle, Jane
ref1
Casanova
ref1
Castaing, John
ref1
Catherine the Great
ref1
Cato Street conspirators
ref1
Cave, Edward
ref1
Cecil, William
ref1
Charing Cross
ref1
Charles I, King
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
Charles II, King
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
ref1
Charlton
ref1
Chaucer, Geoffrey
ref1
Chelsea Bun House, Pimlico
ref1
Chesterton, George
ref1
Chippendale’s Workshop
ref1
Christie, John Reginald
ref1
churches, Sir Christopher Wren’s
ref1
Cibber, Caius
ref1
Clagett, Chrispus
ref1
Clap, Margaret
ref1
Clare, Lord
ref1
Clare Market, Aldwych
ref1
Clegg, Samuel
ref1
Coldbath Fields Prison
ref1
Coleman, George
ref1
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
ref1
Colosseum, Regent’s Park
ref1
Coral, Joe
ref1
Cornhill fire (1748)
ref1
Costermonger’s Language
ref1
Cosway, Richard
ref1
Cottington, John ‘Mull Sack’
ref1
Cotton Library of Manuscripts
ref1
Crapper and Company Ltd
ref1
Cremorne Gardens
ref1
Cromwell, Oliver
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
Cross, Edward
ref1
Crosse & Blackwell
ref1
Crossing Sweepers
ref1
Crystal Palace
ref1
Cuckold’s Point
ref1
Daguerre, Jacques
ref1
Dance ‘the Younger,’ George
ref1
Darwin, Charles
ref1
d’Avenant, Sir William
ref1
d’Orsay, Count
ref1
de Berenger, Charles Random
ref1
de Coverley, Sir Roger
ref1
de Montfort, Simon
ref1
De Paris, Robert
ref1
Death Hunters
ref1
Defoe, Daniel
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
Devereux, Robert
ref1
Devil Public House
ref1
Dickens, Charles
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
Dioramas
ref1
Dog and Duck Public House
ref1
Dog Finders
ref1
Don Saltero’s Coffee House
ref1
Duke’s Company
ref1
Dulwich
ref1
Durham House, The Strand
ref1
Earl’s Court
ref1
Edward I, King
ref1
Edward III, King
ref1
Edward IV, King
ref1
Edward the Confessor
ref1
Edwards, George
ref1
Eel Pie House
ref1
Effra River
ref1
Egyptian Hall
ref1
Eleanor of Castille
ref1
Elizabeth I, Queen
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11
Enon Chapel
ref1
Essex House
ref1
Euston Arch
ref1
Evelyn, John
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
Execution Dock
ref1
Exeter House
ref1
Farr, James
ref1
Farringdon Market
ref1
Fauconberg House
ref1
Field of the Forty Footsteps
ref1
Fitzwalter, Matilda
ref1
Fleet Debtors’ Prison
ref1
,
ref2
Fleet Marriages
ref1
Fleet Street
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
Gaiety Theatre
ref1
Gamages
ref1
Gandhi
ref1
George, Chelsea
ref1
George I, King
ref1
George II, King
ref1
George III, King
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
German traders
ref1
Giffard, Henry
ref1
Giovanelli, Edward
ref1
Goodman’s Fields Theatre
ref1
Gordon, Frederick
ref1
Gordon, Lord George
ref1
Gore House
ref1
Grand Union Public House
ref1
Great Exhibition (1851)
ref1
,
ref2
Great Fire (1666)
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
Great Globe
ref1
Gunter’s Tea Shop
ref1
Hand, Richard
ref1
Hanover Square Rooms
ref1
Hardwicke, Lord
ref1
Harringay Stadium
ref1
Haydon, Benjamin
ref1
Henry VI, King
ref1
Henry VIII, King
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
Highbury Barn
ref1
Highbury Tavern
ref1
Hillocks, James Inches
ref1
Hippodrome Racecourse
ref1
Hitchin, Christopher
ref1
Hockley-in-the-Hole
ref1
Hogarth, William
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
Holborn Restaurant
ref1
Hollingshead, John
ref1
Holy Trinity convent
ref1
Hone, William
ref1
Horn Fair
ref1
Hornor, Thomas
ref1
Houndsditch
ref1
Houses of Parliament
ref1
Imperial War Museum
ref1
James I, King
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
James II, King
ref1
Jenny’s Whim
ref1
John Douglas, Maquis of Queensbury
ref1
Jonathan’s Coffee House
ref1
Jones, Inigo
ref1
Jonson, Ben
ref1
Kemp, William
ref1
Kensington
ref1
Kenwood House
ref1
Kidd, Captain
ref1
Kilburn Wells
ref1
Kings Cross
ref1
King’s Wardrobe
ref1
Kingsway Theatre
ref1
Knightly, T. E.
ref1
Lange, Lord Mayor Robert
ref1
Langham Place
ref1
Lansdowne House
ref1
Lawson, Lionel
ref1
Le Poor, Richard
ref1
Leicester House
ref1
Leicester Square
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
Leno, Dan
ref1
Lever, Aston
ref1
‘Liberties of the Fleet’
ref1
Lillie Bridge Grounds
ref1
Lincoln’s Inn Fields Theatre
ref1
Liverpool Street Station
ref1
,
ref2
London Bridge
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
London Bridge Waterworks
ref1
,
ref2
London Salvage Corps
ref1
London Stock Exchange
ref1
Lord Chamberlain’s Men
ref1
Louis XIV, King of France
ref1
Loutherbough, Philippe de
ref1