Aylwin Estate, SE1

Estate in/near Bermondsey, existing between the 1930s and now.

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(51.49675 -0.07906, 51.496 -0.079) 
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Estate · Bermondsey · SE1 ·
APRIL
4
2023
The Aylwin Estate is in Bermondsey.

It was largely built in the 1930s.


Licence: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike Licence


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CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE LOCALITY


The Underground Map   
Added: 20 Sep 2020 13:01 GMT   

Pepys starts diary
On 1 January 1659, Samuel Pepys started his famous daily diary and maintained it for ten years. The diary has become perhaps the most extensive source of information on this critical period of English history. Pepys never considered that his diary would be read by others. The original diary consisted of six volumes written in Shelton shorthand, which he had learned as an undergraduate on scholarship at Magdalene College, Cambridge. This shorthand was introduced in 1626, and was the same system Isaac Newton used when writing.

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Graham O’Connell   
Added: 10 Apr 2021 10:24 GMT   

Lloyd & Sons, Tin Box Manufacturers (1859 - 1982)
A Lloyd & Sons occupied the wharf (now known as Lloyds Wharf, Mill Street) from the mid 19th Century to the late 20th Century. Best known for making tin boxes they also produced a range of things from petrol canisters to collecting tins. They won a notorious libel case in 1915 when a local councillor criticised the working conditions which, in fairness, weren’t great. There was a major fire here in 1929 but the company survived at least until 1982 and probably a year or two after that.

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Admin   
Added: 26 Aug 2022 15:19 GMT   

Bus makes a leap
A number 78 double-decker bus driven by Albert Gunter was forced to jump an accidentally opening Tower Bridge.

He was awarded a £10 bonus.

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fariba   
Added: 28 Jun 2021 00:48 GMT   

Tower Bridge Business Complex, S
need for my coursework

Source: university

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Comment
Johna216   
Added: 9 Aug 2017 16:26 GMT   

Thanks!
I have recently started a web site, the info you provide on this site has helped me greatly. Thank you for all of your time & work. There can be no real freedom without the freedom to fail. by Erich Fromm. eeggefeceefb

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The Underground Map   
Added: 8 Mar 2021 15:05 GMT   

A plague on all your houses
Aldgate station is built directly on top of a vast plague pit, where thousands of bodies are apparently buried. No-one knows quite how many.

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Lived here
KJ   
Added: 11 Apr 2021 12:34 GMT   

Family
1900’s Cranmer family lived here at 105 (changed to 185 when road was re-numbered)
James Cranmer wife Louisa ( b.Logan)
They had 3 children one being my grandparent William (Bill) CRANMER married to grandmother “Nancy” He used to go to
Glengall Tavern in Bird in Bush Rd ,now been converted to flats.

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Comment
   
Added: 27 Jul 2021 14:31 GMT   

correction
Chaucer did not write Pilgrims Progress. His stories were called the Canterbury Tales

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Added: 3 Jun 2021 15:50 GMT   

All Bar One
The capitalisation is wrong

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Jonathan Cocking   
Added: 30 Aug 2022 13:38 GMT   

Tower Bridge, SE1
The driver subsequently married his clippie (conductress).

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Pearl Foster   
Added: 20 Mar 2023 12:22 GMT   

Dukes Place, EC3A
Until his death in 1767, Daniel Nunes de Lara worked from his home in Dukes Street as a Pastry Cook. It was not until much later the street was renamed Dukes Place. Daniel and his family attended the nearby Bevis Marks synagogue for Sephardic Jews. The Ashkenazi Great Synagogue was established in Duke Street, which meant Daniel’s business perfectly situated for his occupation as it allowed him to cater for both congregations.

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LATEST LONDON-WIDE CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE PROJECT

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Eileen   
Added: 10 Nov 2023 09:42 GMT   

Brecknock Road Pleating Company
My great grandparents ran the Brecknock Road pleating Company around 1910 to 1920 and my Grandmother worked there as a pleater until she was 16. I should like to know more about this. I know they had a beautiful Victorian house in Islington as I have photos of it & of them in their garden.

Source: Family history

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Comment
   
Added: 6 Nov 2023 16:59 GMT   

061123
Why do Thames Water not collect the 15 . Three meter lengths of blue plastic fencing, and old pipes etc. They left here for the last TWO Years, these cause an obstruction,as they halfway lying in the road,as no footpath down this road, and the cars going and exiting the park are getting damaged, also the public are in Grave Danger when trying to avoid your rubbish and the danger of your fences.

Source: Squirrels Lane. Buckhurst Hill, Essex. IG9. I want some action ,now, not Excuses.MK.

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Christian   
Added: 31 Oct 2023 10:34 GMT   

Cornwall Road, W11
Photo shows William Richard Hoare’s chemist shop at 121 Cornwall Road.

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Vik   
Added: 30 Oct 2023 18:48 GMT   

Old pub sign from the Rising Sun
Hi I have no connection to the area except that for the last 30+ years we’ve had an old pub sign hanging on our kitchen wall from the Rising Sun, Stanwell, which I believe was / is on the Oaks Rd. Happy to upload a photo if anyone can tell me how or where to do that!

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Comment
Phillip Martin   
Added: 16 Oct 2023 06:25 GMT   

16 Ashburnham Road
On 15 October 1874 George Frederick Martin was born in 16 Ashburnham Road Greenwich to George Henry Martin, a painter, and Mary Martin, formerly Southern.

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Lived here
Christine Bithrey   
Added: 15 Oct 2023 15:20 GMT   

The Hollies (1860 - 1900)
I lived in Holly Park Estate from 1969 I was 8 years old when we moved in until I left to get married, my mother still lives there now 84. I am wondering if there was ever a cemetery within The Hollies? And if so where? Was it near to the Blythwood Road end or much nearer to the old Methodist Church which is still standing although rather old looking. We spent most of our childhood playing along the old dis-used railway that run directly along Blythwood Road and opposite Holly Park Estate - top end which is where we live/ed. We now walk my mothers dog there twice a day. An elderly gentleman once told me when I was a child that there used to be a cemetery but I am not sure if he was trying to scare us children! I only thought about this recently when walking past the old Methodist Church and seeing the flag stone in the side of the wall with the inscription of when it was built late 1880

If anyone has any answers please email me [email protected]

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Comment
Chris hutchison   
Added: 15 Oct 2023 03:04 GMT   

35 broadhurst gardens.
35 Broadhurst gardens was owned by famous opera singer Mr Herman “Simmy”Simberg. He had transformed it into a film and recording complex.
There was a film and animation studio on the ground floor. The recording facilities were on the next two floors.
I arrived in London from Australia in 1966 and worked in the studio as the tea boy and trainee recording engineer from Christmas 1966 for one year. The facility was leased by an American advertising company called Moreno Films. Mr Simbergs company Vox Humana used the studio for their own projects as well. I worked for both of them. I was so lucky. The manager was another wonderful gentleman called Jack Price who went on to create numerous songs for many famous singers of the day and also assisted the careers of Bob Marley and Jimmy Cliff. “Simmy” let me live in the bedsit,upper right hand window. Jack was also busy with projects with The Troggs,Bill Wyman,Peter Frampton. We did some great sessions with Manfred Mann and Alan Price. The Cream did some demos but that was before my time. We did lots of voice over work. Warren Mitchell and Ronnie Corbett were favourites. I went back in 1978 and “Simmy “ had removed all of the studio and it was now his home. His lounge room was still our studio in my minds eye!!


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Comment
Sue L   
Added: 13 Oct 2023 17:21 GMT   

Duffield Street, Battersea
I’ve been looking for ages for a photo of Duffield Street without any luck.
My mother and grandfather lived there during the war. It was the first property he was able to buy but sadly after only a few months they were bombed out. My mother told the story that one night they were aware of a train stopping above them in the embankment. It was full of soldiers who threw out cigarettes and sweets at about four in the morning. They were returning from Dunkirk though of course my mother had no idea at the time. I have heard the same story from a different source too.

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NEARBY STREETS
102474, SE16 Aulay House is a block on Spa Road.
Abbey Gardens, SE1 Abbey Gardens is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Abbey Street, SE1 Abbey Street takes its name from Bermondsey Abbey which was situated between Bermondsey Square, Grange Walk and Long Walk.
Aberdour Street, SE1 Aberdour Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Acworth Street, SE1 Acworth Street was situated both off the Old Kent Road and Tower Bridge Road.
Alice Street, SE1 Alice Street is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Alscot Road, SE1 Alscot Road runs around Bermondsey Spa Gardens.
Amisha Court, SE1 Amisha Court is a block on Grange Road.
Arc House, SE1 Arc House is a block on Tanner Street.
Archdale House, SE1 Archdale House is a block on Cluny Place.
Archie Street, SE1 Archie Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Artbrand House, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Artesian Building, SE1 Artesian Building is a block on Alscot Road.
Arts Lane, SE16 A street within the SE16 postcode
Attilburgh House, SE1 Attilburgh House is a block on Abbey Street.
Bacon Grove, SE1 Bacon Grove is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Bakery Street, SE1 A street within the SE16 postcode
Bell Yard Mews, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Bell Yaroad Mews, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Bermondsey Exchange, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Bermondsey Square, SE1 Bermondsey Square is located on Tower Bridge Road, the former the site of Bermondsey Abbey.
Bevington Path, SE1 Bevington Path is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Black Eagle Yard, SE1 Black Eagle Yard is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Bluelion Place, SE1 Bluelion Place is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Boulogne House, SE1 Boulogne House is a block on The Grange.
Breton House, SE1 Breton House is a block on Abbey Street.
Bricklayers Arms Flyover, SE1 Bricklayers Arms Flyover is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Bridewain Street, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Bridge View Court, SE17 Bridge View Court is sited on Grange Road.
Bromleigh House, SE1 Bromleigh House is a block on Abbey Street.
Buckley Court, SE1 Buckley Court can be found on Alscot Road.
Burwash House, SE1 Burwash House can be found on Weston Street.
Bushbaby Close, SE1 Bushbaby Close is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Cadbury Way, SE16 Cadbury Way is a road in the SE16 postcode area
Calico House, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Cedar Court, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Chartes House, SE1 Chartes House is located on Stevens Street.
Chartham House, SE1 Chartham House is a block on Law Street.
Christmas Street, SE1 Christmas Street ran north from Tower Bridge Road, west of Green Walk.
City Walk, SE1 City Walk is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Coach House Mews, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Colour House, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Costermonger Building, SE16 Costermonger Building is located on Arts Lane.
Cottage, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Crimscott Street, SE1 Crimscott Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Curtis Street, SE1 Curtis Street is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Curtis Way, SE1 Curtis Way is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Decima Street, SE1 Decima Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Decima Studios, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Devon Mansions, SE1 Devon Mansions is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Dockhead, SE1 Dockhead is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Druid Street, SE1 Druid Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Dunkirk House, SE1 Dunkirk House is located on Unnamed Road.
Dunlop Place, SE16 A street within the SE16 postcode
Dunsterville Way, SE1 Dunsterville Way is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Eastwell House, SE1 Eastwell House is a building on Manciple Street.
Elm Court, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Enid Street, SE16 Enid Street has been radically altered since the Second World War.
Fendall Street, SE1 Fendall Street is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Futura House, SE1 Futura House is a location in London.
Futura House, SE17 Futura House is located on Grange Road.
Gedling Place, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Gemini House, SE1 Gemini House is a block on Bermondsey Street.
Godstone House, SE1 Godstone House can be found on Pardoner Street.
Goodwin Close, SE16 Goodwin Close is a road in the SE16 postcode area
Graduate Place, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Grange House, SE1 Grange House is a block on The Grange.
Grange Road, SE1 Grange Road is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Grange Walk Mews, SE1 Grange Walk Mews is a location in London.
Grange Walk, SE1 Grange Walk is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Grange Walk, SE16 Grange Walk is a road in the SE16 postcode area
Grange Yard, SE1 Grange Yard is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Green Walk, SE1 Green Walk was originally one of two Green Walks in Southwark, the other being in Bankside.
Griggs Place, SE1 Griggs Place is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Griggs Road, SE1 Griggs Road is a road in the E10 postcode area
Guinness Square, SE1 Guinness Square is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Gutenberg Court, SE1 Gutenberg Court is sited on Grange Road.
Haven Way, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Hazel Way, SE1 Hazel Way is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Headbourne House, SE1 Headbourne House is a block on Law Street.
Henley Drive, SE1 Henley Drive is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Henley Drive, SE16 Henley Drive is a road in the SE16 postcode area
Hepburn Building, SE1 Hepburn Building is a block on Grange Walk.
Hestia House, SE1 Hestia House is a block on City Walk.
Hoxton Square, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Hunter Close, SE1 Hunter Close is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Jamaica Road, SE1 The SE1 section of Jamaica Road dates only from the 1960s.
Kemsing House, SE1 Kemsing House is a block on Weston Street.
Kintore Way, SE1 Kintore Way is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Lamb Walk, SE1 Lamb Walk is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Larch Court, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Law Street, SE1 Law Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Leathermarket Court, SE1 Leathermarket Court is sited on Leathermarket Court.
Leathermarket Court, SE1 Leathermarket Court is a road in the SE1P postcode area
Leathermarket Street, SE1P Leathermarket Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Lenham House, SE1 Lenham House is a block on Manciple Street.
Leroy Street, SE1 Leroy Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Limasol Street, SE16 A street within the SE16 postcode
Little London Court, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Little London Mill House, SE1 Little London Mill House can be found on Dockhead.
Long Lane, SE1 Long Lane is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Long Walk, SE1 Long Walk is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Loveland Court, SE1 Loveland Court is located on Jamaica Road.
Maltby Street, SE1 Maltby Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Maltings Place, SE1 Maltings Place is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Marlow House, SE1 Marlow House is located on Maltby Street.
Mason Close, SE1 Mason Close is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Mason Street, SE1 Mason Street is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Mason Street, SE17 A street within the SE17 postcode
Mendham House, SE1 Mendham House can be found on Bermondsey Street.
Mill Stream Road, SE1 Mill Stream Road (or Millstream Road) was demolished to make way for the Arnold Estate.
Morocco Street, SE1 Morocco Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Mulvaney Way, SE1 Mulvaney Way is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Neckinger Mills, SE1 Neckinger Mills is a location in London.
Neckinger Place, SE1 Neckinger Place was a small turning off Druid Street.
Neckinger Street, SE1 Neckinger Street is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Neckinger, SE16 Neckinger is a road in the SE16 postcode area
New Amelia Apartments, SE1 New Amelia Apartments is a block on Abbey Street.
Newhams Row, SE1 Newhams Row is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Norman House, SE1 Norman House is a block on Riley Road.
Ockham Building, SE16 Ockham Building is a block on Arts Lane.
Old Abbey Lane, SE16 A street within the SE16 postcode
Old Town Hall Apartments, SE16 Old Town Hall Apartments is a building on Spa Road.
Pages Walk, SE1 Pages Walk is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Parchment Building, SE1 Parchment Building is a block on Grange Walk.
Parkers Row, SE1 Parkers Row is a street which has diminished in significance since it was first built.
Phoenix Wharf Road, SE1 Phoenix Wharf Road is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Pilgrim House, SE1 Pilgrim House is a building on Tabard Street.
Pope Street, SE1 Pope Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Potier Street, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Preston House, SE1 Preston House is a block on Stanworth Street.
Prioress Street, SE1 Prioress Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Priory Court, SE1 Priory Court is a block on Abbey Street.
Quadrangle Close, SE1 Quadrangle Close is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Queens Court, SE16 Queens Court is located on Old Jamaica Road.
Radcliffe Road, SE1 Radcliffe Road is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Rankin House 139-143, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Rephidim Street, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Riley Road, SE1 Riley Road is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Rope Walk, SE1 Rope Walk is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Rothsay Street, SE1 Rothsay Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Royal Oak Yard, SE1 Royal Oak Yard is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Rufus House, SE1 Rufus House is a block on Stanworth Street.
Scotts Sufferance Wharfmill Street, SE1 Scotts Sufferance Wharfmill Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Seal House, SE1 Seal House is a block on Pardoner Street.
Setchell Way, SE1 Setchell Way is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Shalford House, SE1 Shalford House is a block on Law Street.
Simla House, SE1 Simla House is a block on Dunsterville Way.
Skyline Court, SE1 Skyline Court is a block on Grange Yard.
St Lawrence House, SE1 St Lawrence House can be found on Purbrook Street.
St Owen House, SE1 St Owen House is sited on Abbey Street.
St Vincent House, SE1 St Vincent House is located on Fendall Street.
Stanworth Street, SE1 Stanworth Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Stevens Street, SE1 Stevens Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Swan Court, SE1 Swan Court is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Swan Mead, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Sweeney Crescent, SE1 Sweeney Crescent is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Sycamore Court, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Tanner House, SE1 Tanner House is a block on Tanner Street.
Tanner Street, SE1 Tanner Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Taper Building, SE1 Taper Building is a block on Long Lane.
The Glass House, SE1 The Glass House is a block on Royal Oak Yard.
The Grange, SE1 The Grange is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
The Italian Building, SE1 The Italian Building is a block on Dockhead.
The Leather Market, SE1 The Leather Market is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
The Royal George Apartments, SE1 The Royal George Apartments is a block on Abbey Street.
The School House, SE1 Residential block
The Watch House, SE1 The Watch House is a block on Bermondsey Street.
The Willows, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Thetford House, SE1 Thetford House is a block on Abbey Street.
Tower Bridge Road, SE1 Tower Bridge Road leads to Tower Bridge.
Tower Workshops, SE1 Tower Workshops is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Trowbray House, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode
Twist House, SE1 Twist House is a block on Page’s Walk.
Valois House, SE1 Valois House is a block on Grange Walk.
Vauban Street, SE16 Vauban Street is a road in the SE16 postcode area
Vesta Court, SE1 Vesta Court is located on City Walk.
Webb Street, SE1 Webb Street is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Westerham House, SE1 Westerham House is a block on Law Street.
Weston Street, SE1 Weston Street is street of some length, which crosses Long Lane.
Wharton House, SE1 Wharton House is a block on Millstream Road.
Whitmore Building, SE16 Whitmore Building is located on Arts Lane.
Wild’s Rents, SE1 Wild’s Rents runs south from Long Lane.
Willow Walk, SE1 Willow Walk is one of the streets of London in the SE1 postal area.
Wood’s Place, SE1 Wood’s Place is a road in the SE1 postcode area
Woodmill Close, SE16 Woodmill Close is a road in the SW15 postcode area
Woodmill Street, SE16 A street within the SE1 postcode
Wrotham House, SE1 Wrotham House can be found on Unnamed Road.
Zeno House, SE1 Zeno House is a block on Long Walk.

NEARBY PUBS
The Victoria The Victoria is a pub on Page’s Walk.


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Bermondsey

The name Bermondsey first appears in a letter from Pope Constantine during the 8th century.

Pope Constantine (708-715), in a letter, granted privileges to a monastery at Vermundesei, then in the hands of the abbot of Medeshamstede (as Peterborough was known at the time).

Though Bermondsey’s name may derive from Beornmund’s island (whoever the Anglo-Saxon Beornmund was, is another matter), but Bermondsey is likely to have been a higher, drier spot in an otherwise marshy area, rather than a real island.

Bermondsey appears in the Domesday Book and it was then held by King William (the Conqueror). A small part of the area was in the hands of Robert, Count of Mortain - William’s half brother.

Bermondsey Abbey was founded in 1082 as a Cluniac priory, with St Saviour as the patron.

The monks from the abbey began to develop the area, cultivating land and embanking the river. They put a dock at the mouth of River Neckinger, an adjacent tidal inlet. Records show this was called St Savior’s Dock, after their abbey.

Also owning land here was the Knights Templar. They gave a names to one of the most distinctive streets in London - Shad Thames, a later corruption of ’St John at Thames’.

Other ecclesiastical properties stood nearby. The name ’Tooley Street’ was another corruption - this time of St Olave’s’ Street. It was located in the Archbishop of Canterbury’s manor of Southwark. In Tooley Street, wealthy citizens and clerics built houses.

After the Great Fire of London, Bermondsey started to be settled by the well-to-do. It took on the character of a garden suburb - especially along Grange Road.

A pleasure garden - the Cherry Garden - was founded in the area in the 17th century near to the current Cherry Garden Pier. In 1664, Samuel Pepys visited ’Jamaica House’ in the gardens and wrote in his diary that he had left it "singing finely". Later, from the garden, J.M.W. Turner painted The Fighting Temeraire Tugged to her Last Berth to be Broken Up (1839), showing the veteran warship being towed to Rotherhithe to be scrapped.

The church of St Mary Magdalen in Bermondsey Street was completed in 1690, although a church has been recorded on the site since the 13th century. This church survived both 19th-century redevelopment and the Blitz unscathed. It is an unusual survivor of this period in Bermondsey and in Inner London in general.

In the 18th century, the discovery of a spring from the River Neckinger in the area led to Bermondsey becoming a spa resort - then all the rage. The name Spa Road commemorates this - situated between Grange Road and Jamaica Road.

Bermondsey’s fortunes took a huge nosedive as the Industrial Revolution took hold. Certain industries were deemed too inconvenient to be carried on within the small area of the City of London and banished east - both north and south of the river. One such that came to dominate central Bermondsey was the processing of leather and hides.

Parts of Bermondsey, especially along the riverside, become a notorious slum. The area around St Saviour’s Dock and Shad Thames - known as Jacob’s Island - was one of the worst in London. In Charles Dickens’s novel Oliver Twist, the principal villain Bill Sikes meets a nasty end in the mud of ’Folly Ditch’ an area which was known as Hickmans Folly — the scene of an attack by Spring Heeled Jack in 1845 — surrounding Jacob’s Island. Dickens provides a vivid description of what it was like:

<CITE>... crazy wooden galleries common to the backs of half a dozen houses, with holes from which to look upon the slime beneath; windows, broken and patched, with poles thrust out, on which to dry the linen that is never there; rooms so small, so filthy, so confined, that the air would seem to be too tainted even for the dirt and squalor which they shelter; wooden chambers thrusting themselves out above the mud and threatening to fall into it — as some have done; dirt-besmeared walls and decaying foundations, every repulsive lineament of poverty, every loathsome indication of filth, rot, and garbage: all these ornament the banks of Jacob’s Island.</CITE>

In 1836, London’s first passenger railway terminus was built by the London & Greenwich Railway at London Bridge. The first section of the line to be used was between the Spa Road Station and Deptford High Street. But Spa Road station closed in 1915.

The area was extensively redeveloped during the 19th century and early 20th century with both the expansion of the river trade and the connectivity that the railway brought about. Bermondsey Town Hall - a mark of its civic emergence - was built on Spa Road in 1881. To the east of Tower Bridge, Bermondsey’s three and a half miles of riverside were lined with warehouses and wharves, of which the best known is Butler’s Wharf.

Many buildings from this era survive (around Leathermarket Street) including the huge Leather, Hide and Wool Exchange (now residential and small work spaces). Hepburn and Gale’s tannery, though now disused, on Long Lane is also a substantial survivor of the leather trade.

Peek, Frean and Company was established in 1857 at Dockhead by James Peek and George Hender Frean. They moved to a larger plant in Clements Road in 1866, leading to the nickname ’Biscuit Town’ for Bermondsey. They continued baking here until the brand was discontinued in 1989.

Wee Willie Harris - usually credited as the first British rock and roller - came from Bermondsey. He also worked in Peak Freans before his fame.

Bermondsey’s riverside suffered severe damage in Second World War bombing. A couple of decades later, the wharves became redundant following the collapse of the river trade. After standing derelict, many of the wharves were redeveloped by the London Docklands Development Corporation during the 1980s. They have now been converted into a mixture of residential and commercial accommodations and have become some of the most upmarket and expensive properties in London.

In 1910, Millwall F.C. had moved to a new stadium on Coldblow Lane, having previously played in Millwall on the Isle of Dogs. They kept their original name despite playing on the opposite side of the River Thames to the Millwall area. They played at The Den until 1993, when they relocated to the New Den nearby. The New Den is now back to being called The Den.

In 2000, Bermondsey tube station on the Jubilee Line Extension opened.


LOCAL PHOTOS
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Mill Street, SE1 (1987)
TUM image id: 1682593586
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In the neighbourhood...

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The Swan, 82-86 Old Kent Road. Demolished in 2004.
Old London postcard
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Bermondsey Street (1881) "One cannot help speculating as to the origins of this singular group of houses, with their eight gables. Mr Rendle, who was good enough to take great pains - unfortunately fruitless- to glean something for me about the history of these houses, tells me that in the early part of this century, houses of this type were exceedingly common in the main thoroughfares and bye places of Southwark. They are good specimens of the houses of the time of Elizabeth and somewhat later; the frame of massive timber, else mere shells of lath and plaster; but though often out of shape and leaning in all directions, wonderfully durable." This description was written by Alfred Marks.
Credit: Society for Photographing Relics of Old London/Henry Dixon
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Substandard housing in Snowsfields, Bermondsey (1890)
Licence: CC BY 2.0


The Tooley Street fire of 1861
Credit: Unknown artist
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Tower Bridge (2021) Sometimes, during the various lockdowns, various normally-busy roads have been photogenically quiet
Credit: Instagram user
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Weston Street, SE1 (1950s)
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Wild’s Rents, SE1 (1930s)
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Tea Trade Wharf - part of the Butlers Wharf complex
Credit: Wiki Commons
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Bermondsey Abbey, located around the modern-day Bermondsey Square.
Credit: Sir Walter Besant
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Brickwork in Boss Street, SE1 (1936)
Licence: CC BY 2.0


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