Area photos


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(51.49449 -0.21993, 51.494 -0.219) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
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Colet House
Credit: The Study Society
TUM image id: 1605092347
Licence: CC BY 2.0

In the neighbourhood...

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The main block of Blythe House, seen from Hazlitt Road, Olympia. Blythe House was built between 1899 and 1903 as the main office of the Post Office Savings Bank, which had outgrown its previous headquarter in Queen Victoria Street. By 1902 the Bank had 12,000 branches and more than 9 million accounts.
Credit: Wiki Commons/Docben
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Sacred Heart High School, Hammersmith (2013)
Credit: Wiki Commons/Chmee2
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Stage hands at the Lyric Opera House, Hammersmith (1897) Later called the Lyric Theatre, it had been redesigned in 1895 and opened by Lille Langtry
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Addison Gardens, W14
Old London postcard
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Horse-drawn cab outside Hammersmith station in Beadon Road (1894) Staffords - the shop next to the station - repaired and sola umbrellas.
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Colet House
Credit: The Study Society
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Dewhurst Road, Hammersmith
Credit: Adam Raven (1952–2006), Hammersmith Library
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Margaret House - an original section of the Caroline Estate built in the early twentieth-century. The London County Council extended the estate in 1953. In the background, you can see a tall red-brick building with prominent chimneys. This was another housing estate, which was owned and run by the Peabody Trust. Previously, the site had been home to the Convent of the Good Shepherd, which closed in 1920.
Credit: London Metropolitan Archives
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Extension of the Piccadilly Line station in Hammersmith Broadway (1930) London Underground proudly announce that the works will relieve unemployment. Beatrice Lillie and Nellie Wallace are billed at the Coliseum in the West End.
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Brick makers in Hammersmith In the mid 19th century, the area from Brook Green to Shepherd’s Bush and east to Counter’s Creek was almost wholly devoted to brickmaking. Lakeside Road lay in the heart of the gravel pits between Shepherd’s Bush and Brook Green, known as the ’Ocean’ owing to its marshes and lying water caused by digging for brick clay.
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