This three-storey group, six bays in all, with a recessed quadrant corner, cornice intact, was built in 1853–4 by Joseph Clever of Haggerston for Nathaniel James Powell of Mead & Powell, wholesale stationers. John Loane, a druggist and a churchwarden at St Paul’s, was the first occupant of the larger corner and Dock Street shop, followed from the 1870s by Joseph and Thomas Loane, surgeons, until after 1910 – Joseph Loane was John Liddle’s successor as Whitechapel’s Medical Officer of Health. Manuel Galdeano then Joseph Cenci had a café here from the 1940s to the 1980s. 2 Cable Street was coffee rooms in the years either side of 1900.1
The National Archives, WORK6/144/1,9; IR58/84822/3956: Post Office Directories ↩
1 Dock Street and 2-14 Cable Street from the north in 2017
Contributed by Derek Kendall
1 Dock Street and adjacent buildings from the north-west in 2017
Contributed by Derek Kendall
1 Dock Street from the west in 2017
Contributed by Derek Kendall
1 Dock Street and adjacent buildings in 2018
Contributed by Derek Kendall
Cable St junction Dock Street 1980
Contributed by danny
1 Dock Street and adjacent buildings in 2018 (distant view)
Contributed by Derek Kendall
Panorama of corner of Cable Street and Dock Street in 2008
Contributed by danny