Royal Albert Buildings
Contributed by Robert Ward on Dec. 9, 2018
It was 1968 and I wanted a cheap flat to rent. One day I wandered into
Cartwright street, just behind the Royal Mint on Tower Hill. It runs north
from the high brick wall of St Katharine's Dock to Royal Mint street and the
old railway viaduct that now carries the DLR. Lined with bomb sites and
tenement blocks it was uninviting but halfway down, next to an arch that led
to a railway goods yard, was Marie's grocer's shop. I went in and the people
were friendly. Yes, there were sometimes flats to rent and Royal Albert
Buildings would be best for me. Marie told me where the agents were, in
Houndsditch, and I went there a few times until one day they asked for
references and a week or two later gave me the rent book and a key for a flat
that I hadn't even seen.
Built in the 1880s Royal Albert Buildings was five stories of sooty brick with
cream paint around the windows and entrances and green ironwork. There were no
doors at street level, just four arched openings between plastered pillars,
each leading to a stone staircase with two flats on each floor. Mine was on
the second floor and I still remember the feeling of elation and the sharp
smell of new paint as I let myself in.
Inside was a square hall with just enough space for a door in each wall. To
the left was a sitting room, in front a bedroom, and to the right a kitchen,
all with discoloured old floor boards. The sitting room was a good size, with
a big mullioned window overlooking the street and low cupboards in alcoves
either side of a chimney breast with a blocked fireplace - I would need an
electric fire for the winter as there was no other heating. The windows were
unusual as each had three sashes instead of two - a fixed lower one so
children wouldn't fall out, and two upper ones that slid up and down. The
bedroom was at the back of the building, small and rather gloomy as it looked
out across a roofed balcony. The kitchen, long and thin, had an old grey
enamelled cooker and a sink unit with a cold tap. From it a door led to the
balcony behind the bedroom, which had a view of the goods yard, a little
rubbish chute, and six feet across it the door to an old lavatory with a high
cistern.
It was all as good as I'd hoped for. The controlled rent was £3 a week plus 12
shillings for rates, perhaps a quarter of a typical pay packet then, though it
went up a little when the landlord put a shower in the corner of the kitchen
as I'd asked. The milkman and postman came early each morning. Electricity was
billed quarterly but there was a shilling slot meter for gas and the gas man
called occasionally to empty it, count out the contents on the table and hand
back the surplus, perhaps a third of the total, which was always welcome.
There was a long waiting list for telephones but I eventually got one, a smart
Trimphone that warbled instead of ringing, rented as the GPO didn't allow you
to own your phone.
The other residents of the block were mostly quiet people, working or retired,
with a few children. Marie's shop served the whole street and she was always
there and beaming, often with some of her children helping or playing, while
husband Frank worked as a crane driver in the docks when he wasn't in the
shop. They were from Malta. Most customers were on first name terms and often
had their purchases noted down for future payment in little books kept behind
the counter. In Royal Mint street was a paper shop, another grocer and two
pubs. Tower Hill tube was just minutes away.
Fifty years later the sound of the goods yard stays in my memory. The tracks
that led to it branched off from the main line at Leman Street and sloped
downhill to the yard in a long curve. A line of wagons would be shunted there
and left on the slope without an engine. Sometimes the yard worked through the
night and as the bottom wagon was loaded or unloaded and moved along, the ones
above would each roll down a few yards to fill the space, like a line of
slowly falling dominoes, with screeches, bangs and the clank of chains, an
eerie noise to hear in the small hours, especially on foggy nights when there
would be more ships' sirens than usual from the river.
I lived there for three years. Then the GLC bought the block for redevelopment
together with neighbouring Katharine Buildings, which had communal toilets and
some single room flats, and Royal Mint Square. Tenants were gradually rehoused
or left, corrugated iron started to appear on accessible doors and windows,
and after a couple of years everything was demolished.
Rag Fair and Rosemary Lane to 1840
Contributed by Survey of London on April 26, 2019
Rag Fair, held in Rosemary Lane and thriving by 1700, was by far London’s
largest used clothing market in the eighteenth century. It continued with
gradual decline until after 1900. Trading was mainly handled by women,
unlicensed and in large part in stolen goods. It happened on six afternoons a
week (not Sundays) along the whole length of Rosemary Lane. The market was
much opposed by some, and much enjoyed by others. Repeated attempts to
suppress it failed. ‘Rosemary Lane and Rag Fair possessed one of the most
powerfully articulated reputations for disorder of any London street.’
In 1699 Ned Ward described the street as ‘a Savory place, which in Ridicule of
fragrant Fumes that arise from musty rotten Rags, and burnt old Shoes is
call’d by the sweet Name of Rosemary-Lane’, a place frequented by a
‘Tatter’d Multitude’ and ‘all the Rag-pickers in Town’. The market was
mainly out in the open in the street, but Rag Fair did give rise to some
market buildings on its north side. Immediately west of what had been
Swallow’s house was the Great Exchange, a storeyed range at the back of a
large open yard. Built by ‘Captain’ Richard Johnson following the acquisition
of a 99-year lease in June 1741, it was complete by 1746. Johnson had been
speculating in property on the Leman estate since the 1720s when he
established the Royal Bagnio on the east side of Leman Street. He also had a
share of the Alie Street playhouse. Within a year of Johnson’s lease the Great
Exchange was advertised as ‘near a hundred Shops open’d, where all manner of
Apparel, Table and Bed Linen, new and second-hand, are sold cheaper than any
other Place in London; also ready Money given for all-manner of cast off
Cloaths.’ ‘Johnson’s Change’, sometimes so-called, was inherited with the
rest of Johnson’s estate by his ‘friend’ Catherine Roberts when he died in
1769. Empty in 1781, the Exchange was soon after redeveloped as Johnson’s
Buildings, with Back Change to the north, numerous small houses in a ‘cluster
of four courts’.
Between Mill Yard and Backchurch Lane off the north side of Cable Street were
the smaller Old Exchange and New Exchange. These appear to have antedated
Johnson’s Exchange. The New Exchange, present by 1736 and seemingly first held
by Nicholas Guestor, was described as a square where people brought old
clothes to sell, and as having both shops and cheap lodgings. This was in
ruins in 1781 and both these easterly depots were gone by the 1790s.
Clothes-selling aside, Rag Fair was also an important base for thief-takers in
the first half of the eighteenth century, and a centre of prostitution, with
sailors being a prevalent related presence. By the mid 1680s there was a watch
house of some form at the east end of Rosemary Lane. The challenge that Rag
Fair presented to local administration led to this being given more durable
form in 1708 through the erection of a new building in the middle of the road
at the north end of Well Street, where eastwards continuation became Cable
Street. This east end of Rosemary Lane was the site of the culmination of an
anti-Irish riot in 1736, a protest against cheap labour, there being a
significant Irish population south of Rosemary Lane. The watch house had gone
by the 1790s.
In 1730 Rosemary Lane’s Whitechapel frontages had fifteen public houses: the
Blue Anchor, the Chequers, the Crown, the Crown and Pump, the Five Golden
Pots, the Fountain, the Half Moon and Seven Stars, the Red Lion and Crown, the
Rosemary Branch, the Sugar Loaf, the Sun and Sword, the Tobacco Rolls, the
Waterman’s Arms, the Whale, and the Windmill. The King of Prussia was in Blue
Anchor Yard.
By 1706 the Abell estate had passed to another William Abell who leased the
Board of Ordnance’s waggon-store yard to William Ogbourne (_c._1662–1734), who
from 1700 was the Board’s Master Carpenter and who had lived in the 1690s on
Chamber Street. He had also been the surveyor (architect) for the Trinity
Almshouses on the Mile End Road in the 1690s. Ogbourne used the extensive
premises as a timber yard. He took the freehold from another Richard Abell in
1725, and was knighted in 1727 having served as Sheriff of London and Master
of the Carpenters’ Company. After Ogbourne’s death in 1734 the timber yard
passed via Edward Gatton to Henry Craswell, and thence to Richard Maddock as
Maddock, Craswell & Co., and into the nineteenth century to James Maddock
for Maddock and Gibson’s deal yard.
There was still a degree of social mix and good-sized houses continued to go
up. Taking a 61-year lease from John Turvin, a citizen haberdasher, Samuel
Hawkins, citizen carpenter, built three three-storey and basement (eight-room)
brick houses near the east (White Lion Street) end of Rosemary Lane’s north
side in 1729–30 and also undertook to build at least three more similar houses
adjoining in 1735. Hawkins Court and Nicholls Court (after John Nicholls)
appeared between Abel’s Buildings and White Lion Street. The White Lion was on
the eponymous street’s west side, next door to the White Swan at the corner of
the northern or east–west arm of Abel’s Buildings.
To the west, Rosemary Branch Alley led through to what was called Little
Prescot Street by the first years of the eighteenth century. A Baptist chapel
was built on the west side in 1730. What is claimed to be the oldest
continuous Baptist congregation moved here from Wapping under the leadership
of the Rev. Samuel Wilson. In 1841 the ‘ruinous effects’ of the arrival of the
London and Blackwall Railway forced it to decide to move again, but a shift to
Commercial Street did not happen until 1854–5.
By 1771 the great house that had been Swallow’s had been divided and the
building up of adjoining grounds included a soaphouse in what had previously
been a brewhouse. Dense redevelopment of this area followed by the 1790s, with
small houses around what continued to be called Swallow Gardens, a name that
endured as applying to an alley under a railway arch that gained notoriety in
1891 as the site of the murder of Frances Coles.
To the south the once abbatial garden ground west of Salt Petre Bank (later
Dock Street) had been largely built up by 1680 with Blue Anchor Alley already
then a spine for an irregular array of subsidiary courts. Goodson’s Rents lay
to its east and beyond was White’s Yard (Glasshouse Street from 1867, then, in
what had long been a strongly Roman Catholic district, John Fisher Street from
1936). Here poverty prevailed from an early date. In the southwest corner of
the parish (as after 1694) there was a glasshouse run by the Dallow family in
the decades either side of 1700. Even more intricate density had been stitched
in by the 1740s, by when there was much Irish settlement in the area. Hare
Brain Court and Money Bag Alley, east and west of Blue Anchor Yard, were an
outlying part of the Loades estate, the rest of which was around Salt Petre
Bank. Further south, where the glasshouse had been, Shall I Go Naked Street
became New Martin (later Martan) Street in the 1750s when it was lined by rows
of one-room plan houses each about 12ft square, twelve to the north, nine to
the south with the Crown public house at the White’s Yard corner. Two-storey
brick houses that were assessed as having been built in the early eighteenth
century survived at what became 59 and 60 Royal Mint Street into the 1980s.
Several copyhold tenancies in this area were enfranchised in 1772. In 1773
Thomas Barnes, a Whitechapel bricklayer in the early stages of what was to be
a prolific career of high-volume low-quality housebuilding, agreed to put up
two of twelve houses on Crown Court, east of Cartwright Square (another
courtyard) on a plot that measured twenty-five feet by seventeen feet. Well
Court (or Yard) west of Cartwright Street was developed in 1778–83 by a Mr
Goodyear. Off Blue Anchor Yard, Sheen’s Buildings were put up by Samuel Sheene
the Younger, a Rosemary Lane carpenter. Some of this was timber built, none of
it was substantial. Outside Whitechapel to the west, the Weigh House School
was formed in 1846 at the south end of Darby Street, just east of part of what
had been the Aldgate Burial Ground, consecrated in 1615.
There was a Jewish presence from an early date, with a ‘Rosemary Lane’
congregation said to have been formed in 1748. Jewish men became prevalent
among Rag Fair’s heretofore largely female traders, as was attested by Francis
Place, who thought the area a dangerous place. In the nineteenth century
there was a gradual decline of the still largely street-based market in favour
of more shop-oriented Petticoat Lane. Local housing descended into classically
perceived rookery or slum conditions. Henry Mayhew saw many Jews in the street
and said ‘they abound in the shops’.
Hog Lane and Rosemary Lane: Royal Mint Street's early history to 1700
Contributed by Survey of London on April 25, 2019
On the site east of Tower Hill that later became that of the Royal Mint,
Edward III founded the Cistercian abbey of St Mary Graces in 1350. The abbey
and an outer precinct of gardens and open lands extending eastwards were
bounded to the north by a road that was called Hachestrate by 1250 then
Hoggestreet in the fourteenth century and known by the time of the abbey’s
suppression in the 1530s as Hog Lane. Only the more easterly parts of the
abbey’s lands (those lying beyond the present-day line of Blue Anchor Yard)
were in Whitechapel parish (see Wellclose Square). Abbatial property became
the manor of East Smithfield and was acquired by Elizabeth I in 1560 for the
formation of a depot for supplying the navy on the abbey site. That continued
to 1785, after which the site was redeveloped as premises for the Royal Mint’s
move out of the Tower of London. Hog Lane itself was later described as being
84 perches (1,386ft) long and 8ft wide, and as having been used during the
reign of Elizabeth I to take cannon from Tower Hill to a place called Gunfield
where ordnance was tested. Most of the land on the north side of Hog Lane
(from just west of where Mansell Street runs) was in Whitechapel parish and
was known as Homefield before it became Goodman's Fields.
East Smithfield had more resident foreigners than any other part of London’s
eastern suburbs in the 1570s. In that decade eight acres on the north side of
Hog Lane appear to have been held and improved by Benedict Spinola
(1519/20–1580), an eminent and wealthy Genoese merchant who exported woollen
cloth, imported sweet wine, lived in the City parish of St Gabriel Fenchurch
and held other property outside the City further north. John Stow’s Survey of
London refers only passingly to what he calls Hog Street, as distinct from
Hog Lane (now Middlesex Street), mentioning the Merchant Taylor’s almshouses
that were built in 1593 on the road’s north side at the Tower Hill end that is
outside Whitechapel. However, John Strype’s revision of Stow in 1720 has a
substantial addition immediately following the account of the almshouses. This
has since been linked to Middlesex Street, but from its place in the text it
seems clear that it has to do with the southerly Hog Lane; the paragraph that
follows returns to Tower Hill. The passage reads:
‘In this Hog Lane, now mentioned, lying on the back side of Whitechapel, were
eight Acres of Land, which about the Year 1574 were in the Possession of one
Benedict Spinola, a rich Italian Merchant; whereof he made twenty Tenter Yards
and certain Gardens. These, some pretended, were first enclosed by him, being
before open and common. And hence it came to pass, that in the Year 1584 it
was presented as an Annoyance to the Archers, and all the Queen’s Liege
People. And a Precept was awarded to the Tenants and Occupiers of the
Premisses to remove their Pales and Fences, and all Buildings made thereupon:
For now many Clothiers dwelt here, who, hereupon applied themselves to the
Lord Treasurer of England, and brought Witness to the contrary: Shewing, that
the same Field, before it was so converted as then it was, was a Piece of
Ground several, not common, nor never commonly used by any Archers, being far
unmeet for Archers to shoot in, by reason of standing Puddles, most noisome
Laystals, and filthy Ditches in and about the same. Also the Way called Hog
Lane was so foul and deep in the Winter time, that no Man could pass by the
same. And in Summer time Men would not pass thereby for fear of Infection, by
means of the Filthiness that lay there. So that the Presenters were utterley
deceived, and not well informed in their Presentments. Afterwards Benedict
Spinola bestowed great Cost and Charges upon levelling and cleansing the
Premisses; and made divers Tenter Yards, by means whereof the common Ways and
Passages about the said eight Acres were greatly amended and enlarged, that
all People might well and safely pass. And poor Clothworkers by the Tenter
Yards were greatly relieved: For that of late time divers Tenter Yards in and
about London were decayed and pulled down, and the Ground converted to other
Uses. And because the Queen had lately by Proclamation restrained all future
Buildings and Enclosures in the Suburbs, they shewed that the Tenter Yards and
Gardens were made long before the said Proclamation.’
Division of the Whitechapel section of the north side of the Hog Lane here
under consideration into twenty large plots, averaging around four perches
(66ft) width each, is roughly borne out by the earliest reliable map, William
Morgan’s of 1682. By then, however, much had transpired.
In 1582 Henry Browne was prosecuted for making a sawpit on Hog Lane that was
deemed a nuisance, and in 1607, John Dale, a ‘millener’, and Owen Hore,
yeoman, were charged before Sir William Wade (Waad), Lieutenant of the Tower,
with contravention of a royal proclamation against the erection of timber
buildings outside the City walls by the building of houses on the Whitechapel
part of what was now being called Rosemary Lane. The name change itself seems
to chime with ‘cleansing’ (presumably draining), possibly also referring to a
public house called the Rosemary Branch that was just east of the parish
boundary inside Whitechapel, where Mansell Street now runs.
The property on the road’s north side had passed to Thomas Goodman by 1597–8
when he leased five garden plots in the western part of what lay in
Whitechapel parish with an overall length of 322 or 325ft (not quite twenty
perches), previously occupied by a feltmaker, a baker and a vintner, to
Horatio Franchiotto (or Franchiotti) and Sir James Deane for a term of fifty
years. Franchiotto was another Italian merchant, from Lucca, who had a house
in the City in Mark Lane, and Deane (1546–1608) was a wealthy draper. They
built a ‘great house of brick’ with a brick wall to the rear separating the
property and its garden or orchard from Goodmans Fields. Set well back from
the frontage, at the end of a passage from which it was entered from the east,
this house, which came to be known as Swallows after a later resident (see
below), was assessed for sixteen hearths in 1666. Franchiotto lived in it with
Mary Pickering (née Frankham), otherwise married and ‘reputed his wife,
servant or concubine’. She also leased another garden plot and ‘cottage’ from
Goodman in 1598, and continued to live in the big house in 1623 after
Franchiotto had died. Through Thomas Jay, knighted in 1625 and appointed
Master of the Armoury in the Tower of London in 1628, the Crown had gained an
interest in Franchiotto’s Rosemary Lane property. This was transferred in 1621
to William Bawdrick and Roger Hunt.
In 1620 William Goodman and his wife Mary sold the freehold of a number of
pieces of ground, largely gardens, that together made up most of the north
side of Rosemary Lane in Whitechapel. The purchaser was William Abell who was
rising to prominence as a wealthy vintner. Adding up to an overall frontage of
almost 800ft, but not all contiguous, Abell’s take comprised: an 84ft (just
over five-perch) frontage to the west that was built up with twelve tenements
close to the Rosemary Branch; the land in front of Franchiotto and Deane’s
property; and three more large plots further east that included the premises
of a baker and a vinegar-maker and extended almost to where Leman Street now
ends. An alleyway between the two easternmost plots was probably that which
came to be known as Three Tobacco Pipe Alley, later Abel’s Buildings, which
survives as a passage from Royal Mint Street to Chamber Street, opposite and
continuing the line of John Fisher Street. Alderman William Abell fell to
notoriety in 1641, disgraced as having profited from monopolistic trading. His
son Richard Abell (born around 1609) worked for John Lenthall in 1652, by when
he had possession of the Rosemary Lane property.
The house that had been Franchiotto’s had passed, presumably through
connections at the Tower of London (Jay, allegedly corrupt, had been replaced
in 1638), to Thomas Swallow, a senior official at the Mint, which was then in
the Tower. Swallow held the composite position of Clerk of the Irons and
Surveyor of the Meltings; a Paul Swallow had been Surveyor of the Meltings in
the first decades of the seventeenth century. Though ousted through the
Interregnum, Thomas Swallow retrieved his post and continued in it until his
death in his 80s in 1676. Swallow’s house was assessed as having fifteen
hearths in 1674–5 when he also had another nine-hearth property adjoining. The
large house stood west of what was identified as Swallow Court in 1682 with
land that retained the name Swallows Garden.
Richard Abell lived in a ten-hearth house near the east end of Rosemary Lane’s
north side in 1666 when he built a group of four more ten-hearth houses
immediately west of the entrance to Swallow Court. One of these was leased for
21 years to Robert Tough, a citizen gunmaker. In 1674–5 the group of four was
assessed as having only eight hearths each and five more eight- and ten-hearth
properties stood together further east. Among these, one held by Samuel
Warner, a citizen victualler, had been tenanted by John Skynner, another
citizen gunsmith, who had been burnt out of his City house by the Great Fire.
Otherwise there were numerous much smaller (two- to four-hearth) dwellings
with many yards and courts, from west to east: Abell’s Court, Catherine Wheel
Yard (later White Horse Court), Rosemary Branch Alley (later Little Prescot
Street), Garrards Yard, Swallow Court, Bakers Arms Alley, Three Tobacco Pipe
Alley (Abel’s Buildings), Sugar Loaf Alley and Mill Yard, which last survives
to the east of Leman Street. White Lion Street was formed in the 1680s to
connect Rosemary Lane to Goodmans Fields and Leman Street. To its west was a
public house called the Tobacco Rolls.
In the late 1680s a large former orchard and garden with associated buildings
between Swallows Garden and Three Tobacco Pipe Alley (Abel’s Buildings) on the
Abell holding and adjacent property on the south side of newly laid out
Chamber Street held by Sir Thomas Chamber were taken by the Board of Ordnance,
based at the Tower of London, and developed by William Chapman, carpenter, to
be a storage facility for 300 waggons or ‘timbrells’, storehouses ranged round
a yard opening off Rosemary Lane.
Rosemary Lane was densely built up and generally humbly populated. One
resident who gained notability was Richard Brandon, the executioner of Charles
I, who was buried in Whitechapel parish churchyard. The hearth-tax return of
1674–5 itemises 115 premises along the north side of Rosemary Lane and another
eighty on the courts and yards. Twenty years later John Bankes had four empty
houses on the street, perhaps new-built, and Thomas Chambers had an
undeveloped 64ft frontage. Prohibitions notwithstanding, timber building
continued into the eighteenth century, sometimes with gable fronts, and the
street was lined with shops. Lands to the south, most of them outside
Whitechapel, were yet more densely built and poorly inhabited. Thomas Swallow
and Richard Abell, both justices of the peace, were unusually active in
pursuing prosecutions in the locality as it became a haven for
criminality.
Royal Mint Street
Contributed by Survey of London on May 1, 2019
Rosemary Lane was renamed Royal Mint Street in 1850. Its north side had been
transformed a decade earlier by the viaduct of the London and Blackwall
Railway, which swept away courts of late eighteenth-century houses and the
timber yard. Part of what was left of the timber-yard site was taken for St
Mark’s School, established in 1841 opposite Blue Anchor Yard. Set back from
the road, the red-brick neo-Tudor school comprised three buildings, a small
two-storey classroom block for girls above boys to centre front, a single-
storey boys’ schoolroom set back to the east, and a two-storey block for the
girls’ schoolroom over an infants school set back to the west. Two railway
arches at the back served as playgrounds. The schoolmaster had a house on the
south side of Chamber Street (No. 19), alongside which an access passage ran
through a third arch. There was rebuilding of the boys’ school in 1862–3 and
another infants’ classroom and a WCblock were added to the west. Inadequate
play space, constant noise from trains and very poor under-nourished children
notwithstanding, the school was described as pleasant in 1939 when it closed.
In the 1950s the premises were adapted as St Mark’s House, ships’ stores for
J. Freimuller Ltd, then demolished around 1985 to make way for the Docklands
Light Railway.
The west side of White Lion Street and its corner with Rosemary Lane were
cleared to accompany the widening of Dock Street in 1845–6. The Great Eastern
Railway Company’s East Smithfield Depot, formed in 1864 on what had been
Glasshouse Yard to the south by the London Docks, required a rail bridge to be
carried across Royal Mint Street. This arced over Blue Anchor Yard until
around 1976. The Midland Railway Company Depot followed on the north side of
Royal Mint Street around 1870 causing ‘very old’ wooden houses to come down.
Rosemary Lane’s northern frontage from Leman Street to St Mark’s School had
been cleared by Whitechapel District Board of Works in 1867–8 for road
widening, which had extended further west up to the Great Northern Railway
Company’s Depot at the parish boundary by 1875. In the Tower Bridge
improvements of 1907 Mansell Street was extended southwards as a wide
thoroughfare, obliterating Little Prescot Street and what old fabric had been
left standing between the railway depots. Samuel Blow, a builder who had
premises in one of the last old timber houses on the south side of Royal Mint
Street near Tower Hill up to their removal in the Tower Bridge improvements,
occupied four of the London and Blackwall Railway’s arches as stables from
1881.
Following the widening of Royal Mint Street, what became the Trafalgar
Temperance Coffee House (130 Leman Street) curved round the northeast corner,
going up in 1874–6 alongside four comparably tall four-storey shophouses at
69–72 Royal Mint Street. This group was demolished around 1985 for
construction of the Docklands Light Railway.
On the south side of Royal Mint Street, Nos 32–37, east of the Cartwright
Street corner and not in Whitechapel, were mid nineteenth-century three-storey
shophouses that incorporated Stepney Children’s Library at No. 33 in the
1930s. The corner was a short-lived playground until the whole site was
redeveloped in 1978–82. Linking Nos 41 and 47, Cohen’s Buildings was a small
four-storey development, built in 1856 as tenements over shops and demolished
by 1960. Ruinous houses at 53–54 Royal Mint Street were rebuilt in 1890–1 as a
four-storey warehouse that was used as a Salvation Army Food and Shelter
Depot. The site has been clear since the 1950s. Nos 55–56 was an early
nineteenth-century pair of shophouses that came to house the Model Inn, and
No. 65 a three-storey eighteenth-century building that survived into the
1990s.
Prior to state-sponsored housing interventions, industry accompanied the
railways into the southern residential area. By 1850 there was a factory on
the west side of Glasshouse Street, just north of New Martin Street. This was
rebuilt in 1874–5 as coffee roasting and grinding mills for Peek Brothers
& Co., tea and spice importers. Ernest George, who had been Sir Henry W.
Peek MP’s architect on his Rousdon estate in Devon, was also employed here. In
1912–14 William Verry, the building contractor, built joinery workshops and
stores immediately south of this factory on New Martan Street, employing Leo
Sylvester Sullivan as architect through the City of London Real Property Co.
Ltd. Peek’s factory was by this time devoted to cocoa, and tea-handling
followed. These buildings stood until the late 1970s. In 1934 it was said
that ‘in Royal Mint Street and its tributaries through which such traffic
daily trickles, the horse retains its ancient sway because of the advantage it
has in drawing loads for short distances between the docks, wharves and
railway goods depots’.
Royal Mint Estate
Contributed by Survey of London on May 1, 2019
The history of the site now occupied by the Royal Mint Estate involves the
later parts of the Metropolitan Board of Works slum-clearance that started on
the site now occupied by the Whitechapel Peabody Estate. Once the Peabody
Estate was up, clearances to the west of the Great Eastern Railway Company's
overhead line were undertaken in 1881–2. Darby Street was reconfigured and
Cartwright Street widened and made a through road, that work done by F. H.
Colepeper of New Cross. The MBW modified its plans, stipulating that blocks on
this western side should accommodate 2,297. The sale at auction of four plots
went ahead in 1884.
Land to the south of Darby Street was taken by Thomas Stedman Fardell &
Son, carmen and jobmasters, who had premises at Tower Hill, in two lots, for
£3,350 and £750. The elder Fardell gained permission to build dwellings along
the east side of Cartwright Street to release some of the backland from
housing restrictions for the sake of the firm’s depot behind Brown Bear Alley
off East Smithfield. Fardell’s Cartwright Street tenements went up in 1884–6
as Royal Albert Buildings, designed by Borer and Dobb, architects. This five-
storey range was extended further south by J. R. Fardell in the early 1890s.
To the north, what was now Darby Street Schools had survived the clearances,
later becoming a mission hall.
The west side of Cartwright Street is outside the area covered in these
volumes, but for the sake of a complete account of the MBW slum-clearance
project, the comparatively well-known blocks of dwellings that were built on
linear plots there can be briefly described. Two plots here were sold in 1884.
To the south, Katharine Buildings went up in 1884–5 for the East End Dwellings
Company which had been formed in 1882 by the Rev. Samuel Barnett, Edward Bond
and others. Davis and Emanuel were the architects of this long thin five-
storey range with rear balcony access. This project, the Company's first, was
experimental in that it aimed at housing those below artisan level, the truly
poor. To its north, Alfred Buildings, built in 1886 with Wilson, Son
& Aldwinckle as architects, took its name from the plot’s purchaser,
Alfred Charles De Rothschild. Immediately to the west on Royal Mint Street,
Sir Anthony De Rothschild had in the 1850s established the Royal Mint
Refinery, for refining gold and silver.
Finally, after some delay, the site north of Darby Street and behind the
surviving shophouses of Royal Mint Street was dealt with. Plans had to be
modified to avoid building on what had been the Aldgate Burial Ground. Thomas
Pink, a Westminster building contractor, agreed to buy the site for £4,500
shortly before he died in September 1886. The project was taken forward by
Pink, Fryer & Co., who built a complex that was named Royal Mint Square in
1887–8, possibly in association with the Westminster-based Metropolitan
Industrial Dwellings Company, formed in 1886 to build artisan-housing blocks
of fireproof construction. Seven connected five-storey blocks for 225
tenements, not quite a square as the east range curved alongside the railway
viaduct, sported polychrome elevations with bay windows and shaped gables. The
rooms were papered and finished with dados, and there were knockers to each
front door in a development that aimed ‘for a somewhat better class of people
than usually inhabit buildings of this description’. The square, which has
been judged ‘a very poor example of private housing development’, is said
to have housed skilled workers from the Royal Mint. Its northwest sections
were taken down after bomb damage in the Second World War, the rest stood
until 1975.
Post-war reconstruction plans zoned the whole area around Royal Mint Street as
for ‘general business’ and in 1960 there were plans for a large five-storey
warehouse and office block on the east side of Cartwright Street at the Royal
Mint Street corner. But this was not built and local industry declined while
residential use persisted. In 1972 the Greater London Council decided with the
agreement of Tower Hamlets Council to acquire all the properties between Blue
Anchor Yard and Cartwright Street for a housing development. The existing
housing had been cleared by 1975, with the disused railway viaduct and the
industrial premises on the west side of John Fisher Street following on. Royal
Mint Square Estate, later renamed the Royal Mint Estate, was built on this
land in 1978–82, in what was among the GLC’s last big housing schemes.
The GLC broke with its usual practice of in-house design and in 1973–4
sponsored an architectural competition for housing on the five-acre site at a
density of 124 persons per acre, relatively low for such a central location.
The brief was criticised as too rigid, but there were 299 entries. The
competition’s assessors were Gabriel Epstein (chairman), Andrew Renton and
Frederick Lloyd Roche, three architects, with Stanley Woolf, the senior
assistant director of GLC housing. The winning scheme was by Andrews, Downie
& Kelly with Pierre Lagesse, but they garnered no more than faint praise
for the quality of their open and informal layout, the assessors finding the
overall standard of the entries disappointing. The second- and third-placed
schemes were by the Napper Errington Collerton Partnership, and Sebire Allsopp
Mishcon, both proposing more orthogonal layouts with less open space. Other
finalists were Nigel Greenhill and John Jenner, Christopher J. Stafford (a
student), and Michael Mitchell and Luis Renau.
Generally, low-rise solutions favoured private front doors and small private
gardens in response to the changing architectural climate best exemplified by
Lillington Gardens in Westminster, the result of London’s last large housing
competition and completed in 1972. Simplicity was welcomed and the assessors
found it ‘refreshing to note that few of the entrants venture into the
participation game… What the architects have generally set out to do is design
out the necessity for participation with management, by avoiding some of those
features which have consistently caused problems in mass housing’.
The winning scheme’s modest domesticity, otherwise received as an absence of
forcefulness, has since won less equivocal approval. The project was led by
Donald Downie with David Falla as the project architect heading up a team that
included Uta Giencke, Rolfe Chrystal, Andrew Thomas, Susan McDonald, Rob
Gooderham, Mike Defriez, Minty Mullen and Ian Burl. Lagesse was a consultant
architect from within the GLC from where Mike Norton, the landscape architect,
also came. Alan Baxter & Associates and Sinclair Johnston acted as
engineers. Initially set to provide 157 dwellings for 559 people, revised up
to 175 for 574 in 1975, the plans had to be altered in the other direction
when the existence of the Aldgate Burial Ground came to light. This caused a
year’s delay and resulted in the open space that became Royal Mint Green, and
a reduction to 153 units. Complications over foundations and the need for
double-glazing to mitigate traffic noise upped costs. Building work started in
1978 with Marshall-Andrew as contractors. Taken over by Norwest Holst and with
costs unexpectedly high, these builders tried to renegotiate, but the GLC
wound up the contract at the end of 1979 and all was left in abeyance for
almost a year. Tilbury Construction completed the works in 1980–2.
Grouped in three large snaking blocks, the estate comprises simple short rows
of houses and maisonettes, with a few flats, nothing above four storeys, so
has no lifts. It is intricately arranged, with much use of echelon or
staggered planning and cross-wall construction. In what was called a ‘semi-
Radburn layout’ it maximises open pedestrian-only space and succeeds in
avoiding warren-like navigational incomprehensibility. There are loadbearing
red-brown brick walls with timber floors in the houses, concrete floors in the
maisonettes and flats. Slate hanging and monopitch roofs give the ranges
lively and varied profiles. There are some integral garages, but not many.
Preservation of the Crown and Seven Stars pub and the former warehouse at 41
and 47 Royal Mint Street catalysed the placing of communal space. The
warehouse and an infill link to the pub were made a day centre for elderly
residents, a shop and four maisonettes.
The GLC’s Tory administration of 1977 intended to sell the Royal Mint Estate
housing for owner-occupation, but this was reversed when Labour regained power
in 1981 and the completed units were let as council housing. The estate has
aged well and has been praised as ‘attractive and civilised’. It
exemplifies the humane and undogmatic architecture that emerged at the end of
the twentieth-century experience of council housing. Following the abolition
of the GLC in 1986, the estate was transferred to Tower Hamlets. There was a
general upgrade of landscaping and security in 2008 under the management of
Tower Hamlets Homes.