86 Whitechapel High Street

heavily altered early to mid 19th-century shop and office building, currently (2016) a café

86 Whitechapel High Street
Contributed by Survey of London on July 11, 2018

Within this unassuming, indeed dull, little building that might have been knocked up any time in the past thirty years, lurks a much earlier house, probably mid-nineteenth century. Only the floor heights indicate its age. Alterations and extensions have, grandfather’s axe-style, eroded possibly all original fabric, though a 19th-century outbuilding, part of No. 87 since it housed the George Yard Mission in the 19th century, survives to the rear.

Until the Second World War No. 86 was stuccoed, the frontage flanked by giant pilasters, the windows with scroll-bracketed pediments, the whole topped with a cornice. These decorative affectations were scraped off after war damage, the depredation completed by refronting in brownish bricks and concrete cills, brown metal windows and a projecting tiled mansard attic c. 1991.1 In the nineteenth century the building housed one of the longest-lived businesses on the High Street, John William Stirling, pharmaceutical chemist, who arrived in 1816 and remained till his death there in 1871. His business, whose frontage bore a royal crest in the 1880s, was sustained on an impressive range of Stirling’s Pills, aimed variously at women, children and officers of the army and navy, claiming to cure everything from gonorrhoea to flatulence.2 It continued as a chemist’s until 1930 when Samuel Prevezer, wholesale hosier, took over: ‘My grandparents, Sam and Fay, waited outside the stocking factories where each night the rejects were thrown out. They matched them up and sold them off their barrow in the East End. Eventually they made enough to buy a proper shop, S. Prevezer Hosiery in Whitechapel High Street’.3 It remained Prevezer’s until the 1970s, when another hosier took over until it became a bureau de change in the 1990s, and from 2004 a café.4


  1. Tower Hamlets planning applications online (THP): Photograph c. 1960 from Ron Roberts 

  2. Census: Morning Advertiser, 13 July 1871, p. 7 

  3. Braham Murray, The Worst it Can Be is a Disaster, London 2007: Post Office Directories (POD): London Metropolitan Archives, District Surveyor's Returns (DSR) 

  4. POD: THP 

Samuel Prevezer remembered
Contributed by Aileen Reid on Nov. 2, 2016

From The Worst it Can Be is a Disaster (2007), the autobiography of the theatre director Braham Murray (b. 1943):

'My mother's paternal family name was Prevezer. Originally there were seven sons and four of them escaped from the Nazis to England. They came over on the onion boats with nothing. My grandparents, Sam and Fay, waited outside the stocking factories where each night the rejects were thrown out. They matched them up and sold them off their barrow in the East End. Eventually they made enough to buy a proper shop, S. Prevezer Hosiery in Whitechapel High Street [No. 86]. The moved to Finchley; Uncle Jack, the richest, to Brighton; Uncle Barney to Mayfair; and Uncle Max to Regent's Park.

....The curse of the Prevezers was total emotional constipation. Inside they were cauldrons of feeling but none of it could be expressed.... If you gave my grandfather a present, he'd look at it with worry on his face and say, "How much costs such a thing?" Inside he was delighted.'