213 Whitechapel Road

part of a building of 1846-7 | Part of 211–217 Whitechapel Road

211–217 Whitechapel Road
Contributed by Survey of London on Nov. 17, 2017

This 60ft frontage, probably already then built up, was the subject of a manorial lease of 99 years in 1670 to Sarah Wadeson, a local widow. Divided into four plots, the two to the east were converted to be a public house, the ‘Red Lyon, Towns End’, that was here by 1730 and perhaps much earlier. Sir Benjamin Truman took a new lease of the group in 1764 and his successors at the Brick Lane brewery held the property into the nineteenth century. The present asymmetrical and loosely Italianate four-storey five-bay block was built in 1846–7 as four properties, the Red Lion to the east larger than the others with two closely spaced window bays. William Harrap, a Finsbury carpenter, was the builder for William Walker of St Martin’s Lane. The pub became known as the Old Red Lion around 1900, having gained a top-lit back building. It closed in 1991. In 1912 Isaac Rachovitch, a ‘talking-machine dealer’, was at No. 215. A century later white paint was removed from the whole group and new shopfronts were fitted.1


  1. London Metropolitan Archives, M/93/304–5; MR/LV/05/026; Tower Hamlets Commissioners of Sewers ratebooks; District Surveyors Returns: Post Office Directories: Tower Hamlets Local History Library and Archives, Building Control file 15514: https://pubshistory.com/LondonPubs/Whitechapel/RedLionWhitechapel.shtml. 

213-217 Whitechapel Road with van, December 2018
Contributed by Derek Kendall

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