MARE STREET AND LONDON FIELDS.
There may have been a settlement on the boundary at Cambridge Heath to give its name to Mare
Street, the way to Hackney village from Bethnal
Green. (fn. 79) Cambridge Heath was common pasture
in 1275 and adjoined London Field, which was
recorded from 1540, at first in the singular, and
was perhaps named from its position at the
London end of Hackney's busiest local road. (fn. 80)
This section treats the modern Mare Street as
far north as Hackney Grove, including the
stretch south of the Triangle, which until 1868
was called Cambridge Heath. (fn. 81) It also includes
London Fields, both the open space and the
built-up land east and south of it.
Mare Street was a distinct settlement in 1593. (fn. 82)
By that date it may have included the Flying
Horse inn, said to have been a staging post
perhaps because of its 18th-century name, the
Nag's Head, and the Horse and Groom, since
all three were timber built. The first two stood
at the corners of Flying Horse Yard and London
Lane, both leading from Mare Street to London
Fields. (fn. 83) Farther south a way to the fields, the
19th-century Mutton Lane (later West, from
1911 Westgate, Street), was described in the
17th century as Sheep Lane, which name was
later applied to a route south from Mutton Lane
parallel with Mare Street. (fn. 84)
In 1605 Mare Street had 23 residents who
contributed to repair of the church. The highest
payers included Mr. Huggins, presumably Edmund Huggins recorded in 1602, William Bird,
Thomas Catcher, recorded as a moneyer in 1602,
and Mr. De Quester, probably James De
Quester, a foreign merchant; all were citizens of
London. (fn. 85) Another William Bird, a merchant
with Spanish connexions, had a house in Mare
Street in 1695. (fn. 86) Some property of George
Clarke was occupied in 1657 by Robert Neighbours, a blacksmith, who was allowed to build
on waste in Mare Street near the sign of the
Magpie, adjoining St. Thomas's hospital's
land. (fn. 87) Forty-nine houses owed hearth tax in
1664, the largest being those of Clarke and of
the City chamberlain Sir Thomas Player at 14
hearths, and 6 stood empty; (fn. 88) 78 were assessed
in 1672. (fn. 89)
The ownership and occupation of holdings
between Mare Street and London Fields had
already begun to be reorganized. Dr. William
Parker and his wife Elizabeth were licensed to
pull down an old building in 1667 and 1675, and
occupied a new house in 1685, formed from two
out of four tenements on ½ a. in the north angle
of Sheep Lane (later Westgate Street). (fn. 90) The site
abutted north and west on other land of Parker,
who also held two tenements formed out of one
in Mare Street, acquired in 1672 from James
Debutt, and two houses in Sheep Lane, one of
them the Shoulder of Mutton. (fn. 91) All passed to
the son of William Parker and his heirs. (fn. 92)
James Debutt, presumably as heir to Giles
Debutt who had been made a vestryman in
1627, (fn. 93) occupied part of a neighbouring copyhold of Kingshold in 1666 and settled it on his
son-in-law Richard Bristow, grocer of London,
in 1672. (fn. 94) Bristow acquired a Lordshold copyhold with 5 a. in London Fields in 1695 and
bought the freeholds of five Kingshold houses
in Mare Street, with three tenements behind
them; they included Debutt's house, which had
been assessed at 10 hearths, and Lady Player's
late residence. (fn. 95) His widow Elizabeth Bristow,
with William Parker and Joseph Thompson, was
one of the chief landholders in London Fields
in 1719. (fn. 96) By will dated 1722 she left her Lordshold copyhold, the former 'Black and White
House, now called the madhouse', with land in
Mare Street adjoining Sheep Lane, to her son
John, of the Grove, in Ellesborough (Bucks.), (fn. 97)
whose nephew Richard Bristow in 1769 left
them for sale to Richard Heron. (fn. 98)
East of Mare Street building was carried out
by Thomas Tryon, a merchant and from 1692 a
copyholder, who bought more land in 1696. By
will dated 1703 he left several houses to his
daughter Elizabeth, wife of Richard Wilkinson,
and five to his daughter Rebecca, wife of John
Owen. (fn. 99) Thomas Tryon Owen and his brother
John Owen in 1728 held ten houses, presumably
where Tryon's Place marked the narrow end of
a track leading to Shore Place. (fn. 1)
Near Hackney village, south of the modern
corner of Darnley Road, stood a three-storeyed
gable-ended house reputedly built c. 1590. (fn. 2) It
was granted in 1658 with nearly 4 a. of pasture
called Barber's Barn to John Jones, who held
adjoining premises and presumably leased it to
the regicide Col. John Okey (d. 1662). (fn. 3) The
house, formerly Barber's Barn, was occupied
with 1½ a. by Katharine Clarke, widow, in 1715,
when John Bird mortgaged it to his fellow citizen
of London, the grocer John Iveson. (fn. 4) It later
passed to the nurseryman Conrad Loddiges,
who replaced it with his own house and Loddiges Terrace. Residents in the terrace were to
include the line engraver George Cooke (d.
1834), who worked for Loddiges, and his son
Edward Cooke (d. 1880), the marine painter. (fn. 5)

The south end of Mare Street c. 1830
A Haggerston brickmaker, John Waxham, in
1713 mortgaged land in Tower Street fronting
London Fields, where a house had been built
and others were planned. (fn. 6) That Tower Street
was probably not the later Tower (from 1938
Martello) Street, at the end of London Lane
along part of the line of Church Path, but rather
the later Lamb Lane, said to commemorate the
owner of a large house of c. 1720 at the corner
of Mare Street; (fn. 7) nearby pasture was bordered on
the south-west by Sheep Lane. (fn. 8) Jacob Alvares
had moved to the neighbourhood by 1717 and
held 7 copyhold houses, some having been divided, by 1730. (fn. 9)
Mare Street was the most populous district of
the parish in 1720, with 111 ratepayers, and
contained 9 of the 36 select vestrymen in 1729. (fn. 10)
More built-up than the high road through Kingsland, it had 19 licensed inns by 1723, including
the Shoulder of Mutton where Church Path
reached the south end of London Fields and the
Red Lion at Cambridge Heath; three inns were
called the Swan, two the Cock, and two the
Ship. (fn. 11) Ratepayers numbered 140 in 1735 and
199 by 1761 but had barely increased by 1779,
when Mare Street was overtaken in numbers by
Homerton and rivalled by Clapton. (fn. 12) The traveller Celia Fiennes died at a house in Mare Street
near Well Street in 1741. (fn. 13)
In 1745 buildings lined both sides of Mare
Street between Mutton Lane and London Lane,
leading respectively to the south and north ends
of London Fields. They were probably densest
at the junction with Well Street and did not
extend far down that road or any side road except
Mutton and London lanes, although at the end
of London Lane they lined part of London
Fields. Houses were not yet continuous along
Mare Street: there were breaks between Bethnal
Green and the houses at Cambridge Heath,
between those houses and Mutton Lane, where
the road widened beside a pond at what was later
called the Triangle, and between London Lane
and Church Street. (fn. 14)
The most impressive 18th-century development was on the east side of Mare Street. St.
Thomas's hospital followed its decision to build
on the site of Shore Place (fn. 15) with a lease in 1769
under which Robert Collins laid out St.
Thomas's Square in 1771-2. A Congregational
chapel was opened on the south side in 1772 and
served by distinguished ministers. Richard Price
(d. 1791), of the Old Gravel Pit meeting, moved
to no. 2 in 1786. (fn. 16)
Farther north the hospital allowed small-scale
development east of Mare Street under a lease
of 1780 to Joseph Spackman, whose Spackman's
Buildings until 1868 marked the beginning of
Hackney village. (fn. 17) Building also began to spread
along the north side of Well Street as far as Shore
Place, with a short terrace of 1785 and a slightly
earlier pair. The first terrace in St. Thomas's
Place, a narrow way between the square and
Well Street, was built by Thomas Pearson between 1805 and 1807. Denmark Place was built
on the south side of Well Street in 1810. (fn. 18)
Farther south the village around the Triangle
became linked with Cambridge Heath. In 1789
Benjamin Bond Hopkins leased land stretching
east for c. 300 yd. to Giles Wells, a market
gardener of Bethnal Green, and the Mare Street
frontage was subleased to James Benson, who in
the 1790s built a terrace called Cambridge Row
(later part of the neighbouring Cambridge Terrace and from 1868 nos. 30 to 56 (even) Mare
Street). (fn. 19) Close to the parish boundary John
(from 1871 Vyner) Street ran eastward by
1811, (fn. 20) before the Regent's canal cut it off from
land to the north, where similarly cramped
houses were built on former Hopkins land in
North (from 1938 Northiam) Street. (fn. 21)
South of London Fields the Cat and Mutton
(formerly the Shoulder of Mutton) in 1790
marked the end of a row of building along the
south side of Mutton Lane on land of William
Parker Hamond, whose Shoulder of Mutton
field lay to the west. (fn. 22) Garden ground south of
the row, bounded east by Sheep Lane, was sold
to Thomas Pearson in 1799, with 1 a. north of
Mutton Lane. Neighbouring pieces included 11
houses newly built by George Plumridge, sold
in 1798 to Peter Pearse, and adjoining land sold
in 1800 to James Potts, a purchaser of Hamond's
lands near the Grove, (fn. 23) who was bankrupt by
1817. (fn. 24) Duncan Place on the line of Church Path
(from 1881 part of the Broadway, in 1937 renamed Broadway Market), had been named by
1811. So too had London Place (later part of
London Fields East Side) leading north from
Mutton Lane. (fn. 25) Isaac Alvares built a house for
his mistress Mrs. Jenkins in Tower Street (soon
renamed Lamb Lane) in 1810 and his own
residence had made way for several buildings in
Mare Street by 1812. (fn. 26) Flying Horse Yard (in
1821 called Exmouth Place) and Lamb Lane,
although not wholly built up, housed tradesmen
and workmen in 1821. (fn. 27)
In 1831 buildings formed almost a continuous
ribbon from Cambridge Heath to Hackney village. Houses in Mare Street north of St.
Thomas's Square were compared favourably
with those farther south, many of which presumably were older, and with shops north of the
Grove. (fn. 28) Towards Grove Street further growth
waited on plans for the Cass and St. Thomas's
hospital estates: behind Cambridge Row, Giles
Wells's widow Mary held garden ground where
Victoria Park Road could not be constructed
until the lease expired in 1850. (fn. 29) Towards London Fields there was some cramped building in
Sheep Lane and more on Shoulder of Mutton
field in George and John streets (later Hamburg
and Bremen, from 1918 Croston and Dericote,
streets). South-west of the Fields a start made
on Lansdowne Place in Lansdowne Road (from
1938 Lansdowne Drive) preceded the exploitation of adjoining land in Dalston. (fn. 30) The eastern
edge of London Fields was built up only with
London Place, a few houses in Exmouth Place
(shown at the end of Flying Horse Yard), and
near the ends of Lamb Lane and London Lane.
Arnold House faced London Fields opposite the
buildings south of London Lane; it had been
leased in 1825 from William Thompson Corbett
(d. 1832) of Elsham (Lines.) and probably in
1802 from Thomas Corbett (d. 1808), whose
wife had inherited land of Joseph Thompson. (fn. 31)
Between the Fields and Mare Street the land was
mainly occupied by outbuildings and gardens;
they included those of Dr. Warburton's house,
once William Parker's, Pembroke House, and
the Corbetts' London House in London Lane,
all three being asylums. (fn. 32)
The junction at the Triangle was so busy in
1827 that all the verges were to be cut back to
widen Mutton Lane and a footpath along Mare
Street; the central plot was to be fenced as an
ornamental space. (fn. 33) Infilling began towards
London Fields, where dense building around
Helmsley Street, reaching the Fields at Helmsley Terrace, by 1852 represented the
development of the Alvares estate for George
Jenkins. (fn. 34) Warburton Road, parallel with Flying
Horse Yard, replaced Dr. Warburton's asylum
and its long garden; William Frederick Tuck
planned to build at least 20 houses in 1847 and
Warburton Place along Mare Street in 1848. (fn. 35)
More small houses formed Warburton Square,
which was separated from London Fields by
Pacifico's almshouses of c. 1851 and a chapel of
c. 1863, both built on land sold by the Brandon
family to William Bull in 1846. (fn. 36) Thomas
George Corbett made a building lease for the
west side of Tower (later Martello) Street in
1856. (fn. 37) St. Michael and All Angels' church was
built in 1864 at the west end of Lamb Lane,
while Pembroke House, with Melbourne House
and West Lodge to the north, survived at the
east end. (fn. 38)
New houses behind the east frontages of Mare
Street were chiefly the work of builders active
around Well Street. Marmaduke Matthews, of
Cambridge Lodge south of the Triangle, in 1856
built a large pair called Cambridge Lodge Villas
farther back, blocking plans by the St. Pancras
land society to reach the main road. (fn. 39) Tryon's
Place was extended to the east in the 1840s by
H. D. Hacon as Tryon's Terrace, the whole
length being named Tudor Road by 1865. (fn. 40)
Avenues were planned north and east of St.
Thomas's Square in 1853, in expectation of the
closure of Loddiges's nursery. (fn. 41)
London Fields only narrowly escaped development. Agents of the landholders were denying
access to all but Church Path in 1860 (fn. 42) and
presumably united to advertise for builders in
1862. The offer did not include a square plot of
nearly 4 a. in the north-west, formerly of Mrs.
Hamond and later of William Rhodes and still
nursery ground in 1862. Covered with the
houses south of Wilman Grove by 1870, it was
where a west London surveyor called George
Clarkson was building quickly c. 1867, when his
title was disputed by preservationists. (fn. 43) Supporters of building pointed to the neglected state
of London Fields but were frustrated by concern
to save a large space so close to the City. (fn. 44) The
district's only other public spaces were the garden of St. Thomas's Square and disused
graveyards south of the Congregational chapel
and along the east side of St. Thomas's Place. (fn. 45)
South-west of the Triangle, towards the Regent's canal, conditions were cramped. A few
private grounds survived between the Cambridge Heath houses and Sheep Lane in 1865
but most made way for the G.E.R.'s line opened
in 1872. (fn. 46) The raised railway, whose arches were
to attract workshops, cut north between Mare
Street and London Fields, with a station in
Grosvenor (from 1878 Mentmore) Terrace, and
added to the industrial character of an area said
in 1870 to be very poor. (fn. 47) The G.E.R.'s purchase
of Pembroke House (fn. 48) led to infilling south of
Lamb Lane, where Sidworth Street was named
in 1872 and Bayford Street in 1873. Crowded
housing also filled Fortescue Avenue and other
roads to the north, where Grosvenor Terrace
like Sidworth Street faced the railway and where
Ellingfort Road was named in 1878 and
Gransden Avenue in 1880. (fn. 49) Small businesses by
1872 were numerous in London Place and by
1888 had spread farther along the frontage to
London Fields. (fn. 50)
The main street, with tramways from 1873, (fn. 51)
attracted purpose-built institutions, including
chapels, Morley hall at the Triangle in 1879, and
Lady Holles's sch. midway between Well Street
and St. Thomas's Square in 1882. (fn. 52) Other bodies, notably the Elizabeth Fry refuge and later,
at Cambridge Lodge Villas, St. Joseph's hospice, took over existing houses. (fn. 53) The sanitary
chemist Charles Meymott Tidy (d. 1892), a local
doctor's son, lived in 1870 at Cambridge
Heath. (fn. 54) Three schools were built around London Fields between 1873 and 1898. (fn. 55)
Well-to-do residents still lived along Mare
Street in the 1880s, with some who were 'fairly
comfortable' south of Well Street and with a few
immediately south of Hackney Grove. Around
London Fields the well-to-do along the north
side were separated from the fairly comfortable
in Lansdowne Road and the Broadway by mixed
households along the east side and by the poor
along the west side south of Wilman Grove.
Many streets near the railway were also mixed
including Lamb Lane and Helmsley Street;
Exmouth Place, Warburton Road and Square,
and Helmsley Place were poor. South of London
Fields, Ash Grove was mixed but Ada Street
and its parallels on the opposite side of Sheep
Lane were poor, as were Hamburg and Bremen
streets west of Lansdowne Road. Duncan Street,
Road, and Square were very poor. (fn. 56)
Widening of Mare street was sought in 1885
but it was not until 1899 that the L.C.C. agreed
to improve the whole length from the Triangle
to Hackney village. (fn. 57) The forecourts of several
large houses on both sides south of Hackney
Grove, including Spackman's Buildings, were
compulsorily purchased in 1902 for work that
was finished by 1906. (fn. 58) Building was planned in
the gardens of nos. 263-9 (odd), at the corner of
Richmond Road, in 1903. (fn. 59) Many factories were
built behind, on the east side notably off Tudor
Road and Well Street, including a bus garage of
1911, and near the end of Darnley Road. On the
west side they faced the street, displacing old
houses over shops south of London Lane. Near
the railway they included Silesia Buildings,
named in 1906, off Gransden Avenue. Demolition had taken place south of Lady Holles's
school by 1905 and more was awaited south of
the Triangle c. 1912. (fn. 60) The L.C.C. in 1904
opened Darcy Buildings (later House), 40 dwellings and one of the first of its blocks in Hackney,
on the site of Pacifico's almshouses. (fn. 61)
After the First World War the area grew more
industrial. Conversions of houses into workshops were reported in 1928, notably in Tudor
Road and Mentmore Terrace, as were new
factories in Mare Street and around Tower
Street and Ash Grove. (fn. 62) Large houses also made
way for flats over shops, as at nos. 206 and 208
Mare Street, on the corner of Devonshire Road,
in 1925 and at Richmond Court (no. 257) by
1937. (fn. 63) The timber-framed no. 149 Mare Street,
once the Flying Horse, and two houses north of
Tudor Road, probably the last remnants of
Tryon's Place, were in poor condition by 1930. (fn. 64)
The closure of Cambridge Heath Congregational church in 1936 later provided more space
for St. Joseph's hospice. (fn. 65)
Slum clearance was chiefly around London
Fields. In 1935 more than half of the inhabitants
of 75 houses around Duncan Square had been
rehoused by the L.C.C., presumably in part of
its massive Duncan (from 1974 Alden) House. (fn. 66)
Warburton Square had been newly cleared of
156 houses in 1935 and most of its inhabitants
resettled, presumably in Warburton House next
to Darcy House, by 1938. (fn. 67) Hackney M.B.
planned to clear most of Essex Street, south of
the Triangle, in 1936. (fn. 68)
Victims of bomb damage included churches,
the north-west corner of St. Thomas's Square,
Georgian houses (nos. 107-9) at the Triangle,
and Mentmore Terrace. (fn. 69) The entire northern
and eastern sides of St. Thomas's Square were
compulsorily purchased in 1952 and later demolished, (fn. 70) the northern making way for Pitcairn
House of 1961-3, designed by Eric Lyons as part
of the L.C.C.'s Frampton Park estate. (fn. 71) The
garden on the east side of St. Thomas's Place
was incorporated into the estate, whereas the
older houses on the west side were bought in
1963 by Hackney M.B. (fn. 72) In Mare Street piecemeal rebuilding was most obvious towards the
south end, with extensions for the Cordwainers'
college at the former Lady Holles's school and
for St. Joseph's hospice. (fn. 73) The site around the
bombed nos. 107-9 was taken for Netil House,
partly occupied by Hackney technical college. (fn. 74)
South of London Fields large new buildings
included flats at Broadway House from 1951 in
Jackman (formerly Goring) Street and the 17storeyed Welshpool House from 1965 in
Welshpool Street. (fn. 75) In 1975 Hackney L.B. approved the G.L.C.'s proposals to rehabilitate
Broadway Market and the streets to the west;
London Transport's depot in Ash Grove had
been planned and smaller industries were to be
regrouped. (fn. 76) In Ada Street a long eight-storeyed
block in 1992 was being prepared for use as
workshops.
In 1993 Mare Street was a nondescript mixture
of low-rise factories, shops, and institutional
buildings, the tallest being Pitcairn House. At
the south end new factories around Ash Grove
faced the junction of Northiam Street and Victoria Park road, whence new houses stretched
eastward, with an empty site to the north. The
last reminder of early 19th-century Cambridge
Heath, a row listed in 1975 as nos. 12-20 (even)
Mare Street, (fn. 77) had been acquired by the Spital
fields trust from the Crown Estate and awaited
restoration. (fn. 78) Nos. 24-28, dated 1811 and similarly listed as a terrace of three storeys over a
basement, had already gone. So too had James
Benson's nos. 30-56 and, at St. Thomas's
Square, a pedimented archway which had probably been its carriage entrance. (fn. 79) At the
south-east corner of London Fields, the Ann
Tayler centre had been built on the site of
London Place.
Shops in Mare Street were mainly around the
Triangle, which was adorned by a single tree,
and the junction with Well Street. Broadway
Market, much of it still awaiting refurbishment,
retained most of the 60-odd shops noted in
1975. (fn. 80) Near the railway the new Bayford industrial centre had replaced terraces east of
Sidworth Street. London Fields industrial area
around London Lane appeared run down: nearly
all the railway arches had been blocked up, many
Victorian houses stood derelict or had made way
for yards, and much factory space was unused.
Victorian terraces were mixed with more prosperous industry in Ellingfort and Richmond
roads.
The sole representative of Mare Street's early
18th-century gentlemen's residences is no. 195
(the New Lansdowne club). (fn. 81) It has five bays, of
three storeys over a basement, with steps to a
Doric doorcase; brown and red brickwork has
been renewed, in the original style, on the upper
storeys at the front. (fn. 82) Of the 18th century with
alterations, and of three storeys over a basement,
are nos. 224-32 (even); the first, at the corner of
Darnley Road, has a bow front and was no. 1
Spackman's Buildings, the residence from 1850
to 1863 of the local historian Benjamin Clarke. (fn. 83)
The early 19th-century houses of Loddiges Terrace can be seen to the south, behind the
projecting shop fronts of nos. 210-218. Immediately south of the Cordwainers' college, seven
early 19th-century cottages survive unexpectedly in the cul-de-sac Pemberton Place. A
three-storeyed terrace, mostly over basements,
forms nos. 1-24 St. Thomas's Place, where the
southernmost eight houses were built by
Thomas Pearson in 1807. (fn. 84)
London Fields is a flat utilitarian open space,
with some mature plane trees. The former
Helmsley Terrace, two- and three-storeyed over
basements, survives from the early 19th century
as part of London Fields East Side. Broadway
Market has two-storeyed early 19th-century
houses, of which nos. 75-81 (odd) are at the
north-west end; the group is in poor condition
and no. 77, a 'perfectly preserved contemporary
small shop' in 1975, stands empty. To the west,
Dericote Street has refurbished early 19th-century linked pairs of two storeys over basements,
nos. 4-18 and 5-23; they form a T-junction with
the similar nos. 1-4 and 6-15 Croston Street,
where others are being built in the same style.