DOMESTIC BUILDINGS. (fn. 1)
A survey of Plaistow
ward carried out in 1742 lists 152 houses, of which
119 appear from descriptions to have been timberframed and 33 of brick. (fn. 2) Thirty-four are described
as old, which probably means 16th century or
earlier. At that date Plaistow had about 29 per cent
of the houses in the parish. (fn. 3) The other wards, for
which there are no corresponding surveys, may have
had a higher proportion of new buildings, but even
so it is likely that about 100 pre-17th-century houses
still survived in 1742. By 1970 only one was known
to survive.
The most notable group of medieval buildings in
West Ham was associated with Stratford Abbey,
which is described elsewhere. (fn. 4) New Barns farm,
which lay east of New Barn Street, at the south end
of Plaistow, was part of the rectorial glebe of West
Ham. (fn. 5) The tithe barns from which it was named
were mentioned in the 12th century, and one large
medieval barn survived there, adjoining Cumberland House, until c. 1900. The original vicarage
house of West Ham, at the south end of Vicarage
Lane, still existed in 1853, but was later demolished. (fn. 6)
Manor-houses may have existed during the Middle
Ages at Bretts and Sudbury in Plaistow, at Chobhams in Stratford, and at Woodgrange, but nothing
is known of them. (fn. 7) Christendom House at Plaistow
was part of a small estate, probably in New Barn
Street, which in the early 15th century belonged to
Robert Christendom, draper of London. (fn. 8) In 1742
it was an old boarded house of three storeys; it was
demolished in 1764. (fn. 9) Porch House, on the north
side of High Street, Plaistow, is said to have been
considered old even in the 16th century. (fn. 10) It was
probably the large old boarded house which c. 1723
was given a brick front and two new wings. (fn. 11) From
the 17th century to the 19th it belonged to the
Rawstorne family. It was demolished in 1839. The
site included the present Clegg Street. Sonables, or
Senables, in West Ham Lane, Stratford, was a house
belonging to the archdeacon of Essex ex officio. It
has been traced from 1445 to 1708. (fn. 12) Nothing is
known of its appearance or construction. The site,
now part of the recreation ground, still belonged to
the archdeacon in 1853. (fn. 13)
Among buildings probably dating from the 16th
century was Hyde House, High Street, Plaistow,
which was probably the mansion to which a tenement called The Hyde belonged in 1605. (fn. 14) A wall
in the adjoining yard was dated 1559, and over a red
brick gateway to the south were the date 1579 and
the inscription 'This is the gate of Everlasting Life'.
The improbable tradition that the house was
occupied after the Dissolution by the monks of
Stratford is first recorded in the 18th century. In
the later 17th century Hyde House was the seat of
Sir Thomas Foot, lord mayor of London. In 1742
it was an old boarded house occupied by Aaron Hill
(1685–1750), the dramatist and poet. (fn. 15) It was demolished shortly before 1811. (fn. 16) The gateway of 1579,
which had latterly been built into the wall of a barn,
was demolished in 1859. (fn. 17) The farm-house to which
the barn then belonged was demolished at the same
time. It had contained wall-paintings of biblical
subjects. (fn. 18)
Essex House, Greengate Street, Plaistow, is said to
have been a large white house with Tudor windows. (fn. 19)
It was demolished in 1836, but part of the garden
wall survived until 1905, and a wrought iron gateway still remains. After 1836 some of the materials
from the house were used on the same site to build
Essex Lodge, a cottage-style residence with gables
and ornamental barge-boards, now occupied by the
municipal parks department. (fn. 20) Features retained
from the earlier house include an enriched shellhood of c. 1700 over the front door, and, internally,
what appears to be an early-18th-century stone
doorway adapted as a fire-place. Above the latter
was the crest of the Willyams family, a ducal coronet
surmounted by a falcon with folded wings. (fn. 21) This
suggests that Essex House was the large old plastered
house occupied in the mid 18th century by Thomas
Willyams, and later by John Willyams, who left in
1768. (fn. 22)
The existence of several of West Ham's inns can
be traced from the 16th century or earlier. The Cock
at Stratford occurs in 1485. (fn. 23) The Blue Boar, High
Street, Stratford, mentioned in 1538, was rebuilt
in 1886, refronted c. 1936, and later demolished. (fn. 24)
The Angel, Church Street, was formerly a timberframed building of the 16th or early 17th century
but was rebuilt in 1910. (fn. 25) The Spotted Dog, Upton
Lane, is the only ancient building, apart from the
parish church, which survives in West Ham. It is a
timber-framed structure dating from the 16th
century or earlier, but has been much restored. It
consists of a central block, which may once have
contained an open hall, flanked by two-storeyed and
jettied cross-wings with weatherboarded gables. A
large extension of yellow brick was built to the north
in the later 19th century. In 1968 the inn was
thoroughly renovated and a smaller addition, partly
weatherboarded, was built to the east. (fn. 26) In the later
19th century the Spotted Dog's tea-garden and
cricket ground were well-known. (fn. 27) Among other
early inns was the Swan, Stratford, first recorded
in 1631. (fn. 28) Early in the present century the Swan,
next to the town hall in High Street, was an 18th-century building of three storeys and attics, with a
19th-century frontage to the ground floor. It was
rebuilt c. 1925. (fn. 29) The Bird in Hand, in the same
street, existed in 1667 and survived until c. 1892. (fn. 30)
The Unicorn, Church Street, is recorded from c. 1670
to 1908. (fn. 31)
By the 17th century West Ham's growth as a
prosperous suburb of London could be seen in the
high proportion of large houses. In 1670, for
example, 30 per cent of the houses in the parish
had 5 or more hearths, compared with only 17 per
cent in Ongar hundred, a neighbouring rural area. (fn. 32)
Within the parish, however, there were striking
variations. Of the four wards Stratford contained
45 houses with 5 or more hearths (25 per cent of the
total there), Plaistow 43 (40 per cent), Church Street
26 (25 per cent), and Upton 10 (40 per cent).
Rokeby House, Broadway, Stratford, is thought
to have been built in the earlier 17th century. (fn. 33) The
name, which has not been found before the 19th
century, may be connected with the family of the
Revd. H. R. Rokeby, who owned an estate at Stratford in 1853. (fn. 34) The earliest known occupants were
the Clowes family, whose arms were carved in wood
on a Jacobean chimneypiece in the house. William
Clowes (1582–1648), of London and Stratford,
compounded for his estates in 1646 as a royalist. (fn. 35) He
had been surgeon to Charles I. In the 19th century
Rokeby House became a school and later accommodated the offices of the parish vestry and the local
board, and West Ham's first public library. (fn. 36) It was
demolished in 1898. (fn. 37) Photographs taken then show
a mainly 18th-century front of two storeys and
attics, with 7 bays and two classical doorways, but
the back of the building, with its irregular gabled
roof-line, was considerably older; one gable with
ornamental brickwork may well have dated from the
earlier 17th century. (fn. 38)
At Plaistow Cumberland House, Elkington Road,
off New Barn Street, must have been standing in
the 17th century if not earlier. In 1742 it was a brick
building of three storeys. (fn. 39) It was bought in 1787 by
Henry, duke of Cumberland (d. 1790) and subsequently took his name. In 1902 it possessed a fivebay front of two storeys with a parapet swept up
over a central attic window. (fn. 40) That front probably
dated from the early 18th century, but the back of
the house was probably older. Cumberland House
was demolished shortly before 1936. (fn. 41)
After 1700 West Ham reached its hey-day as a
residential area favoured by merchants and professional men occupying large detached houses.
New houses were built and older ones were modernized. Although few of them survive the appearance
of many has been recorded. (fn. 42) Several, including
Upton House (rebuilt 1731) (fn. 43) contained early-18th-century panelling and fine staircases with slender
twisted balusters. The evidence points to a boom in
high-class building during the first 30 or 40 years of
the century. Later development tended to include
somewhat smaller middle-class houses as well as
large residences in extensive grounds. In the late
18th and early 19th centuries terraced houses and
pairs were built along the roads on comparatively
narrow frontages, especially at Stratford. Such
dwellings apparently filled the needs of professional
and business men who did not keep their own
carriages but were able to use the improving coach
and bus services to London.
Between 1700 and 1840 Stratford, Plaistow, and
Upton maintained their separate identities. At
Stratford large houses were to be found at Maryland
Point, The Grove, The Green, and along Romford
Road. Stratford House, The Grove, 'a substantial
mansion with a uniform front', (fn. 44) has been traced
from the early 18th century. It was the seat of John
Henniker (d. 1803), Lord Henniker, a large local
landowner. (fn. 45) When the railway was built close by,
the house ceased to be attractive as a gentleman's
residence. (fn. 46) It appears to have been demolished late
in the 19th century, when Great Eastern Road was
built across its site. (fn. 47)
South of the Green, in Romford Road, was an
18th-century house of brown brick with a fine
wrought-iron gateway. (fn. 48) For many years up to 1907 it
was a private school. (fn. 49) It became Church House
(diocesan offices, c. 1916–30) and was later used by
the corporation. (fn. 50) During the Second World War it
was bombed, and after the war it was demolished.
North of the Green were several 18th-or early-19th-century houses which were also bombed. (fn. 51) One of
them, later a Territorial Army centre called Artillery
House, had been built or rebuilt in Gothic style,
probably c. 1840. Stratford Hall, on the corner of
Romford and Carnarvon Roads, was an early-19th-century building, demolished in 1921. (fn. 52) A summerhouse in the garden was thought to be older.
Carnarvon Hall was at the north end of Carnarvon
Road, on a site redeveloped c. 1868. (fn. 53) Near it, in
Forest Lane, was Moulseys, which existed in 1777. (fn. 54)
At that date there was also a cluster of buildings at
Maryland Point. (fn. 55) The 18th-century gate piers of
one of them survived until c. 1950.
The office of Arthur Webb Ltd., no. 30 Romford
Road, Stratford, is an 18th-century weatherboarded
building of 5 bays with a new roof. Angel Cottage,
Windmill Lane, is a small double-fronted house
dated 1826. Well-preserved and clad with creeper,
it is a remarkable survival in an industrial area. The
North West Ham Labour club (no. 62), Forest Lane
and St. John's House (no. 2), Romford Road are
substantial detached houses, of c. 1840, each with a
classical portico. A few other houses in Broadway
and High Street may date from the early 19th century, though altered by the insertion of shop-fronts.
At Plaistow development between 1700 and 1840
was mainly within the old village. In c. 1742–80 25
new houses were built and 13 old ones rebuilt. (fn. 56) The
larger houses were typically of five bays and three
storeys. Richmond House, Richmond Street, was an
early-18th-century building with a segmental pediment and Corinthian pilasters to the front door. (fn. 57)
John Curwen lived there in the 1860s. (fn. 58) The house
was demolished in 1930. (fn. 59) Broadway (or Great)
House, in Broadway, also built in the 18th century,
belonged in the early 19th to the Martens, who
were often visited by William Wilberforce. (fn. 60) It
was demolished in 1882. In High Street one 18th-century house, no. 125, still survives. The front has
recently been rebuilt. (fn. 61) At the north end of Balaam
Street was an unnamed house occupied in 1754–66
by William Dodd. (fn. 62) In 1742 it was described as
modern. (fn. 63) It was demolished in 1890 and replaced
by the Laurels. Brunstock Cottage, no. 83 Balaam
Street, still survived, greatly altered, in the 1930s,
but was later demolished. (fn. 64) Edmund Burke lived
there 1759–61. In 1742 it was apparently a boarded
two-storey house. (fn. 65) Chesterton House, Balaam
Street, had an early-19th-century front of seven
bays, but an older interior. (fn. 66) Among its occupants
was Luke Howard. (fn. 67) It later became part of Plaistow
maternity hospital, (fn. 68) but was demolished in 1960. (fn. 69)
North of Plaistow village, on the site of the present
Willow Grove and Valetta Grove, was the Willows,
formerly Bedfords, a large house probably built in
the early 19th century. (fn. 70) Its lodge, a single-storey
gabled cottage of c. 1840, still stands in Willow
Grove but slates have replaced the old thatched roof. (fn. 71)
Between 1700 and 1840, and indeed until after
1850, Upton remained an area of big houses in
extensive grounds. In the earlier 19th century the
residents included several leading Quakers, a
closely-knit community linked by marriage with the
Pelly family, West Ham's principal landowners. (fn. 72)
Ham House, rebuilt in the 18th century, was the
seat of Samuel Gurney (d. 1856). (fn. 73) The Cedars,
adjoining Ham House in Portway, also belonged to
him. (fn. 74) From 1829 to 1844 it was occupied by his
sister Elizabeth Fry and her family, who in 1842
entertained Frederick William IV of Prussia there.
The Cedars later became a Territorial Army centre.
It had a yellow-brick front with a central pediment and classical porch and was said to have been
constructed in the early 19th century from the
barn and farm buildings of an earlier house. It was
demolished in 1960.
Upton House, Upton Lane, was occupied in the
early 19th century by another distinguished Quaker
family, the Listers, including the future Lord Lister,
who was born there. It had been rebuilt in 1731,
possibly by Sir Philip Hall, as one of West Ham's
finest houses. (fn. 75) It was a brick building of two storeys
and attics. The entrance (west) front, of nine bays,
was faced with stucco and altered in the 19th century. Most of the rooms had early-18th-century
panelling, and there was a fine staircase with twisted
balusters. In the kitchen there was a moulded beam
of the 15th or 16th century, possibly brought from
another building. (fn. 76) Adjoining the house to the north
there was a smaller and longer building, possibly
older. (fn. 77) This still existed in 1870, but must have
been demolished soon after, probably during the
1880s, when Lancaster Road was built. (fn. 78) From 1893
to 1959 Upton House was St. Peter's vicarage. (fn. 79) It
was demolished in 1968.
The Manor (or Four Manor) House, Upton Cross,
demolished c. 1885, was the seat of the Pellys. (fn. 80)
Herne House, Upton Lane, was built c. 1770 and
demolished in 1896. (fn. 81) J. S. Curwen lived there c.
1882–90. The Red House, Upton Lane, has been
traced from the 18th century, but was reconstructed
in a florid style in the 1870s. (fn. 82) It is now St. Anthony's
Catholic Club. Grove House, Upton Lane, was an
18th-century three-storey building. (fn. 83) It was for long
the preparatory department of St. Angela's convent
school, but was demolished in 1950.
At Forest Gate there were few buildings before
the 19th century. Hamfrith House, which probably
originated as a farm-house in the 18th century, was
rebuilt c. 1800 as a gentleman's residence, later
called West Ham Hall, in Sebert Road. (fn. 84) Forest
House, Dames Road, was the home of the Dames
family until the 1860s, and was probably demolished
about then. (fn. 85) Between Forest House and Wanstead
Flats were several other large houses, one of which,
dating from c. 1840, survives as no. 91 Dames Road.
Little is known about the houses of the poor
before 1840. A few timber-framed 16th-century
cottages in Church Street, West Ham, survived
until the 1930s or later. (fn. 86) Wenny's Cottages, Romford
Road, Stratford, demolished 1907, formed a weatherboarded terrace probably dating from the 18th
century. (fn. 87) Wilton's Yard, Angel Lane, Stratford,
contained five wooden hovels built along the sides
of the alley leading to an 18th-century detached
house. (fn. 88) Such development, probably of the early
19th century, was also to be found in several other
places in the Angel Lane and High Street areas
of Stratford. (fn. 89) Wood's Yard, Dean's Court, and
Channelsea Court, all off High Street, were slums
singled out for reprobation in the Dickens report of
1855. (fn. 90) Opposite Channelsea Court was Rabbit
Hutch Row, which was sometimes flooded by the
Channelsea, and where the inhabitants used the
stream both as a sewer and a source of drinking water.
The houses had brick basements with one or two
weatherboarded living rooms above. Among cottages
at Plaistow were some occupied by the immigrant
Irish potato workers, in Pinnocks Place, off North
Street, and in Greengate Street. (fn. 91) Those also were
mentioned in the Dickens report. (fn. 92)
A writer in c. 1740 stated that there were more
than 60 public houses in West Ham. (fn. 93) In the later 18th
century the number fell, no doubt as the result of
stricter control by quarter sessions: 46 were licensed
in 1769, 34 in 1795, and 32 in 1815. (fn. 94) In 1742 there
were about 14 in Plaistow ward. (fn. 95) Among them were
the Crown, later the Abbey Arms, Barking Road,
the Black Lion and the Coach and Horses, both in
High Street, and the Greyhound, Balaam Street. (fn. 96)
The Abbey Arms was refronted c. 1820 and rebuilt
in 1882. (fn. 97) The Black Lion, described in 1742 as an
old plastered house, was largely rebuilt in 1875. (fn. 98)
The Coach and Horses (fn. 99) appears also to have been
rebuilt in the 19th century. The Greyhound,
formerly the Greyhound and Hare, was rebuilt in
1773, (fn. 100) and the present building, though altered,
may date from that time. The Greengate, Greengate
Street, formerly the Gate, is recorded from 1776. (fn. 101)
It was rebuilt in 1953–4. (fn. 102) The Prince Regent was
built in 1811 on the river side at the northern end
of the new ferry from Charlton (Kent). (fn. 103) When the
North Woolwich railway was opened in 1847 the
inn, no longer needed there, was demolished and
rebuilt farther north in Prince Regent Lane.
At Stratford the Angel, the Cart and Horses, and
the King of Prussia were listed in 1765. (fn. 104) The
Angel, at the corner of Angel Lane and Broadway,
was rebuilt c. 1870. (fn. 105) It is now a tailor's shop. About
1805 the Cart and Horses was in the Grove, adjoining Stratford House. (fn. 106) The building which it then
occupied probably survived in 1970 as nos. 150
and 152 the Grove; parts of a staircase at no. 150
had slender twisted balusters of the early 18th
century. (fn. 107) The sign of the Cart and Horses was
removed after 1805 to the corner of Windmill Lane
at Maryland Point, where a new building was erected
c. 1880. (fn. 108) The King of Prussia, Broadway, probably
commemorated Frederick the Great (king, 1740–86).
It was renamed the King Edward VII in 1914. (fn. 109)
The present building appears to date from the early
19th century. (fn. 110) Three other public houses of Stratford can be traced from 1776: the Pigeons, the
Yorkshire Grey, and the Two Brewers. (fn. 111) The
Pigeons (formerly Three Pigeons) Romford Road,
was rebuilt c. 1898. (fn. 112) The Yorkshire Grey and the
Two Brewers, both in High Street, were also rebuilt
in the later 19th century. (fn. 113)
In West Ham village the King's Head, Church
Street, recorded from 1765, was rebuilt in 1885. (fn. 114)
The Adam and Eve, Abbey Road, was built amid
the ruins of Stratford Abbey before 1732, when it
was 'a rendez-vous for fellows and wenches in the
summer'. (fn. 115) It appears to have been enlarged in the
mid 18th century and was rebuilt soon after 1900. (fn. 116)
The Eagle and Child, Woodgrange Road, Forest
Gate, existed, evidently as a house of some size, by
1744–6. (fn. 117) In the late 19th century, with pleasure
grounds attached, it was a popular holiday resort. (fn. 118)
It was rebuilt c. 1896. (fn. 119)
Between 1840 and 1914 over 40,000 houses were
built in West Ham, mainly for letting to workingclass tenants. (fn. 120) They were usually of two storeys in
yellow or grey brick with slate roofs and contained
4–6 rooms. The simplest type, predominant c.
1840–60, was similar to the rural cottage of the
period: a plain building, semi-detached or, more
often, in a short terrace. A few examples survive: in
Balaam Street, Plaistow (nos. 180–92); (fn. 121) Chant,
Deason, and Union Streets, Stratford; Francis
Street, Maryland (nos. 39–55); Odessa Road, Forest
Gate (nos. 98 and 100, dated 1857); and Barking
Road (nos. 588–606, formerly Augurs Cottages). (fn. 122)
After 1860 such cottages, in long terraces, with front
doors opening upon the pavement, and footscrapers
in the walls beside them, were to be found mainly
in the poorest areas, like William Street, Stratford
(c. 1863, demolished 1969), Second Avenue (formerly
Avenel Road) and Third Avenue (formerly Lennox
Street), Plaistow (c. 1879), and Argyle and Garvary
Roads, Canning Town (c. 1886). (fn. 123)
Terraces in a simple Georgian style, with the
façades carried up to a cornice or coping, sometimes
with billet-frieze ornament, were common throughout the town until c. 1880. Odessa Terrace (nos. 93–103), Odessa Road, Forest Gate (dated 1869) is in
that style. Globe Crescent, (c. 1860), in Globe Road,
Forest Gate, contains a rare example in West Ham
of a curved terrace. (fn. 124) Another way of building on a
curved frontage was to set the houses at an angle
to the road in step formation. There is one such
terrace, (c. 1860), in Chatsworth Road, Forest Gate,
adjoining Globe Road, and another (c. 1870) in Stratford Road, Plaistow, where it forms a block of small
shops called 'Market Place'. (fn. 125) Most houses built
c. 1875–90 had ground-floor bay-windows. There
are many dated examples, including Mabel Terrace,
Cedars Road, Stratford (1876), (fn. 126) and Cornwall Terrace, Tunmarsh Lane, Plaistow (1889). From c. 1890
the bays were usually carried up to roof level as in
Ness Terrace, Albert Road, Silvertown (1891), and
Albion Terrace, Beckton Road, Canning Town
(1898). After 1900 the bays were often square-sided,
with more pronounced gables, as in Crediton Road,
Canning Town (c. 1903). (fn. 127) Houses with bays
tended to fetch higher rents than those without, (fn. 128)
and they predominated on most of the new estates
built between 1880 and 1914. In spite of redevelopment they are still the commonest type in West
Ham. Even in poor areas the windows were usually
decorated with mass-produced stucco in the form
of miniature columns with foliated capitals.
Some of the estates built in the later 19th century
became slums. High land values and the great
demand for cheap houses made good building
unprofitable, especially in the south of the borough. (fn. 129)
Most of the houses in that area were run up by
speculative builders who had little capital or experience. (fn. 130) Here, as in other towns, this led not only
to faulty workmanship and the use of poor materials (fn. 131)
but to the wrong kind of houses. Many workers
could not afford to rent a whole house, but until
the 1890s very few flats were built in the borough.
Consequently houses designed for a single family
were often shared by two or more. (fn. 132) Conditions in
West Ham, however, were much better than those
in some older industrial areas. (fn. 133) A writer of c. 1900,
in a book on the East End, could even state that
'poor people and dirty streets are the exception
through West Ham'. (fn. 134)
The earliest council dwellings (1899–1905) were
much better adapted to the needs of working-class
tenants than those of the private builders. Most of
them were two-storey 'double houses' with a flat
on each floor. The flats varied in size from two to
four rooms, with a wash-house to each flat. The
original design was by Lewis Angell (borough
surveyor 1867–99) who believed that such dwellings
were 'healthier and more humanizing … especially
for children', than large 'barrack-like' blocks of
flats. (fn. 135) The largest estate, at Wise Road, Stratford
(94 flats and 11 single houses) survives, along with
others in Bethell Avenue, Plaistow, and in Eve and
Corporation Streets, West Ham. (fn. 136)
Houses of more than six rooms formed only a
small proportion of those built in the town after
1840. (fn. 137) The main group was at Forest Gate, in a
belt extending from Romford Road north to the
Great Eastern Railway, and from Carnarvon Road
east to Balmoral Road. It included Hamfrith,
Atherton, Norwich, Sprowston, and Clova Roads,
and Earlham Grove, which were part of the
Gurney estate (c. 1870–90), (fn. 138) and, farther east,
most of the Woodgrange estate: Hampton,
Osborne, Claremont, Windsor, and Richmond
Roads, and the north side of Romford Road. (fn. 139) These
houses, many of which survive, include detached,
semi-detached, and terraced types. In Romford
Road, where sites were no doubt more expensive,
they are often three-storeyed. Some on the north
side of that road had coach-houses in Atherton
Mews and Sprowston Mews. One of the largest
detached houses is Workington House, no. 328
Romford Road, built shortly before 1870. (fn. 140) It is a
three-storey house of five bays with a Corinthian
portico. John Curwen (d. 1880) lived there. The
Woodgrange estate (1877–92) was much the largest
middle-class development in West Ham. (fn. 141) It was
laid out on the 'gridiron' plan common in the 19th
century, but the plots are of good size, with gardens
front and back. Most of the houses are double-fronted, some with glass-roofed verandahs.
Among other streets in north West Ham containing houses built for middle-class occupation are
Westbury, Victoria (formerly Vale), and Palmerston
Roads, at Upton, which were developed from c.
1860. (fn. 142) In Forest Lane, Forest Gate, are three pairs
of semi-detached houses (nos. 122–7) built c. 1860.
One pair still has the original porches, each supported by an iron column decorated with tracery.
The columns resemble those supporting the canopy
at the old (Windmill Lane) entrance to Stratford
Railway station. At Plaistow only a few large houses
were built between 1840 and 1914. No. 142 Balaam
Street (c. 1850), is of three bays with three storeys
and basement. In Chesterton and Howard's Roads
are several pairs of large semi-detached houses of
c. 1850–60. (fn. 143) The Laurels, Balaam Street (c. 1890) (fn. 144)
is an imposing building of three storeys and basements, faced with ragstone. It was formerly the
Freemasons' Club. (fn. 145) St. Andrew's Vicarage, St.
Andrew's Road (1871), and St. Mary's Vicarage,
Stopford Road (1897), are examples of the big
houses sometimes built for professional men whose
work required them to live among the poor.
The Pawnbrokers' alms-houses, Woodgrange
Road, Forest Gate, were built in 1849 by the
Pawnbrokers' Charitable Institution. (fn. 146) They accommodated 8 inmates, not necessarily from West
Ham, who had qualified by subscription. The
buildings formed an impressive group in 'Elizabethan' style. They were demolished in 1898. Legg's
alms-houses, Odessa Road (1858–63), are small and
plain, with gabled fronts. (fn. 147) Meggs's alms-houses,
Upton Lane, were erected in 1893 by the rector and
churchwardens of Whitechapel (Lond.), trustees of
William Meggs's charity; the original buildings
(1658) were in Whitechapel Road. (fn. 148) Among the few
large shops have been J. R. Roberts (founded c.
1870) and Boardmans (1871), both drapers and
furnishers in Broadway, Stratford. (fn. 149) Roberts was
demolished in 1957–62 to make way for the London
Co-operative Society's new department store. Of the
hundreds of small shops, in terraces or on street
corners, few are notable, but in Water Lane, Stratford, is a single-storey butcher's shop (c. 1860, see
plate facing page 203), with lively stucco ornament
depicting bulls' heads over windows and doors, and
an ironwork parapet.
After 1914 there was little private building. Of
1,200 municipal dwellings built in the 1920s and
1930s, mainly in connexion with slum-clearance,
about half lay in the Manor Road area. They included over 400 flats in 4-storey blocks, in Memorial
Avenue and neighbouring roads and in Star Lane. (fn. 150)
Other council estates were built at Stratford, Plaistow, and Custom House. A further 600 houses, built
by the Ministry of Transport in the Holborn Road
area of Plaistow, to rehouse workers displaced by the
Silvertown Way scheme, were taken over by the
borough on their completion in 1931. (fn. 151) There and
in all the council estates of the period much more
use was made of red brick, which had superseded the
standard yellow brick of the previous century.
After the Second World War West Ham council
put in hand the huge building programme outlined
elsewhere. (fn. 152) The main scheme was the Keir Hardie
estate, comprising 230 a. north of the Royal Victoria
Dock; it is one of the largest areas of comprehensive
redevelopment in the country. (fn. 153) The earliest council
building after the war followed a traditional 'garden
city' pattern at a fairly low density. An example is the
Bowman Avenue area, in the south-west corner of
the Keir Hardie estate, where 70 per cent of the
dwellings are houses and the remainder flats in low
blocks. (fn. 154) In West Ham, as elsewhere, higher density
housing became increasingly common after 1950.
This is shown in the part of the Keir Hardie estate
between Fife Road and Butchers Road, which
contains 35 per cent houses, 36 per cent flats, and
29 per cent maisonettes, and incorporates experiments in plan, layout, and colours, intended to keep
down costs and to suggest 'a living and bustling
community'. (fn. 155) The trend towards even higher densities is obvious in the Claremont estate, east of
Woodgrange Road, Forest Gate. (fn. 156) That scheme,
completed about 1956, contains 76 per cent flats in
an 11-storey tower or 'point' block, and 24 per cent
maisonettes in 4-storey blocks. The schemes of the
early 1960s include tower blocks of 15 storeys north
of Fife Road, and of 22 storeys at The Green and
Carpenters Road, both at Stratford. (fn. 157) In 1964 West
Ham council decided to provide 1,000 dwellings in
200-ft. tower blocks erected on the Larsen-Nielsen
industrialized system. The programme, continued
by Newham council, suffered a setback in 1968,
when part of Ronan Point, Clever Road, Canning
Town, collapsed after a gas explosion. (fn. 158)
North of Beckton Road and in Kildare Road is a
small but unusual estate designed for West Ham
council by the Development Group of the Ministry
of Housing and Local Government and completed
in 1964. (fn. 159) Its 39 houses are of composite brick and
timber construction and partly weatherboarded.
They are of six types, some with movable internal
partitions, grouped round a common open space
of ½ a. They were built to Parker Morris standards
after a social study designed to discover the needs
of the kind of families for whom they were intended.
In striking contrast to them is the landscape south
of Beckton Road, where the skyline is increasingly
dominated by tower blocks.