CHAPTER XXV.
STOCKWELL AND KENNINGTON.
"Here the Black Prince once lived and held his court."—Philips.
Etymology of Stockwell—Its Rustic Retirement Half a Century ago—The Green—Meeting of the Albion Archers—The Stockwell Ghost—Old
House in which Lord Cromwell is said to have lived—St. Andrew's Church—Small-pox and Fever Hospital—Mr. John Angell's Bequest—Trinity Asylum—Stockwell Orphanage—Mr. Alfred Forrester—Kennington Manor—Death of Hardicanute—Kennington a Favourite Residence of the Black Prince—Masques and Pageants—Isabella, the "Little Queen" of Richard II.—The Last of the Old Manor House—Cumberland Row—Caron House—Kennington Oval—Beaufoy's Vinegar Distillery—The Tradescants—Kennington Common—Execution of the
Scottish Rebels—"Jemmy" Dawson—Meeting of the Chartists in 1848—Large Multitudes addressed by Whitefield—The Common converted
into a Park—St. Mark's Church—"The Horns" Tavern—Lambeth Waterworks—The Licensed Victuallers' School.
Stockwell lies to our right as we journey along
the Clapham Road on our way back towards the
metropolis. "The etymology of the place," writes
Allen, in his "History of Surrey," "is probably
derived from 'stoke' (the Saxon stoc, a wood), and
'well,' from some spring in the neighbourhood."
It is called a "small rural village" by Priscilla
Wakefield, in her "Perambulations of London,"
published in 1809. The place, indeed, retained
its characteristics of rustic retirement down to
a comparatively recent date. In the "Chimney
Corner Companion" is an amusing account of
a cockney's "outing" with a gun on the 1st of
September, 1825, in which we are told how that
he and his friend breakfasted at the "Swan" at
Stockwell, and pushed on Kent-wards by way of
Brixton to Blackheath, but "without meeting anything beyond yellow-hammers and sparrows!"
Like Lee and other places in the immediate
vicinity of London which we have visited in our
perambulations, Stockwell once boasted of its
"green;" but this, excepting in name, has already
become a thing of the past, and bricks and mortar
are fast usurping what little is left of its once shady
lanes and hedgerows. It was a triangular space on
the western side of the high road, nearly opposite
the "Swan."
In 1840, as we learn from Colburn's "Kalendar
of Amusements," the society of Albion archers
held their first grand field-day, to contend for the
captaincy and lieutenancy for the month, and
Stockwell Park was the place of rendezvous. We
are naïvely told that "shooting commences at one,
eating and drinking at seven, and the light fantastic
toes are agitating at ten o'clock."
In 1778 this place was alarmed by an apparition, known to this day as "the Stockwell Ghost,"
which spread such terror through the then retired
village and neighbourhood that it became suddenly
invested with almost as much notoriety as Cock
Lane (fn. 1) some years previously.
The story is thus told by Charles Mackay, in
his "Extraordinary Popular Delusions:"—"Mrs.
Golding, an elderly lady, who resided alone with
her servant, Anne Robinson, was sorely surprised, on the evening of Twelfth Day, 1772, to
observe an extraordinary commotion among her
crockery. Cups and saucers rattled down the
chimney; pots and pans were whirled downwards
or through the windows; and hams, cheeses, and
loaves of bread disported themselves upon the
floor just as if the devil were in them. This, at
least, was the conclusion to which Mrs. Golding
came; and, being greatly alarmed, she invited
some of her neighbours to stay with her, and
protect her from the evil one. Their presence,
however, did not put a stop to the insurrection of
china, and every room in the house was in a short
time strewed with fragments. The chairs and
tables at last joined in the tumult; and things
looked altogether so serious and inexplicable that
the neighbours, dreading that the house itself
would next be seized with a fit of motion and
tumble about their ears, left poor Mrs. Golding
to bear the brunt of it by herself. The ghost in
this case was solemnly remonstrated with, and
urged to take its departure; but the destruction
continuing as great as before, Mrs. Golding finally
made up her mind to quit the house altogether.
With Anne Robinson, she took refuge in the
house of a neighbour; but his glass and crockery
being immediately subjected to the same persecution, he was reluctantly compelled to give
her notice to quit. The old lady, thus forced back
to her own house, endured the disturbance for
some days longer, when suspecting that Anne
Robinson was the cause of all the mischief, she
dismissed her from her service. The extraordinary
appearances immediately ceased, and were never
afterwards renewed—a fact which is of itself
sufficient to point out the real disturber. A long
time afterwards Anne Robinson confessed the
whole matter to the Rev. Mr. Brayfield. This
gentleman confided the story to Mr. Hone, who
published an explanation of the mystery. It
appears that Anne was anxious to have a clear
house to carry on an intrigue with her lover, and
she resorted to this trick in order to effect her
purpose. She placed the china on the shelves in
such a manner that it fell on the slightest motion;
and she attached horse-hair to other articles, so
that she could jerk them down from an adjoining
room without being perceived by any one. She was
exceedingly dexterous at this sort of work, and
would have proved a formidable rival to many a
juggler by profession. A full explanation of the
whole affair may be found in 'Hone's Every-day
Book.'" The pranks of the "ghost" are also
described so fully by Sir Walter Scott, in his book
on "Demonology and Witchcraft," that there is
scarcely any necessity of repeating them more
minutely here.
The "little fairy green" before the "Swan," at
Stockwell, writes Mr. Thomas Miller, with poetic
exaggeration, in 1852, "is now no more." It was
a dead, flat, triangular space, with no fairies.
"On the west side of Stockwell Green," writes
Allen, in his work above quoted, "is an old house,
now (1829) in the occupation of a butcher, in
which Mr. Nichols says that Thomas, Lord Cromwell, lived. There is no proof, however," he adds,
"that the above individual resided here or at the
adjacent manor-house."
At the eastern end of London Road—or what
was formerly called Bedford Private Road—and
near the triangular space of ground which was
once the "Green," stands St. Andrew's Church.
This edifice, originally known as Stockwell Chapel,
was in 1829 described as "a plain edifice of brick,
with a small turret and bell." The chapel was
built about the year 1767, on a piece of ground
granted by the Duke of Bedford. In 1810, and
again in 1868, it was enlarged and greatly altered,
at a cost of £3,400; and on St. Barnabas Day in
that year it was consecrated, under the title of St.
Andrew. Soon afterwards a consolidated chapelry
district, taken out of the new parishes of St. Mark,
Kennington, and St. Matthew, Brixton, was assigned
to the church.
In the London Road is a small-pox and fever
hospital, which was established here in 1870 by
the Metropolitan District Asylums Board.
On the east side of Stockwell Road are the
Stockwell Training and Kindergarten Colleges and
Practising Schools, in connection with the British
and Foreign School Society, whose head-quarters
are in the Borough Road. The schools here,
which are for girls, were erected about the year
1864, and have since been enlarged by the addition of a new wing. Accommodation is afforded
here for 135 girls and 125 students. The Kindergarten institution, as we learn from the Report
presented to the Society in 1877, had grown
rapidly during the preceding year. "It is meant
to be self-supporting, and, judging from present
experience, the receipts from students and children
will pay all the expenses."
In 1784 died Mr. John Angell, who left £6,000
for the purpose of building at Stockwell a college
"for seven decayed gentlemen, two clergymen, an
organist, six singing-men, twelve choristers, a
verger, chapel clerk, and three domestic servants,"
which he endowed with rent-charges to the amount
of £800 a year, besides making a provision for the
daily food of the members. The good intentions
of the testator, however, were for many years
frustrated by a suit in Chancery respecting his
will. The residence of Mr. Angell, at Stockwell, a
large brick mansion, was for some time occupied
as a boarding-school. His name is now kept in
remembrance by the Angell Town Estate, on the
east side of the Brixton Road. Early in the present
century a Mr. Bailey, a merchant in St. Paul's
Churchyard, founded here an asylum for twelve
aged females. The building, a neat brick edifice,
called Trinity Asylum, was erected in Acre Lane
in 1822.
Another charitable institution here, and one with
more than a local reputation, is the Stockwell
Orphanage for boys, founded under the auspices
of Mr. Spurgeon, the pastor of the Metropolitan
Tabernacle, of whom we have already spoken.
The institution, which covers a large space of
ground on the Bedford estate, and forms a handsome quadrangle, is approached by a broad avenue
from the Clapham Road. At the end of this
avenue, which is planted on either side with planetrees, is the entrance arch, an ornamental structure,
surmounted by a bell-turret. On the piers of the
archway are appropriate inscriptions, such as—"A
Father of the fatherless and a Judge of the widow
is God in his holy habitation;" "Solomon in all
his glory was not arrayed like one of these;" and,
"Your heavenly Father feedeth them."
The following description of the edifice is from
the pen of Mr. Spurgeon himself:—"On looking
from under the arch the visitor is struck with the
size and beauty of the buildings, and the delightfully airy and open character of the whole institution. It is a place of sweetness and light, where
merry voices ring out, and happy children play.
The stranger will be pleased with the dining-hall,
hung round with engravings given by Mr. Graves,
of Pall Mall; he will be shown into the boardroom, where the trustees transact the business;
and he will be specially pleased with the great
play-hall, in which our public meetings are held
and the boys' sports are carried on. There is the
swimming-bath, which enables us to say that nearly
every boy can swim. Up at the very top of the
buildings, after ascending two flights of stairs, the
visitor will find the school-rooms, which from their
very position are airy and wholesome. The floors,
scrubbed by the boys themselves, the beds made,
and the domestic arrangements all kept in order
by their own labour, are usually spoken of with
approbation." At the further end of the Orphanage
grounds stands the infirmary. It is spacious enough
to accommodate a large number of children, should
an epidemic break out in the institution.
The Orphanage, which was commenced in 1868,
and finished by the end of the following year,
contains accommodation for 250 children, who are
here fed, clothed, and taught; and the expenses
of the institution are about £5,000 per annum.
It is largely, if not mainly, dependent on voluntary contributions for its support. The Orphanage,
it should be stated, receives destitute fatherless
boys, without respect to the religion of the parents.
Children are eligible for entrance between the ages
of six and ten, and they are received without
putting the mothers to the trouble and expense
of canvassing for votes, the trustees themselves
selecting the most needy cases. The family system
is carried out, the boys living in separate houses,
under the care of matrons.
Not far from the Orphanage, in Portland Place
North, Clapham Road, lived Mr. Alfred Forrester.
better known by his nom de plume of "Alfred
Crowquill," the author of "The Wanderings of a
Pen and Pencil," "Railway Raillery," &c. Born
in London in 1805, Alfred Forrester was educated
at a private institution at Islington, where he was
a schoolfellow of Captain Marryatt. In due course
he became a notary in the Royal Exchange, but
retired from business about 1839. He commenced
his literary career, at the age of sixteen, as a con
tributor to periodical publications. Later in life
he devoted himself to drawing, modelling, and
engraving both on steel and wood, with the design
of illustrating the works of his pen. His first
publication was "Leaves from my Memorandum
Book," a book of comic prose and verse, illustrated by himself, which was followed by his
"Eccentric Tales." In 1828 he joined Mr. B.
Disraeli, Theodore Hook, and other writers, in the
magazine, edited by Hook, called The Humorist,
and subsequently contributed to Bentley's Miscellany, Punch, the Illustrated London News, &c.

VIEWS IN OLD STOCKWELL.
1. Old Mansion on Stockwell Common, 1792.
2. Old Inn, Stockwell Common, 1794.
3. Stockwell Chapel, 1800.
4. Stockwell Manor House, 1750.

KENNINGTON, FROM THE GREEN, 1780.
On the north side of Stockwell, and hemmed in
by Walworth, Newington, and South Lambeth, is
the once royal manor of Kennington. The name
of Kennington, it is said by some topographers,
was probably derived originally from the Saxon
Kyning-tun, "the town or place of the king." "In
the parish of Lambeth," writes Hughson, in his
"History of London," "is the manor of Kennington, which, in the Conqueror's Survey, is called
Chenintun. At that time it was in the possession
of Theodoric, a goldsmith, who held it of Edward
the Confessor. There is no record to show how
it reverted to the Crown; but during the time of
Edward III. it was made part of the Duchy of
Cornwall, to which it still continues annexed.
Here was a royal palace, which was the residence
of the Black Prince: it stood near the spot now
called Kennington Cross. This palace was occasionally a residence of royalty down to the reign of
Henry VII. After his time the manor appears to
have been let out to various persons. Charles I.,
however, when Prince of Wales, inhabited a house
built on part of the site of the old palace, the
stables of which, built of flint and stone, remained
in situ until the year 1795, when they were known
as 'The Long Barn.'"
Kennington is described in the "Tour round
London," in 1774, as "a village near Lambeth, in
Surrey, and one of the precincts of that parish."
It was formerly a lordship belonging to the ancient
Earls of Warren, one of whom, in the reign of
Edward II., being childless, gave the manor to the
king. It had been already alienated, however,
before the sixteenth year of Edward III., and was
part of the estate of Roger d'Amory, who was
attainted in the same reign for joining with sundry
other lords in a seditious movement. Coming
once more into the hands of the king, it was made
a royal seat, and became shortly afterwards the
principal residence of the Black Prince. The
author above quoted states of this once abode of
royalty, that "there is nothing now remaining of
this ancient seat but a building called The Long
Barn, which in the year 1709 was one of the
receptacles of the poor persecuted Palatines."
It is generally accepted as a certainty that there
was a royal residence near the spot now known as
Kennington Cross as far back as the Saxon times;
and here, says tradition, Hardicanute died in the
year 1041. This amiable King of Denmark, third
son of Canute, succeeded to the English crown
on the death of his brother, Harold Harefoot,
whose body, it is related, he caused to be dug up
from its tomb at Winchester, and afterwards to be
beheaded and thrown into the Thames. "Some
good fishermen," so runs the story, "found the
mangled trunk of the dead king, and decently
interred it in the church of St. Clement Danes.
The peculiarly clement Dane who ruled over them,
however, directly he heard of their pious act,
again ordered his brother's body to be flung into
the Thames." Two years afterwards Hardicanute
went to Kennington (or, according to another account, to Lambeth), in order to honour the nuptial
feast of a Danish lord; and there, within sight of
the river on the banks of which Harold's corse
had been washed by the stream, he fell dead,
amidst the shouting and drinking of the guests
assembled at the marriage banquet.
In 1189, Richard of the Lion Heart granted the
manor to Sir Robert Percy; and it was afterwards
the subject of frequent royal grants. As stated
above, it seems to have been rather a favourite
residence of Edward the Black Prince; and the
road by which he reached the palace from the
landing-place at the water-side, nearly corresponding with Upper Kennington Lane, long retained the
name of Princes Road. Here died that powerful
vassal of Edward I., John, Earl of Warren and
Surrey, in September, 1304.
Again, the kings of Scotland, France, and Cyprus
being in England in the year 1363, on a visit to
Edward III., Henry Picard, who had been lord
mayor, had the honour of entertaining these four
monarchs, with the Prince of Wales and other
illustrious persons. At another time, the citizens
gave a grand masquerade on horseback for the
amusement of the Black Prince's son, Richard
(then in his tenth year), and his mother, Joan of
Kent. The procession set out from Newgate,
and proceeded to Kennington, and was composed
of stately pageants, in masques, one of which
represented the pope and twenty-four cardinals.
This "great mummery" consisted of 130 citizens
in fancy dresses, with trumpets, sackbuts, and
minstrels; and they danced and "mummed" to
their hearts' content in the great hall of the palace;
after which, having been right royally feasted, they
returned again to the City by way of London
Bridge.
Nineteen years afterwards, when the young
king wanted money, and to that end made up
his mind to take a second wife, he married Isabel,
daughter of Charles VI. of France—the "little
queen," as she was pettingly styled, for she was
but a child, under eight years of age. The royal
train, on approaching London, was met on Blackheath (fn. 2) by the lord mayor and aldermen, habited
in scarlet, who attended the king to Newington
(Surrey), where he dismissed them, as he and his
youthful bride were to "rest at Kenyngtoun."
When the poor child was taken from Kennington
to her lodgings in the Tower, the press to see her
was so great that several persons were crushed to
death on London Bridge—among them the Prior
of Tiptree, in Essex.
At Kennington, John of Gaunt sought refuge
from the citizens, after he had quarrelled with the
Bishop of London. The proud Lancaster was one
of the protectors of Wyclif, who was, of course,
particularly unpopular with the prelates, and had
bearded the bishop in a very irreverent manner.
The good churchmen of London, who had small
respect for royalty when royalty chanced to offend
them, chased the ducal offender in the very same
year in which they danced before his nephew,
and he was glad to be quiet for some time in
the old palace. His son, the fiery Bolingbroke,
after he became king, sometimes resided here, as
did his grandson, the unfortunate Henry VI., and
Henry VII., and Katharine of Arragon. James I.
settled the manor of Kennington on the Prince of
Wales, and it has ever since formed part of the
princely possessions. The manor had been purchased in November, 1604, by Alleyn, the player,
and founder of Dulwich College, for £1,065, and
sold five years afterwards by the astute actor—who
knew how to turn a penny, and made good use of
his savings—for £2,000. It was of him, probably,
that it was purchased by James I., who rebuilt
the manor-house. The last fragment of the old
palace—the "Old Barn," or "Long Barn"—remained till near the close of the last century; and
the old manor-house itself, having served for some
years as a Female Philanthropic School, finally
disappeared in 1875. From an account of the
building, published at the time of its demolition,
we gather the following interesting particulars:—The first object which struck the visitor was the
canopied head to the outer doorway, supported
by finely carved trusses. The entrance door was
very massive, and the large lock and unwieldy bar
were suggestive of the times when every precaution
was necessary for the safe custody of property. The
rooms were square and lofty, with old-fashioned
chimney-openings. The finest specimen of decorative art was, without doubt, the modelled plaster
ceiling in the back room. The enrichments were
finely undercut and in alto-relief, the mouldings
and border being in true character with the other
portions. The staircase was of massive oak, and
the mouldings cut in the solid. The doors and
the wainscot dado were also solid oak, the latter
being a particularly fine specimen of wainscoting.
The substantial timbers, door, and window-frames
and heads to the last were in an excellent state of
preservation. The estate having been leased to a
speculative builder, the old house was demolished
in order to make room for modern residences.
Here, on a waste piece of land belonging to the
Prince of Wales, as part of the old royal palace
and demesne, lay for some years a quantity of the
marble statues which had been removed from
Arundel House, in the Strand, and which afterwards decorated "Kuper's Gardens," the site of
which we shall presently visit. Here they were
discovered by connoisseurs, and were purchased,
some by Lord Burlington for his villa at Chiswick,
and others by Mr. Freeman, of Fawley Court, near
Henley-on-Thames, and by Mr. Edmund Waller, of
Beaconsfield. Others were cut up and used to
make mantel-pieces for private houses in Lambeth.
It would appear that Kennington is still regarded as an appanage of royalty; at all events,
it gave the title of earl to the hero of Culloden,
William the "butcher," Duke of Cumberland, the
younger son of George II. The duke's name is
kept in remembrance here by Cumberland Row,
close by the Vestry Hall, Kennington Green: it
forms a low row of cottages, bearing date 1666.
Their unfinished carcases had been used as a lazarhouse during the great plague of the previous year.
The Prince of Wales, it may be added, is still the
ground landlord of several streets in Kennington.
The manor of Kennington subsequently reverted
to the Crown, and was granted by Charles I., when
Prince of Wales, to Sir Noel Caron and Sir Francis
Cottington. Sir Noel Caron was Dutch Ambassador
to the English Court during the early part of the
seventeenth century. He erected here a handsome
mansion, with two wings. On the front was the
inscription, "Omne solum forti patria." He built
also on the roadside the almshouses near the third
mile-stone for seven poor women. His name is
inscribed on their front, with the date, 1618, and a
Latin inscription to the effect that "He that hath
pity on the poor lendeth to the Lord." Caron
House, and the gardens attached to it, are memorable as having been granted by Charles II. to
Lord Chancellor Clarendon, who sold them to Sir
Jeremias Whichcote. The London Gazette tells us
that the prisoners from the Fleet were removed
hither after the Fire of London; it was pulled
down soon after, and the last remains of the house
were removed early in the present century. What
remained of it in 1806, when Hughson wrote his
"History of London and its Suburbs," was used as
an academy, and still retained its former name of
Caron House. Not far from it was—and perhaps
still is—a spring of clear water called Vauxhall
Well, which is said not to freeze in the very
coldest winters.
A portion of the site of Sir Noel Caron's park is
absorbed in the well-known cricket-ground called
Kennington Oval, which shares with "Lord's"
(fn. 3)
the honour of being the scene of many of those
doughty encounters between the heroes of the
bat and ball which have made the "elevens" of
the north and south, of Surrey and Nottingham,
Kent and Sussex, United and All England, all but
immortal. The Oval, which, within the memory
of living persons, was a cabbage-garden, covers
about nine acres of ground, and is set apart
entirely for cricket-matches. It was first opened
as a cricket-ground on the 16th of April, 1846,
as the speculation of a man named Houghton.
The Surrey Club have held it for many years on
a lease from the Duchy of Cornwall, to which the
land hereabouts still belongs; a fact which is kept
in remembrance by the "Duchy Arms" inn, "Cornwall" Cottages, &c.
In Meadow Street, which testifies to the once
rural character of this locality, stands, in grounds
of its own, St. Joseph's Convent belonging to the
Little Sisters of the Poor, a community about whom
we shall have more to say when we pay a visit to
their other house at Hammersmith.
In South Lambeth, on the south of Fentiman
Road, which crosses the Oval Road, is the extensive vinegar distillery of the Messrs. Beaufoy, which
was removed here many years ago from Cuper's
Gardens. The works, which cover a space of
about five acres, occupy the site of Caron House.
Nearly adjoining to the distillery, southward, is,
or was till a recent date, the residence of John
Tradescant, the botanist. The house, a plain brick
building, with a court-yard in front and large iron
gates, had attached to it the physic-garden of the
Tradescants, one of the first established in this
country. Tradescant's museum was frequently
visited by persons of rank, who became benefactors
thereto; among these were Charles I. (to whom he
was gardener), Queen Henrietta Maria, Archbishop
Laud, George, Duke of Buckingham, Robert and
William Cecil, Earls of Salisbury, and many other
persons of distinction. Among them also appears
the philosophic John Evelyn, who, in his "Diary,"
under date of September 17, 1657, has the following entry:—"I went to see Sir Robert Needham, at Lambeth, a relation of mine, and thence
to John Tradescant's museum." Evelyn also speaks
of supping at John Tradescant's house, in company
with Dr. (subsequently Archbishop) Tenison, the
Bishop of St. Asaph, and Lady Clarendon.
"I know," writes Izaak Walton, in his "Complete
Angler," "we islanders are averse to the belief of
wonders; but there be so many strange creatures
to be now seen, many collected by John Tradescant, and others added by my friend Elias Ashmole, Esq., who now keeps them carefully and
methodically at his house near to Lambeth, near
London, as may yet get belief of some of the
other wonders I mentioned. I will tell you some
of the wonders that you may now see, and not till
then believe, unless you think fit. You may see
there the hog-fish, the dog-fish, the dolphin, the
coney-fish, the parrot-fish, the shark, the poisonfish, the sword-fish; and not only other incredible
fish, but you may there see the salamander, several
sorts of barnacles, of Solan geese, and the bird of
paradise; such sorts of snakes, and such birds'nests, and of so various forms and so wonderfully
made, as may beget wonder and amazement in any
beholder; and so many hundreds of other rarities
in that collection, as will make the other wonders I
spake of the less incredible."
The Tradescants were the first well-known collectors of natural curiosities in this kingdom; they
were followed by Ashmole and Sir Hans Sloane,
from whom their spirit was afterwards transfused
into Sir Ashton Lever, whose collection we mentioned in our account of Leicester Square. (fn. 4) It
was a great misfortune that the collection, instead
of being sold in lots by auction, was not secured
for the British Museum.
There are portraits of the Tradescants to be
seen in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford. It is
usually said that it was the elder Tradescant who
first introduced apricots into England, by entering
himself on board of a privateer armed against
Morocco, whence he stole that fruit which it was
forbidden to export.
In Allen's "History of Surrey" we read:—"On
the death of John Tradescant, Dr. Ducarel says
his son sold the curiosities to the celebrated Elias
Ashmole; but Mr. Nichols, in a note, observes that
the doctor must be in error, for, according to the
diary of Ashmole, it appears that on December 15,
1659, Mr. Tradescant and his wife signed a deed
of gift to Ashmole. The house was purchased,
about 1760, of some of Ashmole's descendants, by
John Small, Esq. Dr. Ducarel's house, once a
part of Tradescant's, adjoins."
Kennington Park, which stretches for some
distance along the Kennington Road, and lies to
the east of the Oval, was known as Kennington
Common till only a few years ago, when it was a
dreary piece of waste land, covered partly with
short grass, and frequented only by boys flying
their kites or playing at marbles. It was encircled
with some tumble-down wooden rails, which were
not sufficient to keep donkeys from straying there.
Field preachers also made it one of the chief
scenes of oratorical display. It consisted of about
twenty acres. It was suddenly seized with a fit of
respectability, and clothed itself around with elegant
iron railings, its area being, at the same time, cut up
by gravel walks, and flower-beds, and shrubberies.
It also engaged a beadle to look after it. And so
it became a park, and—it must be owned—an
ornament to the neighbourhood.
The Common is described in the "Tour round
London," in 1774, as "a small spot of ground on
the road to Camberwell, and about a mile and a
half from London. Upon this spot is erected the
gallows for the county of Surrey; but few have
suffered here of late years. Such of the (Scottish)
rebels as were tried by the Special Commission, in
1746, and ordered for execution, suffered at this
place; amongst whom were those who commanded
the regiment raised at Manchester for the use
(service) of the Pretender." In fact, very many of
those who had "been out" in the Scottish rising of
the previous year here suffered the last penalty of
the law. Among them were Sir John Wedderburn,
John Hamilton, Andrew Wood, and Alexander
Leith, and also two English gentlemen of good
family, named Towneley and Fletcher, who had
joined the standard of "Bonny Prince Charlie" at
Manchester. (fn. 5) Wood, it is said, bravely drank a
glass to the "Pretender's" health on the scaffold.
Others engaged in the same cause also suffered
here; among them Captain James (or, as he is still
called, "Jemmy") Dawson, over whose body, as
soon as the headsman's axe had done its terrible
work, a young lady, who was attached to him tenderly, threw herself in a swoon, and died literally
of a broken heart. The event forms the subject of
one of Shenstone's ballads:—
"Young Dawson was a gallant boy,
A brighter never trod the plain;
And well he loved one charming maid,
And dearly was he loved again. . . .
"The dismal scene was o'er and past,
The lover's mournful hearse retired;
The maid drew back her languid head,
And, sighing forth his name, expired."
Dawson and eight others were dragged on
hurdles from the new gaol in Southwark to Kennington Common, and there hanged. After being
suspended for three minutes from the gallows, their
bodies were stripped naked and cut down, in
order to undergo the operation of beheading and
embowelling. Colonel Towneley was the first that
was laid upon the block, but the executioner observing the body to retain some signs of life, he
struck it violently on the breast, for the humane
purpose of rendering it quite insensible for the
remaining portion of the punishment. This not
having the desired effect, he cut the unfortunate
gentleman's throat. The shocking ceremony of
taking out the heart and throwing the bowels into
the fire was then gone through, after which the
head was separated from the body with a cleaver,
and both were put into a coffin. The rest of the
bodies were thus treated in succession; and on
throwing the last heart into the fire, which was that
of young Dawson, the executioner cried, "God
save King George!" and the spectators responded
with a shout. Although the rabble had hooted
the unhappy gentlemen on the passage to and
from their trials, it was remarked that at the
execution their fate excited considerable pity,
mingled with admiration of their courage. Two
circumstances contributed to increase the public
sympathy on this occasion, and caused it to be
more generally expressed. The first was, the appearance at the place of execution of a youthful
brother of one of the culprits, of the name of
Deacon, himself a culprit, and under sentence of
death for the same crime, but who had been permitted to attend the last scene of his brother's life
in a coach along with a guard. The other was the
fact of a young and beautiful woman, to whom
Dawson had been betrothed, actually attending to
witness his execution, as stated above.
Most of the rebel lords, and of the others who
had borne a share in the Scottish rising of 1745,
and who were found guilty of treason, were
executed on Tower Hill, as already stated. (fn. 6) Their
heads, as well as the heads of those executed here,
were afterwards set up on poles on the top of
Temple Bar, (fn. 7) where we have already seen them
bleaching in the sun and rain. Here also was hung
the notorious highwayman, "Jerry Abershaw;" his
body being afterwards hung in chains on a gibbet
on Wimbledon Common.
In the spring of 1848, just after the Revolution
which drove Louis Philippe from Paris, Kennington
Common obtained a temporary celebrity as the
intended rallying-point of the Chartists of London,
who, it was said, were half a million in number;
but of this number only about 15,000 actually
assembled; had the half a million met, it would
have required nearly ten times the space of
Kennington Common! On the 10th of April
the great meeting came off; they were to march
thence in procession to Westminster, in order to
present a monster petition in favour of the six
points of the charter, signed by six millions. But
measures were prudently taken by the Government;
the Bank and other public buildings were strictly
guarded; the military were called out, and posted
in concealed positions near the bridges; and
170,000 special constables were enrolled, among
whom was Louis Napoleon, the future Emperor of
France. On the eventful day the working men
who answered to the call of their leaders—Feargus
O'Connor and Ernest Jones—were found to be
scarcely 50,000, and these gentlemen shrank from
a contest with the soldiery. So the crowd broke
up, and the petition was presented peaceably.
"Modern times," writes Mr. W. Johnston, in his
"England as it Is," "have afforded no such
important illustration of the prevailing tone and
temper of the British nation, in regard to public
affairs, as was presented to the world by the
circumstances of the metropolis during the eventful 10th of April, 1848. That day was, in the
British Island, the culminating point of the
revolutionary progress which, within a period of
little more than two months, had shaken almost
every throne of Continental Europe. In England
nothing was shaken but the hopes of the disaffected. From one end of Europe to the other,
the 10th of April was looked forward to by the
partisans of revolution as the day which was to
add London to the list of capitals submitting to
the dictation of the mob. The spirit of revolt had
run like wildfire from kingdom to kingdom, and
capital to capital. Paris, Vienna, Naples, Berlin,
Dresden, Milan, Venice, Palermo, Frankfort, and
Carlsruhe, had all experienced the revolutionary
shock, and none had been able completely to
withstand it. Now came the turn of London, the
greatest capital of all—the greatest prize that the
world could afford to revolutionary adventure—the most magnificent prey to the bands of the
plunderers who moved about from one point of
Europe to another, committing robberies under
the name of revolution. London withstood the
shock, and escaped without the slightest injury.
Even the wild spirit of revolt, made drunk by the
extraordinary success it had achieved throughout
Continental Europe, was frozen into fear by the
calm, complete, and stern preparation which was
made to encounter and to crush it. The spirit
of Wellington was equal to the occasion, and
seemed to pervade the might and the energy of
the vast metropolis of England while that veteran
was at the head of the resisting power. . . . .
The 10th of April seemed, as if by mutual consent,
to be the day of trial between the rival forces of
revolution and of authority, and it then plainly
appeared, without any actual collision, that the
revolutionists had no chance. All their points of
attack had been anticipated. Everywhere there
was preparation to receive them, and yet nothing
was so openly done as to produce a sense of
public alarm. London was armed to the teeth:
and yet, in outward appearance, it was not changed.
The force that had been prepared lay hushed in
grim repose, and was kept out of sight. The
revolutionary leaders were, however, made aware
of the consequences that would ensue if they went
one step beyond that which the authorities deemed
to be consistent with the public safety. Foolish
and frantic though they were in their political
talk, they were not so mad as to rush upon certain
destruction. They gave up the conflict; and from
that day the spirit of revolution in England drooped
and died away. The political conspirators against
existing authority failed utterly, not because they
were destitute of the enthusiasm meet for such
an occasion, or that there were no real grievances
in the condition of the people which called for
redress, but because the nation had common sense
enough to perceive that the ascendancy of such
desperate adventurers would make matters worse
than better. It was not that the Londoners had
no taste for political improvement, but it was that
they had a very decided distaste for being robbed.
Not only was all the intelligence, the organisation, and the resource of the country arrayed in
opposition to the mode of political action which
the revolutionists of Europe had adopted, but the
familiar instincts of the hundreds of thousands
who had property to guard and hearths to preserve
inviolate arrayed them in determined resistance
to mob violence, whatever might be the avowed
object to which that violence should be directed."
Thus, in the words of the Times, "The great demonstration was brought to a ridiculous issue by
the unity and resolution of the metropolis, backed
by the judicious measures of the Government, and
the masterly military precautions of the Duke of
Wellington, though no military display was anywhere to be seen."

THE CHARTIST MEETING ON KENNINGTON COMMON, 1848. (From a Contemporary Print.)

TRADESCANT'S HOUSE, SOUTH LAMBETH. (From Pennant.)
During the holiday season, Kennington Common
in the last century was an epitome of "Bartlemy
Fair," with booths, tents, caravans, and scaffolds,
surmounted by flags. It also had one peculiarity,
for, as we learn from "Merrie England in the
Olden Time," it was a favourite spot for merryandrews, and other buffooneries in open rivalry,
and competition with field-preachers and ranters.
It was here that Mr. Maw-worm encountered the
brickbats of his congregation, and had his "pious
tail" illuminated with the squibs and crackers of
the unregenerate.
During the year 1739, when the south of London
was a pleasant country suburb, George Whitefield
preached frequently on this common, his audience
being generally reckoned by tens of thousands.
In his "Journal," under date May 6th in that
year, he thus remarks: "Preached this morning in
Moorfields to about 20,000 people, who were very
quiet and attentive, and much affected. Went to
public worship morning and evening, and at six
preached at Kennington. But such a sight never
were my eyes blessed with before. I believe there
were no less than 50,000 people, near fourscore
coaches, besides great numbers of horses; and
what is most remarkable, there was such an awful
silence amongst them, and the word of God came
with such power, that all, I believe, were pleasingly
surprised. God gave me great enlargement of heart.
I continued my discourse for an hour and a half;
and when I returned home, I was filled with such
love, peace, and joy, that I cannot express it."
On subsequent occasions Mr. Whitefield mentions
having addressed audiences of 30,000, 20,000, and
10,000 on this same spot. The example thus set
by Whitefield was soon afterwards followed by
Charles Wesley, with an equal amount of fervour.
In June, 1739, Charles Wesley being summoned
before the Archbishop of Canterbury to give an
account of his "irregularity," he was for a time
greatly troubled; but Whitefield, whom he had
consulted for advice in this emergency, told him,
"Preach in the fields next Sunday; by this step
you will break down the bridge, render your retreat
difficult, or impossible, and be forced to fight your
way forward." This counsel was followed, for in
Charles Wesley's diary, June 24th, 1739, occurs
this passage:—"I walked to Kennington Common,
and cried to multitudes upon multitudes, 'Repent
ye, and believe the Gospel.' The Lord was my
strength, and my mouth, and my wisdom."
"Kennington Common," wrote Thomas Miller,
in his "Picturesque Sketches in London," published in 1852, "is but a name for a small grassless
square, surrounded with houses, and poisoned by
the stench of vitriol works, and by black, open,
sluggish ditches; what it will be when the promised
alterations are completed, we have yet to see."
That the place, however, has since become completely changed in appearance we need scarcely
state, for it was converted into a public pleasureground, under the Act 15 and 16 Vict., in June of
the above-mentioned year. It now affords a very
pretty promenade. What was once but a dismal
waste, some twenty acres in extent, is now laid out
in grass-plats, intersected by broad and well-kept
gravelled walks bordered with flower-beds. A
pair of the model farm-cottages of the late Prince
Consort were erected in the middle of the western
side, near the entrance, about the year 1850.
More recently, in addition to the improvements
effected by the change of the Common to an
ornamental promenade, a church, dedicated to St.
Agnes, was built on the site of the vitriol works.
On the first formation of the "park," the sum
of £1,800 annually was voted by the Government; but this sum was subsequently reduced,
until, in the year 1877, it was only £1,370; and
these reductions had been made although there
had been an increase in the total sum devoted to
public parks.
On the eastern side of the Common, in the
middle of the last century, stood a mansion, once
the residence of Sir Richard Manley. Near the
site of this mansion, occupying the site of the
vitriol works just mentioned, and directly facing the
central paths of the ornamental garden, now stands
the church of St. Agnes. The edifice, which was
erected from the designs of Sir G. Gilbert Scott,
is in the English Middle Pointed style of architecture of the fourteenth century; and it depends
mainly for its effect upon its loftiness, the height
being sixty-five feet from the floor to the nave
ceiling, and seventy-five feet to the external ridge,
and the chancel roof of the same height. The
most important feature in the decorative work of
the church is the east window of six lights, illustrating the doctrines of the Incarnation and the
Atonement, the stained glass of which, costing
£1,000, was executed by Mr. C. E. Kempe, and
forms a memorial to the lady who was the chief
benefactress of the church. The illustration of the
Incarnation was "A Tree of Jesse," or genealogical
tree of Christ's progenitors, of which the Virgin
Mary, holding the Divine Child in her arms,
formed the principal figure, the Virgin's head being
crowned. When, in accordance with customary
usage, the building was inspected by the bishop's
representative, the archdeacon, the existence of this
design was mentioned, and before the ceremony
of consecration was performed, the figure of the
Blessed Virgin was removed by the bishop's
desire.
On the southern portion of the Common, on the
upper part of a small triangular plot of ground,
separated from the larger portion of the Common
by the road to Brixton and the Camberwell New
Road, stands St. Mark's Church, the second of the
district churches erected in this parish. What is
now the site of the church was formerly the spot
where the gallows were erected for the execution
of criminals; and it is rendered more interesting
by its being the actual spot where many of the unfortunate adherents to the expatriated family of the
Stuarts fell a sacrifice to their principles, as we
have stated above. In preparing the foundation
of the church, the site of a gibbet was discovered;
and a curious piece of iron, which it is supposed
was the swivel attached to the head of a criminal,
was turned up a foot or two below the surface.
St. Mark's Church, which was finished in 1824,
from the designs of Mr. D. Roper, consists of two
distinct portions. The body of the edifice is a
long octagon—a parallelogram, with the corners
cut off. The eastern end is brought out, to form a
recess for the communion-table, and to the western
end is attached the tower, sided by lobbies, containing staircases to the galleries; and the whole
is fronted by a portico, formed of four columns,
supporting an entablature of the Greek Doric
order, finished with a pediment. The tower, which
is square and massive, is surmounted by a circular
structure, composed of fluted Ionic columns, and
finished with a plain spherical cupola, on the apex
of which is a stone cross of elegant design. The
main portion of the church is constructed of brick,
and has stone pilasters attached to the piers
between the windows, which are singularly plain
and uninteresting. The interior of the church,
beyond its elliptically-coved ceiling, ornamented at
intervals with groups of foliage, contains nothing
to call for special remark.
Along the south side of the churchyard once ran
a small stream, which was crossed by a bridge,
called Merton Bridge, from its formerly having
been repaired by the canons of Merton Abbey,
who had lands bequeathed to them for that
purpose.
Opposite the western gates of the park, and at
the entrance to Kennington Road, is the "Horns
Tavern." It stands at the junction of the roads
leading to London and Westminster Bridges; and
the assembly-rooms adjoining have for many years
been a great place for public meetings. There is
nothing, so far as we are aware, to connect this inn
with such ceremonies as those formerly enacted at
Highgate (fn. 8) and at Charlton, (fn. 9) in which, as we have
shown, the "horns" played such a conspicuous
part; it may have been that a former landlord was
desirous of emulating the reputation enjoyed by
his professional brethren at Highgate.
Pursuing our course along Kennington Road,
we leave on our left the water-works belonging to
the South London Company. In 1805 an Act of
Parliament was passed for establishing the abovementioned company, who were "to form reservoirs
near Kennington Green, to be supplied from the
Thames along Vauxhall Creek, or at a creek on the
other side of Cumberland Gardens, between that
and Marble Hall, all in this parish." The work
was undertaken; a field of five acres, between
Kennington Lane and the Oval, was procured, on
which two reservoirs were formed, with steamengines and the requisite offices and buildings.
In 1807 the proprietor celebrated the completion
of the undertaking by giving a public breakfast.
The reservoirs were intended to bring the water
into a state of purity before it was distributed; but
it was found that it did not answer thoroughly, and
a change of site had to be made for the enginehouse.
At the point where the road turns off from
Kennington Lane to the Oval, was in former times
a noted place of entertainment, known as Spring
Garden." (fn. 10) Bray, in his "History of Surrey,"
says that Moncony mentions a Spring Garden
at Lambeth as much frequented in 1663. The
gardens were at one time held by Mrs. Cornelys,
of whom we have already had occasion to speak in
our account of Soho Square. (fn. 11) Mrs. Cornelys, we
are told, had "a large white house for entertainment;" but being frequented by loose and dissolute
persons, it was suppressed by the magistracy.
In Upper Kennington Lane, which runs from
Kennington Cross to Vauxhall Bridge, is the Licensed
Victuallers' School, an establishment more to be regarded for the benevolent views of its patrons than
for the architectural beauty of the building which
contains the objects of their protection. The society
was established in the year 1803, and is supported
by the respectable body of licensed victuallers of
the metropolis as an asylum and school for the
orphans and children of the destitute part of their
brethren. A portion of the profits of their trade
journal, the Morning Advertiser, is also added to
its funds. The building is a series of dwellinghouses, added together at various times, as the
funds and objects of the institution increased, and
is therefore little else than a substantial commodious
edifice, with a spacious playground and gardens,
located in an airy situation. Its original design
has been somewhat improved by a central tablet
of stucco over the pedimented door as a sort of
centre. The building was constructed with the
view of accommodating two hundred children.
Great exertions have been made to realise this
design, and by the admission of all the approved
candidates for three successive years, it was all but
accomplished.
At various times, Kennington has been the
residence of many eminent persons, among whom
we may mention John, seventh Earl of Warrenne
and Surrey, father-in-law of John Balliol, who died
here in 1304; David Ricardo, the celebrated
political economist; the Duke of Brunswick;
William Hogarth; and Eliza Cook, who lived here
for many years. It has also been the home of
many persons connected with the theatres. Here
died, in 1877, Mr. E. T. Smith, of Cremorne, the
Alhambra, and Drury Lane celebrity.
Kennington in its day has seen its deeds of
violence; for it appears that in 1323 Elizabeth,
the wife of Sir Richard Talbot, of Goderich Castle,
in Herefordshire, was forcibly seized at her house
in this parish by Hugh Despencer, Earl of Gloucester, in conjunction with his father, Hugh, Earl
of Winchester, and carried off. It is satisfactory
to know that for this act the Despencers suffered
the extreme penalty of the law; the head of the
younger one being set up on London Bridge.
Their estate, of course, became confiscated and
pounced upon by royalty; and the king very
naturally bestowed it on the Prince of Wales, to
whom it still belongs.
Before closing this chapter, we may remark that
the maypole nearest to the metropolis that stood
longest within the memory of the editor of the
"Beauties of England and Wales," was near
Kennington Green, at the back of the houses at
the south-west corner of the Workhouse Lane,
leading from the Vauxhall Road to Elizabeth
Place. The site was then nearly vacant, and the
maypole stood in the field on the south side of the
Workhouse Lane, nearly opposite to the "Black
Prince" public-house. It remained there till about
the year 1795, and was much frequented, particularly by the milkmaids, on May-day. The
maypoles in the country were the scenes of much
simplicity of rural manners and innocent mirth and
enjoyment; but those set up near London, it is to
be feared, were provocative of far more boisterous
rudeness. In 1517 the unfortunate shaft, or maypole, gave rise to the insurrection of that turbulent
body, the London apprentices, and the plundering
of the foreigners in the City, whence it got the
name of Evil May-day. "From that time," writes
the author of "Merrie England in the Olden
Time," "the offending pole was hung on a range
of hooks over the doors of a long row of neighbouring houses. In the third year of Edward VI.,
an over-zealous fanatic, called Sir Stephen, began to
preach against this maypole, which inflamed the
audience so greatly that the owner of every house
over which it hung sawed off as much as depended
over his premises, and committed piecemeal to the
flames this terrible idol!" Like the morris-dancers,
and the hobby-horse, and other much-applauded
merriments of Old England, the maypole in the
end has become a thing of the past, for they were
put down or allowed to pass into oblivion.
The old Roman road, or Watling Street, for a
short distance, intersected the north-eastern corner
of Surrey in its progress from Vagniacis (supposed
by antiquaries to be near Southfleet in Kent) to
London, skirting the eastern side of Kennington.
This road is presumed to have passed through Old
Croydon or Woodcote, Streatham, and Newington,
to Stone Street in Southwark. If, as some writers
have supposed, the ancient Noviomagus was at
Old Croydon, the Ermyn Street must have followed
nearly the present line of roads through Streatham,
Kennington, and Newington, into Southwark; and
thence it was continued in a northward direction
by way of Stoke Newington, as we have already
mentioned in a former volume. (fn. 12)