North Side
Nos 1–49 and 2–50 (Nos 1–49 and No. 2 demolished)
The westernmost end of East India Dock Road, west of
Stainsby Road on the north side and Drill Place (now
Birchfield Street) on the south, was built up between
1847 and 1853 (north side) and 1850 and 1860 (south
side). Essentially one development, both north and south
sides of the road are described here. All lay within the
parish of Limehouse, in the former Gravel Pit Field, (ref. 71)
but the estate of which the road frontages were part, both
southward and (chiefly) northward of the road, extended
into the parish of Poplar. It can conveniently be called
the Conant estate, although the owners changed their
surname more than once on the inheritance of property.
The estate consisted of 4 acres in Poplar and 34
acres in Limehouse (extending into Whitechapel). It was
inherited in 1797, as copyhold of the manor of Stepney,
by Elizabeth Stainsby, a widow, from her brother the
Rev. Pierce Dod, of Ormond Street, Queen Square. (ref. 72) In
1803 the copyhold (less some property in Limehouse
acquired by Charles Hampden Turner shortly before he
became trustee for the new road to be made through this
Conant land) passed by Elizabeth Stainsby's will to a
Nathaniel Conant, described in 1809 as of Portland Place,
esquire. (ref. 73) In 1823 William Conant succeeded, and in 1837
Paynton Pigott Stainsby Conant. (ref. 74) The latter, who had
assumed the last two of his names a year or two earlier, (ref. 75)
was a country gentleman in Hampshire, as was his eldest
son, Francis Pigott, later MP for Reading and Governor
of the Isle of Man, who had a reversionary interest in
the property. (ref. 76) All the family surnames so far mentioned
occur as street names on the Limehouse and Poplar
estate, together with Gough, the maiden name of P. P. S.
Conant's wife. (ref. 77)
In 1801 Elizabeth Stainsby had obtained a licence from
the manor of Stepney to grant leases for 61¼ years, (ref. 78) but
no building took place, although by 1810 the first houses
in East India Dock Road were close by at Canton Place. (ref. 79)
By 1845 P. P. S. Conant and his son had evidently decided
to build, and obtained manorial licence to grant longer
building leases — for 99 years on the north side and its
hinterland in 1845, and for 95 years on the south side in
1849. Leases were 'not to be restricted to the usual number
of five houses'. In the end Conant and his son disposed of
the estate on leases of 70–80 years only. In East India Dock
Road the terms were 70 years on the north side and 78–80
on the south. Similarly, very few of their leases were of more
than five houses: generally the estate was leased slowly, one
or two houses at a time. (ref. 80)
Possibly connected with the expenses of estate development here or elsewhere was the raising of £25,000 by
Conant and his son in 1849 on mortgage. The security
was houses in Oxford Street, Poland Street and Great
Marlborough Street. (ref. 81) In 1855 the property in Limehouse
and Poplar was mortgaged to the Eagle Life Insurance
Society to secure £7,000. (ref. 82)
The enfranchisement of the estate under the manor of
Stepney in the summer of 1855 (ref. 83) did not perceptibly
affect the slow process of development.
On the north side of East India Dock Road a terrace
of 24 houses was built, called Paynton Terrace (in 1864
numbered 1–49, odd, East India Dock Road) (Plate
28d). (ref. 84) The earliest lessee was a schoolmaster in 1846 at
a double site at the corner of Stainsby Road, later Nos
47–49 East India Dock Road, where the house, called
Canton House, was rebuilt in 1863 as the Stainsby
Tavern, at a tendered price of £2,884 (architect, F.
Holsworth). (ref. 85) Thereafter the head lessee or intended
lessee of all the other sites was a Limehouse manufacturer,
William Champion, wholesale staymaker. He received
leases of newly built houses at Nos 23–27 (by 1847),
1 and 3 (1848), 5–9 (1853) and, probably, 11 and 13 (1851
or later). (ref. 86) At the other 13 houses Champion evidently
succeeded in selling the leases from the Conants to which
he was a party. Four purchasers were builders — Philip
Reddington of Limehouse, plumber, at Nos 29 and 31
(1847), Charles Hack of Poplar, builder, at No. 33 (1848),
James Bramston of St George's-in-the-East at No. 17 (by
1850), and William Antcliffe of Whitechapel, builder, at
Nos 39–45 (1852). (ref. 87) Other lessees were a 'gentleman' at
Nos 19 and 21 (1848), a tailor elsewhere in the road at
Nos 35 and 37 (1849), and a pilot, living in the Commercial Road, at No. 15 (1851), as well as a surgeon who
took Bramston's lien on No. 17 in 1850. (ref. 88)
On the south side were built the 25 houses of Archer
Terrace (named after P. P. S. Conant's house, Archer
Lodge near Basingstoke, and in 1864 numbered 2–50,
even, East India Dock Road), (ref. 89) of which the westernmost
five are divided from the others by Amoy Place (formerly
East or Little Church Row). All but No. 2 survive (Plate
29c). There was no one main building lessee, although
the five westernmost plots were all taken in 1859 by
Charles Dunk, a builder extensively used by the estate
as lessee. He erected the Eastern Hotel on three plots in
the angle between East India and West India Dock
Roads. (ref. 90) Expensive alterations were carried out in 1877
at the hands of an architect, Joseph Harris, who lived at
No. 34. (ref. 91)
A favoured builder on the estate, Thomas Golding of
Gough Street, Poplar, had liens on five house-sites here
(Nos 24–32) in about 1859, of which one (No. 24) was
leased (with Golding a party) to a Limehouse pilot in
1860, and another (No. 28) to a plumber in Poplar
Terrace in 1859. (ref. 92) Another building lessee, in 1855, was
Joseph Harris of Ilford (the architect's father), at No.
34. (ref. 93) The lessee of Nos 14 and 18, Francis Viney Davis
of Limehouse, in 1852 and 1856 was described as 'tailor',
but had evidently become a 'builder' by 1860 when he
took a lease of Nos 20 and 22 (unless this was father and
son). (ref. 94) Other lessees between 1850 and 1855 were a
caulker, a spinster of Stepney, a (second) pilot of Limehouse, a lighterman of Limehouse, a ropemaker (in Drill
Place), and the same schoolmaster who had taken Nos
47–49 on the north side. (ref. 95) Probably 10 of the 20 acquired
house-sites for occupation: they included, apart from the
builder-victualler Dunk, two of the building tradesmen —
Joseph Harris at No. 34 and Charles Hack at No. 33. (ref. 96)
Three prices paid for long leases of new houses here in
the 1850s were £450, £500 and £600. (ref. 97) In 1887 the
freehold values of Nos 43 and 45 were £550 and £500. (ref. 98)
The south side (Archer Terrace) had a higher social
standing than Paynton Terrace on the north. In the Post
Office Directory of 1857 nine of the ten named occupants
of Archer Terrace were called 'esq', but only three of the
fifteen of the latter were so designated, mixed with
professional men, tradesmen and lodging-house-keepers.
From 1866 to 1889 Arthur and later Christopher Harston,
active local architects, occupied No. 31. (ref. 99)
Unlike the nearby developments eastwards, the East
India Dock Road frontages were not in fact given the
best houses on the estate. These were to be found in
Stainsby Road, where detached and semi-detached houses
had, on average, twice the width of the East India Dock
Road house-sites: one later became the vicarage of St
Peter's, Garford Street.
The Estate was willing to dispose of its interest in the
property, selling the reversionary copyhold or (from
summer 1855) freehold of at least 14 house-sites in 1856–
60 for about £110–135 each. (ref. 100) Of the 107 houses and
five pieces of ground elsewhere on the estate included in
a family transaction of 1856, 23 houses and one piece of
ground had been sold, mainly to a local builder, by
1864. (ref. 101)
Despite its single chief lessee, Paynton Terrace showed
different types of house at Nos 1–27 and 29–45. All threestoreyed and brick-faced, Nos 1–27 had tall, segmentalheaded window-openings dressed with moulded architraves on each storey, a continued balcony under the
first-floor windows and a crowning dentil cornice: a
dormer window was set in the exposed mansard roof, the
party walls conforming to the mansard shape. Nos 29–45
were much plainer, having undressed window-openings
under straight-gauged arches and no balcony and rose to
parapets concealing the roof. (ref. 102) The central three houses
of the terrace, Nos 23–27, were recessed, with groundfloor bay windows. (ref. 103)
In its main extent, east of Amoy Place, Archer Terrace
(now Nos 12–50 East India Dock Road) is a plain terrace
of brick, notably late-Georgian for its date, rising three
storeys above a basement separated from the pavement
by an area. (West of Amoy Place the houses — Nos 2–10
East India Dock Road, since demolished or altered — rose
to four storeys.) Steep steps lead up to front doors (11
of them original) in openings dressed with the plainest
Doric doorcases. The windows have simple stucco surrounds, those of the ground floor having cornices supported (except at No. 34) on console brackets, and those
of the first floor rising from a bandcourse continued
through the terrace. The fronts are finished with a
moulded cornice and parapet of stone or stucco. All the
fronts are of two bays, the greater width of No. 44
being accommodated without finesse, by 'stretching'.
Shopfronts have been inserted at Nos 22 and 40.
Some constructional difference is suggested by the
back elevations, where Nos 18–34 finish with the 'sawtooth' silhouette of conjoined M-section roofs, whereas
the rear elevations of Nos 12–16 and 36–50 finish with a
straight parapet. The central section thus differentiated
was slightly the later to be leased for building, in 1855–
60.
The architect for the estate, including this unremarkable range, was perhaps the George Alexander who
signed a plan of the estate of 1855 or earlier. (ref. 104) He
exhibited architectural designs at the Royal Academy in
1831–49 (ref. 105) and had some executed work to his credit,
but on his death in 1885 was said to have 'early retired
from practice to the enjoyment of the life of a country
gentleman'. (ref. 106) Later, when streets were being laid out in
1861, the estate surveyor was Charles Moreing. (ref. 107)
Apart from East India Dock Road the estate extended
to comprise all or part of Burdett Road, Canton Buildings,
Canton Street, Church Row, Commercial Road East,
Conant Place, Dod, Francis, Gough, Paynton, Pelling,
Pigott and Silver Streets, Stainsby Road and West India
Dock Road (see page 202). By 1866 — when the development was still not complete — leases had been granted of
404 separate properties, each often of more than one
house-site, and including eight factories, warehouses,
works or offices and one chapel. (ref. 108)
Nos 51–77 (demolished)
A photograph taken in 1897, during the celebrations to
mark the eightieth anniversary of the establishment of
the parish, shows on the left two of the houses that may
have impressed travellers entering the Poplar section of
the East India Dock Road (Plate 20c). (ref. 109) The houses (Nos
57 and 59) were two of the first to be built in the
road, dating from 1807–10. (ref. 110) These and bigger houses
extending eastward to No. 77 (some of which can be
glimpsed through the arch in the photograph) were built
on property, extending also south of the road, which on
the eve of development was held under the manor of
Stepney by Richard Smith of North Street, Poplar,
who, as a 'cowkeeper', had been admitted to copyhold
ownership in 1787. (ref. 111) He disposed of some buildings and
by 1817 the residue was in the hands of a younger
Richard Smith, also of North Street, who continued the
process. How far the Smiths were responsible for the
character of the development here is, however, uncertain:
three of the houses were erected under a building lease
from them, but at least nine other house-sites, including
those of big houses at Nos 69 and 71, were sold off at or
before the time of building. By 1840 the Smiths owned
none of the houses. (ref. 112)
Nos 51–67. The terrace of six houses at Nos 57–67 was
built in 1807–10, being extended westward with Nos 51–
55 in 1823–4, and was known as Canton Place. Four of
the first six house-sites had been sold in 1807 by Richard
Smith to Richard Pillgrem of Poplar, described as a
surveyor: (ref. 113) a William Pillgrem, perhaps the designer of
the constables' houses in Harrow Lane (see page 88), was
the first occupant of No. 59 in 1810, (ref. 114) and it may be
that Richard or William Pillgrem was the undertaker or
designer of these houses.

Figure 33:
Nos 57–67 (odd) East India Dock Road, plans in 1935. Demolished
The photograph mentioned above shows the plain
three-storeyed brick fronts, behind wide areas, with their
first-floor windows descending to near floor level. At Nos
57–63 and where No. 57 was to be joined in 1823–4 to
No. 55, the houses were designed as a quasi-terrace of
semi-detached pairs joined at ground-floor level only by
the coupling of their front doors in a single-storey link.
This arrangement permitted the designer to give the full
width of the house to the front room, but at the expense
of the rear room, which was reduced to accommodate
the staircase compartment (fig. 33). (ref. 115)
The three westernmost houses, Nos 51 55, were built
under a 61-year building lease granted by Richard Smith
(the younger) in 1823 to a builder, Thomas Corpe of
Jamaica Place, Limehouse. (ref. 116) Corpe, who was active
elsewhere in the road, mortgaged the three new houses
here in 1824 to John Mills, gentleman, the owneroccupier of No. 63. (ref. 117) Perhaps Mills had a speculative
interest in the development: Corpe was bankrupt by 1838
and Mills, who in 1833–4 moved to No. 73, (ref. 118) then came
into the possession of that house and of Nos 51–55. In
1840, if not before, he owned seven of the twelve houses
on this stretch of road. (ref. 119) Corpe's son, also Thomas, was
a surveyor, (ref. 120) but whether he had any hand in the design
of Nos 51–55 is not known. No. 55, at least, had a slightly
more developed elevation than the houses eastward, with
a stone or stucco bandcourse below less elongated firstfloor windows, and a parapet above a main cornice. (The
doorcase, however, matched its pair at No. 57.) Early in
the twentieth century these three houses were replaced
by a theatre.

Figure 34:
The Hippodrome Theatre, East India Dock Road, plans. Owen & Ward, architects, 1904–5. Demolished
The Hippodrome (formerly New Princes) Theatre
at Nos 51–55.
This solidly ornate Edwardian theatre,
designed on large lines at a prominent corner site, was
built in 1904–5 and opened under the name of the New
Princes Theatre (Plate 20a). The architects were Owen &
Ward of Birmingham and the builders Kirk & Kirk of
Westminster. Clarence Sounes was the owner: he also
owned theatres at Woolwich and Aldershot, and lived at
Blackheath. (ref. 121) (ref. e) The building had a width of 60ft to East
India Dock Road. The front part of the theatre was built
of red brick with buff terracotta facings, supplied by the
Hathern Station Terra Cotta Company, Leicestershire. (ref. 123)
The main elevation was a handsome composition, largescaled for a large site, in an English Baroque style turning
Continental towards the top. (ref. 124) At its centre were the
entrance to the better seats, the manager's offices with
large, round-headed windows and bow-fronted balconies
at first-floor level, and a colonnade of coupled columns
at second-floor level, flanked by towers which mainly
accommodated the gallery staircases and finished in
copper-covered domes. The main and return groundfloor fronts were sheltered by a bold iron canopy. (ref. 125) The
long side elevation to Stainsby Road made do, at best,
with some tall, blank arcading. (ref. 126)
Inside, the layout of the front-of-house arrangements
deliberately separated the entrances and exits of the more
and less affluent, while taking their money at the same
box-office (fig. 34). (ref. 127) The auditorium was 61ft wide and
78ft deep, and the stage the same width and 41ft deep.
There were 17 dressing-rooms. The auditorium was
arranged in three levels: stalls and pit, circle and balcony,
and gallery and amphitheatre — the two upper tiers being
cantilevered to avoid obstructing the view with columns.
At the opening it was claimed that the theatre held 2,500
persons, (ref. 128) but this is doubtful.
The interior decorations, in the French Renaissance
style', were by F. De Jong & Company and were enthusiastically described by a friendly journalist thus: 'The
prevailing colours . . . are cream and gold, slightly
relieved with pale salmon and blue; artistic panel paintings
adorn the tympana over the proscenium, and in the dome
. . . the whole harmonising tastefully with the crimson
and gold silk draperies and peacock blue carpets.' The
mosaic-work of the staircases and floors was by Diespeker & Company of Holborn. (ref. 129)
As early as 1907 the Princes (called the Hippodrome by
1908) was showing three-hour programmes of animated
pictures. (ref. 130) Mixed bills of live performances and film
continued for the next two decades. By 1925 the
Hippodrome was run just as a cinema and in July 1926,
after alteration by Pitcher Construction Company, (ref. 131)
announced its 'opening' as 'the new Hippodrome Super
Cinema'. (ref. 132) It was altered again in 1936, (ref. 133) but was
bombed in autumn 1940 and described as 'burnt out;
unusable'. (ref. 134) The ruins were cleared away in about 1950. (ref. 135)
Nos 69–77.
The name Canton Place was sometimes
extended to include Nos 69–73.
No. 69 was built in 1818 (ref. 136) on copyhold ground sold
in 1816, presumably by the Smiths (see above), to its
first owner and occupant, Captain James Hamilton, a
master mariner. (ref. 137) This house stood well back from the
building line of Nos 57–67 to its west.
No. 71 had one of the widest sites in the road, of some
100ft, but the house, built in 1821–2, (ref. 138) occupied only
30ft of width, with laundry and other offices on the west
side and a stable yard on the east. The simply designed
three-bay brick front of the house rose through three tall
storeys, the ground-floor window-openings being roundheaded and echoed in the design of the trellising of the
veranda which dressed the first-floor windows (Plate 28a).
(By 1890, at least, these lit a dining room.) (ref. 139) The slated
mansard roof contained two segmental-headed dormer
windows. At the rear, the three ground-floor windows
descended to ground level: the two upper storeys each
contained two windows. From the back of the house
eight steps led down to the spacious garden. (ref. 140)
The first occupant, who remained for some 32 years,
was George Clavering Redman, merchant and shipowner. (ref. 141) By 1836 he had warehouses near the West India
Docks, a counting house and warehouses in Lime Street,
a fleet of 10 or 12 sailing ships and a seat on the board
of a steamboat company. (ref. 142) His tenure of the house came
about by virtue of a sale of the copyhold site for £425
by Richard Smith (the younger) in 1820 to a purchaser
who was probably Redman's father-in-law. (ref. 143) By 1876 the
house was occupied by a solicitor who in 1878 and 1890
added the appendages of upper suburbia — a covered way
to the front door, and a billiard room over the laundry
and offices. (ref. 144)
No. 73 was built in 1824–5, on a copyhold site acquired
in 1823 by the builder Thomas Corpe, who was then
building Nos 51–55. (ref. 145) After his bankruptcy the property
passed, in 1838, to his mortgagee John Mills, (ref. 146) who lived
in the house, which did not then have Pekin Street as its
eastward abutment. Its site later accommodated a cinema
(see below).
Nos 75 and 77, two semi-detached houses, were built
in 1859–60 by the local builders, William Hack & Son
of King (later Ming) Street. (ref. 147) This was part of a development that included 35 other houses in two new streets,
Nankin Street and Pekin Street, the latter opening into
East India Dock Road between Nos 73 and 75. This
whole site had been bought copyhold by the shipowner,
G. C. Redman (occupant of No. 71), from Richard
Smith (the younger) in 1838, for £475. (ref. 148) In 1856 three
shipowners or agents, Stephen Redman of Lombard
Street, Joel Langley of No. 76 East India Dock Road,
and George Fuller of Lime Street, inherited the property
from a female relation of G. C. Redman's, (ref. 149) and it was
probably under their auspices that this development was
undertaken.
The Gaiety Cinema at No. 73.
This small cinema was
built in 1913–14 by J. Easton of Barnsbury to designs by
the architect H. R. G. S. Smallman of Queen Street.
Although confined to a single house-site, it had the
advantage of a corner position and the architect managed
some external pomp with a columned corner entrance
and a dome (fig. 35). Inside, the decoration was a minimal
'dix-huitieme' (panels and swags). The narrow site had at
least the advantage that all of the 496 seats were, in spite
of a wide central gangway, in front of the screen. (ref. 150) In
1917 J. Easton had to rebuild some part of the cinema
because of structural settlement. (ref. 151) Equipment for 'talking
pictures' was installed in 1930. The war-damaged building was demolished in September 1940. (ref. 152)

Figure 35:
35. The Gaiety Cinema, East India Dock Road, sketchelevation. H. R. G. S. Smallman, architect, 1913–14. Demolished
Nos 77W, 79, 79A–E (demolished)
These buildings, of which only No. 79 was of any
consequence, stood on a triangle of copyhold land belonging at the time of the making of the road to a Mary
Burch of St George's-in-the-East (see page 171). The
road separated this area from the larger residue of her
estate on its south side. In 1814 Mary Burch leased all
or part of the triangle for 31 years to a brandy merchant
in Limehouse and the City, Duncan Dunbar, who then
held the land eastward, where he soon afterwards built a
house at No. 81. (ref. 153) In 1843 Mary Burch's successor in
title, Edward Langley, renewed the lease for 61 years to
Dunbar's son, also Duncan, who was on his way to
becoming a millionaire shipowner. (ref. 154) He built a substantial
detached house here at No. 79, Balnagaith House, in
1854–5. (ref. 155) In 1864, two years after the shipowning Dunbar's death, a 39-year term in the house was bought by
a grocer in Pennyfields for £370, and by the 1870s No.
79 had become a lodging house or 'private hotel'. (ref. 156)
Between 1876 and 1886 a tailor, Abraham Goldberg, who
seems to have bought the 'hotel', had six two-storeyed
houses-over-shops of the humblest kind, numbered 77w
and 79A–E, built on its former garden. (ref. 157)
Nos 81–91 (demolished)
Eastward of No. 79 as far as Upper North Street, and
also south of the road, lay a copyhold estate bought in
1803 by the shipbuilder John Perry, then retired to
Harlow, Essex. At that time it consisted of about three
acres of garden ground, some outbuildings and cottages,
a row of 'eight new-built small Brick Messuages and
Gardens' facing the west side of Upper North Street,
and two dwelling houses on the south side of the newly
made road, on the west corner of North Street. By reason
of its position the ground was fairly described at the time
as 'very improvable', and although there were 15 years
to run of a subsisting lease to a gardener, Joseph Brandy,
Perry paid £1,800 for the land. (ref. 158) Nothing seems to have
happened until 1812, and the attempt Perry's son John
then made to develop the eastern half of his land on this
north side of the road (from the later No. 91 to Upper
North Street) was unsuccessful. The intention was to
build 31 small houses — 11 in East India Dock Road, 6
in Upper North Street and 14 in streets behind. The
building lessee was to have been Jonas Charlesson Hahn
of Whitechapel, builder, with whom Perry concluded an
agreement in September 1812 describing the setting out,
dimensions and materials of the houses. The 'internal
arrangement' of the houses was left to Hahn's discretion,
but the simple form of the fronts was presented in
elevational drawings attached to the agreement. (ref. 159) In fact,
'differences and disputes' brought the scheme to an end
and in 1815 the agreement was cancelled, when only
three 'cottages' had been built. (ref. 160) Perry paid Hahn £495
for the work he had done. (ref. 161)
Thereafter the Perrys attempted no more development
east of No. 91, although in 1851 John Perry's nephew,
J. W. Perry Watlington (later MP for South Essex)
enfranchised all his estate here in the manor of Stepney,
and about that time was contemplating another layout of
houses, evidently by the architect John Morris. (ref. 162) But
again nothing happened until in 1865 the site was occupied by St Stephen's Church (see below).
Perhaps disenchanted with terrace-house projects, John
Perry filled the western part of the East India Dock Road
frontage with two large detached houses, with an intended
road between them that was itself abandoned in the
1850s. The westernmost, later No. 81, was built in 1817–
18, and No. 83 in 1825–6. Nos 85–91, built only in about
1855, were semi-detached, so here an owner in the road
was turning from small houses in 1812 to larger ones
later (Plate 29b).
No. 81 (sometime St Stephen's Vicarage).
This house,
detached in a large garden, was built in 1817–18 (ref. 163) on
copyhold property leased from John Perry by the brandy
merchant Duncan Dunbar, the owner of vacant ground
on the site of No. 79, Balnagaith House, eastward. Like
that house it was given a Scottish name, Forres House.
In 1870 it was bought by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners
for £1,400 from J. W. Perry Watlington, who gave them
back half the price. This was for use as the vicarage of
St Stephen's Church, from which it was, however, separated by No. 83. The Commissioners' architect, Ewan
Christian, did not think much of the construction of the
Regency house, or the subterranean location of its offices,
or its low ceiling heights. He insisted on changes and a
minimum thickness of 14in. for the external walls. (ref. 164) The
changes were made by the local architect, John W.
Morris. (ref. 165) Later, the vicar's daughter remembered it as
having 'a great many small rooms'. (ref. 166) In 1886 Margaret
Perry Watlington sold the strip eastward of No. 81, at
one time intended for a road northward, to the vicar, the
Rev. R. J. Elliott. (ref. 167) He had been taking homeless boys
to live in the vicarage but 'as his daughters grew up'
found it necessary in that year to build St Stephen's
Home for Orphans and Fatherless Boys here. (ref. 168) John W.
Morris was again the architect and the builder was J. K.
Coleman of Poplar High Street. (ref. 169) Behind, a small home
for six old people was built. (ref. 170) For the boys' home Morris
designed a plain 'Tudor' building with straight-sided
gables and rectangular, mullion-and-transomed windows
under hood-moulds, executed in brick and stone — a rare
intrusion of this style into Poplar. (ref. 171) In 1909 the vicarage
was abandoned as too expensive to run, in favour of a
clergy house at No. 15 Poplar High Street. (ref. 172)
No. 83.
This substantial house was built in 1825–6 on
the Perry copyhold estate, then in the hands of John
Perry's brother Philip Perry, esquire, of Upper Harley
Street, by John Garford the younger, gentleman, for
his own occupation. Garford's firm were oil and seed
merchants at Limehouse Hole. (ref. 173) James Walker, the surveyor, advised Philip Perry in the matter and considered
Garford had built 'an excellent house', and recommended
a ground rent of £24 per annum for the 73ft of frontage. (ref. 174)
Perry granted an 80-year lease in 1827. (ref. 175)
In 1882 the house was taken over as the convent of
Our Lady of Dolours by a community of French origin,
the Faithful Companions of Jesus, who had been established in England in 1830 in Somers Town. The community and its school removed to Hackney in about 1948
after Howrah House (as No. 83 had been named) had
been damaged by bombing during the war. (ref. 176) By then
successive additions and alterations had camouflaged the
house of 1825–6. The house was demolished in or soon
after 1950. (ref. 177)
Nos 85–91.
Nos 85 and 87 are specimens of the unappealing style of the local architectural firm of John
Morris & Son in about 1855, when they were built as
the western pair of four houses, called Harlow Villas
after the town where J. W. Perry Watlington lived. The
builder, who shared the architect Morrises' address, was
a George Morris, and John Morris himself was the first
occupant of No. 85. (ref. 178)
Nos 89 and 91 (similarly to Nos 86–100 opposite) were
built by another local builder, Adin Sheffield, also to the
designs of the Morrises. (ref. 179)
St Stephen's Church (demolished)
This church was built in 1865–6 at the instigation of the
Rector of All Saints', the Rev. T. W. Nowell, an energetic
creator of new parishes for his widely spread flock (Plate
22a). The site was purchased from J. W. Perry Watlington
by the London Diocesan Church Building Society, who
passed it on to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. (ref. 180) The
architects were F. & H. Francis and the builder William
Howard of Covent Garden, (ref. 181) both parties having recently
been engaged on schools in Northumberland Street for
the rector (see page 205). St Stephen's was consecrated
in January 1867. (ref. 182) The cost was reported as £7,000, of
which no less than £6,000 was given by the Blackwall
shipbuilder and shipowner Henry Green. (ref. 183)
This part of East India Dock Road was then one of
the areas of Poplar closest to prosperity, demonstrating
in some of its houses an expectation (already losing its
basis in economic fact) that this would continue. St
Stephen's reflected the same optimism in its use of the
Decorated style rather than the Early English favoured
where rigid economy was necessary. The Building News
listed it among the more noticeable churches of the year,
and James Thorne in the Companion to the Almanac called
it 'a church of more than the usual pretension'. (ref. 184) The
Illustrated London News thought it 'large and beautiful'. (ref. 185)
Apart from nave, aisles and chancel, providing altogether
some 960 sittings, (ref. 186) there was a square tower at the east
end of the south aisle and an organ compartment and
vestry on the north side of the chancel (fig. 36). There
was no west door (probably to facilitate the building of
a parish or mission hall west of the church), the main
entrance being by the south porch. The exterior was
faced with coursed Kentish ragstone, and Bath stone was
used for all the 'worked details'. The engraving in the
Illustrated London News shows the tower surmounted by
an octagon, with flying buttresses, from which rose a tall
spire, but this was never built. (ref. 187) On the East India Dock
Road front the Francises used the eye-catching formula
by which each of the five tall south-aisle windows was
set under the steep gable of a short transverse roof
running back to the aisle roof.

Figure 36:
St Stephen's Church, East India Dock Road, plan in 1893. F. & H. Francis, architects, 1865–6. Demolished
Inside, the brickwork of the walls (as at the Francises'
St Saviour's) was exposed in banded polychromy, 'no
plaster being used for any part of the church'. There was
encaustic tiling by Mintons, (ref. 188) and the stone arches of
the nave arcades had lushly carved caps.
Much later, in 1897, one of Charles Booth's investigators interviewed the first vicar, the Rev. R. J. Elliott —
still in office after 31 years — and following a tour of the
church noted that 'to make his church beautiful has
evidently been the object nearest to his heart', instancing
wrought ironwork 'all made in the vicarage', a fine
(low) marble choir screen, painted windows, and (still in
progress) some mosaic-work. But 'the work of which
perhaps Mr E. is most justly proud are [sic] the carved
capitals of his pillars and the finials [sic] of the arches',
which were 'full of ideas and meanings' and inspired by
'love and devotion'. (ref. 189) This may imply amateur labour
on the part of the Reverend Elliott, but the rather
idiosyncratic stonecarving looks in photographs similar
to that in the Francises' St Saviour's, and was therefore
probably done by their stonecarver to their requirements
(see page 205). It perhaps contributed, in fact, to the
fierce condemnation of the church by a later critic —
strangely at odds with the Booth investigator's
impression — as 'a beastly bit of Francis commercialism'. (ref. 190)
From the beginning, the east window was furnished
with stained glass, paid for by a committee of local
ladies. (ref. 191) Another window was executed by George Rees
of Lamb's Conduit Street in 1881. (ref. 192)
In 1874 a small utilitarian mission house was built
north-west of the church by Edward lles of Poplar, and
in 1876–7 this was extended towards East India Dock
Road by the builder J. K. Coleman of Poplar in an
ecclesiastical early Gothic style matching the church in
its coursed ragstone facing. The architect of the former,
and therefore perhaps of the extension also, was John
Warrington Morris. (ref. 193)
According to the Reverend Elliott, the church had
to struggle against the success of Trinity Congregational
Church nearby (which was the creation largely of
George Green, the father of St Stephen's benefactor
Henry Green) in attracting the wealthier residents (see
below). (ref. 194) Like other churches in the district, the
church assumed a 'higher' tone in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries. In 1869 the choir was
'unsurpliced', but by 1916 a local paper thought that
the celebration of 'the Roman Catholic feast of Corpus
Christi' by a 'Solemn High Mass' was in emulation of
the Roman Catholic church of SS Mary and Joseph
nearby (see page 202). (ref. 195)
The church was damaged in an air raid in 1917,
incurring some £2,650-worth of repairs. Messrs Powell —
presumably James Powell & Sons — supplied two stainedglass windows at that time. (ref. 196) Damage was inflicted more
than once in the Second World War and the church was
demolished in 1950. (ref. 197) The choir-stalls were removed to
St Peter's, Grange Park, (ref. 198) and the ragstones were utilized
in making the low boundary wall of this part of the
Lansbury Estate along East India Dock Road between
Saracen Street and Upper North Street. (ref. 199)
Nos 93–103 (demolished)
These houses were built, like Nos 104—126 on the south
side, on a property owned in 1827 by John Wilkes
of Pimlico, esquire, and Henry William Masterson of
Rotterdam, merchant. Both were trustees under the will
of Mary Masterson of Pimlico, the widow of a Bruges
merchant, who seems to have inherited the property from
her grandfather, then 'long since deceased'. In 1827 they
sold the property in lots, all to local men. This was in a
lull after the London building boom of a year or two
before, and so development was neither quick nor complete. On the north side of the road, called Prospect
Place, the sites of Nos 93 and 95 were bought by a
lawyer, Jonathan Ellerthorpe, of Nos 97 and 99 by a
blacksmith, James Williams, of Nos 101 and 103 by a
ship-chandler, John Essery, and of No. 103A in two lots
by two 'gentlemen', Oliver Evans and James Duff. (ref. 200) At
Nos 93–97 and 101–103 building took place in 1828–9;
all except No. 101 very humbly in two storeys. (ref. 201) Andrew
Wilson of St George's-in-the-East, builder, was, with a
Shoreditch solicitor, party to all the deeds and had
perhaps, therefore, been the main undertaker.
The site of No. 103A long remained undeveloped. (ref. 202)
The blacksmith and the ship-chandler each occupied one
of their houses. By the 1850s, if not before, there were
shops here. (ref. 203)
Nos 105–115 (demolished)
These six houses, built in 1841–3, and sometime named
Trinity Terrace, spanned what had previously been a
property division on the line of the old drainage channel
and sewer called the Black Ditch. Eastward along this
side of East India Dock Road so far as Chrisp Street lay
the estate which from the early eighteenth century had
belonged to the Wade family and which in 1823 had been
divided between five daughters. Proceeding eastward, the
portions fell (in terms of the later street-numbering) to
Sophia Duff (Nos 111–133), Catherine Wade (Nos 135–
151), Sarah Kerbey (No. 153), Susannah Grundy (Nos
155–171) and Elizabeth Chrisp Willis (Nos 173–187).
Their development conformed to a coherent layout in
the hinterland (see page 210), opening to East India Dock
Road in a series of cross-streets: conceivably this was
the work of James Walker, who had been Mrs Wade's
surveyor.
Sophia Duff and her husband James, a tavern keeper,
also acquired in 1827 the ground immediately westward
of the site of Nos 111–133. This must have facilitated
the purchase by or before 1841 of all the site by the
promoter of the terrace. He was the very wealthy shipbuilder and shipowner George Green, who was creating
a group of 'philanthropic' foundations around this part
of the road — chapel, minister's house, sailors' home,
schools, and almshouses. It was to provide an endowment
for the almshouses (in Upper North Street) that this
terrace was built. George Green was willing and able to
pay the high price of £1,300 for the site. (ref. 204)
The bisection of the site by the old sewer possibly
explains a feature of the terrace that seems discernible in
the only (and imperfect) early representation of it and on
the Ordnance Survey map of 1867–70 — the elevation of
its ground floor higher than usual above the footway
behind a wide area (protected by a low wall surmounted
by a railing). The back wall of the terrace was straight,
without closet wings. (ref. 205) The representation (of Nos 111–
115 only) shows the houses to have been three storeys
high, designed in a late-Georgian style, with roundheaded door- and window-openings on the ground floor
and straight-headed windows under bracketed cornices
on the first floor. All these openings were dressed with
architraves but the second-floor windows were undressed.
The front finished with a plain frieze and cornice surmounted by a pedestal-course supporting a balustrade
punctuated by plain dies marking the intervals between
each bay (Plate 150c).
The architect may have been John Morris, who seems
to have acted for George Green in the matter of archingover the Black Ditch (ref. 206) and was the first occupant of the
widest house, No. 111. In 1857 the terrace also contained
a clergyman and two schools for young ladies and, by
1862, a police station. (ref. 207)
In 1875, following an Order in Chancery, the houses
were vested in the trustees of Trinity Chapel and they,
foreseeing the future of East India Dock Road, granted
a 99-year lease of the houses to the local estate agent and
surveyor William Warren (of No. 77), on condition that
he spent £600 or more converting them to contain shops
on the road frontage, which he did probably to designs
by the local architect E. L. Bracebridge. (ref. 208)
Trinity Congregational Chapel (demolished)
Until it was blown to pieces by a flying bomb in 1944,
this chapel stood both as an example of thoughtful if
idiosyncratic late Classicism (Plate 21a), and a token
of the continuance of the architectural aspirations for
Poplar evident at All Saints'. It was built in 1840–1
to designs by William Hosking (1800–61), Professor of
Architecture at King's College, London. The builders
were Thomas Rider & Son of Southwark and the City,
and the cost was about £5,495 without fittings. This and
all attendant costs were paid by George Green. He not
only paid £400 for the organ, but evidently provided
£1,541 to buy an endowment for the organist's salary,
and paid for the Bible, hymn-books and surplices.
Additionally he paid some £1,180 for the chapel site to
Jonathan Ellerthorpe, a solicitor and estate-developer
hereabouts, who had acquired it ten years earlier, as
well as £630 for the chapel's burial ground. He also
enfranchised both in the manor of Stepney (for £168). (ref. 209)
This was one of several munificent foundations for which
he was responsible in Poplar. (ref. f)

Figure 37:
Trinity Congregational Chapel, East India Dock Road, plan in 1943. William Hosking, architect, 1840–1. Demolished
George Green in his accounts calls the chapel the
sailors' chapel, until its opening as Trinity Chapel, and
it was acknowledged that it was intended to attract
seamen from the locality, especially his own sailors' home
nearby, as well as the shipwrights in his employment. (ref. 211)
Nevertheless, for a number of years the congregation
included much of the local 'carriage trade' of worship. (ref. 212)
As originally built the chapel was a rectangle, externally
55ft wide and 180ft long, exclusive of the portico fronting
south to East India Dock Road (fig. 37). The east side
of the site abutted on Augusta Street and on both sides
the chapel was set with trees.
The tetrastyle Corinthian portico rose from a stylobate
formed by a wall along the road frontage that was
extended to mask lateral steps rising into the portico. It
was surmounted by bronzed railings which broke inward
behind the columns. The capitals of the columns, the
most enriched feature of the front, were decorated with
shells and dolphins. The portico finished with a stepped
architrave, plain frieze and dentil cornice supporting a
pediment with plain tympanum. Within the portico the
south-facing main wall of the chapel was composed to
benefit from east shadows, with three tall round-headed
recesses, containing one entrance and two exit doors
under shell-ornamented tympana, and separated by pilasters against which were set three-quarter-engaged
columns — fluted, like the columns of the portico. The
outer bays of the main front wall, bounded by Corinthian
pilasters, contained smaller, blank, round-headed recesses
to accommodate torch-holders, blank panels above them
and, in the 'implied' but unexpressed entablature, a single
horizontal window on each side to light the interior at
high level. This wall finished with its own full-width
pediment rising above and behind that of the portico, the
individuality of the front owing much to the flattening of
the apex of this pediment to give, visually, a base for the
substantial square bell-turret which, structurally, received
support from the engaged columns below it. The bellturret finished with a steep ogival cap of unusual profile.
Inside, galleries were supported by hollow bronzed
columns. These served also as rainwater-pipes, for
Hosking had ingeniously combined the clerestory lighting
which would be expected in a nave-and-aisles basilican
arrangement, with a single-cell exterior, by breaking
the slopes of his shallow-pitched roof with a hidden
longitudinal valley on each side that admitted light to his
clerestory and was drained through the columns. (ref. 213)
The interior was carefully composed. The case housing
a powerful organ by Joseph Walker, in a Greek style, was
made integral with the internal decorative scheme. The
north end, where the focus of the chapel was on a highlevel pulpit 'executed in Keene's cement', was composed
to echo the triple round-headed openings in the portico
wall.
At its inauguration in 1841, the chapel was said to
accommodate some 1,000 or 1,100 worshippers. Very
soon, however, enlargement was necessary and an exten
sion about 15ft deep was made at the north end in
1846, permitting a higher-level gallery to be made there
(possibly over a ground-floor schoolroom). The work
was probably done by Green's own building staff. The
architect was not Hosking — conceivably because he was
by then the Official Referee to the Metropolitan Building
Office — but John Morris, living nearby. (ref. 214) The accommodation was raised to 1,500. (ref. 215)
The chapel as extended in 1846 was probably not
much changed before its destruction in 1944. (ref. 216) A font
was installed in 1916, and wooden vestries were inserted
rather obtrusively on either side of the pulpit in 1875. (ref. 217)
(For the post-war successor to this chapel see page 225.)
The minister's house was built to Hosking's designs
at the same time as the chapel, but on the other side of
the road at the present site of Pope John House (No.
154). The ground was bought by George Green from
Thomas Hale for £900 and Green paid Thomas Lambert
of Blackwall the large sum of £1,741 to build it. (ref. 218) The
Companion to the Almanac described this 'neat villa-like
house' as
showing how much expression may be given at a trifling expense
to a small and unpretending building of the kind. Of such
expression, much is derived from the upper fillet of the cornice
being of sawn slate, and from the chimney shafts at the ends
of the house being made to project sufficiently to stop the
cornice on its returns, except the cyma, which forms the
corbelling supporting those shafts. The design of the door
corresponds with those within the portico of the chapel, in
having like them an arched head filled with a concave shell. (ref. 219)
Unfortunately the appearance of this building is not
otherwise recorded.
West of the chapel a small house, No. 117, was built
at the same time, and although embraced by the chapel's
curtilage seems not to have been associated with it; the
occupier was successively described as carpenter, grocer
and tobacconist (Plate 150c). (ref. 220)
East of the chapel and also embraced by its curtilage
was No. 119, at the corner of Augusta Street, built in
1827 by its first occupant, a Limehouse victualler perhaps
near retirement, on land he had bought from a daughter
of the Wade family. (ref. 221) It kept up the tone of this part of
the road with a plain, three-bay, three-storeyed, brick
front, having a round-headed door-opening, straightheaded windows rising at first-floor level from a continued
balcony, and a small crowning cornice and parapet. (ref. 222)
In 1889 Holloways the builders erected quite a large
lecture hall and rooms behind the chapel, abutting on
Augusta Street. (ref. 223)
Queen Victoria Seamen's Rest, Jeremiah Street and Nos 121–131 East India Dock Road
Fronting East India Dock Road is the extension of the
Queen Victoria Seamen's Rest made in 1951–3, and
occupying the site of six houses called Wade's Terrace
built in 1829 on the property of Sophia Duff (née Wade)
and her husband James Duff. (ref. 224) The architect of that
terrace is not known. It was a late-Georgian brick row,
set, like Trinity Terrace, behind a street wall topped with
railings, and rose through three storeys to finish with a
stone or stucco entablature, originally crowned by a
balustrade (Plate 150c). There were round-headed openings to the doors and to the ground- and first-floor
windows, the last being dressed with individual balconies
at the four outer houses of the terrace and a continuous
balcony at the two inner, projecting forward slightly
under a pediment set against the crowning balustrade. (ref. 225)
The houses were a little lower rated than those of Trinity
Terrace but in 1841 were respectably inhabited. (ref. 226) By the
later 1870s lodging-houses were taking over and gradually
from the 1880s shopfronts were inserted. (ref. 227)
The original building of the Queen Victoria Seamen's
Rest faces Jeremiah Street and was erected in 1901–2 for
the Wesleyan Seamen's Mission, which had had premises
there since about 1888. (ref. 228) These were well placed opposite
the side door of the Board of Trade building (at No.
133), whence seamen emerged with their wages. An
incentive to rebuild perhaps came from the recent building of the Anglican Missions to Seamen's Institute on
the other side of East India Dock Road. Architects for
the Wesleyans were Gordon & Gunton — Josiah Gunton
being one of the trustees for the new 'house' and by 1910
treasurer of the Wesleyan Mission chapel on the opposite
side of East India Dock Road: the firm built widely
for the Methodists. (ref. 229) The Seamen's Mission, whose
headquarters the building became, was associated with the
Artizans Dwellings Society and the building in Jeremiah
Street was in two conjoined parts, of different designs
(fig. 38). The southern part was originally of three storeys
(soon increased to four), with a four-storey entrance
tower at its southern end, the northern (now much altered
in its front to Jeremiah Street) of four storeys. The top
floor of that block contained cubicles for seamen and
there were dwellings for seamen's families in the northern
part. The cost was £14,000. (ref. 230) In 1932 the same architects,
now Gunton & Gunton, built an extension, costing some
£15,000, on the west side, facing Augusta Street (now
Arabella Close). (ref. 231)
The large extension of 1951–3 by Gunton & Gunton
in East India Dock Road cost £165,000. It is externally
of brick, the only accents in the flat front being provided
by the continuous band of openings on the ground floor
and the close grouping of the windows in the centre bay,
rising to a fourth floor, where it projects from a set-back
of the attic storey. This is in turn surmounted by a small
top storey. A northern wing provided, as built, a lounge
and bedrooms for officers and contains a chapel with
bare-brick interior walls under a flat ceiling with exposed
beams. (ref. 232) The three round-headed east windows were
filled with stained glass by Goddard & Gibbs (designer
Arthur E. Buss) in 1965. (ref. 233) The 'manse' at the northern
end of the site fronting Arabella Close was added by
Gunton & Gunton in about 1961. (ref. 234)

Figure 38:
Queen Victoria Seamen's Rest, Jeremiah Street, elevation of south block, plans and diagrammatic section. Gordon & Gunton, architects, 1901–2
No. 133, formerly Sailors' Home, later Board of Trade Offices
The only survivor of the buildings erected in the road
for the philanthropic George Green is an ambitious if
now altered example of a late-Georgian-style institution
built in the first years of Queen Victoria (Plates 23a,
150d). Green, who established the home primarily for
the seamen of his merchant ships, paid for it all. (ref. 235) Work
began in summer 1839 and was probably completed late
in 1841. The site, which in 1826 was conveyed by Sophia
and James Duff to Joseph Ellerthorpe, (ref. 236) was bought by
Green in 1839, when he paid £1,222 to the vendors,
John Carter (probably a local estate agent) and a Captain
Frazer, for a compact rectangle fronting the road between
the recently formed Jeremiah and Duff Streets.
The notably high cost of building and materials seems
to have been £9,830, of which £1,000 was paid to George
Green's own shipbuilding firm of Green, Wigram &
Green 'on account of advances for labour etc.'. (ref. 237) This,
together with £330 to a surveyor, the cost of the land,
and £3,083 paid to buy seats in the nearby Trinity Chapel
for the inmates of the home would bring the total outlay
to £14,465. (The Gentleman's Magazine reported that it
was £15,000.) (ref. 238)
Much of the material used — timber, bricks, concrete,
slates and lime — was obtained by Green himself, not
supplied by the tradesmen working it. (ref. g) Of the builders'
work, no payment is mentioned for carpentry, presumably
because this was done by the shipwrights of Green's own
shipyard and is accounted for by the payment of £1,000
mentioned above. (ref. 239) (ref. h)
No architect is mentioned in the accounts. Conceivably
that role was filled by the Blackwall builder, William
Constable, executing George Green's commands. The
latter's accounts record payments of £260 to him — £20
for 'building' but the rest for 'surveying', plus £90
awarded by an arbitrator between them. (Constable was,
however, also paid for 'surveying' at Trinity Chapel,
where an architect was certainly employed.) (ref. i)
In 1856 the building acquired a further use, as the
home of the Poplar and Blackwall School of Trade and
Navigation under the Science and Art Department. This
forerunner of the LCC's School of Marine Engineering
and Navigation in the High Street provided day lessons
in navigation for masters and mates in the merchant
navy, and a 'trade school' to give technical instruction to
workmen in the evenings. (ref. 241) In 1874 the building was
taken over entirely by the Board of Trade as a Mercantile
Marine office, partly for the 'trial and settlement of
questions connected with maritime law'. (ref. 242) By 1937 it
housed also a stores department and the Admiralty
Merchant Navy Signalling School. (ref. 243) Use by government
offices terminated about 1978 and in 1981–3 the building
was converted into small flats for 'single people and
childless couples' by Anthony Richardson & Partners for
the Rodinglea Housing Association. (ref. 244)
The building, thought 'beautiful' by the Gentleman's
Magazine in 1841, (ref. 245) was not very highly regarded by the
Historic Buildings Division of the LCC's Architect's
Department in 1946 ('Taken as a whole not too bad a
design. Detail poor.'). (ref. 246) The rather heavy central Doric
colonnade and the first-floor balcony it supported were
removed between 1947 and 1950 (ref. 247) and the railings along
the street have also gone (doubtless during the war). But
with these exceptions the front seems not much changed
since the days when the Green flag flew over it, and, if
not a powerful composition, retains distinctive features
such as the sunk-panelled and corniced chimneystacks,
the low, sunk-panelled screen walls at each end of the
front, and the round, domed piers at the extremities and
centre of the street frontage, again with sunk panels and
a stepped 'cornice'.
Nos 135–151 (demolished)
These nine houses, forming terraces of six and three
houses west and east of Manor Street, were built from
1854 to 1859 on the southern frontage of Catherine
Wade's portion of the old Wade estate, to designs by her
architects John Morris & Son (nearby at No. 85). At the
same time the Morrises were laying out Manor (later
Plimsoll) and Elizabeth (later the eastern part of Rigden)
Streets, and houses on the east side of Duff Street and
at Nos 48–66 Grundy Street. (ref. 248)
The builder of the first house, No. 141, was George
Stent, (ref. 249) and the builder of the three houses east of
Manor Street, Nos 147–151 (as well as of houses behind),
was William Jeves, perhaps the cabinet-maker and
upholsterer in the High Street: (ref. 250) the Jeveses owned or
occupied Nos 149 and 151 in the 1860s and 1870s. (ref. 251)

Figure 39:
No. 153 East India Dock Road, built 1834, southelevation and ground-floor plan in 1988
These houses stood back behind forecourts or front
gardens and Nos 135–145 were arranged so that the block
plans of the east and west trios mirrored each other in
the placing of their closet wings. (ref. 252) They all rose through
three storeys to finish with an eaves under a pitched and
slated roof. John Morris took some trouble over the
eaves, and submitted to the Poplar Board of Works a
drawing that shows that the upper member of the cornice
was in fact a galvanized-iron gutter (fitted with an
optimistic contrivance to keep it clear), the bedmould of
the cornice was made of cement and the console brackets
of iron. These last were of a form suggestive of west
London in the 1860s, and these houses were 'Victorian',
not the belated late-Georgian that had hitherto prevailed
in the road. (ref. 253)
The first occupant of No. 139 was the curate of All
Saints' Poplar, the Rev. R. C. Vaughan, but in 1877 this
terrace included two lodging houses. By then there was
no Wade ownership on this frontage. (ref. 254)
No. 153
This attractive detached villa, sometime called Palm
Cottage and set back behind a deep front garden, was
built in 1834 for its first occupant, a solicitor and churchwarden of the parish of Limehouse, W. H. Harton (Plate
27c). By 1841 he had bought the site from William
Kerbey, former linen-draper at No. 93 Poplar High Street
and widower of Sarah, nee Wade. (ref. 255) It was contemporary
with Monastery House, also built on Sarah Kerbey's
inheritance, forming with that house a trio of detached
villas including the slightly earlier Manor Cottage (see
below). The next occupant, also a churchwarden (of
Poplar), was T. J. Ditchburn, co-founder of the firm that
became the Thames Ironworks and a notable shipbuilder. (ref. 256) In 1983–4 the house was adapted by Anthony
Richardson & Partners, architects, for Circle 33 Housing
Trust for use as a hostel. (ref. 257) It retains its external appearance: a stock-brick block under the wide eaves of a lowpitched slated roof, the front dressed with a concavecanopied veranda and the entrance, in the side facing
Sturry Street, with a fluted Doric porch approached by
a lateral flight of steps (fig. 39).
Monastery House (demolished)
The villa, spaciously set in grounds that occupied the
full width of the present Sixth Form Centre and extended
two-thirds of the way back to Grundy Street, was built
in 1834 for his own occupation by William Kerbey. It
was erected on his deceased wife's part of the old Wade
estate. (ref. 258) Nothing is known of its appearance. In 1882
part of the site was bought to form the site of the new
George Green's School and on the remainder Nos 1–9
Kerbey Street and Nos 15–35 Sturry Street were built.

Figure 40:
George Green's School, East India Dock Road, ground-floor plan, as intended in 1883 (the Infant's wing was not built). (Sir) John Sulman, architect, 1883–4
Sixth Form Centre at former George Green's School
In the decade following the Education Act of 1870, the
school established and endowed by George Green in
1828 at the corner of Chrisp Street seemed increasingly
inadequate, both because its premises were constricted
and because its continued provision of elementary education seemed a limited use of its endowment. (ref. 259) The
Charity Commissioners therefore agreed that the school
trustees should establish a 'middle class' school giving a
wider secondary-type education. The Chrisp Street
school was closed in December 1881, by which time the
trustees' architect had applied to the Metropolitan Board
of Works for permission to erect a school on part of the
site of Monastery House. (ref. 260) He was (Sir) John Sulman
(1849–1934), who had recently designed church and
schools for Congregationalists at Highbury.
The site had been acquired by exchange for the Chrisp
Street site, although the new one was more than twice
the size of the old. (ref. 261) After the Poplar Board of Works
insisted on a set-back frontage to widen the road, work
went ahead in the hands of Ashby Brothers of Kingsland
Road, at a tendered price of £10,596. (ref. 262) The design was
published in November 1883 and the school was opened
in June 1884. The final total cost, including fittings, was
between £13,500 and £14,000. (ref. 263) (fn. j)
The school was designed to accommodate, as a dayschool, 200 boys and 200 girls (constituting formally
separate schools until 1901). They paid modest fees
relievable by endowed scholarships and received a
grammar-school-type education to the age of 16. (ref. 264)
Sulman's plan was carried out more or less as published — but omitting an infants' classroom in a northwest wing (ref. 265) — and still largely survives in the present
building.
The plan of the ground floor, where the boys' school
was located, was in two main parts differently arranged
(fig. 40). On the east five large classrooms and a lecture
room were placed on either side of a wide central corridor,
from which they were separated but not wholly concealed
by glazed partitions. On the west a large assembly- or
lecture-hall, rising through the first-floor level, had
smaller classrooms on one side, some capable of being
opened into the central area. The rooms of the girls'
school, on the east side of the building at first-floor level,
repeated the arrangement of classrooms along a corridor.
A flat roof-playground was provided for the girls. (ref. 266)
The architectural treatment, carried out in red brick
and stone, in a manner a little reminiscent of James
Brooks's St Columba's, Haggerston, was successfully
aimed at the picturesque (Plate 24a). Each part of the
building was expressed externally, with a roof of its own
raised to a telling silhouette of 'Greyfriars' rather than
London School Board type. The feeling is northern
European and the effect, if lacking something in forcefulness, is memorable and individual. The interior is of
less interest in its handling except for the hall, which is of
pegged-pine construction and might well be associational
architecture attempting to create the effect of a stateroom in a big Poplar-built ship (Plate 24c).
Two defects in the building were soon evident. (ref. 267) One
was the lack of laboratories, remedied in 1902 by a
north-easterly extension (architect, William Clarkson of
Poplar). (ref. 268) The other, never fully remedied, was the lack
of play-space.
The first 25 years of the school's life showed that its
endowments were insufficient to support it when the
collapse of Poplar's modest prosperity made fee-paying
very difficult. In 1909, therefore, (with effect from 1910)
the school was taken over by the LCC, with the approval
of the trustees, but somewhat against the inclinations of
the Board of Education. The school was thus one of
London's very few endowed secondary schools to be
'maintained'. In 1923 it became one of the first coeducational secondary schools in London at sixth-form
level. (ref. 269)
On the centenary in 1928 of the foundation of the
school (in Chrisp Street) the George Green Association
fulfilled Sulman's design by adding the projecting clock
to the tower on the road frontage. (ref. 270) In 1968 it was
decided that the school should become comprehensive
and move to a new building in Manchester Road, opened
in 1976 (see page 527). The old building reopened in
1977, providing teaching to pupils in subjects not taught
by their own schools at sixth-form level or those from
schools without a sixth-form. (ref. 271)
Apart from the loss of the high-pitched roof of the
clock-tower during the war, and the unsightly post-war
additions on the top floor facing Sturry Street, the
exterior in 1993 was not much changed since 1884.
Manor Cottage and Nos 155–165 East India Dock Road (demolished)
Of the former Wade estate, that part which came to
Susannah and her husband James Grundy of Hale Street,
builder, was the first to show building here. That was in
1825, when James Grundy erected a detached villa,
Manor Cottage, for the Grundys' own occupation, standing back from the East India Dock Road behind a long
garden and opening to the east side of Kerbey Street.
About the same time, in August 1824, the Grundys sold
the road frontage south-east of the Manor Cottage to
Simon Ive, a shipwright of Blackwall Yard, who built on
it a terrace of three houses called Suffolk Place (later Nos
161–165) abutting east on James (later Vesey) Street. (ref. 272)
The houses had round-headed first-floor windows and
the eaves of the slated, pitched roof were exposed. (ref. 273)
After the Grundys' departure from Manor Cottage about
1837 the house was divided, although remaining for some
time in 'well-to-do' occupation. (ref. 274) In about 1868–71,
however, it lost its front garden when an auctioneer in
the City and the Hackney Road, C. S. Shaw, built seven
ordinary-looking houses there, three facing Kerbey Street
(Nos 2–6) and four facing East India Dock Road
(numbered in 1893 Nos 155–159A). (ref. 275) These included the
Recreation Tavern at the corner, No. 155 East India
Dock Road.
Nos 167–171 and former Post Office (demolished)
These three houses, called Eastcot Place, and built about
1828 on Susannah Grundy's part of the Wade estate,
were by 1840 owned by W. H. Harton, the occupier of
No. 153, and one or two single women named Harton
lived in Nos 167 or 169 from the 1840s to the 1870s.
For many years from 1864 No. 171 was occupied by
Matthew Brownfield, the house surgeon at Poplar Hospital. (ref. 276)
They were replaced in 1911 by a Post Office and
sorting office built on a set-back frontage by Howell J.
Williams Ltd on a tendered price of £4,232, to designs
by John Rutherford for the Office of Works. (ref. 277) It was
boarded-up for demolition in 1967. (ref. 278)
Nos 173–177 (demolished)
Called William Terrace, these houses were built in about
1845 on Elizabeth Chrisp Willis's part of the Wade estate,
although they soon passed out of her ownership. They
had exposed mansard roofs and correspondingly shaped
party walls rising above them. (ref. 279)
Nos 179–185 (demolished)
These houses were also built on Elizabeth Chrisp Willis's
land, here as an enterprise (embracing also houses behind
in William, later Woollett, Street) of the local building
speculator Onesiphorus Randall (see page 208), who lived
at No. 185 and named the row Randall Terrace. They
came into occupation in 1831–7. Randall's executors were
still the owners in 1875. (ref. 280) Shopfronts were inserted in
two of the houses in 1878–9, and about that time one
house passed from an estate agent to a confectioner and
another from a physician to a purveyor of ham and
beef. (ref. 281) They were plain three-storeyed houses with a
raised panel over the second-floor windows. (ref. 282)
Nos 187 and 187A–B and site of George Green's
Chrisp Street School (demolished)
These three plain, four-storeyed houses, together with
three houses and two two-storeyed shops in Chrisp
Street, were built in 1882 for the local estate agent
William Warren of East India Dock Road. (ref. 283) (No. 187A
was still owned under the same name in 1937.) (ref. 284) The
house at the corner of Chrisp Street, No. 187B, was
immediately converted by Charles Bell, architect, for use
as a branch of the London and South-Western (later
Barclays) Bank (builders, Atherton & Latta of Chrisp
Street). (ref. 285) Latterly it had a pilastered and arcaded stone
front to the road, perhaps of 1926–7. (ref. 286)
The site had been acquired by Warren in exchange
with the previous owners, the trustees of a school established by George Green at the corner of East India Dock
Road and Chrisp Street in 1828, who obtained the present
site of the former George Green's School, in which
Warren had an interest. (ref. 287)
The site for the Chrisp Street school had been acquired
by George Green in two parts in 1828 and 1829 from
Elizabeth Chrisp Willis. He built an infant school on the
more easterly part immediately, (ref. 288) and in 1831–2 paid the
Blackwall builder, William Constable, £800 for another
infant school here, presumably on the western part of
the site. (ref. 289) In the years 1837–9 Green spent upward of
£1,994, most of it paid to a builder named Yard, on
building for what he called the 'Irish Protestant School'
here. Thomas Lambert of Blackwall was paid £765 for
building here in 1842 (ref. 290) and a builder in Poplar High
Street, William French, made additions in 1846, when
there was a 'governess's living room under the gallery'. (ref. 291)
The school was closed and demolished in 1881–2.
Nos 189–223 (Nos 189–195 demolished)
Between Chrisp Street and Bow Lane lay a part of Black
Boy Field and two-acre close separated from the rest
of the property southward by the making of the East
India Dock Road. In the eighteenth century it had been
owned, as copyhold of the manor of Stepney, by a farmer
and grazier called Rogers and then, as trustee under his
will, by a farrier. By the operation of gavelkind in the
manor of Stepney, the trust had descended by 1807 to
the farrier's sons. In that year they sold the land needed
for the road to the road trustees, and the residue they
surrendered to three brothers called Griffiths — two
'gentlemen', of Shoreditch and Hoxton, and a bookbinder
in Piccadilly — who were evidently the heirs of Rogers. (ref. 292)
In 1850 James Griffiths of Mile End and William and
Elizabeth Simons of Vauxhall Bridge Road sold the
westernmost part of the road frontage to the East and
West India Docks and Birmingham Junction Railway for
their line. (ref. 293) This presaged the disposal of the rest of the
land for development after its partition between James
Griffiths and the Simonses, the site of Nos 189–205 going
to the latter and that of Nos 207–223 to the former (see
page 175). (ref. 294) At the surviving houses of the Simonses
(Nos 199–205) the buildings are noticeably humbler than
further west in the road.
The house at No. 191 was built in 1851 for the
builders' merchant who had his premises there, probably
to designs by John Morris. (ref. 295)
Police Station at Nos 193–195 (demolished).
About 1861
stables at No. 193 were taken for use by the Metropolitan
Police, (ref. 296) and in 1867–8 these and the house of the
builder John Jeffrey at No. 195 were adapted for use as
a police station by Lathey Brothers of Battersea Park at
a tendered price of £1,193 to designs by T. C. Sorby,
architect. (ref. 297) This was under lease from the freeholder
until the police bought the freehold in 1892. (ref. 298) In 1897–8
the site was rebuilt for the Metropolitan Police by
Willmott & Sons of Hitchin at a tendered price of
£9,985. (ref. 299) This was a good example of the work of the
police architect, John Dixon Butler, large-scaled but well
detailed, big but not intimidating — qualities which the
Arts-and-Crafts style and materials were well fitted to
express (Plate 23c; fig. 41). It was of three and four
storeys, the latter rising to a straight-sided gable. The
building was of brick, banded with stone, the main door
marked by a large projecting shell-hood, the windowopenings of the lower two storeys emphatically mullioned-and-transomed in stone, and the flues grouped in
two deep chimneystacks. (ref. 300) The station was closed in
1971 and subsequently demolished, being replaced by a
police office in Market Way. (ref. 301)

Figure 41:
Police Station, East India Dock Road, ground-floor plan. John Dixon Butler, architect, 1897–8. Demolished
No. 197. This was built in 1897 by Harris & Wardrop
of Limehouse for its occupants, stationers and booksellers, (ref. 302) but has lost all its pleasantly lettered fasciaboard (where the road-number appeared five times) and
exuberant decorative trimmings (Plate 23c). (ref. 303)
Nos 199–223. These were all built in 1852–5, despite
the earlier look of Nos 211–215 (Plate 29a). The humbly
two-storeyed Nos 199–201 have an incised tablet lettered
i argo villas 1852. No. 205 was built for and perhaps
by the freeholder, William Simons, a plasterer, whose
widow lived here. (ref. 304)
The houses built on James Griffiths's property were
less humble but just as old-fashioned. No. 211, bearing
a tablet incised CLEVELAND HOUSE 1852, was first occupied by a female grocer. (ref. 305) Its name seems to betoken
nothing grander than that James Griffiths lived in Cleveland Street off the Mile End Road.
Nos 213–215 were perhaps built by David Caldow
Simpson in association with Frederick Simpson. They
had an interest in, and probably built, the adjacent Nos
217–221, and their associate, the local auctioneer John
Carter, had the sewer laid in front of this stretch of
houses and by 1857 had a lien on Nos 213–215. (ref. 306) The
Simpsons and Carter may therefore have developed Nos
213–221 or 223 jointly. Nos 213–215 are set back —
originally behind forecourts projecting on the pavement,
where a central gate led to paired front doors. The block
plans are mirrored, with small rear wings. (ref. 307) Behind later
shops the stock-brick fronts with (originally) undressed
straight-headed window-openings rise through three
storeys to finish with a block cornice and parapet, behind
which dormer windows are set in the front slope of a
slated mansard roof. The party wall is carried up above
the roof-line. Between the house-fronts is a tablet incised
EMMA PLACE. The rear is similar but the heads of the
windows are not gauged and there is no parapet. To
judge from No. 213 the interiors are without interest,
although that house contains original features, such as
the dog-leg staircase with square-section balusters and
round, simply turned newels, the plainest of chimneypieces and skirting boards, and some simple joinery.
No. 215 was occupied as a lodging house by the 1860s.
In 1899 the occupants were an auctioneer (No. 213) and
a building society (No. 215) but in 1902 the auctioneer
covered most of the back garden of No. 213 with a
workshop. (ref. 308)
Nos 217–223 were built at the same time, probably by
the Simpsons, under the name of Trafalgar Terrace.
They were in commercial use from the beginning and
are now much altered. (ref. 309)
Nos 225–251, 251A–F, 253A (Nos 243–249 demolished)
This frontage to East India Dock Road was part of the
property, including land south of the road, bought as
enfranchised copyhold of the manor of Stepney in 1808
by Hugh McIntosh, 'excavator' and contractor, from his
employer, the East India Dock Company, which had
itself bought the land in 1804. (ref. 310)
Nos 225–243. All these were built about 1845–8 after
McIntosh had disposed of the property (Plate 28c). (ref. 311)
The three small houses at Nos 225–229 were called
Hole's Terrace, presumably built by the mason Josiah
Hole, on whose stoneyard they were erected: in 1875 a
Mrs Hole still owned them. (ref. 312) No. 231 was first built in
1874. (ref. 313) Nos 233–239, sometime called John's Terrace,
although built long after the East India Dock Company
sold the site to McIntosh, are the only properties disposed
of by the company that observed the decent-sized plots
of 20ft by 100ft into which it divided its land for sale. (ref. 314)
They have lost their ground-floor fronts and no longer
exhibit, as Nos 237 and 239 still did in about 1930,
round-headed door- and ground-floor window-openings,
the former filled with Classical doorcases under decorative
fanlights and the latter furnished with Gothick glazingbars. They were thus similar to No. 214 on the other
side of the road, built a few years earlier. Like that house
they showed the survival here of late-Georgian townhouse design. (ref. 315) As built they all rose over basements
behind areas, but shopfronts were put in at Nos 233 and
235 in 1878 and 1884. (ref. 316) From 1894 to 1905 No. 239 was
the Poplar Synagogue and from 1909 to 1933 No. 237
was the premises of William Whiffin, the photographer
who recorded much of pre-war Poplar. (ref. 317)
Nos 241 and 243 (Folkestone Terrace) were built at
the same time, perhaps on the initiative of a 'surgeon',
T. E. Bowkett, the first occupant of No. 243 (until the
1870s). (ref. 318) This house had the added dignity of a continued
balcony, block cornice and parapet: the sober groundfloor front was perhaps put in for Mr Bowkett when
he was secretary of the Poplar Literary and Scientific
Institution here in 1853–8. (ref. 319) The shop-window shown
at No. 241 in Plate 28c was installed in 1903. (ref. 320) Nos 225–
241 survive, more or less altered.
Nos 245–253A. The residential character of the great
eastward road was here becoming hesitant and intermittent, and industry had a presence. At Nos 245–247 a
timber yard was established in 1859–60, the timber
merchant being succeeded by engineers in about 1876
and they by carmen by 1882 until at least the 1930s. (ref. 321)
Industrial usage here declared itself on the street frontage,
albeit discreetly. (ref. 322) At Nos 249–251 a shipsmith had
premises from 1844, building a big warehouse behind in
1864: (ref. 323) shipsmiths continued here until the late 1940s. (ref. 324)
The shops at 251A–F were first built, very humbly, in the
1870s on the site of a terrace of five cottages built in
about 1814–17 end-on to the road, evidently by a resident
of Shadwell and called Union Place. (ref. 325) This was just
across the parish boundary, in Bromley. Nos 251C–253A
is a steel-framed building erected in 1938–9, evidently
by and for Leeds clothiers (ref. 326) — one of a small number of
buildings in the road signalling some economic revival
after the Depression.
Nos 253–301 (Nos 253–259, 269–301 demolished)
Eastward of No. 251 and the parish boundary of Poplar
and Bromley, the first buildings in the road, sometimes
quite early in date, represent a different phase of its
development from those westward. This phase was not
the often tardy extension of 'London' houses and public
or semi-public buildings along a main artery (as the docks
enjoyed their brief early Victorian prosperity), but the
clustering of houses, sometimes humble, near the gate of
the East India Dock itself. In 1807 this ground, eastward
to Quag Lane (later Brunswick Road) and, on the south
side of the road, eastward to Robin Hood Lane, was sold,
as part of Coachman's Field, by John Perry and the
sons of William Wells to Thomas Ashton, the Blackwall
wharfinger, and Thomas Hale of Cannon Street, City,
builder (see page 190). (ref. 327) They sold the sites a year later,
when, however, few if any on this side of the road had
been built upon. (ref. 328)
Nos 253–263. Called Bengal Place from the beginning,
and of which only reconstructed fragments survive, these
houses were built in 1812–13 or soon after. (ref. 329) This was
perhaps by William Dalgleish, a timber merchant of
Limehouse interested in property hereabouts, whose
mortgagees, also timber merchants, were co-owners with
him of No. 255 in 1815. In that year they sold it to one
of the Navy's sea-going sailmakers, for £420. (ref. 330) These
were plain, three-storeyed houses, with two 'Captains'
among their occupants in 1827, but by 1866 there was a
pawnbroker at No. 261 and coffee-rooms at No. 263. (ref. 331)
The latter became an early cinema, being operated in
1909 by the British Bioscope Company — perhaps until
1915. (ref. 332) Nos 257–259 represent the building of 'new
structures' in 1939. (ref. 333)
Nos 265–277. These houses, called Calcutta Place, were
built between 1820 and 1827 under 99-year leases. (ref. 334) But
they were (and at Nos 265 and 267 are) very unaspiring
structures, united by a continued block cornice and
parapet, and given the plain rectangular panels over the
first-floor windows (here proud of, not recessed into, the
wall face) that are so characteristic of the humblest lateGeorgian-type terrace-building in London. (ref. 335) By 1847 at
least three of the houses were shops. (ref. 336)
No. 279. This, the Sir John Franklin public house, was
a three-storeyed building erected in 1859 for £778 by
Thomas Ennor of Vauxhall Gardens and Limehouse to
a routine 'Bayswater Classical' design by James Harrison
of Moorgate. (ref. 337) It was demolished for the duplication of
the Blackwall Tunnel and replaced in 1963 by the present
public house, set further back, of the same name. The
architects for Mann & Crossman were Stewart, Hendry &
Smith. (ref. 338)
Nos 281–291. Little is known of these, except that they
were begun in 1814–15, under the name (perhaps voicing
Cockney sarcasm) of 'Diamond Point'. (ref. 339) An unexecuted
intention to rebuild No. 281 in 1879 evidently
encountered difficulties: no architect was named to receive
the published tenders, which ranged so widely (from
£1,492 to £943) as to provoke the Builder into exclamation. (ref. 340) No. 291 was from 1856 to 1870 the office of
the Poplar District Board of Works. (ref. 341) Latterly it had a
front of some slight Arts-and-Crafts aspirations, with a
high shaped parapet above the cornice.
The Dock House Tavern at Nos 293–295.
This establishment was set up about 1818 at No. 293 at the eastern
corner of East India Dock Road and Ann Street (later
Oceana Close), to replace the tavern removed from the
building at the eastern corner of East India Dock Road
and Brunswick Road. (ref. 342) Very soon its curtilage included
the frequent appendage of public-houses in Poplar — five
tiny cottages built at the back in 'Bromley Place'. (ref. 343) It
was probably altered in 1867 (W. Barrett, architect) and
was extended in 1879–80 to take in No. 295, making it
a big but drab-looking establishment. (ref. 344) In about 1890
the prominent local butcher and ship's victualler Henry
Wickes took it as licensee, and borrowed sums of £7,750
and £2,000 on mortgage from the then owners, the
brewers Reid & Company (later Watney, Combe & Reid),
perhaps to improve it. (ref. 345) A major reconstruction was
intended by the brewers in 1927, although this perhaps
was delayed until 1935. (ref. 346) The plans show a fine example
of the big and busy East London public house (fig. 42).
In a restrained version of 'Brewers' Georgian' externally,
it had on the ground floor two tile-floored public bars,
and a saloon bar, lounge, and luncheon room, all oakfloored, while the first floor was taken up mainly by a
very large oak-floored 'club room'. On the second floor
there were four bedrooms, a large living-room and five
staff bedrooms.
For the approach to the Blackwall Tunnel, which now
occupies the former sites of Nos 281–301, see page 644.

Figure 42:
Dock House Tavern, Nos 293–295 (odd) East IndiaDock Road, ground-floor plan in 1927. Demolished
Day Industrial School, formerly Brunswick Road Board School, previously Ragged School, at Nos 299–
301 (demolished).
In 1863, the committee of a ragged
school in Dingle Lane (that is, a school for the free
instruction of the poorest children) took a 20-year lease
from the East and West India Dock Company of ground
at the west corner of East India Dock Road and Quag
Lane (Brunswick Road). (ref. 347) The site had been bought
from Thomas Ashton and Thomas Hale by the timber
merchant William Dalgleish in 1809 for £183, sold by him
in 1811 to a gentleman of Whitechapel, John Gardner, for
£247, and by him to the East India Dock Company in
1816 for £340: (ref. 348) it was still unbuilt upon in 1863.
Here the committee erected a school with a frontage
of about 28ft to East India Dock Road and about 48ft to
Quag Lane, to designs by the local architect John Warrington Morris (Plate 25a). (ref. 349) It was opened in 1864. (ref. 350)
The ground floor consisted of the infants' schoolroom,
and the first floor of the mixed schoolroom, the total
accommodation (in 1873) being for 287 children. The
architectural expression, in brick laid in Flemish bond,
was simple, with slightly 'industrial' forms. The front to
East India Dock Road had entrances for boys and girls
on either side of a large central window, and there was
another small entrance to the west. The central window,
like the large window above it and the ground-floor
windows of the long return front, was flat-topped but
with rounded shoulders marked by 'engineers' impostblocks of stone. The first-floor windows on this front
were of factory-type, wide and segmentally arched. A
large chimney-stack was corbelled out from this wall at
first-floor level, rising to ridge height with asymmetrically
placed offsets. Small lucarnes lit or ventilated the apex
of the roof. (ref. 351)
In 1874 the dock company sold the site to the London
School Board for £6,000, (ref. 352) and the school was enlarged
in 1874–5 by Andrew Killby of Limehouse at a contract
price of £2,840 to designs by E. R. Robson (1835–1917),
the School Board's architect. (ref. 353) All the additions were at
the rear or north end, where a brick cross-wing was built
in slightly suaver Renaissance style, with steeper-pitched
roof, tall vertically channelled chimney-stacks and rectangular mullioned-and-transomed windows. This accommodated on each floor two new classrooms, which were
smaller than the old ones: on the ground floor one was
designated the 'Babies' Room'. The total accommodation
was raised to 483, infants and 'mixed'. (ref. 354)
The Brunswick Road Board School, as it was now
called, was enlarged once more, in 1880, by Charles Cox,
builder, of the Commercial Road, at a contract price of
£3,426, this time extending the building substantially
westward. The architect was again E. R. Robson, and
the style and material congruent with what had gone
before, but, perhaps partly in recognition of the mainroad location, exhibiting a more incisive design. (ref. 355) Much
of the new accommodation was given to recreation space,
all the ground floor being used for covered playgrounds.
The first and second floors each contained two large
classrooms divided by glazed partitions, and above was a
flat roof-playground open at the front but roofed over at
the rear. The windows, segmental-headed on the ground
and first floors and square-headed on the second floor,
were of increasing size with each storey, and composed
well in the wall face, while the high parapet which
finished the front and guarded the roof-playground had
three semi-circular inverted arches filled with plain railings. (ref. 356) Unlike in Morris's building, the brickwork was
laid in English bond.
In 1899 the conversion of the school into London's
second Day Industrial School was approved by the Home
Office and the Education Department, (ref. 357) and the necessary alterations were designed for the Home Office by
T. J. Bailey (1844–1910), Robson's successor as the
School Board's architect, and executed by F. & F. J.
Wood of Cleveland Street, Mile End Road, in 1900–1 at
a contract price of £4,489. (ref. 358) The school, which gave
both general elementary education and vocational instruction, was intended to accommodate 150 boys and girls,
including truants from other schools. The hours were
from eight until six, requiring a kitchen and large dining
hall, and a drill-room was added to the playgrounds. (ref. 359)
Falling numbers caused the school, opened in 1901, to
be closed in 1909. (ref. 360) From 1925 alterations were being
made to accommodate shops, workshops and a cafe in
the old building, which was demolished in 1956. (ref. 361)