Randall's Estate
Named after its developer, Onesiphorus Randall, a local
building speculator, the nineteenth-century development
known as the Randall's Estate was centred on a sevenacre field, the Grove, which lay to the east of Upper
North Street. To the east of the Grove ran the ancient
Black Ditch or common sewer, which formed the eastern
boundary of the estate, while its western one was along
Upper North Street. Those boundaries merged at the
north and south to form a lozenge-shaped area developed
by Randall during the early 1850s (fig. 71).
Some development of the area had taken place towards
the end of the eighteenth century. In December 1778
George Darby constructed 'an erection for a pot ash
manufactory' on the northern portion of the Grove.
(ref. 102)
Potash or pearl ash was the main potassium compound
in commerce until the 1860s. It was extracted from wood.
plant and seaweed ashes, and was used in the manufacture
of soap and glass. (ref. 103)
There were also two detached houses which pre-dated
the mid-nineteenth-century development, one of which
was known as the Hôtel de Ville Villa. These stood on
the northern triangular tip of the estate between Randall
(later Augusta) Street and Grove (later Bygrove) Street.
Both were demolished during the 1850s. (ref. 104)
The southern section of the land on which the estate
was built was held as copyhold of the manor of Stepney
by the Smith family. In 1847 Richard Smith, junior,
leased the land to Onesiphorus Randall, having obtained
a licence to demise the land for 90 years from Midsummer
1846. (ref. 105)
Smith had nurtured ambitions to develop the area for
speculative housing during the 1840s. John Morris, the
local architect and surveyor, drew up a preliminary estate
plan which laid out building lots and plot numbers. (ref. 106)
When Randall began building the estate in 1848 he
followed that basic street layout, but introduced a new
and important element into the scheme, the inclusion of
a retail market at the centre of the estate. The northern,
smaller, section of the estate was acquired from Richard
Redfearn Goodlad in 1850. (ref. 107)
The splendidly named Onesiphorus Randall was one
of the many publicans in early nineteenth-century
London who were involved in property speculation. A
native of Holt in Norfolk, Randall settled in Poplar in
1819, and from 1820 until 1831 he was the licensee of
the Silver Lion in Pennyfields, and subsequently of the
Globe Tavern, Blackwall, until 1835. (ref. 108) From the mid1820s he became involved in building speculation in the
East End, and started to amass a fortune from the
development of cheap houses for rent to the lower middle
classes. His first scheme was begun in 1827 when he took
a lease of land belonging to Elizabeth Chrisp Willis to
the south of East India Dock Road. (ref. 109) He then built a
terrace of four houses, Nos 179–185 (odd) East India
Dock Road, known from 1832 as Randall's Terrace,
occupying No. 185 himself from 1831 until his death at
the age of 75 in 1873 (see page 142). During the 1840s
he continued to build modest houses in the adjacent
parish of St Leonard's, Bromley.
A most eccentric man, he certainly lived up to the
meaning of his name: 'bringing profit'. In later life he
returned to Norfolk, where he purchased Woodlands, a
mid-Victorian house in Cromer, which he extended, and
decorated with stone pineapples. It now forms part of
Gresham's School. Near the beach at Salthouse he built
a folly with an enormous door on the lower floor, so that
he could drive right through the house with a horse and
carriage. (ref. 110) At the time of his death, his income from
leasehold houses in London amounted to £3,000 per
annum. (ref. 111) His young son, also Onesiphorus, inherited the
estate after a protracted Chancery case, and he died in
1913.
Randall's estate was developed in the usual manner by
means of building leases, most of them on terms of 80
years. A variety of local builders and craftsmen were
involved in the construction of the estate. Among the
most important were George Lester, carpenter (bankrupt
by 1858); James Harpley Leake, joiner, who later ran the
estate office for Randall; John Banbury and William
Wickes, both bricklayers of Poplar; and Henry Clarke, a
local builder. (ref. 112) In 1908 the development comprised 188
dwelling houses, 42 shops and houses, 49 lock-up shops
in Randall's Market and a large premises formerly known
as the Market Tavern. (ref. 113)
Development took place during the period 1848–57. (ref. 114)
The standards of the new buildings were criticized from
the outset. In 1850 Randall was accused by the district
surveyor of building a fourth-rate dwelling house in
Market Street of unsound materials and not in a manner
to produce solid work, and on insufficient foundations.
One wall was said to contain a large number of brickbats,
and Randall was ordered to rebuild it. (ref. 115) In 1857, the
Building News stated that 'a great number of new streets
are in progress, but we regret to observe that they are
anything but what they ought to be as regards design,
materials and workmanship, being run up in a very paltry
style'. (ref. 116)
The southern portion of the estate was built first, with
the market in the centre, followed by the streets that ran
on an east-west axis. The three streets that ran northsouth, Upper North Street, Augusta Street and Grove
Street, were constructed over a longer period. The whole
estate was completed by the end of 1857. (ref. 117) Grove (later
Bygrove) Street was developed between 1849 and 1855,
with 21 houses erected in 1851 (Plate
38d,
). (ref. 118) Richard
(later Ricardo) Street was built between 1851 and 1853,
and Randall (later Augusta) Street between 1848 and
1854, with 24 houses constructed in 1850. John (later
Grundy) Street was an earlier development, being completed by 1851. On the south side of John Street was a
terrace of 11 houses, known as King's Terrace, which
was built in 1850–1 and named after Thomas Henry
King, an architect and civil engineer of Spitalfields, who
leased the site from Randall in 1851. (ref. 119) Market Street
was built in 1850–5, and included a terrace of nine twostorey houses.
All the houses were similar in style and building
materials. They were built of greyish brick, two storeys
high and enriched with compo dressings which the
Building News thought 'preposterously too heavy in their
proportions'. (ref. 120) Towards the end of the nineteenth
century the streets were described as 'mostly straight dull
rows of two-storied houses with a frontage of from 14
16 feet containing 6–8 rooms … most of them rise
straight from the payement in their grimy ugliness. There
is generally a back yard of varying size and capabilities
behind'. (ref. 121) Booth's investigators found that gardens did
not flourish in this part of Poplar.
During the 1880s No. 77 Augusta Street became a
mission hall for the London City Mission and the ground
floor was extended into the rear yard to provide a meeting
hall capable of seating 100 people. (ref. 122) At the northernmost
corner of the estate, No. 116 Upper North Street was an
extensive sawmill. First constructed in 1851, it was rebuilt
in the late nineteenth century and was described in the
1910s as an extensive works with buildings of good order,
constructed in steel. (ref. 123)
On the north side of Market Street was a terrace of
nine houses. The three houses at the centre of the terrace
were built beneath a high pediment on which a market
clock was placed. Both the pediment and the cupola of
unusual shape on the roof were Classical in design. The
northern vista of Randall's Market was closed by these
houses (Plate 38a).
Randall's Market
At the centre of the development was Randall's Market,
much of which was built during 1851–2. (ref. 124) It consisted
of a north-south street of lock-up shops with a circus in
the middle, where it was bisected by an east-west cross
street. It was an ambitious scheme to establish a shopping
area north of East India Dock Road. Costermongers, who
were felt to lower the social standing of the area, were
prohibited from trading there and after about 1870 the
market failed. In 1913 it was said that Randall had made
a great mistake in his attempt to establish the market,
for instead of driving the costermongers away he seems
to have brought them nearer, 'for although High Street
has had its days as a marketing centre, its place has been
taken by Chrisp Street, with its scores of costermongers
and its reputation as one of the cheapest middle-class
markets in the whole of London'. (ref. 125)
In some of the early deeds the scheme is called Trinity
Market, no doubt on account of its close proximity to
the recently built Trinity Chapel in East India Dock
Road. (ref. 126) But this name was never adopted, and from its
first appearance in the Post Office Directories, in 1854, it
is called Randall's Market.
The architect of the market is unknown. It was showy
in style and constructed of cheap materials. An ugly
cement drinking-fountain was erected at the centre of
the market and was surrounded by a punched-metal and
glass canopy. Above the fountain was a gas lamp supported by dolphin brackets. The fountain was said to be
in a state of rapid decomposition as early as 1857. (ref. 127)
Despite its architectural pretension, it was a market in a
very humble area (Plate 38a).
The shops were a series of lock-ups with frontages of
14ft 6in. and depths of 15ft. At the front of each shop
were double-doors and a facade constructed mostly of
wood. (ref. 128) The roof of the single-storey shops was finished
with a low parapet decorated with pierced stucco-work
and concrete statues. At a later date covered walkways
with a colonnaded roof of corrugated-iron supported on
rough iron uprights extended around the outside of the
southern end of the market to afford protection for
shoppers in bad weather. (ref. 129)
In the centre of the market, on the corner of Ricardo
Street and Augusta Street, stood the Market House
Tavern (Plate 38b). This was a three-storey brick building
with rendered walls. Italianate in style, the Market House
had pedimented and embellished windows and the
Ricardo Street façade was decorated with a niche containing a statue of a woman. Above the basement cellars,
the tavern contained one large bar on the ground floor,
behind which was a small kitchen, a sitting room and a
wine store. In an extension to the market side was a tap
room. On the two floors above were a variety of rooms
used as living accommodation. (ref. 130) When first leased in
1854 it was established as a temperance house, and the
tenant Henry John Vousley was not permitted 'to
carry on or permit to be carried on upon the premises …
the business of a vintner, licensed victualler, Ale House
Keeper or licensed retailer of beer, Cyder or spirits', on
penalty of £300. (ref. 131) But by the 1880s the Market House
was a Watney house selling the usual alcoholic beverages.
By 1906 it was unoccupied and it remained in bad repair
until the 1950s. (ref. 132)
The Post Office Directories indicate that there was a
variety of retailers in the market in the early years,
including a greengrocer, cheesemonger, linen-draper,
butcher, haberdasher, grocer, tobacconist and coffeehouse owner, but by the 1870s a decline had started,
with many empty shops and 12 lock-ups tenanted by
furniture dealers. There were also a number of workshops
within the lock-ups, including a birdcage maker and a
lucifer-box manufacturer. (ref. 133)
In 1904 furniture dealers occupied 23 of the 61 shops.
The only shops selling food were a greengrocer at No.
45 and a confectioner at No. 46, showing the failure of
the market to attract the custom of the Poplar housewife.
Most of the other shops had become manufacturing
workshops or the offices and storerooms of builders
and decorators. Chrisp Street had become the dominant
shopping area of northern Poplar. Few reputable shopkeepers wanted to set up in business in Randall's Market
after the arrival of the furniture men, who took more
and more lock-ups for storage. Booth's investigators
found that 'the storied shops are for the most part
furniture shops, mostly belonging to one man; no one
buying and no one there selling'. The streets about the
market were more frequently 'walked' by prostitutes than
local shoppers. (ref. 134)
By 1913 the market's fabric was in decay and soon
afterwards the southern half of the market was closed
and demolished for the construction of The Holy Child
Roman Catholic School in Grundy Street. Designed
by Thomas H. B. Scott of Finsbury Square, architect,
and built by Messrs Sims of Stepney, the school was
erected in 1926 and was blessed by Cardinal Bourne, the
head of the Catholic Church in England, in June 1927. (ref. 135)
It cost £14,000. The single-storey brick building had
six classrooms and provided 264 places for infants and
juniors. (ref. 136) In 1952 two plots of land adjoining the school
were acquired at a cost of £2,580, and in 1956 the school
was extended and remodelled. (ref. 137) In the late 1960s an
assembly hall, kitchens and classrooms were constructed
at the rear of the building. (ref. 138) The school became part of
the Holy Family School in 1983, when the Grundy Street
buildings were closed (see page 172). (ref. 139)
The northern section of the market was badly damaged
during the Second World War and lay largely derelict
with many shops vacant until the 1950s. In 1952 a few
shops in the northern part of the market were still
standing, but the lock-up shops were in a bad condition. (ref. 140)
In 1954 regret was expressed that the market had deteriorated so badly, because it 'could have been preserved as
an exceptional and interesting attraction'. The Market
House Tavern, the shell of which had stood empty for
many years, was recommended by a local resident as an
ideal venue for a museum for the Borough of Poplar. (ref. 141)
But it was too late to save the tavern or the market and
the site was cleared for the Lansbury Estate (see Chapter
IX).
The Wade Estate
Development of that part of the Wade estate north of
East India Dock Road began following the division of
the land among Mary Wade's five daughters in 1823, but
continued until the 1860s. The estate formed a block of
land with a frontage on East India Dock Road between
the Black Ditch and Chrisp Street, and, including that
part of it which lay in Bromley, covered 43½ acres. In
1823 it was divided into 20 parcels, each daughter being
allotted four, giving them more or less equal shares. The
allocation was made in such a way that each daughter
had a frontage on East India Dock Road, but their other
parcels were scattered. (ref. 142)
The early streets were named after the Wade daughters
and their husbands: Sarah and William Kerbey, Sophia
and James Duff, Susannah and James Grundy, Elizabeth
Chrisp Willis, widow of William Willis, and Catherine
Wade, who remained unmarried. Grundy Street was set
out as the principal thoroughfare parallel to the East
India Dock Road, and Kerbey and Chrisp Streets as the
chief streets running from south to north.
During the 1820s the initial phase of development was
confined mainly to the area between Grundy Street and
the East India Dock Road, but even there gaps were left,
with little building along Sarah (Sturry) and Kerbey
Streets before the late 1830s. Nevertheless, by 1828 the
eastern part of the area could be described as 'a very
considerable neighbourhood … [with] many respectable
persons'. (ref. 143) Building in that part of the district extended
north of Grundy Street – along Tetley, Willis, Catherine
and Greenfield Streets (mostly outside the parish) – by
the 1840s. There was little development in the remainder
of the area north of Grundy Street until further streets
were set out in the 1840s and 1850s. That locality was
described as 'fast increasing' in 1851, and building there
continued during the mid-century boom, until the late
1860s. (ref. 144)
The setting out of the Wade estate was given some
coherence by its surveyor, John Morris, although the way
in which the parcels were allocated in 1823, and the fact
that building took place over more than 40 years, resulted,
almost inevitably, in an uncoordinated and piecemeal
development. Although the area was chiefly covered with
rows of two-storey brick terraces without forecourts,
there were differences in the way that the daughters'
parcels were set out. For example, the groups of small
cottages in small courts on Sarah Kerbey's and Susannah
Grundy's land on the north side of Grundy Street had
no parallel elsewhere on the estate, and the pairs of semidetached houses erected in the mid-1850s in New (later
Chilcot) Street, on part of Catherine Wade's allocation,
were also unique in the area. Such uniformity of appearance as there was came in short terraces in the smaller
streets, such as the houses on both sides of Ellerthorp
Street, which was built by W. B. Tomlin on one of Sarah
Duff's parcels between 1842 and 1847. (ref. 145)
The author Arthur Morrison (1863–1945) was born at
No. 14 John Street in 1863, but it is not possible to
determine whether that was the John Street which was
an extension of Grundy Street and was amalgamated
with it in 1865, or the one which in 1875 was renamed
Rigden Street. His descriptions in 'A Street', originally
published in Macmillan's Magazine in 1891, have been
taken to refer to the area of the former Wade estate. (ref. 146)
The street
is not pretty to look at. A dingy little brick house twenty feet
high, with three square holes to carry the windows, and an
oblong hole to carry the door, is not a pleasing object: and each
side of this street is formed by two or three score of such
houses in a row, with one front wall in common … Two
families in a house is the general rule, for there are six rooms
behind each set of holes. (ref. 147)
By the 1910s the area was generally regarded as a 'poor
neighbourhood'. (ref. 148) The commercial premises were chiefly
in Grundy Street, Chrisp Street – which were primarily
shopping streets – and Kerbey Street. (ref. 149) The market in
Chrisp Street was a considerable success in the late
nineteenth century, attracting costermongers from their
former pitches in the High Street. (ref. 150) There was a scattering of public houses on the estate, including the rather
distinguished African Tavern in Grundy Street, built
c1868 to the designs of the local architect Thomas
Wayland Fletcher (1833–1901) (Plate 38c). (ref. 151) Some of
the shops provided further variety, such as the 'Gothick'
Nos 129 and 131 Grundy Street, which stood in a row
of houses erected in the late 1820s and adjoined the
rather more conventional Duke of Clarence public house
of 1829 (Plate 37a). (ref. 152)
Heckford House,
Heckford House, Grundy Street, the first block of flats
to be built by the Borough Council, is situated on the
north side of the street on the site of Oriental Terrace –
two rows of diminutive houses which by 1920 were
derelict. Plans had been prepared by Harley Heckford,
the Borough Engineer and Surveyor, by May 1920, and
the building was completed in mid-1921. (ref. 153) Construction
was by R. A. Reeder of Hackney and the final cost,
including the £600 paid for the freehold, was £8,204. (ref. 154)
Originally known simply as the Grundy Street Flats, Nos
45A–F, the name 'Heckford House' was not adopted until
1939. (ref. 155)
The three-storey block contains six three-bedroomed
flats, arranged as two flats to a floor, leading off a central
internal staircase (fig. 76). The main elevation to Grundy
Street is symmetrical and in a Georgian style, which is
clearly akin to LCC flats of the same period and also to
the flats being built at the same time for the Borough
Council by the Office of Works at Thermopylae Gate
(see page 493). It is of yellow London stock brick, with
a plinth and pilasters in red brick, the latter having
artificial stone capitals. The round-headed front doorway
has a keystone inscribed with the Borough Council's
initials 'PBC', and there is also a stone set above the
doorway inscribed 'Poplar Borough Council, 1920'. The
second floor of the building is incorporated as an attic
storey into the mansard slate roof and has large dormer
windows with flat, corniced heads.

Figure 76:
Heckford House, Grundy Street, ground-floor plan asbuilt. Poplar Borough Council, 1921
Baptist (later Presbyterian) Church, Manor (later Plimsoll) Street (demolished)
This church was built in 1858–9 as 'Chapel and Sunday
Schools' for a congregation of Baptists formed in Poplar
in 1851. The architects and the builder were local – John
Morris & Son of East India Dock Road and Joseph Salt
of Mountague Place – but the erection of the building
was noticed by the Builder and the Companion to the
Almanac, and by the Building News because of a dispute
between the Morrises and the District Surveyor over the
thickness of their end walls (eventually agreed at twoand-a-half bricks). (ref. 156) It had a front of about 45ft, but was
not correspondingly deep, being almost square on plan. (ref. 157)
The building was meagrely Gothic, brick-faced, with a
central doorway approached by steep steps, and a triplet
of lancets above. (ref. 158) Inside it was without galleries and
was open to a stained and varnished hammerbeam roof.
Beneath the church, which accommodated 300 or 400
worshippers, were the schools. The cost was £1,200. (ref. 159)
In 1865 the building was taken over by a recently
formed congregation of English Presbyterians. (ref. 160) It was
bombed in 1940 and was demolished between 1966 and
1971. (ref. 161)
The Bell Estate
This estate, of 27 acres, lay mostly in Bromley. It was
set out by John Morris on the instructions of James Bell,
who had inherited the property in 1851. (ref. 162) The agreement
between the two men was made in 1854, and the plans
were completed by 1860. But there was some delay in
implementing them and not all of the streets had been
formed by 1862. (ref. 163) The estate was built up during the
local building boom of the 1860s. (ref. 164) It had a similar
character to the remainder of the district, with rows of
small two-storey houses producing monotonously regular
frontages, and there was a distinct scarcity of public
houses.
St Alban's, Giraud Street (demolished)
In 1885 a building containing a mission church and clubrooms on two floors was opened at Nos 59–61 Giraud
Street, within the mother-parish of St Saviour's. The
Vicar of St Saviour's, the Reverend V. E. Skrine, was an
Old Boy of Uppingham School and for some years that
school supported the mission, which is called Uppingham
Mission on the 1895 Ordnance Survey map. The architect
was Brett A. Elphicke of Surrey Street, Strand, and the
builder, at a cost expected to be £1,000, J. Jarvis of
Tunbridge Wells (where in 1888 Elphicke designed a
mission church, St Peter's, Forest Road, illustrated by
Muthesius). (ref. 165) Shortly before the Giraud Street church
was built it was said it would be 'Gothic' and Basil Clarke
says it was Perpendicular. (ref. 166) Its street front seems not to
be recorded, but the rest, at its demolition in 1960, had
little or no Gothic visible, being an ordinary, secularlooking building under a half-hipped roof. (ref. 167) By 1928 the
church was called St Alban's. An interior view of the
east end shows exposed brick walls and a three-light
window of stone in a segmental-headed window-opening,
each light having cusped heads and being filled with
stained glass.
The area covered by Poplar New Town was badly
damaged by bombing during the Second World War and
it was subsequently included within the Lansbury Estate.