CHAPTER 9: THE ANCHOR BREWERY
The buildings of the Anchor Brewery date only from the middle of
the 19th century or after, and their high brick walls have a grim and forbidding aspect; but the brewery as an institution has a long history and it
stands upon historic ground. It has also exerted a considerable influence on
the social life and topography of the neighbourhood. A brief account of it is
therefore given here.
The brewing industry seems to have become of importance in Southwark soon after the introduction of hop growing into Kent in the 15th
century. (ref. 169) Thames water was considered peculiarly good for the purpose. In
1509, the Bishop of Winchester and the Prior of St. Mary Overies granted
a licence to the brewers of Southwark to have passage with their carts "from
ye Borough of Southwark untill the Themmys . . . to fetch water . . . to
brew with" so long as the brewers made no claim to the passage as a highway. (ref. 170) This licence was renewed by later bishops.
The nucleus of the Anchor Brewery appears to have been the brewhouse established early in the 17th century by James Monger. (ref. 123) The
brewhouse is first specifically mentioned in the Token Books in 1634 though
Monger's name occurs several years earlier. (fn. a) The site, which lay between
Deadman's Place and Globe Alley (see the plan on Plate 59), had been
leased to him in 1620 by Sir John Bodley and formed part of the property
owned by Sir Matthew Brend which included the Globe Playhouse. (fn. b) James
Child, citizen and brewer, owned the brewhouse towards the end of the
century. He died in 1696 and was succeeded by his "loving son-in-law," (ref. 171)
Edmund Halsey. Halsey was M.P. for Southwark from 1722 until his death
in 1728. (ref. 17) He bought additional ground and extended the brewery. His
purchases included ground on the east side of Deadman's Place (now Park
Street) abutting north on Clink Street and west on the Clink Garden (see
p. 50). Naked Boy Alley, named after a house with that sign, and a number
of tenements stood on this ground. They were subsequently cleared away by
Henry Thrale to make room for a garden called Palmira (ref. 123) opposite his
house. (fn. c) Halsey left his freehold ground to his only daughter, Anne, wife of
Richard Temple, Lord Cobham, (ref. 173) but the business was taken over by his
nephew, Ralph Thrale, who had worked in it for many years. (fn. a) Ralph Thrale
and his son, Henry, enlarged and developed the brewery, purchasing some
freehold ground, including that left to Lady Cobham, and leasing some from
the Bishop of Winchester. Among other properties, the sites of the Globe
Playhouse on the south side of Maid Lane and of the parish workhouse in
Fountain Court were absorbed into the brewery grounds. (ref. 123) The dwelling
house of the brewery stood on the west side of Deadman's Place (see Plate 60a).
There Henry Thrale and his wife entertained Dr. Johnson, Sir Joshua
Reynolds, David Garrick, Oliver Goldsmith and other celebrities. (ref. 175)
Henry Thrale had not the business acumen of his predecessors but
the brewery continued to flourish under the managership of John Perkins
who had joined the firm circa 1763 (ref. 176) and whose presence of mind saved the
premises from damage during the Gordon Riots. Henry Thrale died in 1781
and the brewery, described by Dr. Johnson as "the potentiality of wealth
beyond the dreams of avarice," was sold by auction to Robert Barclay for
£135,000. John Perkins was made a partner and took possession of the
dwelling house. (ref. 176) The extent and layout of the premises at this period can be
seen on the plan made by George Gwilt in 1792 and reproduced on
Plate 61.
One of the biggest extensions of the brewery made after the formation
of the partnership was that southward to include the burial ground and
meeting house in Deadman's Place. A lease of this ground (shown on the
1792 plan) was obtained from the Bishop of Winchester in 1781. (ref. 123) The
origin of the name Deadman's Place is unknown. It is, however, older than
the burial ground since it dates back to Elizabeth's reign and perhaps
earlier. (ref. 129) In 1613, Sir Thomas Bilson obtained a lease of the "great garden
called Deadman's Place" with the tenements there and a gatehouse, (ref. 177) the
latter presumably the Park Gate referred to in many documents relating to
the Bishop of Winchester's Park (see p. 45). John Applebee had a brewery
on part of this ground in the second half of the 17th century. An Independent
meeting house there was opened in 1640 (fn. b) (ref. 176) and existed until 1788 when it
was removed to a new building in Union Street. (ref. 180) Two volumes giving lists
of burials in the burial ground in Deadman's Place are preserved in Somerset
House, the first entry being dated 1716 and the last 1837. Among the persons
of note buried there was Alexander Cruden, author of the Biblical Concordance.
The freehold of the site, which is now covered by the cooperage of the brewery,
was purchased by the firm in 1857.
The last considerable enlargement of the brewery was made in 1820
when the firm obtained a lease of the site of Potts' Vinegar Works from the
Bishop of Winchester. The freehold was purchased in 1864. (ref. 97)
In 1832, the greater part of the brewery, including the dwelling house
in Deadman's Place, was burnt down. The premises were quickly rebuilt (ref. 181)
and some of the buildings erected at this time survive to the present day. An
interesting account of the brewery is given in the Illustrated London News for
1847.
Southwark Waterworks
Until the beginning of the 19th century, the Thames was both the
source of water supply for Southwark and the depository for its sewage. The
records of the Sewer Commissioners show that in the 17th century the
"sweet" sewer and the "foul" sewer often had a parallel course and their
openings at the river edge were side by side. (ref. 129) In 1715 James Whitchurch
obtained from the Bishop of Winchester a licence to supply the inhabitants
of the Clink with river water and to lay and repair pipes in the streets for this
purpose.' (ref. 97) This right became vested in the Borough Waterworks Company
circa 1770 (ref. 72) and the company took over a waterhouse erected by Henry
Thrale a few years earlier to pump water to the brewery. (ref. 123) The waterworks
were situated near Bank End behind the Castle Inn (see p. 60) on ground
leased from the Corporation of Wardens of St. Saviour's. They are shown on
the plan on Plate 59.
For many years the Borough High Street area of Southwark had been
supplied with water from the Thames by means of two waterwheels under
the bridge. By the Act of 1822 (ref. 182) for removing the waterworks at London
Bridge, the London Bridge Waterworks Company was dissolved and their
licence to supply water to the inhabitants of Southwark was acquired by the
New River Company, which planned to raise the water by means of steam
engines. Soon after the passing of the Act, however, John Edwards (later
John Edwards Vaughan), the proprietor of the Borough Waterworks, bought
this licence from the New River Company. By this time the Thames was
anything but a pure source of supply. The London County Council has in
its collection a scurrilous poem on the subject, illustrated with a lurid caricature by George Cruikshank. It was not until after 1834, (ref. 183) when the Southwark Water Company was established by Act of Parliament, that reservoirs
and filter beds were constructed at Battersea and the old waterworks were
closed down. (ref. 184) The site is now incorporated in the brewery.