Read The House by the Thames Online
Authors: Gillian Tindall
London Electricity Company, 191
London Hydraulic Power Company, 159, 183, 221
London School Board, 159
Maid (or Maiden) Lane, Southwark, 36â7, 49, 55
Mallison family, 192
Mann, Revd William, 143, 147â8, 171, 179
Mansell (or Mansfield), Thomas, 30
maps and town views, 26â8, 49â50, 134
Marlborough, John Churchill, 1st Duke of, 58
Marlowe, Christopher, 31
Marshalsea prison, Southwark, 11, 134
Mary I (Tudor), Queen, 24
Mary, Queen of Scots, 14
Mason stairs, 15â16, 43, 100, 177
Massinger, Philip, 37â8
Matthews, Jessie, 201
Mayhew, Henry, 137â8, 167â8, 185
Meade, Dr Richard, 108
Mearns, Andrew:
The Bitter Cry of Outcast London
, 170
Meath, 12th Earl of
see
Brabazon, Reginald
Metropolitan Board of Works, 9, 127, 152
Metropolitan Police: established, 170
Metropolitan Public Garden, Playground and Boulevard Association, 114
Metropolitan Railway, 162
Millennium Bridge, 2, 178, 228
Mills, Sir John, 201
Millwall Dock, 219
Montagu-Pollock, Fidelity, 205
Montagu-Pollock, Prudence (
née
Williams), 204â5
Montagu-Pollock, Sir William, 204â5
Montague, C.J.:
Sixty Years in Waifdom
, 187
Morgan, William
see
Ogilby, John, and William Morgan
Morley family, 193
Morning Chronicle
, 167
Morning Post
, 167
Morris, William, 99
Moss Alley, 58, 178, 195
Munthe family, 206
Munthe, Axel, 206
Munthe, Guy, 224â6, 231
Munthe, Hilda (
née
Pennington-Mellor), 206
Munthe, Ludvig Malcolm, 206â8, 210â12, 214â15
Newington Butts, 116
Norfolk, John Howard, 1st Duke of, 21
North Southwark Community Development Group, 227
Oakeshott, Michael, 212
Oberon, Merle, 201
Ogilby, John, and William Morgan, 50
Old Swan stairs, 43
Oldner family, 64, 83
Oldner, Sir Richard, 54
Oldner, Sir William, 65, 147
Overend Gurney bank, 159
Oxford Canal, 105
Oxo Tower, 15
Paddington Basin, 106
panoramas, 134â5
Paris Garden, Southwark, 12â15, 17, 25, 36â7, 55
Paris Garden stairs, 14
Paris, Robert de, 13
Park Street, Southwark, 37
Paving Act (1786), 103
Peabody, George, 166
Peak Frean (biscuit manufacturer), 184
Peasants' Revolt (1381), 23
Penny Magazine, The
, 136
People's Refreshment House Association Ltd, 191
Pepys, Samuel, 6, 31, 42, 50â3, 73
Perkins, John, 97â8, 104, 127
Perronet, Edward, 107
Phoenix Gas Company, 141, 183
Pigot's New Commercial Directory
, 109â10, 143
Place, Francis, 169
plague: declines in eighteenth century, 92;
see also
Great Plague
Platter, Thomas, 32
Pond Yard, 17, 58
Pool of London, 8, 136, 217â18
Poole, Mr & Mrs (servants), 202
Poor Law Act (1834), 123
Pott, Robert (vinegar manufacturer), 102, 127, 129
Powell, John, 30
Power Station, Bankside
see
Bankside; Tate Modern
Price, Samuel, 82
Price's oil stores, Bankside, 155
Prickett, Thomas, 104
printing, 95
Pritchett, Sir Victor S., 192â3, 231;
London Perceived
, 217â18
prostitutes (âWinchester geese'), 20â3, 25
Puritanism, 25
Pye Garden, the (Pike Garden), 15â16, 82, 195
Quaker Meeting House, Bankside, 56
Queen's Wharf, Bankside, 177
Ragged School Union, 187
railways, 126, 132, 135, 138, 155, 161â2
Raven, John, 19, 30
Reformation, 24
Regent's Canal, 106
Rennie family (bridge builders), 13, 95
Rennie, John, 101â2, 133, 223
Restoration, 49, 53
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 96
Rhinebeck panorama, 135
Richard III, King, 12
road traffic, 77
Rocque, John, 83, 94
Rolfe family, 190â1
Rolfe, Henry, 183â4
Romans: in London, 9â10
Rose Theatre, 31, 33â5, 45, 227
Rotunda, Southwark (
later
Surrey Institute), 101
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 108
Royal Barge House, Southwark, 15, 43
Rush, Samuel, 104
Rymen, Devonish, 35
Sainsbury's (company), 184, 221
St George's church, Southwark, 11
St George's Fields, Southwark, 91, 99â100
St John, Knights of, 12, 14
St Katharine's Dock, 218
St Margaret's church, Southwark, 11
St Mary Magdalene church, Southwark, 11
St Mary Overie's Dock, 27â8, 71, 215, 220, 226
St Mary Overy's church, Southwark (
later
St Saviour's), 10â11, 27
St Mary Overy's priory, Southwark, 11
St Olave's parish church, Bermondsey, 11
St Paul's Bridge (proposed), 3â4;
see also
Millennium Bridge
St Paul's cathedral (old), 48, 52
St Paul's cathedral (Wren's), 58â9
St Peter's church, Bankside, 129, 222
St Peter's school, Emerson Street, Southwark, 184
St Saviour's parish church: origins in St Mary Overy, 11â12, 27; rates, 17, 127â9; parish population, 43, 55â6; altered in Commonwealth, 47; burial ground, 51, 112â15; house building, 55; free schools (National and Parochial), 56â7, 154, 184, 220; Poor Rate and Land Rate records, 64; workhouse, 101, 112, 123â4; unheated, 117; poor relief, 118â19, 123â5; repair and rebuilding, 125â9, 135, 229; burial registers, 150; and railway development, 163
St Thomas à Becket's hospital, Bermondsey, 11
St Thomas's Hospital, Lambeth, 153, 163
Scott, Sir Giles Gilbert, 209, 221, 228
Sells family: Betjeman on, 79; as Bankside residents, 80â1, 89, 143; leaves Bankside, 142, 153, 156, 171; association with Charringtons, 159; family tree, 249
Sells, Arthur, 154
Sells, Sir David Perronet, 159
Sells, Edward: in coal trade, 79, 84, 105; occupies houses on Bankside, 81â2, 86, 88, 146; in Waterman's Company, 83; marriage and children, 84â5; death and will, 89, 106; market sale, 107; in lighterage, 129
Sells, Edward II: follows father's business, 84â5, 105â6; as waterman, 89â90, 105â6; public and parish activities, 104, 116, 118â20, 122â3, 125, 127â9, 131; marriage and children, 106, 109, 123â4, 143; retires to Camberwell, 110, 127; youth, 111; death, 130; and water closets, 144
Sells, Edward (of Walthamstow), 127
Sells, Edward Perronet (Edward II's son): birth, 106â7, 109, 132; as waterman, 124; public and parish activities, 125â7, 130, 154; on rebuilding of London Bridge, 130; moves from Bankside to Bristol, 131, 133; children, 132, 150; death, 133, 156; Bankside houses, 146, 153; in family business, 150; in brother Vincent's will, 151
Sells, Edward Perronet II, 133, 151, 153â4, 159, 198
Sells, Edward Perronet III, 159
Sells, Elizabeth (Edward Perronet II's wife), 157
Sells, John, 107, 109, 124, 157â8
Sells, Martha (Edward's wife), 84
Sells, Sophia Elizabeth (Edward Perronet II's daughter), 107, 109, 151â2, 155, 158
Sells, Sophia Gardiner (
née
Briggs; Edward Perronet II's wife), 106â7, 109
Sells, Vincent: birth, 107, 109; schooling, 124; subscribes to church restoration, 127; resides at and improves Bankside house, 143, 146â7, 198; death and will, 150â1; in family business, 150; leaves Bankside, 150
Sells, William, 116
Selznick, David, 204
Serota, Sir Nicholas, 228
servants, 66â7
sewage, 82â3, 87â8, 144â6, 149, 152â3
Shakespeare, Edmund, 36
Shakespeare, William, 5, 30, 36, 223
Shallett, Arthur, 64
Shallett, Edmund, 64, 81, 83â4, 147
Shallett's meeting house, Bankside, 56
Silkin, Lewis, 210
Sims, George R., 170
Skin Market, 149, 194, 216, 231
Smith, Edmund, 83â4
Smith's balloon view of London, 135â6
Snow, John, 151
Snowden, Antony Armstrong-Jones, 1st Earl of, 222
Society of Owners of Coalcraft, 77
South Bank Centre, 230
South London Press (newspaper), 165
South London Visiting Relief Association, 168
South Metropolitan Gas Light and Coke Company, 141
Southwark: as borough, 9â11, 127; disputes with City of London, 11â12; inns and innkeeping, 17; graveyards, 20â1, 51, 111â15; character in early seventeenth century, 38â40; street paving and lighting, 39, 103; under Commonwealth, 48; layout, 49; fires, 52, 101â2, 103, 155â6; house-building and population, 55â6; coaches and coaching, 77, 132; urbanisation, 90, 99, 133; in Gordon Riots, 93; trades and industry, 94â6, 102, 136; mineral springs and spas, 99â100; children's education in, 125; railways, 126, 132, 135, 138, 155, 161â3; cholera epidemics, 151; absorbed into London, 152; drainage system installed (1860s), 152â3; development in late 19th century, 164â6; Metropolitan Police in, 170; cinemas, 196; bombed in Second World War, 205; post-war planning and rebuilding, 208â11, 216â17; post-war industrial and commercial changes, 216, 219â20; population decline (1950sâ60s), 217; empty warehouses, 219; present-day character, 232;
see also
Bankside; London; St Saviour's church
Southwark Bridge, 2, 95, 133, 135
Southwark Environment Trust, 228
Southwark Fair, St George's Fields, 91, 99
Southwark Street, 163, 165
Southwark & Vauxhall Waterworks, 151, 159
Sphere, The
(magazine), 210
steamships, 137â9
Stevenson, Cecilie, 197, 199â200
Stevenson, Robert E., 196â204, 230;
Darkness in the Land
, 199
âstews', 16, 21
Stonor, Thomas, 88
Stow, John, 17, 20, 31, 43, 56, 180;
Survey of London
, 22â4
Strype, John, 58
Surrey Chapel, Blackfriars Bridge Road, 175
Surrey County Gaol, Southwark, 11
Surrey Institute
see
Rotunda
Surtees, C.E., 154â5, 158â9
Sutton, Joseph, 171
Swan Theatre, Southwark, 25, 31
tanning, 94, 96, 193
Tate Modern (
formerly
Bankside power station), 2â3, 15, 228â30
Taylor, John (âthe water poet'), 36, 43â7, 77, 117, 139
Templars, 12
Thames, river: and transport, 41â2; freezes over, 46, 117; in Great Plague, 51; horse ferries, 77â8; new bridges, 78, 90, 133; sewage pollution, 82â3, 87, 144â5, 149, 153; and canals, 105â6; shipping and docks, 136â9; fish and fishing, 145; water supply from, 145; railway bridges, 162; industry and trade relocated post-war, 217â19;
see also
watermen
theatres: established north of river, 50;
see also
Globe Theatre; Rose Theatre; Swan Theatre
Thorndike, Dame Sybil, 201
Thrale, Henry, 48, 65, 93, 96â8, 147
Thrale, Hester (Hester Lynch Piozzi), 66, 85, 96, 99
Thrale, Ralph, 83, 95â6
Tilbury, 218
Tiller, Thomas, 88
Tradescant family, 48â50
Trinity Square, Southwark, 150
Tuckfield family, 173â5, 198
Tuckfield, Joseph, 172â3
Tuckfield, William, 172
Twentieth Century Society, 228
Unicorn Alley, 195
Union Street, Southwark, 112
Upper Ground, Southwark, 14
Vauxhall Bridge, 133
Vikings, 10
Visscher, Nicholas John, 26â7, 38
Walbrook, 82
Wanamaker, Sam, 33, 226â8
Wandsworth Prison, 159
Ware, George, 151
Warren family, 184
Warren, Edith, 184
water closets, 87, 144â6
Waterloo Bridge, 2, 95, 133, 135, 229â30
Waterman's Arms (inn), 177â8, 183, 191
watermen: occupation and activities, 42â5; in Great Plague, 51; merge with lightermen, 77â8; rights and status, 77; resist new Thames bridges, 78; regatta (1775), 88; and advent of steamships, 137â8
Watermen's Company, 43â4, 46, 78, 82; Hall, 52, 120
Watt, James, 97
Westminster Bridge, 78, 90, 140
White Bear Inn, Southwark, 173
White Hind Alley, 58, 177, 195
Whitehall Palace, 47
Willow Street, 14
Winchester, Bishops of, 12â13, 15â16, 18, 36, 127â9;
see also
Beaufort, Cardinal Henry
Winchester geese
see
prostitutes
Winchester House, 27â8
Winchester Park, Southwark, 12â14; estate, 122â3
Winifrith, Joan Boniface
see
Lee, Anna
Wolsey, Cardinal Thomas, 18
women: eighteenth-century lives, 65â6;
see also
prostitutes
Woodmongers and Coal-Sellers Company, 78
Wordsworth, William, 121
workhouses, 101, 112, 123â4
Worsthorne, (Sir) Peregrine, 211â12, 230
Wren, Sir Christopher, 3â5, 58â9, 183, 207â8, 210, 223
Wright, Sells, Dale and Surtees (company), 154
Wyatt, Samuel, 101 Wyatt, Thomas, the younger, 23
Zoar Street (Sanctuary Street), 56, 64
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