The
East End of London, known vernacularly as the
East End, is the area of London
, England,
east of the medieval walled City of London
and north of the River
Thames, although it is not defined by universally accepted
formal boundaries. Use of the term in a pejorative sense
began in the late 19th century, as the expansion of the population
of London led to extreme
overcrowding
throughout the area and a concentration of
poor people and
immigrants
in the East End.
These problems were exacerbated with the
construction of St Katharine Docks
(1827) and the central London railway termini
(1840–1875) that caused the clearance of former slums and rookeries, with many of the displaced people
moving into the East End. Over the course of a century, the
East End became synonymous with poverty, overcrowding, disease and
criminality.
The East End developed rapidly during the 19th century. Originally
it was an area characterised by villages clustered around the City
walls or along the main roads, surrounded by farmland, with marshes
and small communities by the River, serving the needs of shipping
and the
Royal Navy.
Until the arrival of
formal docks, shipping was required to land its goods in the
Pool of
London
, but industries related to construction, repair,
and victualling of ships flourished in the area from Tudor times. The area attracted large
numbers of rural people looking for employment.
Successive waves of
foreign immigration began with Huguenot
refugees creating a new extramural suburb in Spitalfields
in the 17th century. They were followed by
Irish weavers,
Ashkenazi Jews and, in the 20th century,
Bangladeshis. Many of these
immigrants worked in the clothing industry. The abundance of semi-
and unskilled labour led to low wages and poor conditions
throughout the East End. This brought the attentions of social
reformers during the mid-18th century and led to the formation of
unions and workers associations at the end of
the century. The radicalism of the East End contributed to the
formation of the
Labour Party and
demands for the
enfranchisement of
women.
Official attempts to address the overcrowded housing began at the
beginning of the 20th century under the
London County Council.
World War II devastated much of the East End,
with its docks, railways and industry forming a continual target,
leading to dispersal of the population to new suburbs, and new
housing being built in the 1950s.
The closure of the last of the East End
docks in the Port of
London
in 1980 created further challenges and led to
attempts at regeneration and the formation of the London Docklands
Development Corporation. The Canary Wharf
development, improved infrastructure, and the
Olympic
Park
mean that the East End is undergoing further
change, but some of its parts continue to contain some of the worst
poverty in Britain.
Origin and scope
The term
'East End' was first applied to the districts immediately to the
east of, and entirely outside, the medieval
walled City of
London
and north of the River
Thames; these included Whitechapel
and Stepney
.
By the
late 19th century, the East End roughly corresponded to the
Tower
division
of Middlesex
, which from 1900 formed the metropolitan boroughs of Stepney
, Bethnal Green
, Poplar
and Shoreditch
in the County of
London. Today it corresponds to the London Borough
of Tower Hamlets
and the southern part of Hackney
.
Parts of
the London boroughs of Newham
and Waltham Forest
, formerly in an area of Essex
known as 'London over the border', are sometimes considered to be
in the East End. However, the River Lee is usually considered to be
the eastern boundary of the East End and this definition would
exclude the boroughs but place them in East
London
. This extension of the term further east is
due to the 'diaspora' of East Enders who
moved to West Ham about
1886 West Ham: Introduction, A History of the County
of Essex: Volume 6 (1973), pp. 43-50 accessed: 23 February 2008
and East
Ham
about 1894 to service the new docks and industries
established there. In the inter-war period, migration occurred
to new estates built to alleviate conditions in the East End, in
particular at Becontree
and Harold
Hill
, or out of London entirely.
The extent of the East End has always been difficult to define.
When
Jack London came to London in 1902
his
Hackney carriage driver did not
know the way and he observed,
Thomas
Cook and Son, path-finders and trail-clearers, living
sign-posts to all the World.... knew not the way to the East
End.
Many East Enders are '
Cockneys', although
this term has both a geographic and a linguistic connotation.
A
traditional definition is that to be a Cockney, one had to be born
within the sound of Bow Bells
, situated in Cheapside
. In general, the sound pattern would cover
most of the City, and parts of the near East End such as Aldgate
and Whitechapel
. In practice, with no maternity hospitals in
the district, today few would be born in the area. The origin of
the term is lost, but a plausible explanation is given by Websters.
London was referred to by the
Normans as the
"Land of Sugar Cake" (Old French:
pais de
cocaigne), an imaginary land of idleness and luxury. A
humorous appellation, the word "Cocaigne" referred to all of London
and its suburbs, and over time had a number of spellings:
Cocagne,
Cockayne', and in
Middle English,
Cocknay and
Cockney.
Its linguistic use is more identifiable, with lexical borrowings
from
Yiddish,
Romani, and
costermonger slang, and a distinctive accent
that features
T-glottalization, a
loss of dental fricatives and diphthong alterations, amongst
others. The accent is said to be a remnant of early English London
speech, modified by the many immigrants to the area. The Cockney
accent has suffered a long decline, beginning with the introduction
in the 20th century of
received
pronunciation, and the more recent adoption of
Estuary English, which itself contains many
features of Cockney English.
History

1745 Roque Map of the East End.
London is expanding, but there are still large areas of fields
to the East of the City.
The East End came into being as the separate villages east of
London spread and the fields between them were built upon, a
process that occurred in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
From the beginning, the East End has always contained some of the
poorest areas of London. The main reasons for this include the
following:
- the medieval system of copyhold, which prevailed throughout the East End,
into the 19th century. Essentially, there was little point in
developing land that was held on short leases.
- the siting of noxious industries, such as tanning and fulling outside
the boundaries of the City, and therefore beyond complaints and
official controls.
- the
low paid employment in the docks
and related industries, made worse by the trade
practices of outwork, piecework and casual
labour.
- and
the concentration of the ruling court and national political
epicentre in Westminster
, on the opposite western side of the City of London
.
Historically, the East End is conterminous with the Manor of
Stepney.
This manor was held by the Bishop of London, in compensation for his
duties in maintaining and garrisoning the Tower of
London
. Further ecclesiastic holdings came about
from the need to enclose the marshes and create flood defences
along the Thames.
Edward VI passed the
land to the
Wentworth family, and
thence to their descendants, the Earls of Cleveland. The
ecclesiastic system of copyhold, whereby land was leased to tenants
for terms as short as seven years, prevailed throughout the manor.
This severely limited scope for improvement of the land and new
building until the estate was broken up in the 19th century.
In medieval times, trades were carried out in workshops in and
around the owners' premises, in the City. By the time of the Great
Fire, these were becoming industries and some were particularly
noisome for instance the processing of urine to perform tanning, or
required large amounts of space, such as drying clothes after
process and dying in fields known as
tentergrounds and rope making. Some were
dangerous, such as the manufacture of gun powder, or the proving of
guns. These activities came to be performed outside the City walls
in the near suburbs of the East End. Later, when lead making, bone
processing for soap and china came to established, they too located
in the East End, rather than the crowded streets of the City.
The lands to the east of the City had always been used as hunting
grounds for bishops and royalty, with
King John establishing a palace at Bow.
The
Cistercian Stratford
Langthorne Abbey
became the court of Henry III in 1267, for the visitation
of the Papal legates, and it was here
that he made peace with the barons under the terms of the Dictum of Kenilworth. It became
the fifth largest Abbey in the country, visited by monarchs and
providing a popular retreat (and final resting place) for the
nobility.
The Palace of Placentia
at Greenwich
, to the south of the river, was built by the Regent
to Henry V, Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester
and Henry VIII established a hunting
lodge at Bromley
Hall
. These Royal connections continued until
after the Interregnum, when the
Court established itself in the Palace of Whitehall
, and the offices of politics congregated around
them. The East End also lay on the main road to
Barking
Abbey
, important as a religious centre since Norman times and where William the Conqueror had first
established his English court.
Politics and social reform

1882 Reynolds Map of the East
End.
Development has now eliminated the open fields.
At the
end of the 17th century, large numbers of Huguenot weavers arrived in the East End, settling
to service an industry that grew up around the new estate at
Spitalfields
, where master weavers were based. They
brought with them a tradition of 'reading clubs', where books were
read, often in
public houses. The
authorities were suspicious of immigrants meeting, and in some ways
they were right, as these grew into workers' associations and
political organisations. When, towards the middle of the 18th
century, the silk industry fell into a decline - partly due to the
introduction of printed
calico cloth
- riots ensued.
These 'Spitalfield Riots' of 1769 were actually
centred to the east, and were put down with considerable force,
culminating in two men being hanged in front of the Salmon and Ball
public house at Bethnal
Green
. One was John Doyle (an
Irish weaver), the other John Valline (of
Huguenot descent).
In 1844,
"An Association for promoting Cleanliness among the Poor" was
established, and they built a bath-house
and laundry in Glasshouse Yard, East Smithfield
. This cost a single
penny for bathing or washing, and by June 1847 was
receiving 4,284 people a year.
This led to an Act of Parliament to encourage other
municipalities to build their own, and the model spread quickly
throughout the East
End
. Timbs noted that "... so strong was the
love of cleanliness thus encouraged that women often toiled to wash
their own and their children's clothing, who had been compelled to
sell their hair to purchase food to satisfy the cravings
of hunger".

William Booth founded the Salvation
Army, in Whitechapel, in 1878
William Booth began his 'Christian Revival
Society' in 1865, preaching the gospel in a tent erected in the
'Friends Burial Ground', Thomas Street, Whitechapel
. Others joined his 'Christian Mission', and
on 7 August 1878 the
Salvation Army
was formed at a meeting held at 272 Whitechapel Road. A statue
commemorates both his mission and his work in helping the poor.
A
Dubliner
, Thomas John
Barnardo came to the London Hospital
, Whitechapel to train for medical missionary work
in China. Soon after his arrival in 1866, a
cholera epidemic swept the East End, killing 3,000
people. Many families were left destitute, with thousands of
children orphaned and forced to beg or find work in the factories.
In 1867, Barnardo set up a
Ragged
School to provide a basic education but was shown the many
children sleeping rough. His first home for boys was established at
18 Stepney Causeway in
1870. When a boy died after being turned away (the home was full),
the policy was instituted that 'No Destitute Child Ever Refused
Admission'.
In 1884,
the Settlement movement was
founded, with settlements such as Toynbee Hall
and Oxford House, to encourage university students
to live and work in the slums, experience the
conditions and try to alleviate some of the poverty and misery in
the East End. Notable residents of Toynbee Hall included
R. H.
Tawney,
Clement Attlee,
Guglielmo Marconi, and
William Beveridge. The Hall continues to
exert considerable influence, with the
Workers Educational
Association (1903),
Citizens
Advice Bureau (1949) and
Child Poverty Action Group (1965)
all being founded or influenced by it.
In 1888, the
matchgirls of Bryant
and May in Bow
went on
strike for better working conditions. This, combined with
the many
dock strikes in
the same era, made the East End a key element in the foundation of
modern
socialist and
trade union organisations, as well as the
Suffragette movement.
Towards the end of the 19th century, a new wave of radicalism came
to the East End, arriving both with
Jewish
émigrés fleeing from Eastern
European persecution, and
Russian and
German radicals avoiding arrest. A German
émigré,
Rudolf Rocker, began writing
in
Yiddish for
Arbayter Fraynd (Workers' Friend). By
1912 he had organised a London garment workers' strike for better
conditions and an end to '
sweating'.
Amongst
the Russians was Peter Kropotkin,
the anarchist, who helped found the Freedom Press
in Whitechapel. Afanasy Matushenko,
one of the leaders of the Potemkin mutiny, fled the
failure of the Russian
Revolution of 1905 to seek sanctuary in Stepney Green
. Leon Trotsky
and
Vladimir Lenin attended meetings
of the newspaper
Iskra in 1903. in
Whitechapel; and in 1907 Lenin and
Joseph
Stalin attended the Fifth Congress of the
Russian Social Democratic
Labour Party held in a Hoxton church. That congress
consolidated the leadership of Lenin's
Bolshevik faction and debated strategy for the
communist revolution in Russia. Trotsky noted, in his memoires,
meeting
Maxim Gorky and
Rosa Luxembourg at the conference.
By the 1880s, the casual system caused Dock workers to unionise
under
Ben Tillett and
John Burns. This led to a demand for '6d per
hour' (
The Docker's Tanner), and an end to casual labour
in the docks. Colonel G. R.
Birt, the general manager at Millwall
Docks
, gave evidence to a Parliamentary committee, on the
physical condition of the workers:
These conditions earned dockers much public sympathy, and after a bitter struggle, the London Dock Strike of 1889 was settled with victory for the strikers, and established a national movement for the unionisation of casual workers, as opposed to the craft unions that already existed.
Lady Angela Burdett-Coutts
The
philanthropist Angela
Burdett-Coutts was active in the East End, alleviating poverty
by founding a sewing school for ex-weavers in Spitalfields
and building the ornate Columbia
Market
in Bethnal
Green
. She helped to inaugurate the
London Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Children, was a keen supporter of the '
Ragged School Union', and founded institutions
such as the East End Dwelling Company. This latter led to the
foundation of organisations such as the '4% Dwelling Company',
where investors received a financial return on their philanthropy.
Between the 1890s and 1903, when the work was published, the social
campaigner
Charles
Booth instigated an investigation into the life of London poor
(based at Toynbee Hall), much of which was centred on the poverty
and conditions in the East End. Further investigations were
instigated by the '
Royal
Commission on the Poor Laws and Relief of Distress 1905-09',
the Commission found it difficult to agree, beyond that change was
necessary and produced separate minority and majority reports.
The
minority report was the work of Booth with the founders of the
London
School of Economics
Sidney and Beatrice Webb. They advocated focusing
on the causes of poverty and the radical notion of poverty being
involuntary, rather than the result of innate indolence. At the
time their work was rejected but was gradually adopted as policy by
successive governments.

Sylvia Pankhurst 1882–1960
Sylvia Pankhurst became
increasingly disillusioned with the
suffragette movement's inability to engage with
the needs of working class women, so in 1912 she formed her own
breakaway movement, the
East London Federation of Suffragettes.
She based it at a
baker's shop at Bow
emblazoned
with the famous slogan, "Votes for
Women," in large gold letters. The local Member of
Parliament, George Lansbury,
resigned his seat in the House of Commons
to stand for election on a platform of women's
enfranchisement. Pankhurst supported him in this, and Bow
Road became the campaign office, culminating in a huge rally in
nearby Victoria
Park
. Lansbury was narrowly defeated in the
election, however, and support for the project in the East End was
withdrawn. Pankhurst refocused her efforts, and with the outbreak
of
World War I, she began a nursery,
clinic and cost price canteen for the poor at the bakery. A paper,
the
Women's
Dreadnought, was published to bring her campaign to a
wider audience. Pankhurst spent twelve years in Bow fighting for
women's rights.
During this time, she risked constant arrest
and spent many months in Holloway Prison
, often on hunger
strike. She finally achieved her aim of full adult
female
suffrage in 1928, and along the way
she alleviated some of the poverty and misery, and improved social
conditions for all in the East End.
The
alleviation of widespread unemployment and hunger in Poplar
had to be
funded from money raised by the borough itself under the Poor Law. The poverty of the borough made
this patently unfair and lead to the 1921 conflict between
government and the local councillors known as the
Poplar Rates Rebellion.
Council meetings were
for a time held in Brixton
prison
, and the councillors received wide support.
Ultimately, this led to the abolition of the Poor Laws through the
Local Government Act
1929.
The
General
Strike had begun as a dispute between miners and their
employers outside London in 1925. On 1 May 1926 the
Trades Union Congress called out
workers all over the country, including the London dockers. The
government had had over a year to prepare and deployed troops to
break the dockers' picket lines. Armed food convoys, accompanied by
armoured cars drove down the East India Dock Road.
By 10 May, a meeting
was brokered at Toynbee
Hall
to end the strike. The TUC were forced into
a humiliating climbdown and the general strike ended on 11 May,
with the miners holding out until November.
Industry and built environment
Industries associated with the sea developed throughout the East
End, including rope making and shipbuilding.
The former location
of roperies can still be identified from their long straight,
narrow profile in the modern streets, for instance Ropery Street
near Mile
End
. Shipbuilding was important from the time
when Henry VIII caused ships to be built
at Rotherhithe
as a part of his expansion of the Royal
Navy. On 31 January 1858, the largest ship of that
time, the SS Great Eastern,
designed by Isambard Kingdom
Brunel, was launched from the yard of Messrs Scott Russell & Co, of
Millwall
. The vessel was too long to fit across the
river, and so the ship had to be launched sideways. Due to the
technical difficulties of the launch, this was the last big ship to
be built on the River, and the industry fell into a long decline.
Smaller
ships, including battleships, continued to be built at the Thames
Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company
at Blackwall until the beginning of the 20th
century.
The
West India
Docks
were established in 1803, providing berths for
larger ships and a model for future London dock building.
Imported
produce from the West
Indies
was unloaded directly into quayside
warehouses. Ships were limited to 6000 tons.
The old
Brunswick Dock, a shipyard at Blackwall
became the basis for the East India Company's East India
Docks
established there in 1806. The London Docks
were built in 1805, and the waste soil and rubble
from the construction was carried by barge to west London, to build
up the marshy area of Pimlico
. These docks imported tobacco, wine, wool
and other goods into guarded warehouses within high walls (some of
which still remain). They were able to berth over 300 sailing
vessels simultaneously, but by 1971 they closed, no longer able to
accommodate modern shipping.
The most central docks, St Katharine
Docks
, were built in 1828 to accommodate luxury goods,
clearing the slums that lay in the area of the former Hospital of St Katharine.
They were not successful commercially, as they were unable to
accommodate the largest ships, and in 1864, management of the docks
was amalgamated with that of the London Docks.
The Millwall
Docks
were created in 1868, predominantly for the import
of grain and timber. These docks housed the first purpose built
granary for the Baltic grain market, a local landmark that remained
until it was demolished to improve access for the London City
Airport
.
The first
railway ('The Commercial
Railway') to be built, in 1840, was a passenger service based
on cable haulage by stationary steam engines that ran the from
Minories
to Blackwall
on a pair of tracks. It required of hemp
rope, and 'dropped' carriages as it arrived at stations, which were
reattached to the cable for the return journey, and the train
'reassembling' itself at the terminus. The line was converted to
standard gauge in 1859, and steam locomotives adopted.
The building of
London termini at Fenchurch Street
(1841), and Bishopsgate
(1840) provided access to new suburbs across
the River Lee, again resulting
in the destruction of housing and increased overcrowding in the
slums. After the opening of Liverpool
Street station
(1874), Bishopsgate railway station became a goods
yard, in 1881, to bring imports from Eastern ports. With the
introduction of containerisation, the station declined, suffered a
fire in 1964 that destroyed the station buildings, and it was
finally demolished in 2004 for the extension of the
East London Line. In the 19th century, the
area north of Bow Road became a major railway centre for the
North London Railway, with
marshalling yards and a maintenance depot serving both the City and
the West India docks.
Nearby Bow railway station
opened in 1850 and was rebuilt in 1870 in a grand
style, featuring a concert hall. The line and yards closed
in 1944, after severe bomb damage, and never reopened, as goods
became less significant, and cheaper facilities were concentrated
in Essex.
The River Lee was a smaller boundary than the
Thames, but it was a significant one.
The building of the
Royal
Docks
consisting of the Royal Victoria Dock
(1855), able to berth vessels of up to
8000 tons; Royal
Albert Dock
(1880), up to 12,000 tons; and King George
V Dock
(1921), up to 30,000 tons, on the estuary marshes, extended the continuous development
of London across the Lee into Essex for the first time.
The
railways gave access to a passenger terminal at Gallions
Reach
and new suburbs created in West Ham
, which quickly became a major manufacturing town,
with 30,000 houses built between 1871 and 1901. Soon afterwards,
East
Ham
was built up to serve the new Gas Light
and Coke Company
and Bazalgette's
grand sewage works at Beckton
.
From the mid-20th century, the docks declined in use and were
finally closed in 1980, leading to the setting up of the
London Docklands
Development Corporation in 1981.
London's main port is
now at Tilbury
, further down the Thames
estuary, outside the boundary of Greater London
. The dock had been established in 1886 to
bring bulk goods by rail to London, but being nearer the sea and
able to accommodate vessels of 50,000 tons, they were more
easily converted to the needs of modern
container ships in 1968, and so they
survived the closure of the inner docks. Various wharves along the
river continue in use but on a much smaller scale.
Settlement
During the
Middle Ages, settlements had
been established predominantly along the lines of the existing
roads, and the principal villages were Stepney, Whitechapel and
Bow. Settlements along the river began at this time to service the
needs of shipping on the Thames, but the City of London retained
its right to actually land the goods. The riverside became more
active in Tudor times, as the Royal Navy was expanded and
international trading developed.
Downstream, a major fishing port
developed at Barking
to provide fish to the City.
Whereas
royalty such as King John had had a
hunting lodge at Bromley-by-Bow
, and the Bishop of
London had a palace at Bethnal Green
, later these estates began to be split up, and
estates of fine houses for captains, merchants and owners of
manufacturers began to be built. Samuel Pepys moved his family and goods to
Bethnal Green during the Great Fire of London
, and Captain Cook moved
from Shadwell
to Stepney
Green
, a place where a school and assembly rooms had been
established (commemorated by Assembly Passage, and a
plaque on the site of Cook's house on the Mile End Road).
Mile End Old Town also acquired some fine buildings, and the New
Town began to be built. As the area became built up and more
crowded, the wealthy sold their plots for sub-division and moved
further afield.
Into the 18th and 19th centuries, there were
still attempts to build fine houses, for example Tredegar
Square
(1830), and the open fields around Mile End New
Town were used for the construction of estates of workers' cottages
in 1820.
Globe Town was established from 1800 to provide for the expanding
population of weavers around Bethnal Green, attracted by improving
prospects in silk weaving. The population of Bethnal Green trebled
between 1801 and 1831, operating 20,000 looms in their own homes.
By 1824, with restrictions on importation of French silks relaxed,
up to half these looms became idle, and prices were driven down.
With many importing warehouses already established in the district,
the abundance of cheap labour was turned to boot, furniture and
clothing manufacture. Globe Town continued its expansion into the
1860s, long after the decline of the silk industry.
During the 19th century, building on an adhoc basis could never
keep up with the needs of the expanding population.
Henry Mayhew visited Bethnal Green
in 1850 and wrote for the Morning Chronicle, as a part of a
series forming the basis for London Labour and the London
Poor (1851), that the trades in the area included tailors,
costermongers, shoemakers, dustmen,
sawyers, carpenters, cabinet makers and silkweavers. He
noted that in the area:
A movement began to clear the slums – with Burdett-Coutts building
Columbia Market in 1869 and with the passing of the "
Artisans'
and Labourers' Dwelling Act" in 1876 to provide powers to seize
slums from landlords and provide access to public funds to build
new housing.
Housing
associations such as the
Peabody
Trust were formed to provide
philanthropic homes for the poor and clearing
the slums generally. Expansion work by the railway companies, such
as the
London and Blackwall
Railway and
Great Eastern
Railway caused large areas of slum housing to be demolished.
The
"Working Classes Dwellings Act" in 1890 placed a new responsibility
to house the displaced residents and this led to the building of
new "philanthropic housing" such as Blackwall Buildings
and Great Eastern Buildings.
By 1890 official slum clearance programmes had begun.
One was the creation
of the world's first council housing, the LCC Boundary Estate
, which replaced the neglected and crowded streets
of Friars Mount, better known as The Old Nichol Street Rookery. Between 1918 and 1939 the LCC
continued replacing East End housing with five or six storey flats,
despite residents preferring houses with gardens and opposition
from shopkeepers who were forced to relocate to new, more expensive
premises. The
Second World War brought
an end to further slum clearance.
Second World War
Initially, the German commanders were
reluctant to bomb London, fearing retaliation against Berlin
.
On 24
August 1940, a single aircraft, tasked to bomb Tilbury
, accidentally bombed Stepney, Bethnal Green and the
City. The following night the
RAF
retaliated by mounting a forty aircraft raid on Berlin, with a
second attack three days later. The
Luftwaffe changed its strategy from attacking
shipping and airfields to attacking cities. The City and West End
were designated 'Target Area B'; the East End and docks were
'Target Area A'. The first raid occurred at 4:30 p.m. on 7
September and consisted of 150
Dornier
and
Heinkel bombers and large numbers
of fighters. This was followed by a second wave of 170 bombers.
Silvertown
and Canning
Town
bore the brunt of this first attack.
Between 7 September 1940 and 10 May 1941, a sustained bombing
campaign was mounted. It began with the bombing of London for 57
successive nights, an era known as '
the
Blitz'. East London was targeted because the area was a centre
for imports and storage of raw materials for the war effort, and
the German military command felt that support for the war could be
damaged among the mainly working class inhabitants. On the first
night of the blitz, 430 civilians were killed and 1600 seriously
wounded. The populace responded by evacuating children and the
vulnerable to the country and digging in, constructing
Anderson shelters in their gardens and
Morrison shelters in their houses,
or going to communal shelters built in local public spaces.
On 10
September 1940, 400 civilians, including women and children
preparing for evacuation, were killed when a bomb hit the South
Hallsville School in Canning
Town
.
The effect of the intensive bombing worried the authorities and
'
Mass-Observation' was deployed to
gauge attitudes and provide policy suggestions, as before the war
they had investigated local attitudes to anti-Semitism. The
organisation noted that close family and friendship links within
the East End were providing the population with a surprising
resilience under fire. Propaganda was issued, reinforcing the image
of the 'brave chirpy
Cockney'. On the Sunday
after the Blitz began,
Winston
Churchill himself toured the bombed areas of Stepney and
Poplar.
Anti-aircraft installations were built in
public parks, such as Victoria Park
and the Mudchute on the Isle of Dogs, and along the
line of the Thames, as this was used by the aircraft to guide them
to their target.
The authorities were initially wary of opening the
London Underground for shelter, fearing
the effect on morale elsewhere in London and hampering normal
operations. On 12 September, having suffered five days of heavy
bombing, the people of the East End took the matter into their own
hands and invaded tube stations with pillows and blankets. The
government relented and opened the partially completed
Central line as a shelter. Many deep tube
stations remained in use as shelters until the end of the war.
Aerial mines were deployed on 19 September 1940. These exploded at
roof top height, causing severe damage to buildings over a wider
radius than the impact bombs.
By now, the Port of London
had sustained heavy damage with a third of its
warehouses destroyed, and the West India and St Katherine Docks had
been badly hit and put out of action. Bizarre events
occurred when the River Lee
burned with an eerie blue flame, caused by a hit on a gin factory
at Three
Mills
, and the Thames itself burnt fiercely when Tate & Lyle's Silvertown sugar refinery
was hit.
On 3
March 1943 at 8:27 p.m., the unopened Bethnal
Green tube station
was the site of a wartime disaster. Families
had crowded into the underground station due to an air raid siren
at 8:17, one of 10 that day.
There was a panic at 8:27 coinciding with
the sound of an anti-aircraft battery (possibly the recently
installed Z battery) being fired at nearby
Victoria
Park
. In the wet, dark conditions, a woman
slipped on the entrance stairs and 173 people died in the resulting
crush. The truth was suppressed, and a report appeared that there
had been a direct hit by a German bomb. The results of the official
investigation were not released until 1946. There is now a plaque
at the entrance to the tube station, which commemorates the event
as the "worst civilian disaster of World War II". The first
V-1 flying bomb struck in Grove
Road, Mile End, on 13 June 1944, killing six, injuring 30, and
making 200 people homeless.
The area remained derelict for many years
until it was cleared to extend Mile End Park
. Before demolition, local artist
Rachel Whiteread made a cast of the inside
of 193 Grove Road. Despite attracting controversy, the exhibit won
her the
Turner Prize for 1993.
By the
end of the war, it is estimated that 80 tons of bombs fell on
the Metropolitan Borough of Bethnal
Green
alone, affecting 21,700 houses, destroying 2,233
and making a further 893 uninhabitable. In Bethnal Green,
555 people were killed, and 400 were seriously injured. For the
whole of Tower Hamlets, a total of 2,221 civilians were killed, and
7,472 were injured, with 46,482 houses destroyed and 47,574
damaged. So badly battered was the East End that when Buckingham
Palace was hit during the height of the bombing,
Queen Elizabeth observed that "It makes
me feel I can look the East End in the face." By the end of the
war, the East End was a scene of devastation, with large areas
derelict and depopulated. War production was changed quickly to
making
prefabricated housing,
and many were installed in the bombed areas and remained common
into the 1970s.
Today, 1950s and 1960s architecture
dominates the housing estates of the area such as the Lansbury
Estate
in Poplar
, much of
which was built as a show-piece of the 1951 Festival of Britain.
Population
Throughout history, the area has absorbed waves of
immigrants who have each added a new dimension to
the culture and history of the area, most notably the
French Protestant
Huguenots in the 17th century, the
Irish in the 18th century,
Ashkenazi Jews fleeing
pogroms in
Eastern
Europe towards the end of the 19th century, and the
Bangladeshi community settling in the
East End from the 1960s.
- Immigration
Immigrant communities first developed in the riverside settlements.
From the Tudor era until the 20th century, ships crew were employed
on a casual basis. New and replacement crew would be found wherever
they were available, local sailors being particularly prized for
their knowledge of currents and hazards in foreign ports. Crews
would be paid off at the end of their voyage. Inevitably, permanent
communities became established, including colonies of
Lascars and
Africans from the
Guinea Coast.
Large Chinatowns at both Shadwell
and Limehouse
developed, associated with the crews of merchantmen in the opium and tea trades. It was only after the devastation of
World War II that this predominantly
Han Chinese community relocated to
Soho
.
In 1786, the
Committee for the
Relief of the Black Poor was formed, by citizens concerned at
the size of London's indigent Black population, many of whom had
been expelled from North America as
Black
Loyalists — former slaves who had fought on the side of the
British, in the
War of
Independence. Others were discharged sailors, and some a legacy
of British involvement in the
slave
trade, The committee distributed food, clothing, medical aid
and found work for the (predominantly) men from the White Raven
tavern in Mile End. They also helped the men to go abroad, some to
Canada.
In October 1786, the Committee funded an
ill-fated expedition of 280 Black men, 40 Black women and 70 White
women (mainly wives and girlfriends) to settle in Sierra Leone
. From the late 19th century, a large African
mariner community was established in Canning Town
as a result of new shipping links to the Caribbean
and West
Africa.
Immigrants have not always been readily accepted and, in 1517, the
Evil May Day riots, where foreign owned
property was attacked, resulted in the deaths of 135
Flemings in Stepney. The
Gordon Riots of 1780 began with burnings of the
houses of Catholics and their chapels in Poplar and
Spitalfields.
.jpg/180px-BritishBrothersLeaguePoster(1902).jpg)
Anti-immigration poster, from
1902
In the 1870 and 80s, so many Jewish émigrés were arriving that over
150 synagogues were built.
Today, there are only four active synagogues
remaining in Tower Hamlets, the Congregation of Jacob Synagogue
(1903 – Kehillas Ya’akov), the East London Central Synagogue
(1922), the Fieldgate Street Great
Synagogue
(1899) and Sandys Row Synagogue
(1766). Jewish immigration to the East
End peaked in the 1890s, leading to anti-foreigner agitation by the
British Brothers League,
formed in 1902 by Captain William Stanley Shaw and the
Conservative MP for Stepney,
Major Evans-Gordon, who had
overturned a Liberal majority in the
1900 General Election
on a platform of limiting immigration. In Parliament, in 1902,
Evans-Gordon claimed that
"not a day passes but English
families are ruthlessly turned out to make room for foreign
invaders. The rates are burdened with the education of
thousands of foreign children". Jewish immigration only slowed
with the passing of the
Aliens Act
1905, that gave the
Home
Secretary powers to regulate and control immigration.
Community
tensions were again raised by an anti-semitic Fascist march that took place in
1936 and was blocked by residents and activists at the Battle of
Cable Street
. From the mid-1970s, anti-Asian violence
occurred, culminating in the murder on 4 May 1978, of a 25–year old
clothing worker named
Altab Ali, by three
white teenagers, in a racially motivated attack.
Bangladeshi groups
mobilised for self-defence, 7,000 people marched to Hyde
Park
in protest, and the community became more
politically involved. The former churchyard of St Mary's
Whitechapel, near where the attack occurred, was renamed "Altab Ali
Park
", in 1998 as a commemoration of his death.
Inter-racial tension has continued with occasional outbreaks of
violence; and in 1993 there was a council seat win for the
British National Party (since lost).
A
1999 bombing in Brick Lane
was part of a series that targeted ethnic
minorities, gays and "multiculturalists".
- Demographics
The population of the East End increased inexorably throughout the
19th century. House building could not keep pace, and overcrowding
was rife.
It was not until the interwar period that there was a decline
caused by migration to new Essex suburbs, like the Becontree
estate
, built by the London County Council between 1921 and
1932, and to areas outside London. This depopulation
accelerated after World War II and has only recently begun to
reverse.
These population figures reflect the area that now forms the London
Borough of Tower Hamlets only:
| Borough |
1811 |
1841 |
1871 |
1901 |
1931 |
1961 |
1971 |
1991 |
2001 |
Bethnal
Green |
33,619 |
74,088 |
120,104 |
129,680 |
108,194 |
47,078 |
n/a |
n/a |
n/a |
Poplar |
13,548 |
31,122 |
116,376 |
168,882 |
155,089 |
66,604 |
Stepney |
131,606 |
203,802 |
275,467 |
298,600 |
225,238 |
92,000 |
| Total |
178,773 |
309,012 |
511,947 |
597,102 |
488,611 |
205,682 |
165,791 |
161,064 |
196,106 |
By comparison, in 1801 the population of England and Wales was
9 million; by 1851 it had more than doubled to 18
million, and by the end of the century had reached 40 million.
Today, Bangladeshis form the largest minority population in Tower
Hamlets; constituting 33.5% of the borough population at the
2001 census; and is the
largest Bangladeshi community in Britain. The 2006 estimates, show
a decline in this group to 29.8% of the population; reflecting a
movement to better economic circumstances and the larger houses
available in the eastern suburbs. In this, the latest group of
migrants are following a pattern established for over three
centuries.
Crime
The high levels of poverty in the East End have, throughout
history, corresponded with a high incidence of crime. From earliest
times, crime depended, as did labour, on the importing of goods to
London, and their interception in transit. Theft occurred in the
river, on the quayside and in transit to the City warehouses.
This was
why, in the 17th century, the East India Company built
high-walled, guarded docks at Blackwall
to minimise the vulnerability of their
cargoes. Armed convoys would then take the goods to the
company's secure compound in the City. The practice led to the
creation of ever larger docks throughout the area, and for large
roads to be driven through the crowded 19th century slums to carry
goods from the docks.
No police force operated in London before the 1750s. Crime and
disorder were dealt with by a system of magistrates and volunteer
parish constables, with strictly limited jurisdiction. Salaried
constables were introduced by 1792, although they were few in
number and their power and jurisdiction continued to derive from
local magistrates, who
in extremis could be backed by
militias.
In 1798, England's first Marine Police Force was formed by
magistrate Patrick Colquhoun and a Master Mariner, John Harriott to
tackle theft and looting from ships anchored in the Pool of London
and the lower reaches of the river.
Its base
was (and remains) in Wapping
High Street. It is now known as the
Marine Support Unit.
In 1829, the Metropolitan Police Force were
formed, with a remit to patrol within of Charing Cross
, with a force of 1,000 men in 17 divisions,
including 'H' division, based in Stepney. Each division was
controlled by a superintendent, under whom were four inspectors and
sixteen sergeants. The regulations demanded that recruits should be
under thirty-five years of age, well built, at least in height,
literate and of good character. Unlike the former constables, the
police were recruited widely and so were initially disliked. The
force took until the mid-19th century to be established in the East
End.
Unusually, Joseph Sadler Thomas, a
Metropolitan Police superintendent of 'F' (Covent Garden
) Division appears to have mounted the first local
investigation (in Bethnal Green), in November 1830 of the London Burkers. In 1841, a specific
Dockyard division of the Metropolitan force was formed to assume
responsibility for shore patrols within the docks, a detective
department was formed in 1842, and in 1865, 'J' division was
established in Bethnal Green.
One of the East End industries that serviced ships moored off the
Pool of London was
prostitution, and in
the 17th century, this was centred on the
Ratcliffe Highway, a long street lying on
the high ground above the riverside settlements. In 1600, it was
described by the antiquarian
John Stow as
'a continual street, or filthy straight passage, with alleys of
small tenements or cottages builded, inhabited by sailors and
victuallers.' Crews were 'paid off' at the end of a long voyage,
and would spend their earnings on drink in the local taverns. One
madame described as 'the great bawd of the seamen' by
Samuel Pepys was Damaris Page. Born in Stepney
in 1620, she had moved from prostitution to running brothels,
including one on the Highway that catered for ordinary seaman and a
further establishment nearby that catered for the more expensive
tastes amongst the officers and gentry.
She died wealthy, in
1669, in a house on the Highway, despite charges being brought
against her and time spent in Newgate prison
.
By the 19th century, an attitude of toleration had changed, and the
social reformer
William Acton
described the riverside prostitutes as a 'horde of human tigresses
who swarm the pestilent dens by the riverside at Ratcliffe and
Shadwell'. The 'Society for the Suppression of Vice' estimated that
between the Houndsditch, Whitechapel and Ratcliffe area there were
1803 prostitutes; and between Mile End, Shadwell and Blackwall 963
women in the trade. They were often victims of circumstance, there
being no
welfare state and a high
mortality rate amongst the inhabitants that left wives and
daughters destitute, with no other means of income. At the same
time, religious reformers began to introduce 'Seamans' Missions'
throughout the dock areas that both sought to provide for
seafarer's physical needs and to keep them away from the
temptations of drink and women. Eventually, the passage of the
'Contagious Diseases Act' in 1864 allowed policemen to arrest
prostitutes and detain them in hospital. The act was repealed in
1886, after agitation by early feminists, such as
Josephine Butler and Elizabeth Wolstenholme
led to the formation of the
Ladies National Association for the Repeal of the Contagious
Diseases Acts.
Notable
crimes in the area include the Ratcliff Highway murders (1813);
Ratcliffe Highway Murders (Thames
Police Museum) accessed 15 Feb 2007 the killings committed by the
London Burkers (apparently inspired
by Burke and Hare) in Bethnal
Green
(1831); the notorious serial killings of
prostitutes by Jack the Ripper
(1888); and the Sidney Street Siege
(1911) (in which anarchists, inspired by the
legendary Peter the Painter, took
on Home Secretary Winston
Churchill, and the army). In the 1960s the
East End was the area most associated with gangster activity, most notably that of the
Kray twins. The 1996
Docklands bombing
caused significant damage around South
Quay Station
, to the south of the main Canary Wharf
development. Two people were killed and
thirty-nine injured in one of Mainland Britain's biggest bomb
attacks by the Provisional Irish Republican
Army. This led to the introduction of Police
checkpoints controlling access to the Isle of Dogs
, reminiscent of the City's 'Ring of steel'.
Disasters

1878 drawing.
The Bywell Castle bears down upon the Princess
Alice.
Many disasters have befallen the residents of the East End, both in
war and in peace. In particular, as a maritime port,
plague and pestilence have
disproportionately fallen on the residents of the East End. The
area most afflicted by the
Great
Plague was in Spitalfields, and cholera epidemics broke out in
Limehouse in 1832 and struck again in 1848 and 1854.
Typhus and
tuberculosis
were also common in the crowded 19th century tenements.
The was
a passenger steamer crowded with day
trippers returning from Gravesend
to Woolwich
and London Bridge
. On the evening of 3 September 1878, she
collided with the steam collier
Bywell Castle (named for Bywell Castle
) and sank into the Thames in
under four minutes. Of the approximately 700 passengers,
over 600 were lost.
During
World War I, on 19 January 1917 73
people died, including 14 workers, and more than 400 were injured,
in a TNT
explosion
in the Brunner-Mond munitions factory in Silvertown
. Much of the area was flattened, and the
shock wave was felt throughout the city and much of
Essex.
This was the largest explosion in London
history, and was heard in Southampton
and Norwich
. Andreas Angel, chief chemist at the plant,
was posthumously awarded the
Edward
Medal for trying to extinguish the fire that caused the blast.
The same
year, on 13 June, a bomb from a German Gotha
bomber killed 18 children in their primary school in Upper North
Street, Poplar
. This event is commemorated by the local
war memorial erected in Poplar Recreation Ground, but during the
war a total of 120 children and 104 adults were killed in the East
End by aerial bombing, with many more injured.
Another
tragedy occurred on the morning of 16 May 1968 when Ronan Point
, a 23-storey tower block
in Newham
, suffered a structural collapse due to a natural gas explosion. Four people were
killed in the disaster and seventeen were injured, as an entire
corner of the building slid away. The collapse caused major changes
in UK building regulations and led to the decline of further
building of high rise
council flats
that had characterised 1960s public architecture.
Entertainment
Inn-yard theatres were first established in
the Tudor period, with the Boar's Head
Inn (1557) in Whitechapel, the George in Stepney and a purpose
built, but short lived, John Brayne's Red Lion Theatre
(1567), nearby. The first permanent
theatres with resident companies were constructed in Shoreditch,
with James Burbage's The Theatre
(1576) and Henry Lanman's Curtain
Theatre
(1577) standing close together. On the night of 28
December 1598 Burbage's sons dismantled The Theatre, and moved it
piece by piece across the Thames to construct the Globe
Theatre
.
The
Goodman's Fields Theatre
was established in 1727, and it was here that
David Garrick made his successful
début as Richard III, in
1741. In the 19th century the theatres of the
East End rivalled in their grandiosity and seating capacity those
of the West
End
. The first of this era was the ill-fated
Brunswick Theatre (1828), which collapsed three days after opening,
killing 15 people.
This was followed by the opening of the
Pavilion (1828) in Whitechapel
, the Garrick
(1831) in Leman Street, the Effingham (1834) in
Whitechapel, the Standard (1835) in Shoreditch
, the City of London (1837) in Norton
Folgate
, then the Grecian and the Britannia Theatre
in Hoxton
(1840). Though very popular for a time, from
the 1860s onwards these theatres, one by one, began to close, the
buildings were demolished and their very memory began to fade.
There
were also many Yiddish theatres,
particularly around Whitechapel
. These developed into professional
companies, after the arrival of
Jacob Adler in 1884 and the formation
of his 'Russian Jewish Operatic Company' that first performed in
Beaumont Hall, Stepney, and then found homes both in the Prescott
Street Club, Stepney, and in Princelet Street in Spitalfields. The
Pavilion became an exclusively Yiddish theatre in 1906, finally
closing in 1936 and being demolished in 1960. Other important
Jewish theatres were Feinmans, The Jewish National Theatre and the
Grand Palais. Performances were in Yiddish, and predominantly
melodrama. These declined, as audience and
actors left for New York and the more prosperous parts of
London.
The once popular
music halls of the East
End have mostly met the same fate as the theatres.
Prominent examples
included the London Music Hall (1856-1935), 95-99 Shoreditch High
Street, and the Royal Cambridge Music Hall (1864-1936), 136
Commercial Street
. An example of a 'giant pub hall', Wilton's
Music Hall
(1858), remains in Grace's Alley, off Cable
Street
and the early 'saloon style' Hoxton Hall
(1863) survives in Hoxton Street, Hoxton
. Many popular music hall stars came from the
East End, including
Marie Lloyd.
The music hall tradition of live entertainment lingers on in East
End public houses, with music and singing.
This is complemented
by less respectable amusements such as striptease, which, since the 1950s has become a
fixture of certain East End pubs, particularly in the area of
Shoreditch
, despite being a target of local authority
restraints.
Novelist and social commentator
Walter
Besant proposed a 'Palace of Delight' with concert halls,
reading rooms, picture galleries, an art school and various
classes, social rooms and frequent fêtes and dances. This coincided
with a project by the philanthropist businessman, Edmund Hay Currie
to use the money from the winding up of the 'Beaumont Trust',
together with subscriptions to build a 'People's Palace' in the
East End. Five acres of land were secured on the Mile End Road, and
the
Queen's Hall was opened by
Queen Victoria on 14 May 1887. The complex
was completed with a library, swimming pool, gymnasium and winter
garden, by 1892, providing an eclectic mix of populist
entertainment and education. A peak of 8000 'tickets' were sold for
classes in 1892, and by 1900, a
Bachelor of Science degree awarded by
the
University of London was
introduced.
In 1931, the building was destroyed by
fire, but the Draper's
Company, major donors to the original scheme, invested more to
rebuild the technical college and create Queen
Mary's College
in December 1934. A new 'People's
Palace' was constructed, in 1937, by the Metropolitan Borough of
Stepney
, in St Helen's Terrace. This finally closed
in 1954.
Professional theatre returned briefly to
the East End in 1972, with the formation of the Half
Moon Theatre
in a rented former synagogue in Aldgate.
In 1979,
they moved to a former Methodist chapel,
near Stepney
Green
and built a new theatre on the site, opening in May
1985, with a production of Sweeney
Todd. The theatre enjoyed success, with premières
by
Dario Fo,
Edward
Bond and
Steven Berkoff, but by
the mid-1980s, the theatre suffered a financial crisis and closed.
After years of disuse, it has been converted to a public house. The
theatre spawned two further arts projects: the
Half Moon
Photography Workshop, exhibiting in the theatre and locally,
and from 1976 publishing
Camerwork, and the 'Half Moon
Young People's Theatre', which remains active in Tower
Hamlets.
Today

Redevelopment of Isle of Dogs
Historically, the East End has suffered from under-investment in
both housing stock and infrastructure. From the 1950s, the East End
represented the structural and social changes affecting the
UK economy in a microcosm. The area had
one of the highest concentrations of
council housing, the legacy both of slum
clearance and war time destruction. The progressive closure of
docks, cutbacks in railways and the closure and relocation of
industry contributed to a long term decline, removing many of the
traditional sources of low- and semi-skilled jobs.
However, beginning
with the LDDC, in the 1980s, there have been a number of urban regeneration projects, most notably
Canary
Wharf
, a huge commercial and housing development on the
Isle of
Dogs
. Many of the 1960s tower blocks have been
demolished or renovated, replaced by low rise housing, often in
private ownership, or owned by
housing associations.
The area
around Old
Spitalfields market
and Brick Lane
has been extensively regenerated and is famous,
amongst other things, as "London's curry capital", and has been
dubbed as Bangla Town. The contribution of
Bangladeshi people to British life was recognised in 1998, when
Pola Uddin, Baroness
Uddin of Bethnal Green became the first Bangladeshi-born Briton
to enter the House of
Lords
; and the first Muslim peer to swear her
oath of allegiance in the name of
her own faith.
The area
is also home to a number of commercial and public art galleries;
including the newly expanded Whitechapel Gallery
. The artists Gilbert and George have long made their
home and workshop in Spitalfields
, and the neighbourhood around Hoxton
Square
has become a centre for modern British art,
including the White
Cube
gallery, with many artists from the Young British Artists movement living
and working in the area. This has made the area around Hoxton and
Shoreditch
fashionable, with many former residents and artists
now driven out by higher property prices, and a busy nightlife has
developed, with over 80 licensed premises around
Shoreditch.
By the mid-1980s, both the
District
Line (extended to the East End in 1884 and 1902) and
Central Line (1946) were running beyond their
capacity, and the
Docklands
Light Railway (1987) and
Jubilee
Line (1999) were constructed to improve rail communications
through the riverside district. There was a long standing plan to
provide London with an inner motorway box, the
East Cross Route.
Apart from a short
section, this was never built, but road communications were
improved by the completion of the Limehouse Link tunnel
under Limehouse Basin
in 1993 and the extension of the A12
connecting to the Blackwall tunnel
with an upgraded carriageway in the
1990s. The extension of the
East
London line to the north, on the border between Islington and
Hackney, is scheduled to provide further travel links in 2010. From
2017,
Crossrail line 1 is expected to
create a fast railway service across London, from east to west,
with a major interchange at Whitechapel.
New river crossings
are planned at Beckton
, (the Thames Gateway Bridge
) and the proposed Silvertown Link road tunnel, to supplement
the existing Blackwall Tunnel
.
The
2012 Summer Olympics will be
held in an Olympic
Park
created on former industrial land around the
River Lee. It is intended
that this should leave a legacy of new sports facilities, housing,
and industrial and technical infrastructure that will further help
regenerate the area.
This is linked to a new station in the
Newham
, and the future Stratford City
development. Also in Newham is London
City Airport
, built in 1986 in the former King
George V Dock
, a small airport serving short-haul domestic
and European destinations. In the same area, the University of East London
has developed a new campus, and the Queen Mary
campus has expanded into new accommodation both adjacent to its
existing site at Mile End, and with specialist medical campuses at
the Royal
London Hospital
, Whitechapel and at Charterhouse Square
in the City. Whitechapel is the base for the
London Air Ambulance, and the
hospital's clinical facilities are undergoing a £1 billion
refurbishment and expansion.
Much of the area remains, however, one of the poorest in Britain
and contains some of the capital's worst deprivation. This is in
spite of rising property prices and the extensive building of
luxury apartments centred largely around the former dock areas and
alongside the Thames. With rising costs elsewhere in the capital
and the availability of
brownfield
land, the East End has become a desirable place for
business.
In popular culture
The East End has been the subject of parliamentary commissions and
other examinations of social conditions since the 19th century, as
seen in
Henry Mayhew's
London Labour and the London
Poor (1851) and
Charles Booth's
Life and Labour of the
People in London (third, expanded edition 1902-3, in 17
volumes). Narrative accounts of experiences amongst the East End
poor were also written by
Jack London in
The People of the
Abyss (1903), by
George
Orwell in parts of his novel
Down and Out in Paris and
London, recounting his own experiences in the 1930s, as
well as the Jewish writer
Emanuel
Litvinoff in his autobiographical novel
Journey Through A Small
Planet set in the 1930s. A further detailed study of Bethnal
Green was carried out in the 1950s by sociologists
Michael Young and Peter Willmott,
in
Family and
Kinship in East London.
Themes from these social investigations have been drawn out in
fiction. Crime, poverty, vice, sexual transgression, drugs,
class-conflict and multi-cultural encounters and fantasies
involving Jewish, Chinese and Indian immigrants are major themes.
Though the area has been productive of local writing talent, from
the time of Oscar Wilde's
The Picture of Dorian Gray
(1891) the idea of 'slumming it' in the 'forbidden' East End has
held a fascination for a coterie of the literati.
The image of the East Ender changed dramatically between the 19th
century and the 20th. From the 1870s they were characterised in
culture as often shiftless, untrustworthy and responsible for their
own poverty. However, many East Enders worked in lowly but
respectable occupations such as
carters,
porters and
costermongers. This later group particularly
became the subject of music hall songs at the turn of the century,
with performers such as
Marie Lloyd,
Gus Elen and
Albert Chevalier establishing the image of
the humorous East End Cockney and highlighting the conditions of
ordinary workers.
Vaudeville, Old and New: An Encyclopedia of
Variety Performers in America pp 351-2, Frank Cullen, Florence
Hackman, Donald P. McNeilly (Routledge 2006) ISBN 0415938538
accessed 22 October 2007 This image, buoyed by close family and
social links, and the community's fortitude in the war, came to be
represented in literature and film. However, with the rise of the
Kray twins, in the 1960s, the dark side
of East End character returned, with a new emphasis on criminality
and gangsterism.
See also
- Museums of local history
References
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(2000)
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and Poverty in Late-Victorian London pp 35-6 (Fairleigh
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accessed 26 September 2007
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under his name appeared in the Bolshevik newspaper Bakinskii
proletarii (but was excised from the second edition of his
collected works). He stayed in Tower House, a hostel for itinerant
workers near the London Hospital, for two weeks, paying sixpence a
night for a cubicle. Jack London and George Orwell, in their respective
periods, also stayed at the hostel writing on the poor conditions.
Today, the hostel provides luxury housing for City workers.
(see Guardian, below)
- Luxury beckons for East End's house of
history Mark Gould and Jo Revill 24 October 2004
The
Guardian accessed 25 February 2007
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Socialism Trotsky, Leon My Life (Charles
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- John Burns is commemorated in the name given to a current
Woolwich
Ferry)
- 2.5p in modern coinage
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Docklands History for GCSE, accessed 18 September 2007
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National Dictionary of Biography accessed 3 February
2007
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accessed 17 May 2008
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Rosemary (Breedon Books 2001) ISBN 1 8598327 09
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Stepney, Bethnal Green (1998), pp. 132-135 accessed: 10 October
2007
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otherwise London would have been bombed for 76 successive nights.
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Museum in Docklands accessed 27 February
2008
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distrust in the East End, families preferring to remain united and
in their own homes (see Palmer, 1989).
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Joint Regional Commissioner, and a former councillor and Mayor of
Poplar. Elected on a pro-war ticket within the first 30 weeks of
war (see Palmer, 1989, p. 139)
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War Age-exchange accessed 14 November 2007
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Homeground) accessed 15 February 2007
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Alison The
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2007
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1944.
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London's Blacks and the Foundation of the Sierra Leone Settlement
1786 - 1791 (Liverpool University Press, 1994)
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West Ham's early black community (Stratford: Eastside
Community Heritage, 2002)
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History Society accessed 5 July 2007
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End London Borough of Tower
Hamlets accessed 26 Sep 2007
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Shooter, March 2003 (Socialist Review) accessed 1 October
2007
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available online at Moving Here
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Blackshirts by Audrey Gillan, The Guardian, 30
September 2006. Retrieved 17 April 2007
- Bethnal Green and Stepney Trades Council Blood on the
Streets (report published 1978)
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Reform pp. 30–31 (Taylor & Francis, 1990) ISBN
041503826X
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(Metropolitan Police) accessed 24
January 2007
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1849 (Metropolitan Police) accessed 23 October 2007
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Snatching in 1830s London (Metropolitan Books, 2004) ISBN
0805075372
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Street, Donald Rumbelow, ISBN 0-491-03178-5
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Terror Tony Lambrianou (Pan Books 2002) ISBN
0-330-49014-1
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debate The Lord Privy Seal (Viscount Cranborne) 12
February 1996 (Lord's
Hansard, UK Parliament) accessed 26 September 2007
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yards in Spitalfields in 1665 (source: London from the
Air)
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Museum accessed 19 September 2007
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Howard Bloch (Stroud: Tempus Publishing 2003). ISBN
0-7524-3053-X.
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George
Lansbury.
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Union) accessed 2 April 2007
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Phillpotts (CrossRail Documentary Report, prepare by MoLAS
accessed 17 Nov 2007
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Samuel
Schoenbaum (Oxford University Press, 1987) ISBN 0195051610
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premises in Shoreditch, that had operated from the early 1830s,
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theatre Alfred L. Crauford, (London: Cranley and Day 1933)
accessed 22 September 2007
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pp. 4-6
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0-679-41351-0
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Green (London, Pavilion Books Ltd. in association with Michael
Joseph Ltd., 1986)
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London (DoNotPress, 2002) ISBN 1 899 344 85 3
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Besant All Sorts and Conditions of Men (1882)
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property in Beaumont Square, Stepney to provide for the 'education
and entertainment' of people from the neighbourhood. The charity -
and its property - was becoming moribund by the 1870s, and in 1878
it was wound up by the Charity Commissioners, providing its new
chair, Sir Edmund Hay Currie, with £120,000 to invest in a similar
project. He raised a further £50,000 and secured continued funding
from the Draper's Company for ten years (The Whitechapel Society,
below)
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Mary College G. P. Moss and M. V. Saville pp. 39-48
(University of London 1985) ISBN 0-902238-06-X
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Society (2006), accessed 5 July 2007
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London Alumni Booklet (2005) accessed 5 July 2007
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archive Archives in M25, accessed 23 October 2007
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70s The New York Times online, accessed
23 May 2007
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accessed 23 October 2007
- Poverty, Housing Tenure and Social Exclusion Peter Lee
and Alan Murie, (The Policy Press in association with the
Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 1997)
ISBN 1 86134 063 X
- Housing associations, also known as registered social
landlords, active in the East End, include: BGVPHA (Bethnal
Green and Victoria Park Housing Association, Tower Hamlets
Community Housing, Poplar HARCA and EastendHomes.
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April 2004 The Guardian accessed 18 September
2007
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century London) accessed 26 March 2009
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Fuchs (Tate Publishing, 2007) ISBN 9781854376817
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Borough of Hackney (2007)
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line TfL accessed 23
October 2007
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Directory) accessed 23 Oct 2007
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London (alwaystouchout) accessed 20 July 2007
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(alwaystouchout) accessed 20 July 2007
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Hansard 3
September 2007 accessed 18 September 2007
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(London: Griffin, Bohn, and Company, Stationers' Hall Court) in
Volume 1 (1861), Volume 2, Volume 3, and an additional Volume (1862) all accessed 14
November 2007
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(1957) ISBN 978-0140205954
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One Place
Further reading
- Geoffrey Bell, The other Eastenders : Kamal Chunchie and
West Ham's early black community (Stratford: Eastside
Community Heritage, 2002)
- Walter Besant. All Sorts and
Conditions of Men (1882)
- Gerry Black Jewish London: An Illustrated History
(Breedon) ISBN 1-85983-363-2
- William J. Fishman, East End 1888: Life in a
London Borough Among the Laboring Poor (1989)
- William J. Fishman, Streets of East London (1992)
(with photographs by Nicholas
Breach)
- William J. Fishman, East End Jewish Radicals 1875-1914
(2004)
- Gretchen Gerzina, Black London: Life Before
Emancipation (New Jersey, 1995)
- Tony Lambrianou, Inside the Firm: The Untold Story of the
Krays' Reign of Terror - (2002)
- Nigel Glendinning, Joan Griffiths, Jim Hardiman, Christopher
Lloyd and Victoria Poland, Changing Places: a short history of
the Mile End Old Town RA area (Mile End Old Town Residents’
Association, 2001)
- Derek Morris, Mile End Old Town 1740-1780: A social history
of an early modern London Suburb (East London History Society,
2007) ISBN 978-0-9506258-6-7
- Alan Palmer, The East End (John Murray, London
1989)
External links