Wapping (pronounced ) is a
place in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets
which forms part of the Docklands
to the east of the City of London
. It is situated between the north bank of
the
River Thames and the ancient
thoroughfare simply called
The Highway.
Wapping's
proximity to the river has given it a strong maritime character,
which it retains through its riverside public houses and steps, such as the Prospect of
Whitby
and Wapping Stairs.
Many of
the original buildings were demolished during the construction of
the London
Docks
and Wapping was further seriously damaged during
The Blitz. As the London Docklands
declined after the Second World War, the area became run down, with
the great warehouses left empty. The area's fortunes were
transformed during the 1980s by the
London Docklands
Development Corporation when the warehouses started to be
converted into luxury flats.
Rupert Murdoch moved his
News International printing and
publishing works into Wapping in 1986, resulting in a trade union
dispute that became known as the "
Battle
of Wapping".
History
Origins
The area was first settled by
Saxons, from
whom it takes its name (meaning literally "[the place of] Wæppa's
people").
Waeppa's People - a History of Wapping by Madge
Darby - ISBN 0 947699 It developed along the embankment of
the Thames, hemmed in by the river to the south and the now-drained
Wapping Marsh to the north. This gave it a peculiarly narrow and
constricted shape, consisting of little more than the axis of
Wapping High Street and some north-south side streets.
John Stow, the 16th century historian, described
it as a "continual street, or a filthy strait passage, with alleys
of small tenements or cottages, built, inhabited by sailors'
victuallers".
'The Thames Tunnel, Ratcliff Highway and Wapping', Old and
New London: Volume 2 (1878), pp. 128-37 accessed: 29 March
2007

Wapping by James McNeill
Whistler
Wapping's proximity to the river gave it a strong maritime
character for centuries, well into the 20th century. It was
inhabited by sailors, mastmakers, boat-builders, blockmakers,
instrument-makers, victuallers and representatives of all the other
trades that supported the seafarer.
Wapping was also the site of 'Execution Dock
', where pirates and other
water-borne criminals faced execution by hanging from a gibbet
constructed close to the low water mark. Their bodies would
be left dangling until they had been submerged three times by the
tide.
The Bell Inn, by execution dock was run by Samuel Batts.
His
daughter, Elizabeth, married James Cook
in 1762 at Barking
, after the
Royal Navy captain had stayed at the Inn. The couple initially
settled in Shadwell
, attending
St Paul's
church
, but later moved to Mile End
. Although they had six children together, much
of their married life was spent apart, with Cook absent on his
voyages and, after his murder in 1779 at Kealakekua Bay
, she survived until 1835.
Dockland area
Said to be
England's first, the Marine Police
Force was formed in 1798 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 and it is now known as the
Marine Support Unit.
History of the Marine Support Unit (Met) accessed 24
Jan 2007
In 1811, the horrific
Ratcliff
Highway murders took place nearby at
The
Highway and Wapping Lane.
Stepney Murders: The Ratcliffe Highway Murders
accessed 21 Jan 2007
The area's
strong maritime associations changed radically in the 19th century
when the London
Docks
were built to the north and west of the High
Street. Wapping's population plummeted by nearly 60% during
that century, with many houses destroyed by the construction of the
docks and giant warehouses along the riverfront.
Squeezed between the
high walls of the docks and warehouses, the district became
isolated from the rest of London, although some relief was provided
by Brunel's Thames
Tunnel
to Rotherhithe
. The opening of Wapping tube
station
on the East London
Line in 1869 provided a direct rail link to the rest of
London.
Modern times

Gun Wharves, Wapping.
Now home to luxury flats.
Wapping was devastated by
German bombing
in World War II
My Mum's War: Life in the East End - BBC WW2
People's War accessed 1 Apr 2007 and by the post-war
closure of the docks. It remained a run-down and derelict area into
the 1980s, when the area was transferred to the management of the
London
Docklands Development Corporation, a government
quango with the task of redeveloping the Docklands.
The London Docks were largely filled in and redeveloped with a
variety of commercial, light industrial and residential
properties.
In 1986,
Rupert Murdoch's
News International built a new £80m
printing and publishing works in the north of Wapping.
This became the scene
of violent protests after News International's UK operation moved
from Fleet
Street
to Wapping, with over 5,000 print workers being
sacked when new technology was introduced.
Wapping dispute
The "Wapping dispute" or "Battle of Wapping" was, along with the
miners' strike of
1984-5, a significant turning point in the history of the
trade union movement and of UK
industrial relations. It started on 24 January 1986 when some 6,000
newspaper workers went on strike after protracted negotiation with
their employers,
News
International (parent of Times Newspapers and News Group
Newspapers, and chaired by
Rupert
Murdoch). News International had built and clandestinely
equipped a new printing plant for all its titles in Wapping, and
when the print unions announced a strike it activated this new
plant with the assistance of the
Electrical,
Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union
(EETPU).
The plant was nicknamed "Fortress Wapping" when the sacked print
workers effectively besieged it, mounting round-the-clock pickets
and blockades in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to thwart the
move.
In
2005, News International announced the intention to move the print
works to regional presses based in Broxbourne
(the world's largest printing plant, opened March
2008), Liverpool
and Glasgow
. The editorial staff were to remain,
however, and there was talk of redeveloping the sizeable plot that
makes up the printing works.
Landmarks

Wapping old stairs
Perhaps Wapping's greatest attraction is the Thames foreshore
itself, and the venerable public houses that face onto it. A number
of the
old 'stairs', such as
Wapping Old Stairs and Pelican Stairs (by the Prospect of Whitby)
give public access to a littoral zone (for the Thames is tidal at
this point) littered with flotsam, jetsam and fragments of old dock
installations. Understandably it is popular with amateur
archaeologists and treasure hunters - it is surprisingly easy for
even a casual visitor to pick up a centuries-old shard of pottery
here.
St George in the East
St George in the East on Cannon Street Road is one of six
Hawksmoor churches in London, built from
1714 to 1729, with funding from the
Commission for
Building Fifty New Churches.
When the church was hit by a bomb during
the
Blitz the original interior was destroyed by the fire, but the
walls and distinctive "pepper-pot" towers stayed up. In 1964 a
modern church interior was constructed inside the existing walls
for the active congegration, and a new flat built under each corner
tower.
Behind the church lies St George's Gardens, the original cemetery,
which was passed to Stepney Council to maintain as a public park in
mid-Victorian times.
Execution Dock
The "Execution Dock" was located on the
Thames. It was used by the
Admiralty for over 400 years (as late as 1830) to
hang
pirates that had been convicted and
sentenced to death by the
Admiralty
court.
The Admiralty only had jurisdiction over crimes on the sea, so the
dock was located within their jurisdiction by being located far
enough offshore as to be beyond the low-tide mark. It was used to
kill the notorious
Captain Kidd.
Many
prisoners would be executed together as a public event in front of
a crowd of onlookers after being paraded from the Marshalsea
Prison
across London Bridge and past the Tower of London
to the dock.
Public houses
Three venerable
public houses are
located near Stairs.
By Pelican Stairs is the Prospect of
Whitby
, which has a much-disputed claim to be the oldest
Thames-side public house still in existence. Be that as it
may, there has been an inn on the site since the reign of
Henry VIII, and it is certainly one of
the most famous public houses in London. It is named after a
then-famous collier that used to dock regularly at Wapping. A
replica of the old Execution Dock gibbet is maintained on the
adjacent foreshore, although the actual site of Execution Dock was
nearer to the
Town of Ramsgate. This also is on the site
of a 16th century inn and is located next to Wapping Old Stairs to
the west of the
Prospect; by Wapping Pier Head — the
former local headquarters of the Customs and Excise.
Situated half way between the two is the
Captain Kidd,
named after the Scottish privateer
William
Kidd. He was hanged on the Wapping foreshore in 1701 after
being found guilty of murder and piracy. Although the pub occupies
a 17th century building, it was established only in the
1980s.
Literary and cultural references
Wapping has been used as the setting for a number of works of
fiction, including the
Dr Who
episode "
The Talons of
Weng-Chiang"; the
Ruby In The Smoke novel in the
Sally Lockhart series by Phillip
Pullman; the BBC sitcom
Till Death Us Do
Part, in which the central character,
Alf Garnett, shares his name with Garnet Street
in Wapping; and the brothel in
The Threepenny Opera, in which Mac
the Knife was betrayed by Ginny Jenny.
The Darlings of Wapping
Wharf Launderette is a compilation album by East End group the
Small Faces.
Fictional residents also include
Bernard Cornwell's
Richard Sharpe, an
officer in the
British Army during the
Napoleonic wars; and
Dr. Lemuel Gulliver, the title character of
Johnathan Swift's
Gulliver's Travels who, in the
novel, lived in Wapping before going to sea.
In the best-selling
Playstation 2 game
Stuntman the first
'film' the player takes part in is entitled 'Toothless in Wapping.'
Game designers stated in an interview in
Kerrang that they chose Wapping because "We went
there once and it proper smelled of throw-up."
Notable people
Among the people born in Wapping are
W.W. Jacobs, author
of
The Monkey's Paw. The American
painter
James McNeill
Whistler, well known for his
Thames
views, painted
Wapping when he lived at Wapping between
October 1860 and 1864.
The painting is permanently displayed at the
National Gallery of Art
Washington
.
During the 90s Wapping was home to American entertainer
Cher.
Education
Transport
- Nearby areas
Opening
in June 2010, the nearest London
Overground station is Wapping
See also
References
Notes
- Famous 18th century people of Barking and Dagenham
Info Sheet #22, LB Barking & Dagenham
- BBC NEWS | UK | World's biggest print plant opens
- Daily Telegraph Money 9 February 2006
accessed 5 May 2007
- http://www.shadwatch.co.uk/wapping_history_01.htm
-
http://www.doctorwholocations.net/locations/wappingoldstairs
-
http://www.damaris.org/content/content.php?type=1&id=197
-
http://www.jbutler.org.uk/London/TowerHamlets/Wapping.shtml
- http://www.nodanw.com/shows_t/threepenny_opera.htm
- Darlings of Wapping Wharf Launderette Retrieved
September 16, 2008
- Wapping
Bibliography
- Martha Leigh, Memories of Wapping 1900-1960: Couldn't
Afford the Eels, The History Press Ltd (4 Jul 2008), ISBN
0752447092
- Madge Darby, Waeppa's People: History of Wapping,
Connor & Butler (Dec 1988), ISBN 0947699104
- National Council for Civil Liberties, No Way in Wapping:
Effect of the Policing of the News International Dispute on Wapping
Residents, Civil Liberties Trust (May 1986), ISBN
0946088276
External links