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Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Wed Jul 05, 2017 3:09 am
by kiwi
Blackman Street before it became Borough High Street c 1890.jpg
Blackman Street before it became Borough High Street c 1890.

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:29 am
by kiwi
66-68 BOROUGH HIGH STREET X.jpg
66-68 BOROUGH HIGH STREET

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Sun Aug 27, 2017 5:24 am
by kiwi
This view reinforces Borough High Street's status as a commercial and industrial centre and as an important transport artery.
Note the insurance office and the baler (or pockets) of hops, hop merchants being the distinctive trade along the high street.
Note also the dominance of Field & Son, Estate Agents.
This view looks south from an upper floor of the Town Hall Chambers at the junction with St. Margaret's Hill. c1926.
Borough High Street c 1926   X.jpg
Borough High Street c 1926

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2017 4:03 am
by kiwi
Borough High Street (2).jpg
Town Hall St Margarets Hill, Southwark.
Borough High Street  Plaque on Old Town Hall Building..jpg
Borough High Street Plaque on Old Town Hall Building.
Borough High Street, The Talbot Inn, Southwark. X.jpg
Borough High Street, The Talbot Inn, Southwark
The Tabard(Talbot)
The old Tabard Inn was pulled down in 1875, though a modern building bears the name.
The Tabard was probably one of the earliest inns in this street of inns, for there is mention of it in 1306 when the Abbot of Hyde had lodgings adjoining. It is certainly the most famous of the Borough inns as the meeting place of Chaucer's Canterbury pilgrims. Henry Bailley, M.P. for Southwark in 1376 and 1379, was then host of the Tabard—Chaucer's inn was probably pulled down in 1629, for in 1635 the "Talbut" is said to be "a newe building of brick" erected on an old foundation about six years previously by William Garford, the landlord. After two rebuildings in the 17th century it is extremely unlikely that any of the mediaeval building survived.
Borough High Street. Tabard Inn, General Railway And Shipping Office, Talbot Yard, Southwark.   X.png
Tabard Inn, General Railway And Shipping Office, Talbot Yard, Southwark.

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Thu Dec 14, 2017 5:02 am
by kiwi
Borough High Street..jpg
Borough High Street. A different view.

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Fri Jan 26, 2018 10:26 pm
by kiwi
Maypole Alley, Borough High Street.jpg
Maypole Alley, Borough High Street
Maypole alley..jpg
Maypole alley, opposite Marshalsea Prison.
BOROUGH 1799.jpg
BOROUGH 1799

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Tue Apr 10, 2018 2:48 am
by kiwi
The Star was situated at 256 Borough High Street (c 1908). This pub has now been demolished, with a block of flats now standing on the site.
The Star was situated at 256 Borough High Street c 1908  X.jpg
Photo: c.1908, Picture source: Stephen Olney.

Borough High Street, formerly Blackman Street. The Star was situated at 79 Blackman Street until renumbering in 1899. This pub was demolished c.1932.  X.png
Borough High Street, formerly Blackman Street. The Star was situated at 79 Blackman Street until renumbering in 1899. This pub was demolished c.1932.

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Mon Apr 16, 2018 12:02 am
by kiwi
The Ship, 68 Borough High Street, SE1.jpg
The Ship, 68 Borough High Street, near junction with Borough Road,2017

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2018 3:17 am
by kiwi
Borough High Street, W.H.Daniel, Cow Keeper, White Hart Yard, c.1910.jpg
Borough High Street, W.H.Daniel, Cow Keeper, White Hart Yard, c.1910
Borough High Street,White Hart Yard (2017) almost opposite Southwark Street..jpg
White Hart Yard (2017) almost opposite Southwark Street
BOROUGH.jpg
WHITE HART YARD 2017,looking towards Borough High Street

Borough High Street, White Hart Yard, looking towards Guys Tower.  X.png
White Hart Yard, looking towards Guys Tower.

Re: Borough High Street

Posted: Sat May 12, 2018 11:14 pm
by kiwi
Three of the clock faces were lit by gas. The church’s website states that the fourth clock face was not lit due to the cost, the story of the residents of Bermondsey, was more a story rather than a statement of fact. The unlit clock is above the main body of the church and so not easy to see from many angles, so I can understand that from a cost perspective, lighting the three fully visible clocks was more important than lighting the fourth – but again, I suspect we will never know the true story. You can see the dark clock in the picture above.
BOROUGH..jpg
Borough c1900, St George the Martyr Church..jpg
St George the Martyr Church,c1900.>>>>>>