Bromley-by-Bow: Difference between revisions
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'''Bromley-by-Bow''' otherwise '''Bromley''', is an inner-city district in the East End of [[London]]. The ancient parish of Bromley St Leonard lies at the very south-east of [[Middlesex]] adjacent to the border with [[Essex]]. | '''Bromley-by-Bow''' otherwise '''Bromley''', is an inner-city district in the East End of [[London]]. The ancient parish of Bromley St Leonard lies at the very south-east of [[Middlesex]] adjacent to the border with [[Essex]]. | ||
The area is separate and distinct from ''Bow'', which lies immediately to the north. | The area is separate and distinct from ''[[Bow]]'', which lies immediately to the north. | ||
It is located five miles east north-east of [[Charing Cross]]. | It is located five miles east north-east of [[Charing Cross]]. | ||
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==History== | ==History== | ||
===Toponymy=== | ===Toponymy=== | ||
In early records the name first appears as ''Brambele'', ''Brambelegh'', or ''Brembeley'' and is likely to be derived from the Saxon words ''Brembel'' – a bramble, and lege – a field.<ref>[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=45405 ''Bromley St Leonard's'', The Environs of London: volume 2: County of Middlesex (1795), pp. 59-69] accessed: 19 May 2008.</ref> In 1967, the [[London Underground]] station at Bromley was renamed to Bromley-by-Bow to distinguish it from the stations at [[Bromley]] in [[Kent]] some eight miles to the south. Over time the station's name has extended to the area and today it is nearly always known as Bromley-by-Bow. Bow itself was originally known as ''Stratforde'', becoming ''Stratford-at-Bow'' when a mediæval bridge was built, in the shape of a bow. | In early records the name first appears as ''Brambele'', ''Brambelegh'', or ''Brembeley'' and is likely to be derived from the Saxon words ''Brembel'' – a bramble, and lege – a field.<ref>[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=45405 ''Bromley St Leonard's'', The Environs of London: volume 2: County of Middlesex (1795), pp. 59-69] accessed: 19 May 2008.</ref> In 1967, the [[London Underground]] station at Bromley was renamed to Bromley-by-Bow to distinguish it from the stations at [[Bromley]] in [[Kent]] some eight miles to the south. Over time the station's name has extended to the area and today it is nearly always known as Bromley-by-Bow. [[Bow]] itself was originally known as ''Stratforde'', becoming ''Stratford-at-Bow'' when a mediæval bridge was built, in the shape of a bow. | ||
===Religion=== | ===Religion=== |
Latest revision as of 10:42, 20 April 2017
Bromley-by-Bow | |
Middlesex | |
---|---|
The Drapers Almshouses | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | TQ375825 |
Location: | 51°31’29"N, 0°1’1"W |
Data | |
Population: | 14,480 (2011 (Ward)[1]) |
Post town: | London |
Postcode: | E3 |
Dialling code: | 020 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Tower Hamlets |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Poplar and Limehouse |
Bromley-by-Bow otherwise Bromley, is an inner-city district in the East End of London. The ancient parish of Bromley St Leonard lies at the very south-east of Middlesex adjacent to the border with Essex. The area is separate and distinct from Bow, which lies immediately to the north.
It is located five miles east north-east of Charing Cross.
History
Toponymy
In early records the name first appears as Brambele, Brambelegh, or Brembeley and is likely to be derived from the Saxon words Brembel – a bramble, and lege – a field.[2] In 1967, the London Underground station at Bromley was renamed to Bromley-by-Bow to distinguish it from the stations at Bromley in Kent some eight miles to the south. Over time the station's name has extended to the area and today it is nearly always known as Bromley-by-Bow. Bow itself was originally known as Stratforde, becoming Stratford-at-Bow when a mediæval bridge was built, in the shape of a bow.
Religion
Bromley was also known as Bromley-St Leonards, after St Leonard's Priory, a Benedictine nunnery founded in the time of William the conqueror. This priory achieved notoriety in the prologue to the Prioress' tale in Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
- Ther was also a nonne, a prioresse,
- That of hir smylyng was ful symple and coy;
- Hire gretteste ooth was but by seinte loy;
- And she was cleped madame eglentyne.
- Ful weel she soong the service dyvyne,
- Entuned in hir nose ful semely,
- And frenssh she spak ful faire and fetisly,
- After the scole of stratford atte bowe,
- For frenssh of parys was to hire unknowe.[3]
This was a barbed reference as it implied the Prioress had learned French from the Benedictine nuns in a distinct Anglo-Norman dialect.[4] By this time the dialect had lost prestige and was being ridiculed as sub-standard French.
The Abbey was destroyed at the time of the Dissolution, and the manor and lands passed to Sir Ralph Sadleir, who lived at Sutton House in Homerton and was privy councillor to Henry VIII. The church was retained to become the parish church of St Leonards. This in turn was destroyed by bombing in World War II and obliterated by the building of the Blackwall Tunnel approach road, dividing the main residential body of the parish from the river front. All that remains of the grounds of the Abbey is a small neglected churchyard.
Henry Grattan Guinness founded the East London Missionary Training Institute (also called Harley College) at Harley House in Bromley-by-Bow in 1873, with Dr. Thomas Barnardo as co-director. The school outgrew the premises and relocated in 1883, eventually becoming Cliff College.
The Revd Richard Enraght, religious controversialist,[5] was the Curate of St Michael and All Angels Church in St Leonards Road from 1884–1888 and Rector of St Gabriel Church (now demolished), Chrisp Street (Poplar), from 1888-1895.
Bromley Old Palace
In 1606 a palace was built for James I facing the line of St Leonard's Street by John Thorpe. This was principally used as a hunting lodge but was a grand residence of 24 rooms, including a State room, built along the lines of Hardwick Hall and Montacute House. Some of the stonework was quarried from the remains of the (now disused) priory. It remained in Royal use and was refurbished in the reigns of Charles II and James II and stables were added. During the 18th century the frontage of the building was renewed and the palace was converted into two merchant houses. It went through a variety of uses, including a boarding school and a colour works. The house was demolished at the end of the 19th century by the London School Board for construction of a new board school. Many of the original fittings remained in place and were said to be in fine condition. The house was sold piecemeal for £250 with the State room, panelling and an oak doorway going to the Victoria and Albert Museum.[6]
St Andrew's Hospital
In 1868, the Poplar and Stepney Sick Asylum was opened on a site next to the present day Bromley-by-Bow tube station. It was renamed St Andrew's Hospital in 1921. It closed in 2006. [7] A new housing development, William Guy Gardens, now occupies the site.
Geography
To the north and west is Bow, and to the south are Poplar and Blackwall. The area is bisected north to south by the Blackwall Tunnel Approach Road (A12) and the boundary of the area to the east is the River Lea which forms the boundary with West Ham and county border with Essex. Between the expanded tunnel approach and the river is a small light industrial area that since the 1980s has held the area's main supermarket, Tesco. Nearby is Three Mills. On the eastern side of the A12 is East London's oldest surviving building, Bromley Hall. To the west are Poplar and the former district of Mile End.
The former Bow Common now forms Tower Hamlets Cemetery and Mile End Park.
The London Thames Gateway Development Corporation's aims for the Lower Lea Valley include providing 3,800 new homes and about 1,000 new jobs in the Bromley by Bow area by 2016. With the Olympics in nearby Stratford, Bromley-by-Bow will be one of the areas in East London to gain regeneration.
Community facilities
Kingsley Hall is famous both for the visits of Mahatma Gandhi to the East End in 1931 and the therapeutic clinic run by the alternative psychologist R. D. Laing from 1965. Despite a severe fire in 1995, Kingsley Hall remains an active community centre.
Bromley By Bow Community Organisation (BBBCO) also provides Youth Provisions and Community Engagement programmes for Bromley By Bow. Its projects and services as a voluntary organisation provide the area with five football teams, Girls Group, Youth Group and Elderly and Community Services. It empowers the local residents, one of the most deprived wards in Tower Hamlets, and its surrounding areas to improve their socio-economic and cultural well-being and be able to sustain a good quality of life.
Transport
Rail
British Rail services used to stop at Bromley-by-Bow (then called Bromley) station on the London, Tilbury and Southend Line before 1962. Today theses services pass the station without stopping. There also used to be another station called South Bromley which closed in 1944 on the former North London Line (Poplar Branch).
Tube/DLR
The nearest station is Bromley-by-Bow for London Underground District and Hammersmith & City lines and Bow Church and Devons Road for Docklands Light Railway (DLR) services.
Cycling, walking, waterways
The Lea Valley Walk on the River Lea Navigation and Lea River passes on the area eastern side. To the south, the Limehouse Cut starts. Cycle Superhighway 2 (CS2) runs to the north of the area on Bow Road.
Notable residents
- Prof. William Harold Joseph Childs FRSE, physicist, born here
- Andrew Mawson OBE, founder of the Bromley by Bow Centre; entered the House of Lords as Baron Mawson, of Bromley-by-Bow in 2007[8]
- Mary Price, teacher at Bromley St Leonard's church school; mother of Professor Ralph Kekwick FRS (1908–2000), biochemist who did pioneering work on human blood plasma
- Jack Warner (the 'Dixon of Dock Green' actor) was, as a child, choir soloist at St Leonard's Church
References
- ↑ "Tower Hamlets Ward population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=13689085&c=Bromley&d=14&e=62&g=6338042&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&o=362&m=0&r=1&s=1476639007022&enc=1. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
- ↑ Bromley St Leonard's, The Environs of London: volume 2: County of Middlesex (1795), pp. 59-69 accessed: 19 May 2008.
- ↑ Line 125. Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales accessed on 14 Nov 2006
- ↑ Old Language Variety: Anglo-Norman
- ↑ Rev R.W. Enraght BA My Prosecution (1883) accessed 17 May 2007
- ↑ The Old Palace of Bromley, Survey of London: volume 1: Bromley-by-Bow (1900), pp. 33-40. Date accessed: 14 February 2009
- ↑ "Hospitals". Derelict London. http://www.derelictlondon.com/hospitals.html.
- ↑ "Six new non-party political peers". The Guardian. 15 February 2007. http://politics.guardian.co.uk/lords/story/0,,2013978,00.html. Retrieved 19 May 2008.
Outside links
- Kingsley Hall Community Centre
- Bromley-by-Bow Centre
- Bromley-by-Bow Ward Profile - based on 2001 census data
- Local Area Partnership 6 for the Mile End East ward and the Bromley by Bow ward.
- 2001 Key Statistics for LAP6 - compared to London Borough of Tower Hamlets
- Bromley-by-Bow Ward Councillors
- Bromley By Bow Community Organisation including Bromley By Bow Football Club