Posts Tagged ‘Cottage Green’

Baptist Chapel, Fine Houses, A Queen And A Hospital

Tuesday, November 15th, 2022

More pictures from my walk on 27th January 1989. The previous post on this walk is St George’s Tavern and North Peckham 1989

Cottage Green, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-01
Cottage Green, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-01

Robert Browning the Victorian poet (1812-89) was born in Rainbow Cottage, Cottage Green and grew up in the area – there is a Rainbow Street not far away but the cottage is long gone. But the area still felt a little out of place in the middle of twentieth century London.

The tree is still there on the corner with Wells Way and so too is the chapel down the street and the house beyond on the corner of Southampton Way. At right the brick wall and fence remain, but the site behind, not visible here, has been sold for development. I’m not sure why the foreground railings on the pavement edge were there, but they are now no longer. At left instead of the corrugated iron there is now housing almost up to the pavement and the 11 storey block facing the end of the street has been replaced by flats of half the height.

Browning’s parents – his father was a clerk at the Bank of England on what was for the time a pretty decent salary – moved a few yards to Hanover Cottage on Coleman Rd when he was around 12, and there is a more or less illegible stone plaque on a wall of the shop on the corner of Southampton Way and Coleman Road with a more recent Southwark blue plaque higher up.

Cottage Green Baptist Chapel, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-61
Cottage Green Baptist Chapel, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-61

The chapel was built in 1844 and became a Baptist chapel ten years later in 1854. Owned by the Copleston Centre, a Peckham Community Church in Copleston Road it has been in use as a Christian nursery, the Destiny Day Nursery registered in 2007.

When I took this picture is still in use as a Baptist chapel. The commercial building beyond the chapel is still there as is the brick building at left, though the fences have been replace by a low brick structure, perhaps a bin store.

Cottage Green Baptist Chapel, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-62
Cottage Green Baptist Chapel, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-62

A second picture gives a clearer view of the church noticeboard with its message ‘SUNDAY FAMILY SERVICE 11.00AM’. I would like to know more about the windowless building to the right.

Haulage Yard, Housing, Southampton Way, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-63
Haulage Yard, Housing, Southampton Way, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-63

The houses at 73-77 were built in the early 19th century and are Grade II listed. A planning application was made in 2021 for the development of the yard which has an ‘L’ shape behind the houses on Southampton Way to another entrance on Cottage Green, opposite the chapel and next to another listed building, Collingwood House at 1-3 College Green – which I did not photograph.

Brunswick Park area, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-64
Brunswick Park area, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-64

I think these houses are near Brunswick Park, but cannot identify the exact location. There are a number of houses of a similar mid-Victorian age and style in the area which was developed by W J Hudson who bought the area in 1847, naming the open space in the centre after the estranged wife of George IV, Caroline of Brunswick. Long separated from her husband she had become a very popular figure by the time he became king in 1820 and died (possibly not naturally) shortly after his coronation in 1821.

The garden at the centre of the square was bought by the Metropolitan Borough of Camberwell in 1901 and opened to the public as a park in 1907.

Brunswick Park, St Giles Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-66
Brunswick Park, St Giles Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-66

Finding the exact location of photographs I took 33 years ago is much easier when they include street names as this picture of houses on the corner of Brunswick Park does. Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel was the daughter of George III’s sister and had a surprising introduction to this country as she first landed at Greenwich at what was then the Royal Hospital for Seamen and asked “Are all Englishman missing an arm or a leg?

The future George IV married her for her money and for the need to provide the country with an heir. She was “short, fat, ugly and never changed her undergarments, and rarely washed. Her body odour was overwhelming.” George had already made a secret and illegal marriage to the beautiful but Roman Catholic Maria Fitzherbert around ten years earlier, but as he had not had his father’s consent for this, the second marriage was not bigamous. Both George and Caroline got very drunk at their wedding and somehow despite their mutual repulsion a daughter and heir Princess Charlotte was born the following year.

The couple separated shortly after. George made a number of unsuccessful attempt to divorce her, including setting up a Royal Commission called the ‘Delicate Investigation’ which failed to find evidence of adultery, possibly because their heart wasn’t really in it, perhaps due to the overwhelming evidence against George.

Caroline left Britain in 1814 for Europe, shocking people in various countries by her behaviour (which included often appearing in public with her dress open to the waist, dancing topless in Geneva and becoming the mistress among others of Napoleon’s brother-in-law.)

When George became king in 1820 as they were still married she was automatically queen consort and decided to return to Britain. The government tried to bribe her, offering her £50,000 to stay away, but she came back and set up house in Hammersmith. She was very popular with the public (at a distance) many of whom were disgusted by her husband’s immoral behaviour, both towards her and with his various mistresses. A mob surrounded Parliament daily when the House of Lords tried for over 7 weeks to dissolve her marriage, eventually forcing them to abandon the attempt.

Uninvited, she tried to attend George IV’s coronation in 1821, but had the door of Westminster Abbey slammed in her face. She died 19 days later, convinced she had been poisoned. It seems more than likely this was so.

St Giles Hospital, Flats, St Giles Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-52
St Giles Hospital, Flats, St Giles Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-52

St Giles Hospital was opened in 1875 as the Camberwell Workhouse Infirmary and blocks were added here on St Giles Rd (then Brunswick Rd) around 1900. In 1913 it became the Camberwell Parish Infirmary and in 1930 it was taken over by the London County Council. On joining the NHS in 1948 it became St Giles’ Hospital. It closed in 1983 and the blocks here were converted into flats.

St Giles Hospital, Flats, St Giles Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-54
St Giles Hospital, Flats, St Giles Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1g-54

Another picture from the four I made of the former hospital in St Giles Road on the east side of Brunswick Park. I walked down the road back to Peckham Road, where my walk will continue in a later post.


My posts on this walk on 27th January 1989 began at St George’s, Camberwell, Absolutely Board & Alberto.


St George’s Tavern and North Peckham 1989

Thursday, November 10th, 2022

More pictures from my walk on 27th January 1989. The previous post on this walk is Houses, British Lion & Elmington Estate.

Wells Way, Coleman Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-31
Wells Way, Coleman Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-31

From Camberwell Road I hurried along Bowyer Place and New Church Road to take my next pictures along Southampton Way, going past The Brewers pub (since closed and converted to residential use) and then down Parkhouse Street and on to Wells Way. None of the nine pictures I made on this section of the walk seemed worth putting on-line, perhaps I was hurrying too much.

The view in this photograph has not changed radically, with the row of houses along Wells Way at right still much the same. You can still see the St George’s Tavern some way down Coleman St on the corner of Rainbow St, though it has lost the signage on the wall. It has apparently been there since at least 1851, though it was closed and boarded up, but re-opened in April 2021. But the estate towering above the end of the road is no longer there.

1JKC and St Georges Tavern, Coleman Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-32
1JKC and St Georges Tavern, Coleman Rd, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-32

I didn’t expect to see a Bentley with a personalised number plate on the street close to the ‘friendly neighbourhood pub’. I wondered who might own it, and there were certainly some very dubious characters in the area at the time. The registration plate 1KJC would have been expensive to buy – and now probably well into five figures if available, a serious vanity symbol.

The pub at that time was still owned by Taylor Walker whose Barley Mow Brewery in Limehouse and 1,360 pubs and off-licences and were bought by Ind Coope in 1959 – and brewing ceased the following year. The name was revived and used by another pub owning company for its London pubs from 2010 but then they were taken over by Greene King in 2015 and again re-branded.

Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-35
Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-35

6-22 Newent Close, Peckham, were Grade II listed in 1972 as in Peckham Grove, Peckham. The nine linked villas date from 1838. This is a remarkable Regency (or rather immediately post-Regency as Victoria came to the throne in 1837) enclave in the area. These houses are on the west side of the street.

Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-36
Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-36

The other end of this short row of houses with the blocks of the North Peckham Estate at the right. These houses were clearly rather run-down when I photographed them.

Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-22
Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-22

The houses on the east side of the street have these weighty porches. At right is a part of the Gloucester Grove Estate, one of the five estates often known collectively as the North Peckham Estate. Although this gained a terrible reputation, many former residents have fond memories of living there and the quality of their accomodation.

Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-24
Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-24

Another view of houses on the east side of Newent Close. The long block at right is I think part of the actual North Peckham Estate, completed around 1972. The five estates were all part of the largest regeneration scheme ever approved in 1994, and were demolished at a cost of £260m over the next ten years or so.

Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-26
Houses, Newent Close, Peckham Grove, Camberwell, Peckham, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-26

Another view of this remarkable street with the Gloucester Grove Estate in the background at left. I did take one picture of Nailsworth House on the North Peckham estate but haven’t digitised that.

Cottage Green, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-16
Cottage Green, Camberwell, Southwark, 1989 89-1f-16

Eventually I managed to drag myself away and stop taking pictures of the remarkable short section of street at the top of Peckham Grove – now surrounded by rather mediocre looking properties from the regeneration of the North Peckham estates. I walked back towards Wells Way and down to Cottage Green – where the next post on this walk will begin.

My posts on this walk on 27th January 1989 began at St George’s, Camberwell, Absolutely Board & Alberto.