Belvedere Riverside & Plumstead – 1994

Belvedere Riverside & Plumstead: Some more pictures including some panoramas from my Thames riverside walk on Monday 1st August 1994, and a few from Plumstead a few days later.

Ford Ferry, Pier, River Thames, Belvedere, Bexley, 1994, 94-805-22
Ford Ferry, Pier, River Thames, Belvedere, Bexley, 1994, 94-805-22

Ford at Dagenham was just on the opposite bank of the Thames, with a Ford ship moored in front of it and some ominous black smoke rising.

But although the Ford was only around 600 metres away, the fastest route for workers driving from here to the factory was around 15 miles. Taking the Woolwich ferry would take a couple of miles off this, but be slower.

Ford Ferry, Pier, River Thames, Belvedere, Bexley, 1994, 94-802-11
Ford Ferry, Pier, River Thames, Belvedere, Bexley, 1994, 94-802-11

Many of Ford’s workers did live south of the river, either in Thamesmead or further away, and Ford provided a large suppposedly secure car park here from which they could walk down the pier to the Ford Ferry to take them across the river.

Ford had come to Dagenham in 1929 and opened the factory in 1931. They set up the private ferry for workers living in Kent in 1933. In its heyday it made 50 crossings a day taking as many as 1,500 workers to and from the plant, but after vehicle production ended with the plant turning to making engines it was only taking around 240 across and Ford discontinued it in 2003. Eventually they were forced to pay around half a million in compensation and to provide a bus service instead.

Much earlier there had been a Pilgrims ferry from Rainham to Erith, for pilgrims on their way to Canterbury, said to have begun in 1199 and to have continued in use until the mid 1950s.

Riverside Path, River Thames, Belvedere, Bexley, 1994, 94-802-12
Riverside Path, River Thames, Belvedere, Bexley, 1994, 94-802-12

Around here I turned back towards Erith, taking some more pictures on my way (some of which were included in my previous post.)

Riverside Path, River Thames, Belvedere, Bexley, 1994, 94-802-13
Riverside Path, River Thames, Belvedere, Bexley, 1994, 94-802-13

I can’t now remember exactly where on the path this was, but I think I walked all the way back to Erith and to the station there.

Penny's Cafe, Motor Auctions, Erith, Bexley, 1994, 94-803-32
Penny’s Cafe, Motor Auctions, Manor Road, Erith, Bexley, 1994, 94-803-32

Finally from that day in Erith, one I took earlier around the start of my walk but failed to post previously. Manor Road leads out east from Erith and was then an industrial area.

This Café (and Motor Auctions) had also clearly once been a factory and still catered for workers in nearby factories. Facebook posts say it had been an engineering factory called Ivor & Jettage, that the café was full of boxing photos and that its yard, used for motor auctions and later car boot sales on Sundays, was in 2024 a scaffolding yard. But I have been unable to confirm this.

Nathan Way, Plumstead, Greenwich, 1994, 94-806-52
Nathan Way, Plumstead, Greenwich, 1994, 94-806-52

A few days after my Erith walk I was back not far away in Plumstead, and made just a handful of colour images including these three.

This picture was made from The Ridgeway a foot and cycle path on top of the Southern Outfall Sewer from Plumstead to Crossness. Nathan Way runs for around 600 metres just to the north of this and most industrial sites along here were demolished by 2015 and are being replaced by a huge estate of blocks of flats, Lombard Square, with 1,913 new homes. The first were finished in 2025.

Nathan Way, Plumstead, Greenwich, 1994, 94-805-24
Nathan Way, Plumstead, Greenwich, 1994, 94-805-24

Another image from The Greenway not far from where I made the panorama above. From 1888-90 here or close by Royal Arsenal football team played here at what became the Manor Ground. They moved next to Woolwich, becoming Woolwich Arsenal but soon found the rent there too high and moved back. They played their last game here in 1913 before moving to Highbury in North London – and of course losing the Woolwich.

Some industry remains at the east end of this stretch of Nathan Way but I’m not sure this includes any in my picture.

Panoramic, Double Glazing, Nathan Way, Plumstead, Greenwich, 1994, 94-806-31
Panoramic, Double Glazing, Nathan Way, Plumstead, Greenwich, 1994, 94-806-31

Nathan Way is a long road leading from Plumsteaad to Thamesmead and I think this may have been on the corner with Kellner Road.. But the name repeated on the lorry and the large modern shed behind as well as on what was perhas a small shed in the foreground was unmissable. I just had to make a Panorama.

Tony's Snack Bar, Nathan Way,  Plumstead, Greenwich, 1994, 94-805-26
Tony’s Snack Bar, Nathan Way, Plumstead, Greenwich, 1994, 94-805-26

I think the building at left it 115 Nathan Way, now occupied by Hydraquip Hose & Hydraulics, while behind are the roofs of Belmarsh Prison. But the picture is about the mobile snack bar here and the neat empty row of six white chairs for its then non-existent customers.

My walk continued on into Thamesmead but although I took quite a few black and white pictures I can’t at the moment find any more colour – and perhaps I took none.


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